Oregon daily emerald Tuesday, May 29, 1984 Eugene, Oregon Volume 85, Number 163 State board maintains present tuition level By Doug Nash Of the Emerald University tuition for 1984-85 will re main at its present level, the State Board of Higher Education decided Friday. Acting on a mandate from last year's legislature, the board continued a freeze in tuition and approved small increases in room and board, incidental fees and health center fees. At the University, undergraduate resi dent tuition for full-time students will re main at $373 per term. The incidental fee will be increased by $3 a term, however, to $59 from $56. Including incidental, health service, building and gym activities fees, Univer sity students will pay $480.50 per term next fall. In addition, the board decided against imposing a computer use fee and postponed any changes in post baccalaureate student fee policy. In what was their final meeting of the academic year, board members em phasized the need to improve faculty salaries, libraries and programs related to economic development. The board instructed Department of Higher Education staff to design pro posals for strengthening and expanding instructional and research programs related to economic development, for ac quiring additional library materials and automating library catalogs, and for mak ing faculty salaries competitive with average faculty salaries nationwide. "A stronger higher education system can be the catalyst for rapid growth of science-related as well as other business and industry in the state/' Vice Chancellor Bill Lemman said, explaining the recommended high-tech improvements. As for libraries, Lemman said the fun ding level has not kept up with the cost. "As a result, state system libraries are acquiring a smaller percentage of need ed published materials," he said. "Fur ther, when compared with other institu tions with similar missions and curricula, Oregon's libraries are below-average and losing ground." Also at Wednesday's meeting, the board elected Louis Perry as its president and Al Batiste as vice president. Perry, who is chair of Portland's Stan dard Insurance Co., will succeed board President Robert Ingalls, who leaves the board after his term expires June 30. Batiste succeeds board Vice President Loren Wyss, who also leaves June 30. Elected to join Perry and Batiste on the board's executive committee were Ed Ffarms of Springfield and James Peterson of La Grande. Reagan gives medal, tribute to nation's unknown soldier WASHINGTON (AP) — Under somber skies, with his country's highest honors and the prayers of many faiths, an unidentified serviceman of the Vietnam War was committed to eternal rest Mon day. And so, he took his place with the dead of three other wars in this century who are 'known but to God.'' Pres. Ronald Reagan led the nation's tribute for the Unknown Serviceman of Vietnam, bestowing the nation's highest military decoration, the Medal of Honor. As commander-in-chief of the armed forces, Reagan saluted the coffin as the funeral ended. As president of the United States, he was considered the next of kin for a fallen warrior of whom no next of kin is known and he received the flag that covered the coffin. “The unknown soldier who has return ed to us today and whom we lay to rest is symbolic of all our missing sons," said Reagan. The eulogy was delivered in the white marble amphitheater of Arlington National Cemetery behind the Tomb of the Unknowns. U S. flags fluttered bet ween the colonnades and 4,000 people stood as the National Anthem began the funeral service. "Today we pause, to embrace him and all who served us so well in a war whose end offered no parades, no flags, and so little thanks," the president said. As the remains rested on a bier over the open grave — behind the unknown soldier of World War I and between the unknowns of World War II and the Korean War — a rabbi said the Kaddish, the Jewish prayer for the dead, and other chaplains intoned the Orthodox, Catholic and Protestant prayers of committal. Oregonians mark holiday with vigils, flowers, flags From Associated Press Reports Hundreds of flowers were tossed into the Pacific Ocean near Depoe Bay Mon day as about 25 boats took part in the 39th annual Fleet of Flowers ceremony. After a three-gun salute from National Guardsmen stationed at Newport, Stan Allyn, the master of ceremonies, said, "Gentlemen, start your engines.” The vessels, most of them commercial fishing boats, left Depoe Bay with wreaths of flowers draped over their sides and form ed a circle offshore before tossing the flowers into the water. A Coast Guard helicopter and an Air National Guard fighter jet flew overhead. The Fleet of Fldlvers commemorates people who have lost their lives at sea. A reporter in Depoe Bay estimated that about 3,000 people were on hand. The ceremony was one of several Memorial Day activities around the state. Observances were also scheduled at many cemeteries. In Troutdale, volunteers over the weekend marked veterans' graves at the Douglass Cemetery owned by Multnomah County. American Legion Post 108 at Corbett chose Douglass Cemetery for the flags because it had been neglected and because the Corbett post of the Veterans of Foreign Wars was taking care of other veterans' graves nearby. Hey — what a mess... Maybe they missed some While volunteers helped pile trash in front of Johnson Hall Thursday and Friday as part of the ",Shaping Up '84” program, piles of debris left from the recent Canoe Fete mold on the banks next to the Millrace. The "Shaping Up '84” program was part of the area-wide clean up campaign. Photos by Frank Shaw and Michael Clapp