Friday, February 3, 1967
Student Fees Rise
80 In Ten Years;
Penn Heads Reform
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
SNCC Loses
I
Bid For Power 1
By KITTY CAPARELLA
.. ..While the University's tuition
.is lower than in previous
.years, student costs at other
. colleges continue to rise.
.... Pennsylvania is leading the
way for gradual reduction of
fees for public institutions,
said M. M. Chambers, Indi
ana University professor of
.higher education, at a recent
..Washington, D. .C meeting of
the. National Association of
Land-Grant Colleges and the
'. Association of State Universi
'tles. :;;To stop the rise of student
; qosts which jumped some 80
.percent in 10 years in com
parison to the 17 per cent in
crease in the cost of living,
Chambers advocated free tui
tion at state institutions.
Negate 'Dream9
"Fees for public education
flatly negafe the American
dream of equality of oppor
tunity," Chambers said. "The
' cbncept of public education as
V commodity to be sold for a
price is wholly outdated and
' entirely wrong.
; "Most of the state universi
ties and colleges originally
'.were intended to be free of tui
,tion," he said. "Their state
constitutions prescribe it."
'But, some institutions avoid
calling the costs tuition fees;
; instead, they charge special
IJfejes, Chambers added.
iCqn Afford More
:
o- "While appropriations of
.state funds amount to $3.5 bil
Ilion (a 44 percent rise in two
.years) for the current fiscal
'year, states can afford this
i and much more for educa
tion, he said.
-' Although the University's tu
.ition was reduced $470 for
:State residents last year, it
.still has one of the highest
State resident tuitions of the
iNASULGC since it charges
residents over $400.
The University also falls in
line with those institutions
which charge the highest ($1,
000 or more) in tuition and
fees for non-resident students.
When the Pennsylvania Gen
eral Assembly I appropriated
,$M: million . for., reduction of
State resident tuition last year,
it also required out-of-State
tuition to be three times as
high as in-State tuition.
One Of Few
However, Pennsylvania
(along with tuition - free Cali
fornia) was one of the few
states to provide tax funds to
reduce tuition costs, said the
annual Cost Study of
NASULGC.
- A 10 percent rise in tuition
' this year will affect some three
million college students, the
. reDOrt said.
This increase follows last
year's 4.28 per cent rise in
state resident tuition and a
19.9 per cent jump in out-of-state
tuition Across the na
tion, the study showed.
1. Location reflects the differ
ences An tuition costs, it said.
The highest state resident
rates are in the East and the
lowest tuition rates are in the
West and South.
Not Affect Others
Geographic location does not
affect out-of-state tuition. In
stead, non - residents must
pay tuition fees which ap
proach the traditionally expen
sive non-public colleges' fees,
the study said.
Of the 206 institutions mak
ing up the American Society
of Colleges and Universities,
the median tuition in the past
year for state residents rose
4.16 per cent (from $240 to
$250) and for out-of-state stu
dents, 10.46 per cent (from
$478 to $528).
The median tuition at the 97
institutions in the NASULGC
rose 6.73 per cent (from $312
to $333) for State residents
and 6.53 per cent (from $734
to $782) for out-of-State stu
dents. Tuition rates probably would
be higher if state legislatures
had not increased appropri
ations for higher education,
said officials from both organizations.
(Editor's note: This article
first appeared in Jack New
field's weekly column in the
Village Voice.)
An analysis of the way new
ly registered Negroes voted in
the Deep South shows that nei-
er Charles Evers in opposing
the radical Freedom Dem
ocratic Party, and in electing
Robert Lee Williams, a Negro,
to the county - wide school
board.
Also, three Negroes were
ther nationalists or separatists elected to the Texas state leg-
of the SNCC variety were as
acceptable to them as racial
moderates. This could signify
a great deal about Southern
politics in the future. More
than 500,000 Negroes were add
ed to the voting rolls in the 11
states of the Old Confederacy
during the past two years, and
another 250,000 are expected to
join them by 1968.
In Lowdnes County, Ala
bama, SNCC's Black Panther
Party received only 41 per
cent of the vote despite a Ne- -gro
majority in registration.
On the other hand, the votes of
newly enrolled Negroes were
decisive in electing moderate
Wilson Baker, a Negro, over
ultra-segregationist Jim Clark
to the office of sheriff in Dal
las County, Alabama, and in
the victory of Republican Win
throp Rockefeller over racist
Democrat Jim Johnson for
Governor of Arkansas. And in
Mississippi's rural Jefferson
County, Negroes followed the ,
lead of cautious NAACP lead-
New York Budget
Bleeds Most In USA
NEW YORK (AP) Health,
education, neighborhood de
velopment, transit and beauty
add up to New York City's
first $1 billion - plus capital
budget, the largest, Mayor
John V. Lindsay said today, of
any city in the nation.
In submitting it to the city
coulcil for fiscal 1976-68, Lind
say said it represented "a
sound compromise between the
need to improve and exnand
public facilities and the finan
cial burdens that must be
born by the taxpayers."
The proposed budget $1,
081,762,771 was an increase
of about 59 per cent of $404,
616,148, over the current 677,
208,758 capital budget.
Top priority went to health
services, including hospitals,
which Lindsay called the
jcity's 'most crucial'' -problem.
, v iTM $665 million he jet aside
Alumni Fund Raising
Gifts to date for the 1966-67
Alumni Annual Giving Pro
gram are running about 20 per
cent ahead of the same per
iod last year, according to
Chairman Marvin B. Koonce
Jr. of Raleigh.
A survey of last year's con
tributions showed that Caro
ina alumni have become in
creasingly generous through
the years, Koonce pointed out.
Their average gifts have gone
up about 50 per cent from
$17.82 the first year to $24 last
year. Of the approximately 70,
000 living alumni, 43,500 were
solicited.
for health services was, how
ever, $24 million less than was
requested by the city health
services administrator.
islature, as were six in Ten
nessee and 11 in Georgia.
Georgia's winners included ex
SNCC leader Julian Bond.
All this indicates that South
ern Negroes will effectively
bloc - vote against white
racists and for Negro mod
erates, but are alienated by
the Black Panther Party, and
even by the radical integra
tionists of the Mississippi Free
dom Democratic Party. Des
pite exploitation and suffering,
the southern Negro remains
relatively conservative and
unrevolutionary.
Uncle Sam
Goes Fishing
WASHINGTON (AP) Adm.
David L. McDonald said to
day the Navy's speedy armed
patrol boats now are sweep
ing the rivers of Vietnam of
enemy supply craft.
"Where the Viet Cong once
could move on the rivers with
relative impunity, they now do
so at considerable risk to
themselves," he told a closed
session of the Senate Armed
Services and Appropriations
Committee.
McDonald said 75,000 Navy
men now are aboard the
Seventh Fleet Ships off Vietnam.
DAILY CROSSWORD
ACROSS
1. Sleigh
5. Cuts grass
9. Similar
10. Fetish
12. Pretense
14. Consumed
15. Chinese
shrub
16. Equal
17. French
pronoun
18. Extra:
Scot.
20. Negative
reply
21. Lever
22. Tardy
24. Singing
voices
27, Accumulate .
2! 'Jump''
29. Greek"
letter
30. Nobleman:
abbr..
31. Rhoderick
Dhu
33. South
American
river
36. Shoshonean
38. Single unit
39. Dad's
companion
40. Magnolia
State
43. Killed
44. Step
'45. Soapy
water
46. Vend
DOWN
1. Kind of
rock
2. Enjoys
3. Aug
ment 4. Bor
rowers 5. Tooth
6. Japanese
kimono
sash
7. Cry
8. Scholars
9. Candle
nut trees
11. Valiant
soldiers
13. Weird
19. Crimean
river
21. Sudden,
sounds
23. Rough
lava
24. Books
for
photo
graphs 25. Used
in
soup
26. Tantalum:
sym.
27. Affirms
29. Ages
32. Dimes and
nickels
1 BRAri5HU T
ME E R jiC AM E
P E Dp SIOLJE M
O ML j-JJP
r eVJo dTd Ts e
T AB L EprplO R
2 llE A w A R p
AEGEAN YN
HTCAKY A
E MlAS SC D I R
R on e Tf ace
e aTt s1jewer
Yesterday's Answer
33. Force
34. Anime
35. Among
37. Jacob's
brother
41. Mr. Caesar
42. Anger
m f f r m IT f
12. 15
24 25 2fo V"
40 41 42.
While doing business
with our Loan Dept.
We pay the tab.
DURHAM'S OLDEST
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ENTRANCE ON CITY
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(CAFE BHIffiMT ILEAF
Every Saturday Night 5:30 to 9
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. : :
sS FREE PARKING in our Modern Garage
Magazine Is
Edited By
Old Fogies
(Editor's note: This candid
appraisal came in an editor
ial in the Minnesota Daily)
Most of the world may not
know what's going on in Chi
na, but that doesn't deter the
editors of Xotional Review
(NR).
With their typical political
primitivism, NR's editors have
urged (for tenth time) that
the U.S. "unleash Chiang Kai
Shek" so he can take on the
mainland. Furthermore, they,
ask: "What better time than
right now to carry out the des
truction of the Chinese nucle
ar installations?"
We suggest NR's descrip
tion of Mao Tse-tung as "old,
ill, and very probably mad"
applies as much to NR's edi
tors as it does to Mao.
MARDI GRAS BALL
The Alliance Francaise will
sponsor the annual benefit
Mardi Gras Ball for the sev
enth consecutive year. The
ball wffl be held at the Elk's
Club, Durham - Chapel Hill
Blvd., Feb. 4, from 9 p.m. to
1 a.m. The grand march will
start at 10:30 with music pro
vided by Jim Crisp and his
orchestra.
RALEIGH MEMORIAL
AUDITORIUM
(JOE MUNICH)
CASS1US Vs. ERNIS
CLAY TERRELL
World Champion WBA Champion
No Home
TV
' , i .
ALL SEATS $5.00
ON SALE: ARNOLD JACOBS
VOGUE SHOP, 213 Fayttv
MAILORDERS TOt
RCHT RaUigh Memorial
AwtttMfem Mk Chocks
FeyabU to: CAM Promotions
EhIom Soff-Addrouorf
Stampod Envelop
n n n n
Ann
1PIS1S
The airlines are desperately in need of young
men for training as career pilots.
A pilot career offers high pay exceptional re
tirement benefits, excellent working conditions,
and good advancement opportunities.
All airlines are enjoying expanded routes and
increased business activity. Within the next few
years, many pilots who joined the airlines after
World War II will retire.
Replacements for these men must be found.
The Aviation Academy of North Carolina,
located it the Raleigh-Durham Airport, is spon
soring a meeting on your campus to answer ques
tions about flight careers. A major airline repre
sentative will be present.
A FEW HOURS SPENT EACH MONTH AS A
STUDENT PILOT IN THE AVIATION ACAD
EMY OF NORTH CAROLINA, WHILE YOU ARE
STILL A COLLEGE STUDENT, WILL QUALIFY
YOU AS A PROFESSIONAL PILOT.
February 0' 1837
4 P.D.-210 Gardner
It UN
If unable to attend or for further
information call:
Raleigh 833-6656
Durham
ri
RE-LMN6 FAST 6L0RIES,
CHARLIE BRO10N?
Ves. I've been tonkin about
"IKE DM I THREW MY STRIKE
I r-t lil I J S
JM M
TiM opp If I THOUGHT 1 T j 1 II
( PUS PET 1 VPAPERIN' THE HALL ill I
vJJ5TN Y i bio - j i yi
iLS&Pl DOIN'THE I j i
cj j ! ' j
Iv
; :
Oe Campes Interviews
for
Professional Career Programs
February 7
RCA is now undergoing the greatest
expansion of its history, based on a
wide diversification of products and
services. This has opened up opportu
nities for BS, AB and Advanced Degree
candidates in the following programs:
COMPUTER MARKETING requires individ
uals with good academic standing and
a degree in engineering, science, mathe
matics, liberal arts, or business admin
istration, with an interest in computer
systems and sales.
ENGINEERING for the engineer or scientist
interested in research, development, de
sign, manufacturing engineering, pur
chasing or materials management.
There are two possible avenues for
the individual chosen: Engineering
Rotational Program will help you decide
in which directions your career apti
tudes He. Direct Assignment for the
person who knows his chosen field of
interest
FINANCIAL for the graduate with an inter
est in financial management and the
applications of the computer in the field
of finance.
MANAGEMENT INFORMATION SYSTEMS re
quires individuals in engineering, sci
ence, mathematics with an interest in
systems design and proamming ap
plications in the broad financial areas
of RCA's businesses.
See your placement officer now to ar
range an interview with an RCA
representative.
An Equal Opportunity Employer
THE MOST TRUSTED HAKE III ELECTRONICS
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