Thursday, August 18, 1966
Page 8
THE TAR HEEL
(
N. C. General Law Forbids
Collusion And Price Fixing
(Continued from Paffe 1)
dry and Cleaners.
Smith - Prevotst Cleaners
will raise its prices Sept. 1.
Campus Cleaners, a division of
Durham Laundry, raised its
prices to the present level
some time ago.
The cleaners that raised pri
ces, hiked $1 items about 15
per cent and 60 cent items
about 8.3 per cent.
North Carolina General Sta
tute, Section 75-1, says "Ev
ery contract, combination in
the form of trust or other
wise, or conspiracy in restrain
of trade or commerce in the
State of North Carolina . . .
is illegal."
According to G. S., Section
75-5 (2), the law applies to
"goods, articles, wares, mer
chandise, or other things of
value."
The law has also been ap
they raised rates because of
increasing labor and supply
costs.
Food Prices
To Pay For
Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitter
son predicted this week that
one of Carolina's biggest noise
maWf this' f?ll will be not
th3lVictnam'War or the Sp3a
ker Ban but food prices.
Sitterson made the state
ment Tuesday white address
ing th3 Advisory Budget Com
mission in Morehead Planetar
ium. . The Chancellor was request
ing $700,000 to renovate Len
ior Hall, previously renovated
with profits made by the cafe
teria. "But we no longer have any
profits," Sitterson said. "We
lo?t $80,000 last year from our
cafeteria operations." The
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plied to services in the case
of railroad rates (Bennett V.
Southern Railway).
North Carolina law says
that the attorney general has
the duty to investigate viola
tons of this law. He also has
the discretion of prosecuting a
civil action, or seeking a man
datory order enforcing provis
ions of the statutes.
All laundry managers said
Graduate
A U. S. Army medical team
which narrowly escaped a Viet
Oong ambush while operating
near a village in Vietnam has
been nicknamed for Capt. Wil
liam M. Monroe of Sanford,
a 1964 medical graduate of the
University of North Carolina.
U. S. Wolfhound infantrymen
in southern Hau Nghia Pro
vince now refer to the 25th
Infantry Division Medical Civ-
May Go Up
Renovations
Chancellor said rising food
costs will undoubtedly mean
a rise in caf-:t?ria prices this
fall..
One member of the commis
sion, Joe Eagles of . Wilson,
who had been in charge of the
cafeteria and "unable to catch
the situation and adjust the
prices" to prevent the $80,00C
los.
'The same man who was
there and has been making
money for us," replied Sitter
son. Eagles asked Consolidated
University President William
C. ' Friday, "don't you think
the student ought to be requir
ed to pay the cost of his food
and the cost of putting it on the
table?"
"I think the state ought to
do the major renovations,"
Friday said.
"That's where we disagree,"
Eagles replied.
Persia changed its name to
Iran in 1936.
btorbike-Safety Urged
A special licensing program
for motorcycle and motorbike
riders, and laws requiring pro
tective apparel for the riders
are the conclusions of a survey
made here.
A detailed study of accidents
involving students at the Uni
versity was made by the
School of Public Health.
Motorcycle and motorbike
fatalities and injuries are ris
ing sharply in the state, and
spokesmen for the Department
Heads "Marauders"
ic Action Program (MEDCAP)
team as "Monroe's Marau
ders." Dr. Monroe, 27, is the Sec
ond Battalion surgeon.
Stars and Stripes, Armed
Forces - authorized publica
tion in the Far East, reported
that Dr. Monroe's team is
CAPT. W. M. MONROE
fighting both disease and am
bush in Vietnam.
"Shortly after the medics
began operating in the ham
lets of Tan My, Hiep Hoa, Due
Hue and So Do," the public
ation stated, "the villagers re
ported that the Viet Cong had
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J)uhkani
of Motor Vehicles have expres
sed their concern.
The report covers an inves
tigation of 53 of 58 accidents
involving the two - wheelers
between Oct. 18, 1965, and Feb.
18, 1966.
That four - month period in
cluded a three - week vaca
tion period and a between -semester
break, and this
means "injury rates were on
the low side," the report said.
There was one fatality, and
theatened to kill the members
of the team.
"Army of the Republic of
Vietnam (ARNV) units in the
area beat off two VC attempts
to mine the route taken by
the medics into Tan My, but
were unaware of an ambush
planned on the outskirts of
Hiep Hoa, two miles away.
"A 40-pound command-detonated
mine was set off as the
Wolfhound ambulance roared
down the road with two gun
jeeps." The mine missed only be
cause the medics surprised
the Viet Cong by traveling
about 40 miles an hour.
Capt. Monroe served his In
ternship at Tripler General
Army Hospital in Hawaii be
fore being assigned to Viet
nam last January. He is now
on leave in Tokyo with his
wife, the former Blanche Kam
mer, also of Sanford.
He expects to return to the
U. S. in January and plans
tentatively to begin a resi
dency in ophthalmology at
N. C. Memorial Hospital here
next summer.
E
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22 of the 53 students hurt suf
fered multiple injuries. The
report said 53 per cent of the
injuries were rated as "se
vere," and included concuss
ions, fractures and burns.
As possible remedies for the
climbing accident toll, the re
port suggested special license
examinations for motorcycle
operators, who now are re
quired to have only a regular
driver's license.
It also suggested regulations
requiring the operators to
wear protective equipment.
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