Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / July 16, 1964, edition 1 / Page 3
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PUBLISHED THURSDAY AFTERNOONS OFFICES SECOND FLOOR GRAHAM MEMORIAL CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, THURSDAY, JULY 16, 1964 Oh Where, Oh Where Do The $$ Go? By JIM NEAL Where does all the money go? You paid $17.50 in fees when you registered this session to cover a wide range of expenses. ; The most tangible "product" you get for your money is en tertainment $14,879.87 worth. . The biggest bites from your $17.50 are , registration ($5.50) and physical education ($5) fees. The physical education fee in cludes use of the pool and. gym facilities.- University staff - per sonnel pay $6 for the same privilege. - ' . ; . Hie smallest individual fee lumped into your $17.50 is 75 cents for the library. Last Rites Held For Ray Ritchie Funeral services were held last Friday for Howard Raymond Ritchie of Chapel Hill, former di - rector of retail stores at UNC, who died July 7 in Memorial Hospital. He had been in de clining health for several years. Ritchie was 56. Ritchie, a nattive of High Point and a UNC graduate, ; joined the Book Exchange staff J here in 1938. He was manager "from 1941 until his retirement last December because, of poor ; health. - Under his leadership the Book ; Ex grew from a tiny over crowded store to an operation of eight branch locations and in creased its sales by more than $1,300,000. He was a past president of the National Association of College Stores and a member of its board of directors. He also was a former vice president and chairman of the NACS program and budge committees. He was a member of the Chap el Hill Rotary Club and an as sociate member of the University Baptist Church. He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Dorothy Webb Ritchie; two sisters, Mrs. C. L. Clapp of High Point, and Mrs. John H. Biltorie of Columbus, Ga.; three broth ers, Fred V. of New York City, Guy G. of Columbus, Ga., and David A. Ritchie of St. Louis, Mo. State Supreme Court Orders Return Of Carter Case For Faculty Review The case of Anne Royall Carter has come back home. The State Supreme Court rul ed last week that she is entitled to another, hearing before the Faculty Review Board. Miss Carter, the daughter of UNC business administration pro fessor Clyde C. Carter, was ex pelled from the University in 1961 by the Woman's Honor Coun cil. She had been convicted of cheating on a Latin make-up ex amination. She appealed first to the form- ' er Student-Faculty Review Board, next to the administration, and finally to the Board of Trustees. These appeals failing, she took ' her case to the courts. Miss Carter has since complet ed college at another school, but ' The entertainment fee, which supports Student Government, The Tar Heel, Graham Memorial Student Union and the YM YWCA, is only $1.75. The total amount paid at reg istration varies depending on whether you're from in or out of state and whether you take the University's laundry service. i Out-of-state students pay $100 tuition while in-staters pay $30. Laundry is $10 more. - Health services cost $3, which goes to the student infirmary. Another $1.50 goes for laboratory fees and materials. Dr. A. K. King, director of the summer session, said the entertainment fee of $1.75 goes to the Summer Session Pro gram - Planning Council, . which .qiiLOjfrwwwwwj T" r 1; " """" "t1"" """ ""-' 1 ' pwiM"i'""WUHW'wjikj.k.ujikiJiiiujJi!ULiiiiij i i ; lllilli 'tilllllllBIS HI v, X- m0-S ' 0 x' '() 0O ' ' I f llllllli I 'i ' v A TIME TO RELAX Don Curtis, acting stu- rier, acting president for the upcoming session, dent body president for the first summer session pours over various unfinished odds and ends as he relaxes with his bubble gum as his term of office prepares to take over, draws to a close. In the background, Gene Bar- Photo by Jim Wallace More Chapel Hill Businesses Integrate Under Rights Bill Three more local businesses have apparently lowered their racial barriers as a result of the Civil Rights Act, while at least two others remain segregated. has continued the fight to clear her name here. Justice R. Hunt Parker, speak ing for the Court, directed Uni versity officials to move with "reasonable promptness" in giv ing Miss Carter a second hear ing. He added that University of ficials had begun planning for the hearing before Miss Carter's court appeals interrupted them. The case had come to the high court on an appeal from an order signed by the late Superior Court Judge Clawson Williams of San ford. Judge Williams got the case after Superior Court Judge He man Clark of Fayeteville signed an order upholding the cheating decision by the Board of Trus tees abiding by the Council's decision. approves budgets of organiza tions and appropriates money to them. Budgets are drawn up and approved in the spring and adjusted, if necessary, early in the summer. The planning council, headed by William G. Long, dean of men, consists of the heads of five organizations: Eob Spear man, as student body president, represents student government; Howard Henry, GM director, the student union; Anne Queen, Y secretary, the Y; and Prof. W. S. Newman, the music de partment. Dr. King said all the money goes into a summer session con tingency fund, on which he draws requisitions to meet the Civil Rights testers sought and obtained service at Watts Grill and Clarence's, a beer parlor on W. Franklin St., last week. Ne groes had been denied service at However, Judge Clark's order also sent the case back to the Trustees for "review" in the light of new evidence offered at a hear ing before him in Wake County Superior Court in 1962. His order had questioned the validity of the original decision but had not reversed it, the Supreme Court said. Judge Williams had turned down a request from Miss Carter's at torneys to order her immediate reinstatement. Instead, he told University officials to grant her another hearing. The high court struck down most of that order, ruling, in ef fect, that it was unnecessary. Judge Clark's earlier order, the Court said, had already referred the case back to the University. requirements of the organiza tions. He said money is drawn from the fund on the basis of $1.50 for each student in residence. The other 25 cents, he said, is used for departmental affairs. "For many reasons," Dr. King said, "the exact number of stu dents in residence is not the figure you'd use to find the total amount of money." Dean Long explained the plan ning council "was created to give various departments a cer tain amount of money for stu dent activities." Dr. King and Dean Long said money collected during the regular school year is never used for summer activities, and (Continued on Page 12 both places during earlier tests of the new law. The manager of the Smoke Shop, a cafe on Main St. in. Carrboro, has reported he will, comply with the Law, although rights testers said they were denied service there early last week. The manager said no one had been denied service there be cause of race, and he intended to comply with the law. 'These testers came by on Sunday when we were closed, and were denied service then. No one has come back since." The two establishments still maintaining policies of at least partial segregation are the Caro lina Grill on W. Franklin St. and the Patio on the 15-501 By pass. The Carolina Grill serves Ne gro University students, but no other Negroes. The manager said this week he hadn't had time to discuss any possible change of policy. The manager of the Patio said there had been no change in his segregation policy. Testers have been denied service at both places. 2nd Session ; Registration Is Monday , Registration for second ses sion will be held Monday, July 20. -J Students who pre-registered may pick up class tickets in the lobby of Memorial Hall from 9 a.ra. to 8 p.m. Monday, or from 7 to 8:30 a.m. Tuesday. Students not pre-registered must: get permits and appointments to register at 102 Peabody Hall; meet with their dean or ad visor to get registration approval forms; . register by picking up class tickets in the basement of Hanes Hall at the time on the appoint ment slip. , . Students registering after 8:30 a.m. Tuesday must pay a late fee of $5. Classes 'begin at 7:30 a.m. Tuesday. The Library will keep an odd schedule between sessions. It will be open until 5 p.m. Friday, and from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sat urday. Sunday it will be closed all dav. The Monday schedule Will Uc UIHU n a.u. " f."" with regular hours resuming Tuesday. Graham Memorial will close at 6 p.m. Friday, and will stay closed until 4 p.m. Sunday, when it will reopen on its regular schedule. GM activities will continue ; during the second session. The Summer Activities Board has scheduled five combo parties, beginning Friday, July 24. The "Jammers" will play from 8 until midnight. The schedule of free flicks will begin July 23 with "All Quiet on the Western Front," the adven-' tures of seven German youths in the First World War. Others in the series are "Rasho-Mon," July 30; "Kanal," August 6; "The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari," ' August 13; and "Olympia," August 20. All are in Carroll Hall at 7:30 p.m. A concert by the Triangle Little Symphony in Hill Music Hall July 23 at 8 p.m. will be sponsored by GM. The musicians are all from the Research Tri angle area. The program is free of charge. The swimming pool will be open all during the break for those who haven't gone to the beach. Reeular hours will be ob served Friday. Saturday, the pool will be open from 1 to 6 p.m.; Sunday, from 2 to 5 p.m. Regular hours resume Monday. Civil Rights Forum Will Be Held Here Chapel Hill's Inter-Church Coun cil for Social Service will spon sor a public forumon the Civil Rights Act Sunday, July 19. The forum will deal with the content of the law and its effect on Chap el Hill. Serving as panel members at the forum will be Duke Law School professor Joel Paschal, Thomas Christopher of the UNC Law School, and Henry Frye, as sistant U. S. Attorney General for Raleigh, The forum will be held at 4 p.m. in the Fellowship Hall of the Presbyterian Church. The public is invited to attend.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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July 16, 1964, edition 1
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