1 .IZZLfZZz Si11 eils pnippca ten points. Sunday, February .7, 1065 iPajre. 6 run i hattv mAO U'C'CT . eek9 Mews In Meview At I5ERS Money. That was the -word on campus last week. For students it meant that it will cost more to attend UNC next fall. For the Consolidated University it apparently meant appropriations from the Gen eral Assembly will be slashed. It will cost UNC students at least $24.50 more to come to school next year. The $12.25 per semester hike is the result of a fee increase effective fall semester. Most of the increase will go to finance the $2 million Frank Sorter Graham Student Union. The University has borrowed $2 million from the federal gov ernment for construction of the 1 union. The loan is self-liquidat- , Ing, to be repaid with student t fees and charges. . ... i Summer school students will - start paying their share of the - bill in 1966. Fees will be raised . to $20.70 per session. Cost of the union accounts for $9.60 of the hike per se mester. A $5 per year increase in student athletic fees accounts for most of the remaining in crease. . Another increase went into effect this semester for men stu dents who live in residence halls. , Social fees . were raised from $1.50 to $1.80 per semes ter this year to pay intramural managers salaries.. The extra .30 cents could not be billed in - time for payment last semester ISO a 60-cent charge was made this semester to make up the difference. ; Forty-eight per cent of UNC's total 1965-67 budget request was recommended to the Gen eral. Assembly by the Advisory Budget Commission. Although this recommenda tion is not binding on the As sembly, it is usually followed closely by the legislators when voting on appropriations. The entire "A" budget, $4, 577,402, was approved. This is the money needed to maintain services of the University at their present level. The "B" budget requested was chopped 66 per cent, from $9,041,676 to $2,049,311. The "C" budget, for capital expenditures, was sliced 57 per cent, from $20,569,094 to $8, 766,000. Consolidated University Presi- oem wiinam . u. j? riaay may succeed in getting some cuts re stored when he appears before the Joint Appropriations Com mittee later in the session. OTHER THINGS But there were other things to keep students occupied as they returned to campus. For . some it was a long week in the . basement of Hanes standing in drop-add or registration lines. For others it was adjustment to new professors or maybe to a ' new roommate, or' several of - them: . . ' .-. : ' ' :.' 7 Some spent all week looking for a used textbook before - breaking down and buying a new one Friday. Others chose AinLlHE STEWARDESSES NEEDED WE SERVE THE LEADING AIRLINES Requirements Attractive Single Age 20 to 26 , Hgrt. -52" to 5'8" Wgt. 105 to 130 Good health, good vision (no con tact lenses) 2 years college. Apply to college placement office or write P. O. Box 324, Asheboro, N. C. Airlines Personnel Consultants Aimnes rersonnel Consultants sides for or against Dean Smith andor his charges. In the news, the rest of the week went like this: MEN'S COUNCIL INVESTIGATION . Student Legislature voted Thursday to investigate proce- , dures of the Men's Council. The action came after a speech by University Party legislator Britt Gordon, who charged students were placed in possible double jeopardy. He cited three cases tried in the fall semester in which students who pleaded not guilty and were later convicted, were tried for lying in their original plea. Gordon based the charge on a brief prepared by former UP legislator Bo Edwards who said in the report: "I believe there exist certain rights to all Americans Under the Constitu tion which cannot be abrogated by the UNC Honor Code or its Honor Council." Student Party Floor Leader Arthur Hays called for the in vestigation. "The student was tried and convicted both for commiting an act and for denying that he committed it. Thus he is being tried and convicted twice in cases arising from the same act." 'CARPETBAGGING' CHARGED In an address to Student Legislature Speaker Pro Tern Charles Neely hit the University Party for "carpetbagging." Neely based his charges on the. recent moves of three UP leaders into key legislative dis tricts. . Freshman Class President Bill Purdy and UP Chairman Jim Hubbard have or will move from Gimes and the Phi Delta Theta house, respectively, to Ehringhaus. Freshman Class Vice President Buddy Nester moved from Grimes to Old West where he will take over the legislative vacancy created by the resignation of former UP Floor Leader Mai King. UP Chairman Jim Hubbard refuted the charges and said the moves were non-political. SORORITY TO DISBAND Alpha Gamma Delta sorority COMING TO 90ft TOD JUUEDA KING COLEMAN M.C. THE AlvhCASH US&ta I AND THE CRAWLERS - X y&r KrJAUijWfs One show only AH Seats Reserved. "Achn. $2.00, $20, $3.00 Tickets on sale at Thiein's Record Sbpjp and Village Pharmacy Camera . Shop, Raleigh Record Bar, Durham and fchapel HilL announced plans to suspend operations on campus and be come an alumnae chapter June 7. A house spokesman said: "We just couldn't keep up the house. After rush it became evident we would not be able to con tinue. Our international headr quarters ' did everything pos sible, but we finally decided to go inactive." The sorority will not partici pate in spring rush. The move leaves UNC with seven sororities. GOVERNOR'S SPEECH Gov. Dan K. Moore said Thursday that he will attempt to prevent the controversial Speaker Ban and N. C. State name - change from interfering with the University's progress. 1 The statement was included in Moore's "State of the State" address to a joint session of the General Assembly. , Education in the Tar Heel State occupied an important, part of Moore's address. JHe urged the legislators and the people of the state to step for ward from "the threshold of greatness" by endorsing a legis lative, program concentrating on education. Moore lent his strong appro val to the concept of consolida tion and called the University the "single most important fac tor in higher education in the state." Moore endorsed Charlotte College as the fourth branch of ' the Consolidated University. TRUSTEES Consolidated University Pre sident William Friday and act ing UNC-G Chancellor J. S. Ferguson agreed last week that "ability," not alumni affiliation, should determine the composi tion of the Board of Trustees. This was in reaction to Gov. Dan Moore's remarks to the General Assembly that recom- mended a study of the role of the trustees, the method of their selection and representa tion of the various campuses. He Urged "every effort be made to equalize representation more fully." Friday said that while the de cision is a legislative judgment, "my thought would be more to SAT. FEB. 8:30 P.M. 3? IMPERIAL SHOW STOPPERS EAK'D ) is? picic 5iucsi nev neisases the qualifications of people than their particular alumni status." Ferguson said: "Some very able trustees come from the ranks of the alumni of UNC-G, and I would welcome an in crease in their number. But at the same time, I would not like to see anything done to stimu late the development of blocs within the boat board." REBELLION ON CAMPUS Chancellor Paul F. Sharp warned last week that reellion on American campuses results from a student revolt against the "older generation" and a lack of student-administration communication. . Sharp said he saw "no overt signs" of rebellion brewing on this campus. He spoke Tuesday to the Dean of Women's staff at an in-service training pro gram. . He said the need for univer sities to analyze themselves was "brought to mind by Berkeley." He said the controversy there was a symptom of the growth of the rebellion which may last as long as a generation. UNC, he said, is "relatively free of that kind of restric tion, with the exception of the Speaker Ban, but we ought to familiarize ourselves with it." NAME CHANGE The controversial N. C. State name change went back to the General Assembly Friday. Rep. George Wood of Cam den introduced the bill to change the name to "North Carolina State University at Raleigh." Wood was confident of the bill's passage. "The bill has favorable support in the House and .a lot of grassroots sup port," he said. . The current name of North Carolina State of the Univer eon m?jrn?f am mm .fels. . n 'j:W II (MSP ' : ,4 f&- II mrnxm, r i J . H I ,1 . - - t .,...,. ,. sity of North Carolina at Ra leigh was a compromise of the heated debate in the 1963 Gen eral Assembly. ? OLD WEST NO. 1 Old West was the No. 1 resi dence hall during the 1963-64 academic year, according to fig ures released last week by the Dean of Men's office. The 20 residence halls were ranked in five categories with the top spot going to the resi dence hall with the best over all ranking. Old East finished second with Avery and Grimes tied for third. Aycock and Battle-Vance-Pet-tigrew tied for fifth. It was also announced that damage per man in residence halls last year was 38 cents, enough to get a comment of a "fine record" from Dean 'of Student Affairs C. O. Cathey. SPOT THE SPOT Spot The Spot finally came to an end early Wednesday morn ing when Van Johnson correctly identified the two tie-breaking spots. Pictures of a doorway to the University Laundry and of the bell ringers list in the bell tower stumped 23 of the 24 finalists, but not Johnson. He made the call at 1:34 a.m. and picked up the prize of 12 rec ord albums from Kemp's Wed nesday afternoon. Use Our Classified Ad Service iVU i"1??: - A t . i H r f

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view