I t VOL.—44 No. 6 SIXTEEN PAGES SOUTHERN PINES, N. C., THURSDAY, DECEMBER 26, 1963 SIXTEEN PAGES PRICE: 10 CENTS Top 1963 News Stories, Developments In Area Business, Building Recalled What were the “big stories” of 1963 in Moore County? One reporter’s list gives first place to the overwhelming bond issue vote of November 5, secur ing the community college and INCLUDING MOORE Big Dam Project To Benefit Wide Section Of State Impressive benefits loom for this central North Carolina area as result fo final authorization by Congress last week of the $25 million New Hope Dam project in Chatham County, after years of frustration and delays. The huge concrete dam to be built where New Hope Creek joins the Haw River backing up a 32,000-acre lake in Chatham, Durham and Wake counties, will be augmented eventually by other dams bn Deep River at Randle- man, in Chatham, and at Howards Mill vin Moore County just this side of the Montgomery County line; The two sm^ler dams have not'yet been formally authorized. The project is part of an overall water resource development plan for the Cape Fear River basin. The Haw River and Deep River, which crosses northern Moore County, join near Moncure to form the Cape Fear which flows —and often overflows—across the southeastern part of the State. While flood control is the main reason for harnessing this unruly stream, a vast recreation business, with benefits for all surrounding counties, is envisioned as a direct result. Sen. B. Everett Jordon last week estimated benefits as $2% improvement of schools, witlall the events which led up > it through many months; and ext, the great “Pinebluff fire,” Mich on April 4 swept over 25,000 cres 'of forest and field, destjying several homes and threatewg to destroy the village of Kni)luff. Third is listed the death Bill Upchurch in Deep River aHigh- falls, and the search ofmany weeks by rescue workers Jr the body which was eventuallfound, though many persons dotted it was there at all. Then might come the eablish- ment of the Moore CountMental Health Clinic; the lettinof con tracts for a big expsion of Moore Memorial Hospal; and the dramatic effort of loodmo- bile donors which save the Red Cross blood programfor this county. Stories of various develop ments, great and smalhU on the cheerful side add upo what is truly the “big sto:” of the year—^progress on my fronts, meaning better educion, better business and bette living for Moore County citizis. Here is that story as one sporter has summed it up: Moore county’s fest develop ment of 1963 was : the field of education, when iiiecured allo cation of the firstf the State's new network of )mprehensive community college then approv ed a $4 million ond issue to build the college ant and mod ernize all school'with consoli dation of nine county high schools into thre Proctor-Silex, manufacturing steam and spra electric irons, opened its new '00,000 plant at Southern Pinesn January an by year’s end ts at peak pro duction as placed, with about 450 employees. This was theJunty’s only new million annually, with $1 million per Tear in recreation Proceeds 7 for Chatham County alone. ' j f Congress has made the sumiof $280,000 available so work can go forward hf orfee-w The plan was envisioned by the late Sen. W. Kerr Scott, who did a great deal of work on it before his death. His successor. Senator Jordan, picked up where Scott left off. The delays came through the opposition of Rep. Harold Cooley, who favored an alternate (Continued on Page 5) Nominations For 1963’s ‘Young Man Of Year’ luvited The public is4nvited to submit noniinations for the annual Dis tinguished Service award made to the outstanding local “Young Man of the Year” by the South ern Pines Junior Chamber of Commerce. Deadline for nomina tions is January 15, 1964. Jim Thomasson, Jaycee presi dent, said that Don Walter and Mack Ausbon head the conunit- tee. 'They are canvassing church^ es, businesses, clubs and organi zations for suggestions for nomi nees. Although a nominee need not be a Jaycee, he must be with in the Jaycee age limit—35 or less. Nominations will be submitted to a committee composed of five local citizens who, by reason of their age, are not eligible for the award. Nomination blanks are avail able from any Jaycee. The award goes to the young man who has contributed most to the commu nity during the past year, but ac tivities of previous years are also taken into consideration by the committee who picks the winner. The local award winner will be entered in a State contest. 'The State winner will enter the na- sive real ests developments took place in 6 Southern Pines Pinehurst vicity. Work proceed ed on the R^al Dornoch Golf Village and ountry Club of North Carols, with a distin guished list rincorporators from over the StS- An 18-hole golf course has >een completed, a dam erectecfor a large lake in addition to he beautiful bigger lake alreadpn the property and many wiling roads built through ti tract which has been subdided into lots for the members. Other rS estate developments; 100 acres.Jurchased by C. A. Pitts, Caidian contractor, for a new golfcourse and driving (Cortiued on Page 13) We Wl5^ ^ou Mlerr^ (El^rlstmas ZX Mew ^ear The Staff of The Pilot Karagheusian Merger With J. P. Stevens & Co. Revealed Today Chaidler Named NewPresident Of Moce Memorial Ralp L. Chandler, Jr. of Southffi Pines was elected pres ident i the Moore Memorial Hos pital.!' Pinehurst at a meeting of the bird of directors held Tues day ight at the hospital’s Nurses’ Horn Heucceeds H. G. Poole of Car- thag who headed the Board for the ast three years. Also elected ■wet- Mrs. John E. Dixon, first vic'president, John M. Currie of .Carthage, second vice presi de?, Mrs. Paul Dana of Pine- aust, secretary, John F. Taylor, trtsurer, and William C. Sledge, Pjehurst, assistant secretary and tiasurer. ilected to the board of di- r;tors for the new year were: Its. Samuel G. Allen, Mrs. James byd, Wilbur H. Currie, J. B. .dwards, R. S. Ewing, W. Ward all, N. L. Hodgkins, H. Arnold ackson, Allan A. McDonald, Dr. Young People On Holiday Reminded Of Driver Course A driver education course de signed especially for young peo ple 16 through 18 years of age who are home on vacation from school or college wiU be given at the National Guard Armory here Monday and Tuesday of next week, December 30 and 31, the public was reminded today by Worth McDonald of Carthage, driver education representative of the State Department of Motor Vehicles. The course will be held from 8:30 a. m. to 12:30 p. m. on each of the two days. It is open to any young person, of the ages listed, who has not taken or does not plan to take an official approv ed driver education course in one of the public schools of the area. Completion of such a course is mandatory before any one in the 16-18 age group can obtain a driv er license, according to a new State law. Persons taking the course must enroll in advance with a State driver license ex aminer and must present a birth certificate at that time. The driver license examiner for the lower Moore County ansa is at the fire station in Aberdeen, each Monday and 'Tuesday; at the Information Center building in Southern Pines, each Wednesday and Thursday; and at the fire station in Pinehurst, each Friday. ARCHITECTS FOR COLLEGE CHOSEN The board of trustees of the newly authorized Moore County Community College, meeting last Wednesday night in Carthage, chose Hayes-Howell and Associates of Southern Pines as archi tects for the $1 million pro posed college plant. The college will .be located on land given by Mrs. C. Louis Meyer, between Pine hurst and the Southern Pines- Pinehurst Airport. Before making their deci sion. the trustees interviewed representatives of several ar chitectural firms interested in designing the buildings. Jaycees Sponsoring School Safety Boys The Southern Pines Junior Chamber of Commerce has taken over sponsorship of the schoolboy safety patrols at both the East and West Southern Piniss Schools, officials of the Jaycees have an nounced. Already authorized are expen ditures of $125 for raincoats for the West Side patrol and about $50 for equipment needed by the East Southern Pines boys. Recognition of patrol members by cookouts or other such event is planned, the announcement said. Patrol members guard the safe ty of children while crossing streets near the schools, in co operation with the police depart ment. Local Physician To Work In Algeria Next Month With ‘Medico’ Aid Team 1. M. Medlin, E. H. Mills, J. Reece tiOnal competition in which the Ijonroe, Eric Nelson, Mrs. Henry 10 outstanding young men of the Page, Jr., J. E. Parker, H. G. nation are chosen. Poole, T. T. Prickett, L. R. Rey- Nbmiation blanks sltould benolds, E. Marvin Ritter, William mailed to: Southern Pines Jay-P. Saunders, Jack M. Taylor, cees, attention, DSA Committee! C. L. Tyson and Earl Harbour. CONFUSED?.Well, So Are We! Here comes Thursday’Pilot on a Monday—a circum stance that may be as conusing to readers as it is to us. Point of the adyance? publication is that Christmas falls on a Wednesday ancwe wanted to giye merchants a chance to get out their Oristmas greetings to the public, as well as to giye The Plot’s staff a three-day holiday. We’ll all be back on ne job Friday, getting ready for the next paper, to be pu?lislied Thursday, January 2. So, Merry Christmas AND Happy New Year! Dr. Clarence B. Foster, local eye surgeon, will be the ophthal mologist with a “Medico” team in Algeria during the month of Januaiy, 1964. Medico is a non-profit organi zation originally founded through the efforts of Dr. Tom Dooley who saw the great medical needs in Southeast Asia during World War II. Since then, teams of doc tors from various medical cen ters and hospitals throughout the country have been sent by Medi co to all parts of the world. They have been active not only in ap plying their skills directly to the needy but in teaching native physicians how to give better care to the sick. The surgical team for January will be made up, other than Dr. Foster, of various members of the staff of Geisinger Memorial Hos pital, Danville, Pa. An ophthalmologist has usually been one of the specialists select ed to make up a team in these various assignments. There is a great need, in Algeria at the pres ent time, for cataract surgery, ac cording to the announcements of Dr. Foster’s assignment. There are many other conditions, need ing attention also, chief of which is trachoma with its accompany ing distortion of the external vis ual apparatus, the announcement said. Mrs; Foster will accompany her husband as secretary and general assistant in the hospital. ’They were to leave Southern Pines this M DR. C. B, FOSTER week. Dr. Foster expects to resume his practice here by February. During January, Miss Sue Cagle will be in the office to handle ap pointments and to answer all cor respondence. MANY CHEER BASKETS Members of John Boyd Post, VFW, are preparing to deliver nearly 100 Christmas Cheer food baskets Tuesday afternoon to needy families of the area, along with toys and other gift items to some of the families. Sunday afternoon, the post home was vis ited by many children for the post’s annual Santa Claus party. School Planning Committee Tells Aims, Purposes Dr. Charles Phillips, chairman of the Citizens Committee for Long-Range School Planning, in a statement issued this week, said that committee men^bers have “expressed shock and dismay” at the way in which the Southern Pines Board of Ekiucation con ducted a poll of parents last week. The poll, using questionnaires sent home by school children, asked whether parents favored an independent survey of the school district to help with school planning; and also asked whether they favored joining the county school system. Results announced last week by Supt. J. W. Jenkins showed 694 “No” answers to the school planning survey question and 327 “Yes” answers, in replies return ed through Thursday. The other question—about joining the coim- ty school system—showed 864 “No” answers and 116 “Yes.” The poll of parents came the day after the Citizens Committee formally asked the Board of Edu cation, of which Dr. C. C. McLean is chairman, to authorize surveys or consultations'—by agencies of the State Department of Public Instruction and by some inde pendent agency—“to determine whether East Southern Pines High School can best serve the community by remaining an inde pendent school or by consolida tion with other high schools in the area.” The statement issued this week by Dr. Phillips, a local physician who took the lead in organizing the Citizens Committee, reveals in detail what the Committee re quested from the Board of Edu cation. Committee members were shocked and dismayed, the state ment said, because the Board of Education asked parents to vote on issues “about which all of us have had little or no information from the Southern Pines Board of Education,” further pointing out that the survey asked for by the Committee “would have pro duced all of the facts necessary for the citizens to make an intelli gent appraisal of what we now have in the way of schools and what would be necessary, if any thing, on a long-range plan to improve our schools.” Dr. McLean said last week, after the questionnaire results had been tabulated, that the out come did not necessarily mean that the Board of Education would abandon any consideration of the survey request. The full statement made by Dr. Phillips on behalf of the Citizens Committee, follows: “In order that the public might be intelligently informed con cerning our schools, our long range plans and the issues in volved, the Citizens’ Committee for Long Range School Planning met with the Southern Pines Board of Education on Monday night, December 16th, 1963, and made a request for survey or consultation, as outlined below: (Continued on Page 5) The merger of A. & M. Kara gheusian, Inc., one of the leading carpet manufacturing companies in the United States, with a plant at Aberdeen, and J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc., one of the nation’s larg est and most diversified textile DOUGALD kelly III College Student Killed In Wreck East Of Cameron A college student home for the holidays was killed and two other young men, with possibly a third, were injured, when the car in which they were riding went out of control and overturned several times Sunday at 3 p. m. on NC27, one and one-half miles east of Cameron. All were Negroes. The car’s driver was ordered held on a manslaughter charge. State Trooper J. F. Cardwell identified the dead youth as Dougald Kelly III, of Carthage, a student at North Carolina Col lege, Durham, and two of the in jured as "Vinson Cornelius, 22, and Theodis Marks, 27, both. of the Cameron community. Cardwell said a third man, Otho Harrington, Jr., of Camer on had been riding with them, but several hours after the acci dent he had not been able to lo cate Harrington and did not know whether he was injured. All had been removed when Cardwell ar rived on the scene of the wreck and he located C^ornelius, who he said was the driver of the car, at Lee Coutity Hospital, Sanford, and Marks at St. Joseph’s Hospi tal, Southern Pines, both report ed seriously but not critically hurt. 'The trooper said the car, trav eling east at apparently exces sive speed, somersaulted off the road on the right, just past a curve, and landed in a field. Cor oner W. K. Carpenter ruled that Kelly died of a broken neck, and ordered Cornelius held for grand jury action on a manslaughter charge. The 1963 Ford two-door con vertible, which was demolished, was owned by Joseph 'Williams of Carthage, who had lent it to Cor nelius to take his friends on a holiday outing. They were on their way to Cornelius’s home in the coimtry east of Cameron when the accident occurred. companies, was announced today (Monday). In their joint announcement, Robert T. Stevens, president of J. P. Stevens and Charles A. Kara gheusian, chairman of the board of the Karagheusian firm, said that an agreement has been reached that Stevens stock would be exchanged for Karagheusian stock. Upon completion of the ex change, Mr. Stevens indicated, the Karagheusian company would be operated as a separate entity, with Steele L. Winterer, current Karagheusian president, continu ing in that office. J. Cecil Beith, plant manager of the Aberdeen Karagheusian faci lities, said that the Gulistan Car pet trade name would be retained under the new merger, with the former Karagheusian Company to be known as the Gulistan Car pet Division of J. P. Stevens & Co. Karagheusian, a company found ed in 1897, began operations in Aberdeen in April, 1957. Since then its employment has risen from about 300 to over 500 persons and the plant itself has been ex panded by about one third, pro viding a total of about 320,000 square feet of floor space. Karagheusian operates other plants at Albany and Statesboro, both in Georgia, and at Freehold, N. J. All are included in the merger transaction. All the company’s carpet pro ducts bear the trade name “Guli stan” and ar.2 sold nation-wide through 3,500 retail outlets. The carpets are of a wide variety, ranging from mo(Jestly-priced to the most luxurious custom quali ties. Gulistan carpets are widely used in the commercial field by hotels, theatres and other public accomodations. Mr. Beith said that operations in Aberdeen are expected to con tinue without change following the merger. The plant will re main here, h.2 said. J. P. Stevens & Co., Inc., found ed in 1813, is one of the most di versified textile companies in the United States. It operates 57 plants manufacturing and pro cessing a broad range of cottons, woolens and worsted goods, and fabrics made from many fibres of synthetic origin for nearly every apparel use and in nearly every price range. It employs 38,000 per sons and its plants produce fab rics in excess of 800,000,000 yards per year. Stevens has not heretofore been engaged in the broadloom carpet business. Kiwanis Builder’s Cup Award Marks Milestone In Career Of ‘Cliff’ Blue The recent award of the Ki wanis Builders Cup to Rep. H. Clifton Blue of Aberdeen marked another milestone in a career in which Moore County people have long taken pride. It saluted particularly an achievement which, of all the long list, is the one which, so far, is perhaps nearest and dearest to the heart of “Cliff Blue himself— his successful efforts with others of his coimty to secure a compre hensive community college for Moore, efforts which will contin ue in his membership on the newly named board of trustees. Appointed - by Governor Sanford to an eight-year term, he was then elected as chairman of the board and will guide the new college in its establishment and operation. On a wider front, it recognizes his service as Moore’s representa tive for nine terms—^first elected in 1946, he is now dean of the House in length of service—and as Speaker of the House during the 1963 term. It is^ - another sign that his “home folks” are behind him in his undertakings in behalf of the comity and State. Known Everywhesre There is small doubt in their minds that his campaign for lieu tenant governor, which is carry ing him to all parts of the state these days as he accepts invita- ons to speak and preside at var ious events, will be successful. His acquaintance and popularity all over'North Carolina have been well evidenced, and he is known by his first name—even his nick name— everywhere across the State. In Moore he’s “Cliff” to every one, and “cousin” to many, since he’s descended from several lines of pioneer Scots who settled the area before the Revolution, and (Continued on Page 14) Contracts To Be Let On New Ag Building At their regular meeting in January, the county commission ers are expected to award con tracts for the proposed new agri culture building next to the coun ty health center in Carthage. The commissioners opened bids in a special session last week but deferredv awarding contracts until the January meeting. THE WEATHER Maximum and minimum tem peratures for each day of the past week were recorded as follows at the U. S. 'Weather Bureau obser vation station at the W E E B studios on Midland Road. Max. Min. December 19 39 14 December 20 37 19 December 21 37 12 December 22 36 17 December 23 35 18