Vol. 26, No. 30 Kiwanis Club Does Honor io The Lawsons Plaque Is Presented to Them; Their Daughter Gives Report On Golfing Trip to England The Chapel Hill Kiwanis Club made its dinner meeting this week a tribute to Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Lawson. Sharing the honors with them was their daughter, Mrs. Estelle Lawson Page, whd gave the company a lively report upon her recent golfing expedition to England. Beside her at the guest table was her husband, Julius Page. His parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Page, were also there. J. Maryon Saunders, to docu ment his review of Dr. Law son’s career, had brought along a University catalogue and two issues of the annual of the era of fifty years ago. He read pas sages about University athletics of that era and recalled the prowess and the fame of the young Virginian, Bob Lawson, who came here in 1898; was pitcher on the baseball team for three years and afterward coach; played on the Boston team in the National League; studied medicjne and took his M. D. degree at the University of Maryland; and returned here to become gymnasium instructor and member of the faculty of the University medical school. W. S. Hogan, president of the club, and T. A. Rosemond, past president, expressed the Kiwan ians’ high regard for their guests of honor. Mr. RoseoiQpd pres«a* ed to them « ing: *ln Grateful RecqgPHSl to Dr. and Mrs. Robert B. Law son for Outstanding Community Service, 1906-1948. Chapel Hill Kiwanis Club, July 20, 1948.” Both Mr. Hogan and Mr. Rosemond praised Mrs. Lawson for her services. Mr. Saunders acclaimed Mrs. Page as “the member,.of the family Who has made Chapel Hill famous all over the world.” Polio-Smitten Boy Is Home from Hospital Ramsey Green, nine years old, one of the twin children pf Mr. and Mrs. Fletcher Green, who was taken to the hospital with polio on Thursday of last week, has been brought home. Yes terday the family were rejoic- ing dVer his recovery. “The doctors tell us they think there will be no bad effects,” said Mr. Green. The official records kept by Dr. 0. David Garvin, health of ficer, show seven cases of polio in Orange county, including the Green boy. Six were in the Chapel Hill area, one in Hills boro. In Chapel Hill’s neighbor city, Durham, a falling off in the number of new cases*of the dis ease was reported in yesterday's Durham Herald. Webers Are in Sharpe House While Mr. and Mrs. R. R. Sharpe are away for the next six weeks, in upstate New York and New Hampshire, their house on Pittsboro street will be occupied by Mr. and Mrs. Carl Weber of Waterville, Maine. Mr. Weber is teaching English in the Univer sity summer school. The Sharp es’ address is 80 Van Ness ave nue, Greenwich, N. Y. Their son David is a counselor at Camp Timanbus at Raymond, Maine. The Chapel Hill Weekly Louis Graves • Editor Fowler’s Has a Grand Opening The new Fowler’s Food Store on West Franklin street opened yesterday. It was a grand opening. People began trooping in early in the morning and kept on trooping in all during the day. They ad mired the new fixtures and the great displays of food. They ex changed cheerful greetings with the personnel—Vance Hogan and John Sparrow and Lemuel Carson and the rest—whom they had known in the former store. Some of the visitors were interviewed for broadcasts from radio station WDUK. Mrs. Neal Creighton was in charge of this part of the proceedings. She picked “victims” from among the customers, and her assistant, Bob Andrews, did the interviewing. Prizes were given to the men and women (mostly women) who answered questions. Similar broadcasts will be given at 12:45 P.M. today (Friday) and at the same hour tomorrow. If you want to hear them, tune in at 1310 on the dial. The opening-day visitors marveled at the size of the establish ment. It is the biggest thing in the way of a store that has ever been seen in Chapel Hill. The building, 80 by 200 feet, is well matched, even pver-matched, in area by the parking space along side. This space is 160 feet wide, and customers may drive in from either street, Franklin or Rosemary. The interior is arranged for both self-service and house-to house delivery. Robert L. Fowler of Chapel Hill and Marvin M. Fowler of Dur ham are the owners. Robert is the manager-in-chief, both here at the store of the same name in Durham. Vance Hogan is grocery manager and John Sparrow is meat manager. Lem Carson is the senior member of the force in serv ice, having started with the Model Market (the forerunner of the present store) 22 years ago. Others on the force are Leßoy Merritt, Earl Blackburn, Thomas Hunter, John Kapley, Leon King, Sam Taylor, Arthur Clark, Mrs. Leßoy Merritt, Mrs. Cecil Proctor, Miss Ellen Hogan, and Miss Betty Canada. The Model Market was established 39 years ago. It was con ducted by Sam Pickard and later by John T. Fowler, father of Robert and Marvin. * . Movies Used for Teaching of Football Officials A project for instructing foot ball officials by moving pictures has been completed here. It was arranged by the Uni versity athletic authorities in cooperation with the Southern Football Officials’ As » White and a Blue, made up of players on the Carolina squad, constituted the personnel that demonstrated the Right and Wrong of foot ball—that is, first, observance of the rules, and, second, infrac tions of the rules. About a dozen of the leading officials of the Southern Confer ence were here for the demon strations, as both participants and sideline observers. When participating they would take their accustomed places on the field. A play would be called, and both players and officials would go through with it just as in a regular game. For example, it might be a forward pass. As the pass was Graham Promoted in Missouri Chancellor Arthur H. Comp ton of Washington University in St. Louis announces that Ed ward K. Graham, who went there last year from Cornell, has been appointed acting dean of faculties in succession to the late Joyce C. Stearns. A native of Chapel Hill, son of the late President Edward K. Graham of the University of North Carolina, he attended Woodberry Forest school in Vir ginia; took his A.B. and M.A. degrees here; and took his Ph.D. degree at Cornell. After being in the teaching faculty at Cornell for several years, in the history department, he was assistant to President Day and the secretary of the University. His wife is the for mer Miss Elizabeth McFadyen of Concord, N. C. They have three children. - Dance Recital August I Bill Hooks and Frances John son will have the principal parts in a dance recital August 1 in the Playmakers Theater. CHAPEL HILL, N. C„ FRIDAY, JULY 23, 1948 about to be caught a player on the defensive team would inter fere with the receiver. All the while the man with the movie camera would be taking a pic ture of the play. * Demonstrations q| 'MmWS/k ceivable situations went on K>r more than a week and were care fully photographed. Several copies of the film have been made for distribution and will be used for the instruction of hun dreds of football officials throughout the country. The Glorious Blossoms of the Crepe Myrtle The village and the campus are adorned with the glorious blos soms of the crepe myrtle. The trees that bear them are in rows along the streets, in churchyards and on the grounds of public buildings, alongside stone walls and fences, and in yards and gardens. Some of them are in orderly ranks like soldiers; others, as though they had re sponded to a vagabond urge in their youth, are scattered here and there. Some are boldly to the front; others are peeping timidly around the corners of houses. There are several colors of the crepe myrtle. The oldest in Chapel Hill is the purple, or maybe it should be called lavender. This is the variety you see in the Episcopal churchyard. Some people are fond of it, but to me it is a little sad-looking. There is the white, which seems the airiest and most fragile of all. The pink is delicate and charming. But the rich watermelon-red— ah! that is the crepe myrtle that is the most completely beautiful! If there be those who do not agree with me about this I will pub lish their dissent and let them convince whom they can; but they cannot convince me, because I have gazed at millions of crepe' myrtle blossoms, and have thought long and deeply about them, and my accolade is for the red. But, after all, comparisons are not the best note to strike in a discussion of this superb flower. Crepe myrtle blossoms, of what ever hue, are perfect. Gaze upon them and be happy. A certain expression that has become part of the slang of the day describes them so well that when you apply it to ihem it is not slang but the simple truth: crepe myrtle blossoms are out of this world. Chapel Hill’s Summer Heat Compared with Apulia’s By the Distinguished Visitor, Constantine Panunzio Constantine Panunzio, distin guished sociologist from Cali fornia, who taught in the first term of the University summer school, is staying in Chapel Hill a few days longer. He says he wishes he could stay on and on. He has been looking around for a lot on which, possibly, to build a home. In his delightful autobiog raphy, “The Soul of an Immi grant,” published by Macmillan —a book that is leisurely and Chapel Hill Chaff Being in New York for the Summer is not going to make Miss Mildred Mooneyhan, prin cipal of the Chapel Hill elemen tary school, miss the North Carolina Principals’ Conference here next week. “I’ll fly down to the conference Wednesday afternoon after my classes at Columbia University are over,” she writes. “I’ll get to the Raleigh-Durham airport at 5:09 and will be in Chapel Hill to have dinner before attending the 6:30 meeting.” That reminds me of another air-travel incident. When my nephew, Pembroke Rees, left for Pawley’s Island Monday morning I went to the bus station with him. Happening to look at his traveling bag, I remarked upon the padlock that secured the zipper-fastener. “I had to have that padlock broken at Athens last month,” he said. “We had made a flight from Port Lyautey in French Morocco, stopping at Algiers, Malta, and Crete. We spent the night at Athens and next morning, just as we were about to take off for Turkey, I found I had left my keys in the hotel after locking the bag. A Navy yeoman at the airport said he would get them and keep them for me. I found some pliers on the plane and broke the lock. We flew to An kara, and then to Istanbul. When we landed at Athens, on the way bade to Morocco, the first per sor I saw was the Navy yeoman. He was waving something at me Mj got off the plane. It was my day, at iHßNMiipT’lK^ight another it ■ '■' * si* 1 * * * After luncheon last Saturday Lyman Gotten noticed a bunch of fluff in the living room fire place. His mother and aunt were going to have some friends in (Continued on page four) stirring in turn, sped-up by ex citing adventure and then slowed-down by philosophical re flections—Mr. Panunzio tells of the South Italian village where he was born and brought up. - When the temperature was at 99 yesterday afternoon I asked him how the climate here compared with that of his na tive province of Apulia. “On the average the summer heat is not so oppressive in (Continued on page four) 9. Town’s Revenue and Budget Are Both Greater than Last Tear And Tax Rate Stays at $1.63 Dynamite Blast * At about 6 o’clock yesterday morning the quiet of Chapel Hill was shattered by a tremendous explosion. It could be heard aU over town, and presently people were telephoning around to find out what it was. One woman said to me: ‘T wondered if maybfe it was an atom bomb from Moscow.” ■ Making inquiries by telephone, I found that it was a dynamite blast that the contractor who is* preparing to move the school’s “Tin Can” (athletic building) had set off in order to get some rock out of the way. Lindsay Warren, Jr., who lives at, the nearby Zeta. Psi house, told me later in the morn ing that several window panes had been broken by the blast. “It bounced us around in our beds,” he said, “and gave us a bad scare.” A student in the Kappa Sigma house said: “It didn’t break any of our windows but it shook us up and scared us.” The Terrific Heat The terrific heat which began about the middle of June has continued. People in Chapel Hill are declaring that the village never before had such a long spell of hot weather so early in the summer, and the official rec ords bear this out. Just before the paper went to press yesterday afternoon, July 22, the temperature was 99. Max D. Saunders, custodian of the U. S. Weather Bureau station on the University cam pus, gives me the following rec ord ,of maximum temperatures for the 33 days June 19-July 21: June 19 92 July 6 96 20 94 7 96 21 90 8 89 22 92 9 86 on nr ■* n nn CO XU ov 24 97 11 90 25 96 12 92 26 98 13 93 27 99 14 90 28 99 15 86 29 96 16 87 30 94 17 92 July 1 90 18 97 2 88 19 96 3 94 20 94 4 97 21 99 6 98 This shows 27 days on which the maximum temperature was 90 or above, and on 12 of these it was in the upper half of the 90’s (that is, above 95). In the corresponding 33 days last year the maximum temperature was 90 or above on only 11 days. Mias Brunk Goes to Richmond Miss Betsy Brunk was called to Richmond yesterday by the illness of her father. She went by airplane. Dr. Henninger in AuguaU Dr. J. B. Henninger, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. 8. Henninger, was discharged from the army with the rank of cap tain early this month. He h»s left his former station at White Cross hospi tal, Columbus, Ohio, and has taken a permanent residency at the Oliver General hospital, Augusta, Ga. His wife has joined him therer. Mia* Coffey Returns to Richmond Miss Christine Coffey, member of the Virginia State Library staff, who was yisiting professor ber« in the library school in the first summer term, has returned to Richmond. $2 a Year li Advance. Se a Cap? Rise in Revenue Is Due Mostlr to New Buildings and to the Revaluation of Property The town's budget for this year (July 1/48 to June 30/49) is up $29,500 from the expen ditures last year; but the reve nue will be greater, too, so that there will be no increase in the tax rate. It will remain at $1.63. This is the total of the rates for town operation ($1.10), town debt service (33 cts), and school (20 cts). The budget figures are “tenta tive,” but there is, not much chance of their being changed. As required by the State’s local government law, the tentative budget is open to public inspec tion at the Town Hall. The increase in revenue is due mostly to new buildings and to property revaluation. Assessed valuation was estimated at $5,- 300,000 for last year but turned out to be $6,153,000, an increase of about 16 per cent. The prop erty tax levy this year is esti mated at $68,000, as compared with an estimated levy of $58,- 000 and an actuaHevy of $67,000 last yfear. ~ t •|j Another element in the reve nue increase is the beer and wine tax. The town got $1,884 from that last year. Under the law that allots to a municipality a share of the beer and wine tax collected within it, Chapel Hid is expected to get $4,000 from that source this year. The operating budget fer this fitft debt service budget at $35,000, a total of $153,000. The expen ditures last year were $96,500 for operation and $27,000 for debt service, a total of $123,500. Tryouts at 4 Monday For “As You Like It* Tryouts for the Carolina Play makers’ outdoor production of Shakespeare’s comedy. “As You Like It,” will be held from 4 to 6 o’clock this coming Monday afternoon at the same place that the play will be performed for the public August 19 and 20: the stage of the Forest Theatre in Battle Park. “These tryouts are open to all comers,” said the director, Sam Hirsch, yesterday. “We have parts for 17 men and 4 women. The more candidates there are, the better we’ll like it.” If you think you can act, come along; if you are doubt ful that you can act but hope so, also come along. Mr. Hirsch and his assistant judges will assess your talent, if any. If they see talent in you, they will acclaim it; if they see none, they will (my bet is) let you down easy with smooth phrases like “may be some other time” or “this just doesn’t happen to be. the sort of play that suits you.” Mr. Hirßch hopes there will be some candidates who are— well, not old, but fairly well a long in years. The melancholy Jacques is one character whb should be portrayed by a person who has lived long enough to be come something of a philosopher. Club to Hear About Polio There will be a regular meet ing of the Faculty Club Tuesday, July 27, at 1 o’clock at the Caro lina Inn. Dr. E. G. McGpvnm will speak on the polio situation. Mi*. Harry Russell's mother has cove from Ritloigh to visit but.