Vol. ,30 No. 27 Jaycees Have Good Time at Dallas, Texas Six Chapel Hillians returned from a 2,500 mile cross-country trip this week after attending the U. S. Junior Chamber of Commerce 32nd annual convention in Dallas, Texas. Those who made the trip were Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Phillips, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Ogburn, Paul Wil liams, and Roland Giduz. The first two couples traveled in the Co burns’ car; Williams and Giduz went on a specially chartered air conditioned bus. In all there were 150 Jaycees from North Carolina at the convention, which was at tended by 6,000 young men and their families from every state in the union, Alaska, and Hawaii. Dallas was comparatively cool during the week-long convention, but the trip, two and a half days each way, was made in scorching weather. Mr. Ogburn reports that the temperature was 106 degrees in the shade when he passed through Monroe, La. In Dallas most of the meetings were held in the air-conditioned hotels of the city. Williams and Giduz said they be lieved the bus was a far more comfortable mode of travel than an auto, since the interior of the 40-passenger vehicle was always pleasantly cool. Also, they said, they could get up and stretch their legs a bit whenever they wanted to. Though Chapel Hill didn’t win any special awards at the con vention, North Carolina received honors in several fields. Harry Stewart of Raleigh, the immediate past president of the N. C. Junior Chamber of Commerce, received more votes than any other candi date in being elected one of the ten national vice-presidents of the organization. He was also named as one of the five most distinguish ed state presidents in the country. The Rocky Mount Jaycees were named the top club in the country, and the Salisbury group won a similar award as one of the top five in the nation. In its first year of existence in 1948-49 the Chapel Hill Jaycees won an award for being the best first-year club in the nation. Altrusa Has Picnic At Strowds* Farm The Altrusa Club’s annual pic nic was held recently at the country home of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Strowd. Some amusing entertain ment was provided by Mrs. Alice Tuttle Steadman, who told for tunes according to the horoscopes of those present. When Mrs. Evelyn Smith, chairman of the club’s fi nance committee, saw what was going on she levied a $1 charge for each fortune told. The money thus raised will be used to help pay for the club's college scholarship giv en annually to a girl graduate of the Chapel Hill high school. Mrs. Steadman, who is curator of the Charlotte Art Museum, also exhibited some of her paintings at the picnic. Formerly a member of the staff of the University’s art department, she was here visiting Mrs. John Foushee. + . The NC Cafeteria provided box ed lunches for the picnic at $1.25 per box. Each box contained a half of fried chicken, a ham sand wich, and several other items Everybody remarked on how de licious and plentiful the food was and also how inexpensive it was. j Bastille Day Celebration The activities of the Univer sity Summer Session’s French House will be climaxed with its annual celebration of Bastille Day on the 14th of July with a banquet at Lenoir hall. The speaker will be Jacques Schricke, secretary at the French Embassy in Washing ton, D. C. French will be the language of the evening. Annual prizes award ed to French House students will be presented after the banquet, which will begin at 7 o’clock. Per sons interested in attending the event may make reservations by telephoning the French House at 9-3071, Tickets for “Blithe Spirit” Tickets for “Blithe Spirit,” to be given in the Playmakers theatre at 8:30 p.m. July 10, 11, and 12 by the Carolina Haymakers, are en sale at the organization’s busi ness office in Swain hall at $1.25 each. All seats are reserved. Tickets may be picked op now or they may be reserved by telephone or letter and picked up later. Telephone reservations should be made on week-days between 9 a.m. and 6 PJB. The Chapel Hill Weekly 5 Cents a Copy Speech Clinic In Ilesull of Teamwork —MMMMt- eeoeeec- > I fBHi ||h // Herbert Koepp-Baker, director of the children’s speech clinic being held at the elementary school, is shown here with two of his pupils listening to a play-back of a re cording of the speech class’s sing ing. The children are Michael Cooke and Jane Mangum. Michael is us ing ear phones because he is deaf. The clinic, lasting from June 10 to July 15, is being held in con nection with a teacher training course sponsored by “the Univer sity’s school of education and the North Carolina Society for Crippled Children. Mr. Koepp-Baker, one of the nation’s leading authorities in the field of children’s speech problems, is speech pathologist at the University of Illinois’s medical school. The following information about the school was supplied by an of ficial of one of its sponsoring or ganizations: “Transportation of children from The Persons to Protest to About the Destruction of Trees on the Streets For the last few days I have spent a considerable part of my time listening over the telephone, or face to face, to people who want to tell me how distressed they are about the destruction of trees on our streets. I am mighty glad to have them talk to me on this subject because I like to see that the people of Chapel Hill are just as interested in their trees, and just as eager to have them protected, as they have always been. It is natural for them to enter protests with the village newspaper editor, because a village news paper is a community medium for news and opinion. But I believe many of these citizens may like to know how they can go to “headquarters” with their protests; that is, to persons who have authority with respect to trees. First, there are Mayor I.anier and Aldermen P. L. Burch, Robert L. Fowler, G. Obie Davis, Kenneth Putnam, R. B. Fitch, and O. K. Cornwell. The town manager, Thomas D. Rose, acts at the direc tion of the aldermen. The aider men have control of the streets and sidewalks. Then, when it comes to cutting off the limbs of trees to make room for telephone and electric light wires, the man in charge is Grey Culbreth, the University’s superintendent of utilities; but he is subordinate to and answerable to J. S. Bennett, the University’s director of operations. Os course both are subject to the town gov ernment’s authority with respect to trees on the streets. The University owns both the Summer Stars Are Topic of New Show The constellations of the summer skies are identfied in “Summer Star Stories,” the new show which opened Tuesday at the Morehead Planetarium and will continue there through July 28. Perform ances are given at 8:30 p.m. seven days a week, at 3 p.m. Saturdays, at 3 and 4 p.m. Sundays, and a special 3 o’clock matinee will be givdh tomorrow, Friday, July 4. The show lasts about 50 minutes. During the demonstration the names and stories connected with the various heavenly patterns known as constellations are told. Anthony Jenzano, Planetarium di rector, said that these stories have been passed on through several thousand years and added that they will help considerably in the Ross and Raney Coming Hero Dr. Robert A. Rota, obstetrician and gynecologist in tho Duke Uni versity Medical School, and Dr. R. Beverly Raney, orthopedic sur geon at Watts hospital in Durham, have resigned from their positions to head departments of the Univer sity Medical School hers. Hillsboro and other parts of Orange county is being provided by the Orange county chapter of the North Carolina Society for Crip- j pled Children. A mother of one of the children brings five children to the clinic and stays each day to take them home. Her waiting time is used in observing the clin ics, auditing a psychology class, and learning much about her child, herself, and her family problems. A teacher brings three children from Durham and a mother calls for them. “The children receive a mid morning snack of milk and cookies. The milk is being donated by three Chapel Hill dairies, a taxicab comp any delivers it for two of the dairies, and a teacher provides the cookies. “The children have lots of fun. Imagine their delight when they saw the University’s swimming pool (Continued on page 5) electric light and power system and the telephone system. I am not sure whether the line of command from Mr. Bennett upward runs to Assistant Controller and Business Manager Teague or (o Chancellor House or to Vice-Piresident and Controller William D. Carmichael, jr. Nobody expects the University's high-up administrative offices to give day-to-day attention to mat ters like the stringing of light and telephone wires, but when these operations bear upon anything as important as the protection of Chapel Hill’s trees and come to be of deep concern to the Chapel Hill community, then the University chieftains may be reasonably ex pected to take a hand. Night before last Mr. Voorhis telephoned me that a telephone wire-stringing crew were chopping off limbs in front of his Nash (Continued on page 5) Calendar of Events Tuesday, July 8 8 p.m., Gerrard Hall, lecture on “Are you a Unitarian without Knowing It?” by A. J. G. Priest. Wednesday, July. 9 8 p.m., Caldwell hall, lecture on “Humanism or Existentialism,” by Enrique de Ezcurra. Thursday, July 10 8:30 p.m., Hill Music hall, free concert, by Summer Session Chor us directed by William Whitesides. Betty Zouck Gone to Camp Miss Betty Zouck, daughter of Mrs. Henry Zouck, left last Mon day for a six-weeks stay at Old Mill Camp at Whitsett, N. C. rapid identification of many in dividual stars. To make the picture more vivid, figures are superimposed on the Planetarium sky. "Many people think that as tronomers must be possessed of very vivid imaginations to see these pictures in the sky,” Jen zano said. “Actually, the profes sional astronomer is likely not to think at all of the rich heritage of tradition and history that lies behind the constellations. His con cern is normally only with the named area embraced by these legendary heroes or mythical creatures.” Bullocks Move to New Jersey Mr. and Mrs. W. D. Bulloch and Mrs. Bulloch’s aunt, Mrs. Charles Stancell, spent several days in En field last week on a visit to Mrs. Bulloch’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Whitaker. They returned Sunday njorning, and the Bullocha left Sunday afternoon for Madieon, N. J., where they win nuke their home. CHAPEL HILL, N. C., THURSDAY, JULY 3, 1952 Weather Turns Cool; Top Was 1011/ 2 A mass of cold air coming from Canada early this week broke the longest, toughest hot spell the country has known-.for many years. The temperature fell to 65 in Chapel Hill day before yester day morning. The weather was delightful through the day and in bed that night people were pulling up the covers. And yesterday was another cool day. (It started that way, anyhow. The air was cool when this was written.) Chapel Hill’s top tempera ture in the hot spell was 101 Va last Friday, June 27. Thurs day the 26th, with a top of 100, was the day for which I reported 95, but that was because I was turning in my final piece of copy to the lino type before noon and I had to take a morning figure. I hedged by saying the mer cury might go higher; and it did, before the paper had quit rolling off the press. Max D. Saunders, custod ian, of the U. S. Weather Bu reau station here, reports maximums of 100 on the 28th, 97 on the 29th, and 91 on the 30th. The average maximum in June was 92.8 (it was 88.71 in June 1951) and the average minimum in June was 66.7 (it was 62.6 in June 1951.) The June rainfall was 2.25 in 1952; it was 3.27 in 1951. Hot Weather at the Beach Mr. and Mrs. Bill Walston en countered the hottest weather of their lives last Thursday at More head City, where the temperature went up to 107 degrees. They were spending the week at nearby At lantic Beach Mr. Walston’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Wal ston of Nashville, N. C. Mr. Wal ston said yesterday that Morehead City was the hottest place in the nation that day. Coach Studies for Ph.D. Sam Barnes, the University’s wrestling coach, is studying for a Ph.D. degree in English. Business Buildings and Homes Cooled While University and Municipal Workers Swelter Air-conditioning is the trade name for it, but let’s just call it air-cooling. People who sell the cooling apparatus teii you about how it keeps the air at a uniform temperature all the year round, but nobody’s interested now in the tempera ture of last winter or next win ter. The temperature we are all interested in now is the summer temperature. We have had for a long time fur naces, and for a still longer time fireplaces and stoves, to heat the air in winter. Modem gadgets make the heat more regular and save us the trouble of going down to the basement to put fuel in the furnace, but the air-condition ing function that we really care about is not heating but cooling. As I have inquired into air cooling in Chapel Hill, in these last few days of extreme heat, I have been impressed by the great progress made in the cooling of business establish ments and homes and the very William T. Couch’* Now Post William T. Couch, former direc tor of the University of North Carolina Press, has become editor in-chief of Collier’s Encyclopedia and Collier’s Year Book. Mr. Couch went from here in 1946 to be di rector of the University of Chi cago Press and was in that post for five years. He was president of the Association of American University Presses in 1941-42. Henry House to Return Soon Mr. and Mrs. Henry House will return soon from New York, where Mr. House has been doing graduate work at Columbia University for tha past year. He will rejoin tho physical education and athletic staff of the University bora. Chapel Hill Chaff Early one morning a few weeks ago I heard a bob-white sounding its cheerful notes under my window, and in writing about the incident I said it supported me in my practice, for which I am some times derided in a good natured way, of calling Chapel Hill a village. I said that no ' place -where bob-whites run j around in people’s yards had lost its village character. There is plenty more evi dence, of a like nature, that Chapel Hill does not deserve to be degraded to the status of a city. For example, Gra ham Creel, the policeman, was telling me last week that one night he heard a whippoorwill calling near one of our most crowded street corners. And today Mrs. Mebane tells me that yesterday she saw a mule running loose on East Frank lin street. It was trotting at a leisurely pace, up the slope eastward from the Umstead to the MacNider home. It had caused a following car to slow down, and that car had caused the next one to slow down, and so on until there were about a dozen cars form ing a procession led by the mule. A scene like that is a village, not a city, scene. Speaking of the words city, town, and village: as a descriptive term, anybody is free to use whichever of the three he likes best. There is nothing to keep anybody who likes to think of Chapel Hill as a city from calling it that, and some persons do so. Legal ly, Chapel Hill is a town. It is so designated in its char ter and in statutes relating to it. Its enecutLe officer is this town manager, its tax rate is the town tax rate, its govern ment is the town’s govern ment. I use the word town in these phrases and also in everyday phrases such as “in the middle of town," “out-of town guests,” “from one end (Continued on page 5) little progress made in the cdoling of public buildings. That makes a sharp divid ing line between the Univer sity and the Town of Chapel Hill, but there is one place in the Town that belongs in the University division. That is the Town Hall. The basis of the division, then, is the source of- the money needed for cooling. The man or wom an employed in a restaurant or store or bank has cool air to work in, but the man or woman employed by the State or the municipality must work in the terrible exhaust ing heat. The idea seems to be that “the taxpayers’ money” must (Continued on page t) Unitarian Leader Will Speak Tuesday A. J. G. Priest, prominent New York lawyer who is teaching a course on public utilities in the University Summer Session, will speak at 8 p.m. Tuesday in Ger rard hall on “Are You a Unitar ian without Knowing It?” His talk is being sponsored by the Unitar ian Fellowship of Chapel Hill. Everybody is invited. Mr. Priest, who makes his home in Summit, N. J., is a partner in Reid & Priest, with offices in New York. He is a specialist in public utilities. A native of Nebraska, he practiced law in Idaho for five years with the Idaho Power Co. and in New York for 23 year* with Reid t Murphy. He is a member of the New York and the American Bar Associations. A well-known Unitarian layman, Mr. Priest i* chairman of the Middle Atlantic States Council for Correction in Sherbet Ad In the Dairyland Farms adver tisement on page six sherbet should be priced at 65 cent* a half-gallon inetead of 65 oonta 11 gallon. Muirhead Plans a Lake and An Azalea Garden on Tract He Bought from Paul Green Tree Full of Foliage Is Cut Down A big elm tree full of' flourishing foliage, on West Franklin street, was cut down I 'Monday. (The trunk was still (standing yesterday, but all the : rest of the operation was to i be done as soon as possible.) The final decision to cut the tree down was made by Mayor Edwin S. Lanier and Aider man Kenneth Putnam and G Obie Davis on the basis of their own inspection and the advice of the man-on-the-job for Armstrong Tree Service, Incorporated. - It was early in the morn ing, at the start of the limb lopping, when I got my first telephone call from a citizen who was distressed at the spectacle. The calls continued during the day. The callers spoke in despairing tones. They said they wished there were some way of stopping the destruction of trees on our streets. This tree stood ne. A the Johnson-Strowd-Ward furni ture store in front of a vacant (Continued on page 5) Chorus Is to Give Concert Next Week The Summer Session Chorus will give a public concert at 8:30 p.m. Thursday, July 10, in Hill hall. Ad mission is free. The chorus will be directed by William Whitesides, with Almonte Howell assisting at the piano and harpsichord. The featured number will be Bach’s Capita 106, “God’s Time Is the Beet.” The program will also include three madrigals by Palestrina, Gibbons, and Mor ley, and two American works, “Be Glad Then America,” by William Billings, America’s earliest com poser, and “Alleluia,” by the con temporary composer, Randall Thompson. During the Bach cantata the chorus will be assisted by three soloists, John Park, tenor; George Muns, bass, and Maurine Synan, alto, and a small orchestra of flutes and strings. Interns Here for One Day Twenty-two interns who are to serve in the University’s new hos pital came to Chapel Hill Tuesday to begin work according to their contract. But the hospital is not ready for them, so they are being “farmed out” for two months to various hospitals in the State. They will return September 1, the new date set for the hospital opening. In the course of their day here they were taken around the medical center on orientation tours and were entertained by the clinical chiefs of staff at luncheon at the Berryhill farm. Jamee Waller Is Here James Waller, former University graduate student who has been teaching economics at Texas A. and M. College, has returned here and is doing work toward a Ph.D. de gree. that denomination. He is chair man of the board of directors of Federal Union and on the execu tive council of United World Fed eralists. He is also a member of the Masons, Phi Beta Kappa, Beta Theta Pi, the Union League and Down Town Association of New York and the Metropolitan Club of Washington. An Appeal about a Lost Dog Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Kirby, jr., of 223-B East Rosemary lane are still hoping for news of their dog, Poochy, who disappeared near the post office the night of June 11. In an appeal for help in finding him, Mrs. Kirby writes: “He is 6 months old, weighs 10 pounda, has slender body and long legs. He is brown and white with rather long hair slightly curly at the ears. Tail is a brush of whitish long hair. Muzzle is long, slender, and black. He looks sort of like a cross between spits and collie, but Is small like his mother, a rat terrier.” The Kirby phone num ber is 9-5168. $2 a Year in County; $3:60 in Bast of N. C., Va., and S. C.; $4 Elsewhere in U. S. William Muirhead has ex tended his holdings of land to the rear of Glen Lennox, his apartment house development, j by buying a tract of 45 acres from Paul Green. This tract 'lies alongside the new bypass ; connecting the Chapel Hill- Durham highway with the Chapel Hill-Raleigh highway. Mr. Muirhead has told friends that he plans to make of it some sort of park with a lake and an azalea garden and perhaps other attractions. He hasn’t told all the details of the project, maybe because he hasn’t yet decided on all of them. But it is sure that he is going to revise nature up ward—that is, in the direction of beauty. The tract is some what on the bleak side now, being a tangle much of which is swampy in wet weather. Mr. Muirhead, starting with his bulldozers and proceeding on to lake-building and the planting of shrubs, flowers, and grass, is going to make it as nearly like Paradise as possible. Paul Green has decided to build a road about 2,000 feet long to connect Greenwood road, the main thoroughfare of the Greenwood suburb, with the bypass, and he hopes to have it completed before fall. It will leave Greenwood road some 200 or 300 yards from the Green home and go through the woods to join the bypass near the 45-acre tract bought by Mr. Muirhead. Thus it will convert Green wood road, which now runs to a dead-end at tha Green home, into a road open at both ends. Work on the 86-apartment extension to Glen Lennox has been delayed by tie-ups in Washington and on the steel front, and so the hope of hav ing the apartments ready by early fall has had to be given up. Some Stores Will Have 2-Day Holiday The following business establish ments will be closed all day to morrow, Friday, July 4, and all day Saturday, July 5: Bank of Chapel Hill, Carolina Flbwer Shop, Carolina Sport Shop, Caston Motor Company, Chapel Hill Motors, Coman Lumber Comp any, Electric Construction Comp any, Fitch Lumber Company, John Foushee Real Estate and Insurance Company, J. B. Goldston Lumber Company, Hazzard Motor Comp any, Home and Auto Supply Store, Ledbetter-Pickard, Knight-Camp bell Hardware Store, Jack Lip man’s, Sol Lipman’s, Little Shop, Orange Plumbing and Heating Company, Public Service of Chapel Hill, Town and Campus, Univer sity Florist, University Printery, Varley’s Men’s Shop, Wentworth and Sloan, and the Yarn Shop. Kimsey King Marries A. K. (Kimsey) King, jr., of Chapel Hill and Mjss Marjorie Jeon Fisher of Morgantown, W. Va., were married June 22 at the Wes leyan Memorial church in Morgan town. Mr. King’s parents and his brother, Dennis, and sister, Mary Ann, went from here for the wed ing. Mary Ann, who is six years old, was flower girl. The bride was formerly the young women’s social director at the YWCA in Durham. The couple are living at 737 South Williams St., Denver, Col., where the groom is stationed with the U. S. Air Force. Ralph Boggs in Korea Pfc. Ralph Karl Boggs, son of Mrs. Marian Boggs, is now sta tioned in Korea not far from the front lines. His address is Pfc. Ralph Karl Boggs ER14307790, "A” Btry. Bth FA Bn., APO 25, Care of Postmaster, San Fran cisco, California. Prsobytsrian Circle Mooting Circle No. 11l of the Presby terian Women es the Choreh will meet at 8 pan. Monday, July t, with Mrs. Arthur Brawn at Iff l Jackson Circle, Yietaty Village.