VoL 33 No. 1 Income From Tobacco Crop Seriously Off The gross return from Orange county's chief money crop, tobacco, was $400,000 less in 1954 than in 1953, it was reported to the County Commissioners last Monday M County Farm Agent Don mthesoo. Total returns for the 1954 crop are expected to he about $2,000,000, as compared to about $2,400,- N 0 for the 1953 crop, which amounted to $1,000,000 less than the 1952 crop. Last summer’s prolonged drought was Warned for the 1954 drop. In addition to Mr. Mathe son's report, farm reports were made to the commiss ioners by his assistant, Ed Barnes, and Home Demon stration Agent Ruth Thomp son and her assistant, Kath ryn Pritchett. AU four were' praised by the commission ers for their work during l pUast year. iuuwi women organized two lie* home demonstra tion ciubs in the county dur ing the year. Miss Thompson said. She added that about 500 rural women are now iakirg part in the program in the county. feMr. Matheson and Mr. nrnes said 1954 was a bad year for the county’s poul try-men and cattle farmers. They blamed this chiefly on the price-costs squeeze and described plans for a 1955 program to foster greater efficiency and help farmers bold on to the gains already Mr. Matheson said that one of the year's more en couraging notes was the ex pansion of irrigation pro jects to combat drought on the county’s tobacco farms. He said that tobacco on irri gated farms averaged about $909 per acre more than be fore irrigation. Bennetts Have Big Time in New York *>k. *ai Mr*. J. S. Bennett Sew to Near York kit week for s *w4kj vacation and had a fine tan* Thnyfiiaa. Coins to (hoars, and richtoeeinc ~UV didn't have any plans or dleuim,* Mr. Bennett told a friend tare when they returned. "Me just went out on the town and hard n pad tune." They saw fans radio shows, a ultnsta shew, and two stage shows. “The Seven-Year Itch" and “The Solid Gold Cadillac." 4 one of the radio studio shows Mrs. teamen's name was drawn far pact ni|-atria ia a contest show the next day, but she ynldst take part because that the day they were to leave] On their return trip Mr. and Mn. tenant tad a rsasrvad seat ia a dag reach that left New York at M am. and arrived ia Raleigh at T:tt pm Be said .they ea jeyed ridnt a treia ia the day- Ume and aeesag the eountryaide. •and tame en that train.’* Mr. tenant! aaid. “The entertain un far nil passengers at four attach in the afternoon." '%\Stady unit martingi of the Isogus es Wemaa Voters will be MM anal matt aa follows Unit I at M am Ttooday at the homo ed Mr*. IA Btakwed on Dog amad drive; Unit 2 at • pm tatty an the Team Hall; Unit 8 at • pm Vadtaaday at the Tana MnR; Unit 4 at pae. Ihmwdny at the heme of Mrs. L ftygy Battel mm Oahweed drive; \ Cast 6 at I pm Ttaraday with Man Batter Tgler and Miss Lncy ttaskhac a Bmanr tor nf the Fabric Shop en West *ie toner there ia nothing to the Upg Kiwanis Club Installs Officers and Directors gHk B•> 'vr \ . ■ gi, iV . w- The ten Chapel Hill citi-| zens pictured above will] ?er\e as officers and direc tors of the Kiwanis Club for 1955. They were formally installed this week at the regular Tuesday evening meeting by*Spurgeon Boyce of Durham, past District j Governor. Seated, left to Liberal and Conservative Views about Spending for Various Public Services By John W. I'm* Usd, Jr. Orange County's Representative in the Legislature As the time for the con vening of the Legislature draws near we hear more and more speculation about ! whether this member or that member is a liberal or a con servative. Having been ac-j cused froai ttom|Mkto #fj being an 'during Hie pass ' atwral) years, given some thought] to what is meant by the two terms. Over the years I have] watched those who were call ed liberals and those who were called conservatives in their reaction to proposed legislation. In the main those called liberals have been those most apt to recognize neces-j sary services that the State I should render its citizens and who were willing to raise the money to pay for ] these services although it might mean more taxes for |themselves as well as others.! Those called conservatives; have been those who seemed to minimize necessary serv ices and who wished to raise lonly those taxes that were absolutely necessary even j though such action meant {sacrificing many services that make life worth living in our State. The real attitude of these groups was ahoton when a bond issue for secondary roads and school buildings was passed on by the voters. The liberals supported the bond issue because they saw Volunteer Workers Get Down to Real Business as March of Dimes Is Begun The March es Dimes drive in .Orange county get off to a good start this week with 6,000 let ters, containing special checks sad reply envelopes, being mailed to families throughout the Chapel Hill towns hip, and posters and cote containers being placed in ■tores nil over the county. E. C. Smith, campaign chair man, announced that Miss Sarah Umstead would direct the collect ing of contributions te the the atre*, and that Mr*. Kempton Jons* would head the annual Mother's March, which will ho hold later in the month. The col lecting of contributions in the theatres will begin Sunday and will last for one week. Plane are now being made for a special window display at TtaU’s Bstarr Jernlgaa. to deoign and —to a display tor The Chapel Hill Weekly 5 Cents a Copy | right, are Carlyle Shepard, (director; Frank Umstead, vice-president; Dick Jamer -1 son, president; Raymond Knight, secretary, and : Douglas Fambrough, treas urer. Standing are Rogers Wade, immediate past presi dent, and Charlie Hubbard, ' Arnold King, Harvey Ben in it a better way of life for those who lived in the rural sections. The conservatives said that neither the pro posed roads nor the school {buildings wore necessary and j cautioned the voters about {bonds, and the program was was almost completed with in a three-year period. To day there are very few of our citizens, even of the ultra-conservative class, who will not admit that this bond : issue, instead of damaging the State’s economy, has greatly improved it. | During the last session of the Legislature, when it was proposed to allot the 14 mil lions in the surplus to the various institutions and agencies that needed addi tional facilities and to com plete the building program for the mentally ill there was the same old cry from the conservatives. Regard less of the necessity they (Continued on page 2) Cemmenity Club Meeting The Community Club will meet ■t 3 o’clock this (Friday) after noon at the Episcopal parish house. Mrs. Bernard Boyd, chairman of the literature depart ment, will have charge of the program. Mrs. Henry Myers will review the book, "Southern Folk lore." Members of the club's American home department will be hostesses. ' Mary Frances Kellam was in charge of the mailing of letters, and Duka Williams, in Chapel Hill, and the Lions club, in Hills boro, distributed the posters and the coin boxes. The letters pointed out the need for everyone to "contribute as much aa you can to the March of Dimes so that we can take care of our polio victims and •peed the prevention of this dread disease." The letters said that there were 980 new cases of polio in North Carolina in 1964, nnd that four of these were ia Orange county. Feast of Lights Service The Feast of Lights will ho colobrated with a special sorvieo at the Chapel of the Cress this Sunday night, January 9, at 8 •'clack. It is a symbolic service depicting the coming ci Christ te bs the light mi the world, and tot carrying mi the tight to all people everiwtace. Everyone to invited te attend and > Http Hi i* the peseta* CHAPEL HILL, N. C., FRIDAY, JANUARY 7, 1955 nett, and Richmond Sloan, all directors. Rogers Wade delivered a short talk on his year of service, and then turned the gavel over to president elect Jamerson. To close out the program Clyde Carter, pro gram chairman for the year, called on several members to offer suggestions and advice .hat would make the club more worthwhile to its mem bers and jpmmunity in 1955. An outdoor grill was presented to Rogers Wade by the dub. Sammerlia te Go With Princess 8m BatotoerNa, Associated Press correspondent for Cabo, the Caribbean Islands, and Contra! America, telephoned te hla parents, Mr. aad Mrs. Irl Summerlin, on Now Year's Day. hto Nth [ told them he w** fMM A SB York to ictenpisf IttMß Margaret when she goes on her tear of the British possessions in the West Indies. Calendar of Events Friday, January 7 a 3 p.m. Community Club, Epis copal parish house. Saturday, January 8 a 6:30 p.m. Freshman basketball, UNC vs. Wake Forest, Wool len gymnasium. a 3 p.m. Twelfth Night Kevtuls, Playmakers theatre, a 8:16 p.m. Varsity basketball, UNC vs. Wake Forest, Wool len gymnasium. Sunday, January 9 a 8 p.m. Community Drama Croup. Library assembly room. a 8 p.m. Feast of Lights service, Chapei of the Cross. Monday, January 10 o 7:30 p.m. Tournament bridge, Graham Memorial. Tuesday, January 11 o 2:30 p.m. Newcomers Club, Li brary assembly room. • 3 p.m. Community Club’a in ternational relations group, home of Mrs. J. P. Harland. • 7:30 p.m. Philological Club, choral room, Hill hall. • 8 p.m. Rise Stevens concert, Memorial hall. • 8 p.m. American Association of University Women, 106 Hanes hall. # 8 p.m. Catholic Women’s Guild, Catholic rectory. Wednesday, January 12 a 8:16 p.m. Ed Wivaa club, home of Mrs. George E. Shepard, Thursday, Janaary II • 8 p.m. B’nai B’rith, Hillel house. Newcomers Club Meeting W. J. Meyer will talk on “Pic tures In Home Decorations” at a meeting of the Faculty New comen Club at 2:80 p.m. Tues day, January 11, in the Univers ity Library's assembly room. At an informal tea following the talk the hostesses will be Mrs. Joseph Gorrity (chairman), Mrs. Robert Gray, Mrs. Charles Bream, Mrs. Ernest Wood, Mrs. Owen J. Young, and Mrs. George Smith.» * NeWaua te Give Talk William Newman of the Uni versity's music department win' address the Philological Huh at 7JO p-aa. Tuesday, January U,! to the etoral mm mi HU toll.! tare and matte- ttaea | Basketball Game Will Be Televised Here Tomorrow WUNC-TV, the Univers ity’s jaleviaion station, will be tflßmt sta tion in this the country to a live telecast of a basketball game, daring its first eve ihg of operation tomorrow (Saturday). The big TV cameras will be set up In Woollen gym nasium to transmit the vars ity and freshman games be tween the University and Wake Forest. The freshman game will begin at 6:30, and the varsity game is expected to start at about 8:15. The play-by-play announ cing for both games will be handled by Frank Waldman, television sports director for the Consolidated University. Mr. Waldman is an experi enced sports writer and broadcaster. Prior to com- : ng to Chapel Hill he was the west coast sports editor of the Christian Science Moni for. The basketball broadcast will be the first in a series of game telecasts over the University station on Chan nel 4. University policy is that sports is an integral part of the student program, and therefore is definitely in keeping with the idea of an educational television sta tion. WUNC-TV will present broadcasts of a number of different sports in the fu ture, both from State Col lege in Raleigh and from the University here. Saturday night’s varsity basketball game is expected to be an exeiting contest, Isincethe players will include ■Hjmo top scorers of the ■Me Coast Conference. Btekte Hemric of Wake For rest and Lennie Rosenbluth of the University. Both players were elected to the all-tournament team of the recent Dixie Classic. If Suburban Fire District Is Approved, Full Protection Won’t Come Right Away The Board of County Commis sioners, meeting in Hillsboro on Monday, were told not to worry about the county's being liable for suit if it cannot provide ade quate fire protection to the pro posed new fire control district immediately after an election establishes the district The statute governing fire dis tricts says the county must fur nish fire protection “to the extent of taxes collected.” According to Chairman R. J. M. Hobbs of Chapel Hill, "That means wo don’t have to have a complete fire fighting unit until we get the taxes to pay for it.” The fire district station, which involves a sweeping suburban area on three sides of Chapel Hill, U scheduled for April 12. The commissioners will make a decision at their February meet ing on how many polling places will bo needed for the election. Boms discussion was raised at Governor’s Address Televised Through University Equipment m m -’-..0,, ../■ . mm Hi |§g I m Jj| #u*cTv Ikl/i TIV I | Ms I I 111 I f I r JMH* j iu n V/l ’ V , ygm - •;; This IrlghtfrjrtrMff has bwmm tbs aioMl# tiluliioß equipment of the asw University educational station, WUNC-TV, which bagtos Tts regular brond •rotoif attMtto* tt 6* par- to Chapel Mill Chaff L. G. Mrs. John M. Booker, who is in Savannah visiting her son-in-law and daugh ter, Dr. and Mrs. Lee How ard, tells, in a letter to a friend here, about questions her two young granddaugh ters have been asking her. At Christmas, when they had been hearing the story of Bethlehem, the older one, Julie said: “Were you here when Jesus was born?” A few days later the younger one, Nellie, probably having in her mind tales from American history that she | had heard from her kinder garten teacher, said: “Gran, were you here in the olden times, and did you steal; your land from the Indians?” * * * * The University String Quartet gave a fine perform ance Tuesday evening. I noticed that for two thirds of the concert it was not a quartet but a quintet. Why a company is proclaimed a quartet and then performs more often as a quintet than as a quartet—this is one of Uhe many things about 'music that I do not under stand. The next time I see Glen Haydon I will ask him to explain it to me. The program consisted of hree four-part pieces: first, one by Mozart; next, one by Bartok; last, one by Brahms. The fourth part of the Brahms piece was down on the printed program as: “Vivace ma non troppo presto." I asked Mrs. Wal ter Golde, a distinguished muaician, whom I met in the aisle when the concert end ed, what these words meant. She said they meant “Lively but not too fast.” I might Itove worked that out from my small surviving knowU edge of Latin but I liked better to have it told to me by a beautiful woman. I enjoyed immensely the pieces by Mozart and (Continued on page 12) the board meeting about the ad visability of putting a polling place at the Glenwood school. There was some feeling that Glen residents are liable to vote against setting up the fire district, since they already have fire protection. The commissioners heard re quest* from Sheriff Odell Clay tun and Clerk of Court Ed Lynch that their salaries be raised. Present salaries stand at $4,400 for Mr. Lynch, and 84,100 for Mr. Clayton. Mr. Clayton won support from the board on another request, to provide an extra $l7O for the re maining ttx months of this fiscal year to help Deputy Sheriff Buck Knight defray automobile ex penses incurred in his dutiss. Mr. Clayton originally asked that Mr. 1 Knight’s automobile allowance be increased from $760 to $1,060 per year te put his allowance in Una (Continued on pags 18) to tto University by Carolina m —n ITIUwi/l, Tto bus was In Kalttfb yeeer dty (Ttarsd»y),wtar» kto tam gptwtoto ttWtt toty m* te $3 a Year in County; oihor rotas a* png* S After More titan Two Tears Os Planning, the University’s Television Station Will Begin Operations Tomorrow Night Jet Pilot Here For A Day** Vi.it This ia M.C.S. Noble, 3rd, who v/as here last Sunday on a visit to his aunt, Miss Alice Noble. He has completed his ground train ing at the Navy Air Force’s base at Pensacola, Florida, and is now about to begin his flight train ing as a jet pilot. He and his traveling compan ion, a fellow pilot, stopped here on their wsy back to Pensacola by r.utomobile after a vacation in the North. Mark called on some of his old-time friends. In the course of the day the young men had a good long sleep because they were going tc. drive all right in order to make the early i morning roll-call. Red Cross Chooses Campaign Director Roland McClamrach, chairman of the Chapel Hill chapter of the American Rad Cross, announces that Mrs. Robert H. Wetteeh will be chairman of the chapter’s an nual drive, to be held the first week In March. The goal of the drive will to about |B.OOO. Seventy per eemt of thia amount will bo used by the local chapter in this community, while 30 per cent ia sent to head quarters of the Red Cross for its national relief and disaster work. Committee members to be ap pointed by Mrs. Wattach will be cnnounced later. Community Club Meeting The Community Club’s inter national relations group will meet at S p.m. Tuesday, January 11, at the home of Mrs. J. P. Harl and on Laurel Hill road. Mias Arendine Kimmel will speak on 'The Netherlands.” Hostessss will be Mrs. W. W. Cort and Mrs. Harland. Catholic Women's Meeting The Catholic Women’s Guild will hold its January meeting at 8 p.m. Tuesday, January 11, at the rectory on Pittsboro street Hostesses will be Mrs. Alma White and Mrs. Virginia Murray. All membars are urged to attend. Ed Wives Club Meeting ! The January meeting of the Ed Wives Club will be held at 8:15 p.m. Wednasday, January 12, at the home of Mrs. George lE. Shepard In Westwood. oddness to ton joint session of tto General Assembly. Sines (to University station to not yot en tto afar, llig governor's spoech ««• reitoto ttOMNMNtaI ««*t Following more than two years of planning aad hard work, the Consolidated Uni- ’ versity’s educational tele vision station, WUNC-TV a* channel 4, will begin opera* tions at 5:30 tomorrow afternoon (Saturday). The station will broadcast its programs from studios at all three branches of the University Chapel Hill, Woman’s College at Greens boro, and State College at Raleigh. The use of mobile transmitting equipment will also enable the station to broadcast from almost any place in this section of the state. The WUNC-TV transmit ter, which sends all the pro grams out on the airwaves, is located on Terrell’s Moun tain, about eight mites southeast of Chapel Hill in Chatham county. This lo cation guarantees excellent reception not only in this area but within a hundred mile radius of the tower. The station operates on VHF—Very High Frequen cy—which means it can be received by all TV seta, with out the use of any special adapters. It transmits with 100,000 watts power, the maximum permissible under Federal Communications Commission regulations. The addition of WUNC TV to the television family of this part of North Caro lina means that viewers in Chapel Hill will now have a choice of three VHF sta tions —»the University ela tion. WFMY-TV in Greens boro, and AVTVD in Dur ham. Persons with sets capable,of receiving UHF stations ■ also can watch WNAO-TV in Raleigh. With in the next two years a new VHF station is expected to be approved for Rateigh, but (Continued on peg* If) Used Clothes Are Asked for by Shop An appeal for used clothing is issued by officials of the Thrift Shop, which is operated on West Franklin by the P.T.A. organi xations of the Chapel Hill pub lic schools. “As you clean up after Christ mas,” the appeal says, “remember that the Thrift Shop needs the things you no longer want. Some body can use the old coat you re placed. The new sweater which doesn’t match anything you have will keep someone else warm.” Contributions may bo dropped in collection barrels at Fowler’s Food Store and at Dairy land Farms in Glen Lennox. Or If you want them picked up at your homo eall Mrs. Karr White at 4268. Notice to Pans Bank Hotter* Holders of University athletic passbooks will have to axchaage ■tuba for tickets at tto Woollen gymnasium box office by not inter than If o’clock noon to morrow (Saturday) in order to ■ttend the Carolina-Waks Forest basketball game to bo playod bore at f:18 pan. tomorrow in the gymnasium. This applies te students, faculty members, aad University employees aliko. Tto gams will bo preceded at 4:11 by a game between the Carolina ahd Wake Forest freshman teams, Ctaryl Birewd Wins Contest Cheryl Btrowd, who was eleven years old on New Year's Dap, recently won first prise la a | talent program in Greensboro. Her winning performance was i mads up of a ballot aad an acre- j batic number. Than wort to other entrants in tto contest Cheryl has studied dancing under Mr. tn*li.h Dagby. NW B IfMWHfHp g wWMB *'■