Sri. 33 No. 14 Kivil Defense Discussed by ( County Board Khapel Hill and the coun ■ at large would be swamp ■ with refugees if an Homk or hydrogen bomb Kould be released over Eurham or Raleigh, say Civil DBfense authorities. ■ The job of preparing for Hhese thousands of refugees Knd the caring for them with ■he necessary medical sup- Kies, food, clothing, and Shelter would be the job of ■he Orange county Civil Defense organization, at ■present developing very ■slowly under the tireless I efforts of W. G. Wienn, [ county Civil Defense direc- I tor, who has been receiving I “very poor” cooperation I from people throughout the I county. j In truth, Orange county’s Civil Defense is far from being prepared for the ef fects of such an attack. How ever, the Red Cross in Chapel Hill and throughout the county has a plan or plans for just such an emer gency, but that organization isn’t free to put any of these into effect unless called upon to do so by the county’s Civil ■fcfenae organization. This discussion was raised Monday at the County Com missioners’ meeting in the Court House in Hillsboro when Mr. Wrenn informed the members of the board that Durham had been de signated as a target area and that Orange county had been named a “reqpptfon area” and could expqct jm Inti mated 25,000 refUMM jghJ in an hour in the|Ki| such sn attack. Wimre, after pointfhg nut that “the American people when emergency comes will get out and do miracles, but until that emergency comes they will do nothing,” re quested that the board help finance a survey of the coun ty to find out how many re fltoes the county could imse and otherwise provide for. The opinions of the com (Continued oa page 8) Walter Rabb Talks At Kiwanis Meeting Walter Rabb of the Univers ity's baseball coaching staff talk ed to his fellow Kiwuntans at their Tuesday evening SMtting about the University’s baseball team and Chapel Hill’s newly or ganised Little League teams, ga A special guest was Bill Ay wck, jr., a Little League player, who was dressed in a uniform es the league. He end Mr. Rabb demonstrated some of the right ways and wrong ways of hitting and fielding. The program was directed by Clyde Carter. Jaycees Are Happy Over Prospects for Minstrel Show Safe. *%Bmr muni • , .•■ - r 'JHI j,A * - f. W- <■•■ a ■-v w’ 9| H I .Hi ._ HI J {Hp^^wjSH ::^ ■> .••• ; HrtßSi4^Bßr 9 JHHiPHBhH ■■ ypMUB .jI^HsBTCJ^^HP HBL Soffit MMyK|M|| ■>, /■■ ft 8 ■ i ’ jjl||R *- >. , ; :JH| »§» w ® The SM Jeypeen to ttt Ihw |M» m a sssHes wver the IMS edition of the •'Cork end Cm MtototreT which the Jay ease will ,r a# ts ss *» n») h«* **► Little Leaguers Acre Gager for Action w T ' ~'if nHnßm f ■ • /ml J These four candidates for first-string berths on baseball teams in Chapel Hill’s newly or ganized Little League are (left to right) Kent Evans of son of Mr. and Mrs. Tern Evens of Carrboro; Vance Barron, Dodgers, son of the Rev. and Mrs. Vance Barron; Bill Aycock, Yankees, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Aycock, and Johnny Alkott, Indians, son of Public Is Invited to See 31 Plays at Spring Drama Festival Here Next Week The Carolina Dramatic Asso ciation’s 32nd annual spring fes tival will be held here from Thursday through Saturday of next week under the direction of John W. secre tary of the asseciation and busi ness manager es the Carolina Playmakers. Thirty-one plays, all winners of recent district festival*, will be (given in' the Playmakers theatre |tote|Mtehejmg| to the public. BQjMMphll p* Wi» be PnESvitr htth whoou. ait '•wukP'WNHmois, Junior colleges, and three senior aoUegas will ha represented in these performances. Other plays wil be given by private schools, two special guest groups, and community theatre groups. The program will also include a special theatre arts exhibit, contests in make-up and costum ing, the showing of selected Aims New Scout Troop Planned A suppe- and parents’ rally were held last night at the Carr boro Baptist church by the Lions Club for the purpose of organiz ing a new Boy Scout troop. The supper was prepared under the direction of Mrs. Winslow Will iams, who was assisted by Mrs. Eric Riggsbee, Mrs. Harold Dark, Mrs. Clyde Squires, Mrs. Hughes Lloyd, and Mrs. Nick Watts. Ralph Howard is to be Scout master of the new troop. Clifton Sapps Are Here Mr. and Mra. Clifton D. Sapp of Detroit, Mich., are here visit ing Mr. Sapp's mother, Mrs. Clyde Dickson, and his sister, Mrs. Elisabeth Montgomery. They stopped off on their way home from Van Horn, Texaa, where they had spent a month with their daughter, Mrs. Joe Meeks. ahft Cdbr Mb 111, m 4 George Rattle. Steading mml mtW, left to right, arc Bah £**, Charlie BteaeoH, Imirt Hemptoa, Pafcey Slaw tolar, Disk Yetmg, and I math Mill AB ptotta fMM tto aha* The Chapel Mill Weekly 5 Cents a Copy lon theatre subjects, and the an nual business meeting of the as sociation's directors. Programs of plays open to the public will be held in the Play makers theatre at 9:30 a.m. Thursday and Friday and at 2:30 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. all three days. Four plays will be given at each session, A season ticket good, for admission to all 81 plays cost ft Admission to any single session of four plays wig he 81 rant. „ ———— Fpiteapsl Easter Serviced A three-hour Good Friday ser vice will be held today at the Chapel of the Cross from noon to 3 p.m. Worshipers an asked to enter during the singing of a hymn and to leave during a hymn. The church’s Easter Sun day service* will be as follows: Holy Communion at 7:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.; church school at 0:30 a.m. and 11 a.m.; church school’s Easter festival and presentation of Lenten offering at 4 p.m.; evening prayer at 8 p.m. Good Friday Telecast The minister of the United Congregational Christian church, the Rev. Richard L. Jackson, and the church’s choir under the di rection of Philip Nelson and ac companied by Mrs. Frank Hanlin will conduct a Good Friday ser vice to be telecast by station WTVD-TV from 2 to 2:16 p.m. today (Friday). The title of the program will be “Hia Cross and Ours.” Mrs. Pegg in Virginia Mrs. Carl Pegg was unexpect edly called to Warwick, Va., this week because of the illness of her mother, Mrs. E. O. Smith. She will be there for an inde finite time. CHAPEL HILL, N. C-, FRIDAY, APRIL 8. 1956 Mr. end Mrs. Mui Alleott. Tryouts for the teems will bo held in early May. Blanks for parents to sign in order to give permission for their sons to play are bring distributed in the schools. Walter Rabb, Vernon Crook, end Bob Ray of the equipment committee have an nounced the arrival of uniforms and other equipment for the teams in th# league. Easter Sunrise Service The annaal Easter eaarlee service sponsored by the Chapel Hill Ceuncil of Church es will bo held at 5:80 a.*. Sunday at the Chapel HUI Country Cite. Music will be provided by a brass ensemble front the high school head. The Rev. Paul Edwards, pre tor as the Carrboro Methodist church, and the Rev. Maarice A. Kidder of the Church of the Holy Family wiU officiate. Everybody to invited. Vemee Voters’ Unit Meetlß April unit meeting* of Utpii of Women Voters will w as follows: Unit 1 at 10 a.m. Tuesday, April 12, at home of Lib Blackwell on Dogwood drive; Unit 2 and 3 at 0 p.m. Wednes day, April 18, at the Town Hall; Unit 4 at 2:30 p.m. Thursday, April 14, at home of Peggy Rei* bel on Oakwood drive; Unit 6 at 8 p.m. Thursday, April 14, at home of Lucy Morgan and Eunice Tyler on Gooseneck road. These will be the last unit meetings of the league’s fiscal year. At Memorial Hoepital Among local persons listed as, patients at Memorial hospital l yesterday were William Baldwin, Mrs. Elvin Bradshaw, Martha Lee Bynum, F. K. Cameron, R. H. Cheek, Mrs. W. B. Cobb, William Dykstra, Mrs. J. F. Fowler, Mrs. Frank Haskins, Mrs. Norman Jarrard, C. H. Lloyd, Mrs. Wes ley Lloyd, R. W. Madry, Charles Masterton, M. B. Merritt, Joe W. Sparrow, Arthur R. Summerlin, 111, Mrs. Robert Tuck, L. E. Walker. Easter Egg Hunts Two Easter egg hunts and a field day will be held Monday, April 11, at the Episcopal church for the children of the church school. The first hunt, for pupils below the first grade, will be held at 10 a.m. The second, for pupils of the first, second, and third grades, will be at 4 p.m. The field day, for those in the fourth grade and above, will also be at 4 p.m. Good Friday Service Today A devotion service on ‘‘The Seven Last Words of Christ" will be held today (Good Friday) from noon to 8 p.m. at the Church of the Holy Family. It will consist of seven separate services, be tween which people may enter or leave during the singing of hymns. Mr. Kidder will speak. Camara Club Meeting The Color Camera Club will meet at S p.m. Tuesday, April 12, at the home of Mrs. H. D. Crockford on the Country Club road. Mrs. Paul Smith will show slides of color photographs she took on a recent trip to Mexico. NaacOecrafters te Meet The needlecrafters of the Com munity Club’s arts and crafts de partment will meet at lj0:80 a.m. Tuesday, April 10, with Mrs. W. B. Holmes at 4 Audiey lane. MwA Mad Anniversary ***»'« Drugstore is holding •Mg sale today (Friday) aad to morrow la celebration of Its Mad Chapel Mill Chaff L.G. Chapel HiHians who go to the Durham-Raleigh-Chapel Hill airport observe with pleasure an improvement made by the State Highway Department at the sharp turn in the road about a mile beyond Nelson: the installa tion of a conspicious direc tion sign to replace the former dim one that a driver could easily fail to see. The new sign bears the word Airport in big letters, with s pointer, and is of a reflec ting material that makes it clear to drivers at night. There is an old story about a native who drove a sight seeing bus on a tour of Civil War battlefields and also acted as guide. He had his history down pat—history of the brand he liked. One day a woman passenger said to him: “All the battles you tell us about were Confed erate victories. Didn’t the Northerners sometimes win ?” The driver-guide answered firmly: “Lady, as long as I’m runnin’ this bus and tollin’ about the war, the Confederates are goin’ to win all the battles.” . That reminds me of my practice with regard to the name of the airport. The legal and official name is Raleigh-Durham but I say Raleigh-Durham-Chapel Hill and am going to keep on calling the airport by that Qame, in conversation and in print. And if I use an ab breviation it will be R-D-CH. Look at the little map of the airport vicinity publish ed by the Eastern Air Lines and you will see that the highways coonectiog Ral- and Chapel ■ the airport form KjNflK and that the #»- tapee flora Raleigh or Dor ham to the airport is, if greater at all, very little greater than the distance from Chapel Hill. By the measure of time we are actually closer than people (Continued on page 8) Baseball Team Win The Chapel Hill high echool baseball team won ita second game in as many starts Tuesday afternoon by defeating Alqxan der-Wilaon 6-5 in a non-confer ence game. In their first game last week the Wildcats defeated Roxboro, 5-4. Chapel Hill’s winning run In Tuesday’! game came in the last inning, whan Alexander-Wilsoa missed a double play try on Tom my Goodrich’s grounder. Clyde Campbell scored from second on the play. Phil Rigdon and Lewis Preeland led the Chapel Hill bat ting attack with two hits ia two official trips apiece. Rigdon was the winning pitch er. He struck out nine Alexan der-Wilson batters, walked one, and allowed nine hits. Chapel Hill batters also got nine hRs. Yesterday afternoon tha Wild cats played Hillsboro on the local diamond. Next Tuesday the team Pact Oflca'i Schedule Par Easter Monday The aaly curtailment at service at the Chapel Hill poet office aa Easter Monday, April 11, will be that the windows will dose for tha day at 1 pjg. Town deliveries and rural de liveries of mail will ha made as usual, outgoing mail will he dispatched aa usual, and in coming mail will ha put up la bones as uaual. The doors will he open from « a.m. to mid night, and the service win dows will be open from t iua to 1 p.m. Easter Monday is not a legal holiday in the Past Office Department, hat a local office is permitted to curtail service if moot of the atone in its town are closed that day. Added Easter Shewing^" A spatial added matinee per formance of tha Morehead Plane tarium’s Easter show, “Easter, tha Awakening," will be given at I p m. Monday, April 11. The sche dule of regular performaacca is as follows: t;9O p.m. seven days a week and alee at 11 MH, § pjn. and 4 pjm. aa lutgydar and Cornwell It Unopposed So Far; Roy Cole Is Opposing Stewart; Candidates for Board Are Wade, Pritchard, Stancell, and Strowd ' " Mew Track Mhw ■Better Service The addition of a red, white and blue Dods* nail truck to the Chapel HOI post office fleet will alleviate sev eral problems in mat dis tribution here, according to Postmaster Paul Cheek. The truck, painted in the new post office colore as op posed to the old olire drab, gives the post office three full time vehicles. Previous ly, it was forced to hire a car each month in order to distribute mail. Mr. Cheek said that mail carriers will be aided by the addition in that mal may now be carried to the relay boxes to be picked up by the carriers, whereas before the mail carriers themselves had to fill the relays. An increase in mail flow ing into Chapel Hill, report ally of parcel post, waihfted as one factor bringing fibobt the addition. Us. Cheek also said that the post office is now reedy to supply mail delivery to forty or fifty homes south of the by-paes which former ly did not get such aervioe. He said the post oftee was awaiting approval from the district office before begin ning the aorefafi. - ’•■>■»■■ Gleaweod P.T Jt Meeliß The Gian wood P.T.A. wttß at A pja Thursday .tepril 14, ia the Glaewood aches) cafeteria. Ceil Brown of the University's School of Education will have charge of the prograat. Class rooms will be open to parents nt 7:40. Tha mooting sms postponed from April 7 because of tho Uni versity's spring holiday. is First Two Games will play Oxford Orphanage, and on Friday it will go to Hondor son. The Jayvees will play East Durham here next Thursday. Dr. Howard Patterson's Letters Dr. Howard Patterson, chief surgeon at Roosevelt hospital tat New York, delivered, Monday night, the annual lecture given by the honorary medical frater nity, Phi Chi, for the University Medical School. Ha talked about unusual operations on the stom ach. The lecture was preceded by a dinner in his honor at the. Carolina Inn. Other guests were Dr. W. Reece BenryhiU and Dr. Nathan Womack. Julian Alber gotti, the Phi Chi president, was toastmaster. Managers and Merchants Stage “Go to the Movies Month" tit ..jEmamallH ■ ul2jm m Bmmg, m April is “Go to the Movies Month," in Ohapel Hill and throughout tha state and nation. The managements of the theatres here, in cooperation with the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Mer chants Association, have gone all out to bring saaaa of tha ftaast movies in the history of show business to Chapel Hill viewers this month. la tha above picture, freon left to right. B. & Smith, manager of the Caroltaa theatre: Joe Bob bins, chairman of the M»h tools $3 a tear in county other rates on page 2 By Charlee Dana The May 3 municipal elections began to *»kq on mean mg Wednesday as Mayor OUver K. Cornwell filed for re election and four other men became rssda«taf fig the three Board of Aldermen seats that will be vacated (hk spring. Itiose filing for the board are Rogers Wade, Gena Strowd, W. Grady Pritchard, and Charles M. Stancell. Mr. Wade is the only one of the candidates now on the board. He was elected by the aldermen last November to SB the vacancy left when Mr. Cornwell was to succeed Edwin Lanier as Mayor. P. L. Burch, who has been a member of the board for almost 28 years, has announced that he will not bo 19 for re-election this spring. The other alderman whose terra expires is Obie Davis. Mr. Burch reported Mr. Davis would not seek re-election. Mr. Davis is out of town and could not be reached for comment. A judge for the Recorder’s Court will «la> be in May. Last week William S. Stewart, the prmrnt judge, and Roy Cole announced their candidacies for office. In announcing for mayor, Mr. Cornwell said. “It has been a privilege to serve on the Board of Aldermen, and no mayor of Chapel Hill. The passage of the forthcoming bond issue (the 2190,000 bond issue for mn»irip.i improve ments to be voted on also on May 3) is of i-rt import ance to the future development of this community. “I would like to offer my services to as its as major for another term with the promise that I will do every thing in my power to see that adequate steps are taken la provide the needs and aorriore neoeemn far a happy and healthy comaumity.” Mr. Burch la rnitmriig hla rethrereaad aUL "I have Well Patronized la Ite Ftae Meath SaeUpU la the w Gka Lmmmx ray fogi Qfarefc, the first MBth q t R> Swfition, rets “vfigjr pkab tew.'* onnfiHre to Chnprt fvWM rate ErtfftCmth Mr.Chrek ftyi Mutt the rerelpta are ex pected to nearly double in April aa more Glen Lennox residento begin to uae the service. The station is located in the toy shop in the Glen Lennox shopping center. Voopor Service Tonight A Good Friday vesper service of meditation and worship based on the Sown Words of tho Crass will bo held at 7:30 this (Friday) evening at the Holy Trinity Lutheran church. Tha scripture leading up to each of tha seven words will he read by tha pastor, tha Rev. Wade F. Hook. •3.888 Jewelry Robbery Hera Jewelry valued at more than fSjMO was stolen from tbs Vill age Apartments in two separate robberies last week. Mrs. J. B. MacLeod reported that 1960 , worth of jewelry was taken from her arpartment, and Mias Fran ce* Sweat reported approximately 88£SO worth of of jewelry miss ing. Tha Chapel Hill police are still investigating the cases. Drive-In end the Hollywood theatres, are shown going over the lint of fine films being shown tort in April, In proclaiming April aa “Go to the Movies Month" Governor Lather H. Hodges said, “Our motion picture theatres represent n most important and unique activity, not only as a progress ive business enterprise but nine an a community service." Mayer O. K. Cornwell said in his pro demotion: “Chapel HiU can well to proud of its outotemdfato the Mevbm* torred oa th* BMid for 28 Fork forgot hm tejtnlA but now thny rend aagre yore* foL liwa to tel#care of thfi hrevy Mad m to to kpM. Tha *i*dnto» that Mind Wodtoaafog areal gred km. Ito at#teteareto* to jteatog thto Jtoy teteff foto tto ia practical «red«tedd main Chapel HU a totter Ptow to Brew” With regard to hia flflpg for tho board, ho added : “Soreral dtiraaa hare urged me to run for a regular term, aad I f eel that (Can Hawed ea gaga I) Carrboro CM Is To Meet Wednesday The Carrboro Civic Chsto will bold its April meeting at 3 pjm. Wednesday, April Ig, at its ctab houae near tha Cart bras achaaL A display es della treat rariewa countries and a talk aw thersnuse subject will he given by Mrs. George N. fomii The dells will he beautifully dree.id in their native oeetnmee. Hostesses for the meeting will be Mra. Frank Maddhj and Mrs. Edward Pratt. AU numbers mra urgod to attend, aad visitors am invited. Mouth* In North Carolina and Urn nation " theatre trill install abaraaglmarie