TUESDAY
ISSUE
Nut brat Friday
Vol. 33 No. 76
Atomic Power
To Be Subject
Os Panel Talk
A panel discussion on the
“Peaceful Uses of Atomic
Energy” will be presented,
at 8 o’clock this (Tuesday)
evening in the Exhibition
Room of the University Lib
rary. The program is under
tm* auspices of-the Chapel
Hill branch of the American
Association of University!
Women. Sj
J. Harris Purks, acting 1
president of the University
of North Carolina, will be
moderator of the panel. The
discussants are the Honor
able Carl T. Durham, Re
presentative of the Sixth
Congressional District; Clif
ford H. Beck, North Carolina
State College; and Dr. Colin
G. Thomas Jr., North Caro
lina Memorial Hospital.
Mr. Purks, the moderator,
before going into administ
rative work, was a physicist,
having taught at Emory Uni
versity. He has also been on
the council of the Oak Ridge
Institute of Nuclear Studies.
Congressman Durham was a
member of the U. S. delegation
to the Conference on the Peaceful
Uses of Atomic Energy held in
Geneva, Swtizerland, during Aug
ust. He will relate some of the
highlights of the conference,
'Jjßlh met to discuss the exchange
<W>chnical information on atom
ic energy developments and to
explore means of international
cooperation.
Mr. Beck, who is chairman of
the Department of Physics and
director of the nuclear reactor
at State College, will talk on
the uses of the nuclear reactor
and development* in atomic ener
gy research. In addition to his
duties at State, Mr. Beck is also
vice president of the Oak Ridge
Institute of Nuclear Studies, a
<dW*profit educational
Mon concerned with regional a
tomic research.
Dr. Thomas is engaged in medi
cal research in the use of radio
active isotopes in the treatment
of disease. He will discuss some
of his findings and some of the
practical uses of isotopes in
the medical field.
This meeting is sponsored by
the International Relations Com
mittee of the AAIIW, Mrs. Paul
N. Cuthrie, chairman. It is an
open meeting and the public is
Ewdially invited to attend.
New Group Formed
In Carrboro Church
A new organization, Methodist
Men, was recently chartered in
the Carrboro Methodist Church
by Methodism’s General Board of
Lay Activities. Its officers are
Alan G. Brandon, president; John
Boone, vice-president, and Hor
ace B. Dark, secretary. Assisting
in its formation was the Kev. J.
Paul Edwards, pastor of the
church.
The Carrboro group is one of
wiore than 8,500 Methodist Men
V/ganizations out of a total of
10,000 clubs which the board
plans to charter before the Gen
eral Conference opens in April
of 1066.
It la estimated that 2,000,000 1
men in the Methodist Church are
prospective members of Method
ist Men clubs. ,
Robert G. Mayfield, executive
secretary of the board, says “We
seek to mobilise through Method
ist Men the tremendous power
and enthusiasm of the men of,
the church. Our purpose is to,
give strength to the program of
Christ and His Church through {
£}sccrated service of men in:
Wiry local church of Meth-f
odism.” ,
Holiday Hours
All Chapel Hill and Carrboro
business establishments which
usually observe a half-holiday 1
Wednesday will be open all day'
tomorrow (Wednesday), but they
will be closed Thanksgiving Day.
, Banks and other public institu
itions, including the Post Office,
I will also be closed Thursday.
Most of the cases end drug stores
and both theatres will be open
Thanksgiving _Day.
Chapel JJillnotei
ashionably dressed woman
football game smoking n
* while people around her
m*A k^n.
Randolph’s dog
in* for her Sunday
mmmmmmt* fust doer «f
Churak
Community Club Holds Annual Christmas Ideas Tea
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—Photo by M A. Quillen
Mrs. John R. Gilbert (left) and Mrs. Alfred Linde are shown flanking a flower and
candle arrangement at tke annual Christmas Ideas Tea held by the Community Club last
Thursday at the home of Mrs. R. W. Jernigam Mrs. Gilbert was general chairman for
the tea, and Mrs. Linde is president of the club.
Dr. Foy Roberson Rites Conducted Here;
Chapel Hill Pays Tribute to Deceased
Graveside funeral services were
held in Chapel Hill cemetery,
yesterday (Monday) afternoon!
for Dr. Foy Roberson, 71-year- 1
old prominent Chapel Hill and;
Durham surgeon, University;
trustee, and Orange County resi
dent.
Dr. Roberson died at Duke Hos
jpital after a brief illness on
Saturday morning, the 50th an
niversary of the last football
game he played for Carolina,!
that against Virginia, in 1906
when he was qpptaln q# that
team. \ .
J He is survived by his widow,j
.Mrs. Helen Roberson of the home
at Cedar Tarrace, near here;
two daughters, Mrs. Frederick j
0. Bowman of Chapel Hill and
Mrs. Richard Marshall of Hamp*!
ton, Va.; and two sinters, Miss
Nellie Roberson and Mrs. Charles
,T. Woollen of Chapel Hill
1 A graduate of the University,
Dr. Roberson opened his medical
practice in Durham in 1912. Over,
the years he took an active part
in the medical, religious, sociul,
and political life of Durham und
Orange Counties and the state.
Hi. was influential in shaping
the University’s academic uth
lctic policies.
A number of Dr. Roberson’*
friends and acquaintances in
Chapel Hill paid tribute to his ,
work, among them Chancellor
Robert B. House, who said, “He 1
was a life-long friend, warm- ,
hearted and true, and one of the
great surgeons of our tigie. He
was a hard-hitting critic of the
University of North Carolina!,
because he loved it and thought
straight.”
Robert A. (Coach Hob) Fetzer,
UNC director of athletics for
Home Construction
Suggestions on TV
I James Heizer, Durham con
tractor, will give televiewers the
trade secret to keeping down con
struction costs Wednesday at 7
o’clock on WUNC-Television’t
"Blueprint” series.
As this week’s guest on “Blue
print,” Heizer will discuss such
questions as how to select a con
tractor; how to pay a low price
for a high quality home; what
to avoid in home planning in
lorder to keep costs down; how
| specifications influence costa; and
how to make sure the contractor
has competent men on the pro
ject. Heizer will also be put on
the "preacher's spot" with the
question, “should a contractor be
expected to guarantee his work?”
Host and hoateas on tha Chan
nel 4 “Blueprint" series are Bob
Andrews and Mrs. William C.
Friday.
Tkaakagiving Gueata
Mra. Percy Boynton, who teach
es music at Bpelman Collage,
a branch of Atlanta Univaraity,
will be the Thanksgiving guest
of Misa Mary Gilaon. She is the
widow of the late Professor Boyn
ton, who taught English at tha
University of Chicago, where
Miss Gilson was a faculty mem
ber.
Episcopal Parents to Meet
Parents of pupils in the Chapel
of the Cress Sunday school will
mmt at 8 p.m. Monday, Novem
har 28.
The Chapel Hill Weekly
6 Cents a Copy
30 years and now executive secre
tary of the Morehead Founda
tion said that Dr. Roberson was
‘‘a most loyal and devoted alum
nus, who contributed greatly to
;the progress made over the years
by the University, especially in
its athletic department.”
A boyhood friend of Dr. Rober
son in Chapel Hill was Louis
Graves, contributing editor of the
Chapel Hill Weekly, who said,
i“He was a wonderful man, very
generous with his medical ser
jvices. His death in a deep loss
jto Durham and especially to
|chapel Hill and the University,!
where he had so many devoted
friends.”
j Dr. Roberson was a member
of the University’s athletic coun
cil. He and Mrs. Roberson estab
lished the Foy Roberson Jr. medal
in memory of their son who
died in a plane crash while serv
ing in the Army Air Corps dur
ing World War 11. He was a
,1940 graduate of the University
and a varsity basketball player.
The medal is awurdod annually
to the player who contributes
most to team morale.
Coupon Plan Disapproved
The Chapel Hill-Carrboro Mer-!
chants Association has refused,
to approve the sale of merchan
dising coupon books here by a
concern known as Consolidated
Advertisers. According to a
spokesman for the company, the
books would be sold to consumers'
for $3.95 apiece, and each hook
would he worth $39.95 in iner-'
)
-chandise bought in Chupel Hill
stores taking part in the plan.
Special Library Hours
The University Library will be
closed all day Thanksgiving Day,
November 24. On Friday, Nov
ember 25, the library will be
open from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.' and
on Saturday, November 26, from
9 a.m. to 1 p.m. only. It will be
closed all day Sunday.
Judge Phipps Is Elected Chairman of
Orange County Boy Scout Organization
Judge L. J. Phippi will direct
the activities of the Boy Scouts
of Orange County during thei
coming year. The election of Mr. 1
Phipps, Judge of Orange County i
Recorder's Court, took place at
the annual recognition dinner of
Orange District leaders held last
Wednesday evening at the Bap
tist Church in Chapel Hill.
Some 160 Scooters and district
committeemen and their wives
attended the pot-luck supper at
which the election of officers
occurred. Mr. Phippi, who suc-l
ceeds John Foushee as chair
man, has held various district.
Scout offices and is at present |
the institutional representative'
for the Baptist Church, whicn
sponsors Troop 826.
Other district officers elected
were John Efland Jr., of Kfland {
uid J Sullivan Gibson of Carr
boro, vice-chairmen, and Frank
Umstead of Chapel Hill, re-elect
ed commissioner.
Occoneeehee Council Scout Ex
jcutive Spurgeon Gaskin of Ral
igh installed the new leaders,'
srho had been nominated by aj
committee heeded by Edgar;
(■homes fftd consisting of Dr.
I Wilfred Gallagher of Chapel 1
CHAPEL HILL, N. C., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 1955
High School Pupils
On Television Show
Individual and partner stunts
for seventh and eighth grade
students were presented on the
weekly in-school Play Period pro
gram last week over WUNC-TV.
The program, directed by Mrs.
Ruth Fink of the UNC Physi
cal Education Department, in
cluded demonstration of the acti
vities by the following Chapel
Hill students: John Bagby, John
|Falvey, Dawn Culton, Clarissa
Joyce, Beth Hunt, Joe Moore,
.Susan Cabus, Cheryl Harville,
{Bob Spearmao, Susan Lowell,
Sue Ham, Carolyn May nor, Ann
I Wadsworth, Buddy Thompson,
'Charles Shaffer, and Montie Mil
ner.
New Choir Formed
By Methodist Group
A newly organized Methodist
Youth Fellowship choir of 30
voices, under the direction of
Miss Carla Smith, will make its
first appearance at the 11 o’clock
service this Sunday morning, No
vember 27, at the University
Methodist Church. The group in
cludes boys and girls from 11
to 15 years old. It rehearses
at 6:30 p.m. every Sunday at the
church.
In addition to the responses
and usual hymns, the choir will
sing the M. Y. F. hymn, “Are
Ye Able?”
The sermon will he delivered
by the Rev. O. Murry Unruh,
director of the Wesley Founda
tion on the University campus.
Community Thanksgiving Service
The annual community Thanks
giving service will be held ut
10 a.m. Thursday at the Carr
boro Methodist Church. The
speaker will be the Rev. Henry
Ruark, formerly of Chapel Hill
and now pastor of the Laurinburg
Methodist Church. Music will be
provided by the choir of the
Carrboro Methodist Church.
t Hill, Ira Ward of Hillsboro, and
i Sam Ward of Eflandj
'| In the recognition phase of
the program special awards were
presented by the Rev. Richard
; L. Jackson to Bob Hawkins,
Scoutmaster of Troop 820; Ed
Johnson, assistant Scoutmaster of
iTroop 89; Mr. and Mrs. Foster
' Fitz-Simons, Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam Straughn, and Mr. and Mrs.
1 1 Vance Isenhour, Cub Scout lead
ers, and Ira Ward, District Vice
Chairman. Roy Armstrong, form
er president of the Occoneeehee
Council, presented a diamond
studded Universal Scout Pin to
Chairman Foushee for his fine
leadership.
Mr. Foushee reported on dis
trict accomplishments during 19-
66. The Rev. Charles Hubbard
described a new four-year pro
gram for Boy Scouts, the slogan
of which is "Onward, for Ood
{and My Country." The invocat
ion was rendered by the Rev.
Wade Hook. Closing ceremonies
were under the direction of Rob
ert L. Collins, District Scout Exe
cutive. t. Justice Haswell had
. charge of arrangements for the
liaupper.
90 Per Cent
/ The 1956 Community Chest
•ampaign had reached 90 per
Vent of its goal yesterday morn
ing, and a clean-up drive waa
still going on, Chairman J. A.
Branch reported. v
The Chest drive officially
ended last week, but contribut
ions are still coming in. The
total collected by yesterday
morning was $23,173, which
leaves $2,560 still to go to
reach the goal of $25,733.
Hunting Season To
Open This Thursday
The hunting season on turkey,
quail, rabbits, and squirrels will
open this Thursday and con
tinue through January 14 for
rabbits and squirrels and through
January 31 for turkey and quail.
Hunting licenses and copies of
the game laws are available at
the Carolina Sport Shop, Hug
gins Hardware, and Knight-
Campbell Hardware in Chapel
Hill and at Lloyd-Ray Hardware
in Carrboro.
Bag limits are as follows; Rab
bits, daily, 5; possession, 10; sea
son, 75. Squirrels, daily, 8; pos
session, 16; season, 100. quail,
daily, 8; possession, 16; season,
100. Turkey (gobblers only),
daily, 1; possession, 2; season 2.
“This is just a small part of
the game laws,” Game Protector
Bob Logan of Chapel Hill said
in making the above announce
ments. "Every hunter should get
a copy of the game laws when
buying a license. And don’t forget
it is illegal to shoot any kind
of wild animal or bird unless
you have s license, even an Eng
lish sparrow.
“Also, be sure to get per
mission from land owners before
hunting on their property, and
be careful with fences, gates,
[domestic animals, and grain
fields. When you hunt on u man’s
property you should respect his
rights."
To Broadcast Pkry
“The Orchid,” a dramatization
of the life of George Washington
Carver, the famed Negro scient
ist and teacher, will be presented
over the National Broadcasting
Company Thursday night at 9:05
o’clock. It was written and pro
duced ut the Communication
Center at the University.
Chorai Club Is to Present Concert at
8 O'Clock Tonight in Hill Music Hall
A program of vocal and instru
mental music will be given by
the Chapel Hill Choral Club at
8 o’clock this (Tuesday) evening
in Hill Music Hall. Admission
is free and everybody is invited.
The club is directed by Joel
Carter, assistant professor in the
University’s Department of Mus
ic.
Sponsored by the Music Depart
ment us one of its Tuesday (even
ing Concert Series, the program
will feuture Handel’s "Utrecht
Jubilate,” Vocal soloists with the
chorus will include Betty Jo Far
rington, mezzo-soprano, Chapel
Hill; and Robert Minteer, bass,
Chapel Hill.
Instrumentalists accompanying
the work are Donald Pease, harp
sichord, Knoxville, Tenn.; Maur-
Hchool Holidays
The Chapel Hill public schools
will be closed Thursday and Fri
day for the Thanksgiving holi
day. Classes will be held as usual
tomorrow (Wednesday) and will
begin again at the usual time on
Monday, November 28. The final
day of classes before the Christ
mas holiday will be Friday, De
cember 16. The holiday will last
through January 1, with classes
beginning Monday, January 2.
Mann Named Fellow
Virgil Mann, associate profes
sor of geology at the University,
has been appointed a Fellow in
the Geological Survey of Ameri
ca. Among Mr. Mann’s other re-i
cent professional activities was
his appearance as a geological
consultant to a clinic panel on so-i
clal studies at North Carolina'
College in Durham.
John Neals Lesve
Sgt. John R. Neel and his fam
ily, who have been here visiting!
his mother, Mra> William Neal, 1
have gone to Virginia Beach,
Va. From there Sgt. Neal will
fly to Seattle, Wash., where he
will await assignment to tha 1
Far East. His family will join l
him there later. Sgt. Neal is an 1
Army draftsman.
Here for the Winter
Miss Mary H. Coley has re
turned from Williamsburg, Maes.,
and will he here for the winter.
Chapel Mill Chafl
J.J.
Day afer tomorrow, the
first day of the hunting sea
son, will find many country
people plagued by gunners
who shoot on their property
without first going by the
house to ask permission. For
their own good, hunters
should follow Game Warden
Bob Logan’s advice and al
ways get the property own
er’s approval before invad
ing his land. Nobody likes
to hear his quail coveys be
ing shot up by people he
hasn’t even seen. Such con
duct sours the good will of
the farmers and leads to the
posting of more and more
land against all hunting.
A woman who lives in the
country near Chapel Hill re
turned from a trip to town
and found a car parked in
front of her house and a
bunch of children playing
in the yard. They told her
their parents had left them
there and were somewhere
on the place hunting quail.
After this she put up No
Trespass signs, but hunters
tore them down. Using a
ladder, she put similar signs
high up on trees out of
reach of a person standing
on the ground, but these
too were torn down. Not all
hunters are sportsmen.
• * *
Nicholson B. Adams says
that Marshall Stewart of
the Tar Heel Barber Shop
is the best mustache man
in Chapel Hill. Or anywhere
else, for that matter.
“I’ve had my mustache
trimmed in cities all over
the world,” Mr. Adams says,
“but nobody has ever given
me a better job than Mr.
Stewart; He does it exactly
right.”
Another thing Mr. Adams
likes about the trim he gets
from Mr. Stewart is that
it is done at no extra charge.
It is thrown in free with
the haircut. Mr. Adams says
(Continued on page t)
ine Synan, piano, Hopewell, Va.;
Mary Gray Clark, ’cello, Wash
ington, D. C.
Another featured composition
on the ull-Kuroque program is
Purcell’s dramatic trio "Saul and
the Witch of Kndor.” Robert
Andrews, tenor, Chapel Hill, will
sing Saul; Donna Patton, soprano,
Chapel Hill, is the Witch of En
dor; Joel Carter, bass, Chapel
Hill, is the Prophet Samuel. Eu
gene Hudson, music major from
Black Mountain, is the piano ac
companist.
In uddition to the accompani
ments provided by the harpsi
chord und piano, some of the
works call for organ. Miss Mary
Sue Honaker, graduate student
from Hinton, W. Va., Vill be
at the organ for a bass duet
by Schutz, and for Bach’s Chorale
Fantasia sung by the chorus.
Professor Everett Hall, bass,
Chapel Hill, and Edgar Vom
jLehn, graduate student and bass,
Burlington, are soloists for the
former work.
| The remaining works on Tues
day's program art “God of all
I Nations,” for double chorus by
! Leitring-Glarum, and “Sonata in
A Major” for viollncsllo and
harpsichord by Visconti.
Scheer Cites Decline in Children's Books
*
"There are signs that writsrs
and publishers of books for child
ren ere losing eight of the reel
'purpose of children’s literature,"
'according to George F. Scheer
of Chapel Hill, publishers’ re
presentative and writer.
| Speaking to the Wiley School
PTA in Salisbury last week, Mr.
Scheer deplored the "increasing
strong tendency toward instruct
ional books rather than books
I for pure pleasure." Agreeing with
Miss May Arbuthnot, noted au
thority on juvenile literature,
that books for the younger child
especially are showing signs of I
“Pernicious anemia," be charged'
that schools themselves are large-'
Jy responsible for the paucity of
good story-telling whose design
fs to entertain and stimulate the
imagination.
"Tha siren song of the school
library budget is wooing publish
, era and writers from works of;
literary distinction bo the pre
94 a Year in County; other rates ob page 2
Holiday, Religious Services,
Benefit Grid Game Scheduled
For Thanksgiving Observance
Thanksgiving—the day during which Americans give
thanks for their bountiful blessings—will be appropriately
observed in Chapel Hill-Carrboro.
It will be a general holiday, a respite from labors for
most of the people in town, but there will be church
University Holiday
T o Begin Tomorrow
The University’s Thanksgiving
holiday will begin at 1 o’clock
tomorrow (Wednesday) afternoon
and will continue through Sun
day, with classes being resumed
at 8 o’clock Monday morning.
The four-and-a-half-day vacation
comes shortly after mid-term
examinations for the fall se
mester, which began September
25.
Three weeks of classroom work
will come between the Thanks
giving holiday and the Christmas
vacation, scheduled to begin De
cember 17. The fall semester 1
will end with final examinations,
beginning January 19 and end
ing January 28.
Kiwanis Officers
Will Gather Here
. The annual Organization Con
ference and Training School for
Kiwanis Chib officers in the Im
perial sth Division will be held
here at 2:30 p.m. today (Tues
day) at the Carolina Inn, it is
announced by Lieutenant Gov
ernor-elect Tom Rosemond of
i Chapel Hill.
| More than 60 officers of thir
teen Kiwanis clubs in twelve cities
and towns in the division will
attend the conference. They have
been invited by Chapel Hill Club
President Dick Jamereon to stay
over for the local chib meeting
tbis evening at -6:45.
The officers, who will take their
poet# in January, will be instruct
ed in tke purposes and operations
of Kiwanigk- Among tke gpeakera
during toa afternoon will bo three
Chapel HilHana. They are: J. M.
Saunders, past governor of the
Carolines district wfco will spaak
on duties of presidents; Dr. Wil
liam Richardson, past lieutenant
governor who will talk on duties
of secretaries; and Bill Pugh,
past president of the local club
who will speak on Kiwanis Inter
national. Others on the program
will include Dan Rader of
Graham, past lieutenant gover
nor who will speak on duties of
vice-presidents; and Guy Rawls
of Raleigh, present lieutenant
governor who will speak on rela
tions of his office with the sep
arate clubs.
Mr. Rosemond will preside at
the meeting.
Clubs in the division are located
at Burlington, Graham, Haw Riv
er, Mebane, Durham, Roxboro,
Oxford, Yanreyville, Henderson,
I’ittsboro, Chapel Hill and two in
Raleigh.
Episcopal Thanksgiving Services
Thanksgiving Day services at
the Chapel of the Cross will in
clude Holy Communion at 8 a.m.
and morning prayer and sermon
jot 10 a.m. At the 10 o’clock
service there will bo an offering
'for the Thompson Orphanage in
Charlotte. The orphanage is own
ed and operated by the Episco
pal Church in North Carolina.
News Letter Issued
The annual “News Letter” of
the Department of History of tha
j University has been published.
| This is the fourth year the pub
lication has been Issued. It con
tains news of the professional
activities of the department of
History, Its staff members, grad
uate students, and alumni.
i duct ion of more and more special
ized books which merely supple-
I ment text books." Mr. Scheer
1 said. “The purpose of great liter- 1
' ature is to stir imagination. We 1
nitod more story-telling and less
instruction, mors ‘Treasure Is-
I land’ and less first book of rocks,
. second book of shells, genubia
book of trees. There is room
for both, but where are the old
> fashioned story tellers, those
i writers who tackled a real theme
and find the child’s imagination
. and daveloped him into a life
time reader and thinker?”
i|
Mr. Bcheer represents two pub
lishers of children’* books and
' has himself written stprles for
i young people. He ha* just com
> plated work on an adult book,
I written in collaboration with a
former Chapel HUUan, Hugh P.
Rankin, and has arranged to write
'A book for children In the Held
at Aasericah history.
TUESDAY
ISSUE
Next lime Friday
family gatherings,
and a benefit football game
plus entertainment appropri
ate to the season.
Union Thanksgiving wor
ship services for everyone
in the two communities will
be held at 10 a.m. at Carr
boro Methodist Church with
a sermon by Rev. Henry
Raurk of Laurinburg, form
erly of Chapel Hill. Earlier
that morning, at 7 o’clock,
the Carrboro Methodist con
gregation will have its sep
arate service.
At both Episcopal Church
es—the Chapel of the Cross
and Church of the Holy Fam
ily—there will be Holy Com
munion at 8 a.m. and a fami
ly worship service at 10 a.m.
A pre-Thanksgiving ser
vice will be held by members
of McDuffie Memorial Bap
tist Church, New Hope Pres
byterian Church and Univer
sity Methodist Church to
morrow (Wednesday) even
ing at 7:30 o’clock at McDuf
|fie Memorial Church.
Although all public offices
and retail business establishments
will be closed for the day, most
of the cases and resturants in
both towns as well as local thea
tres will be open at their usual
hours. The student population
will be lowered by a four-day
holiday, ending Monday morning,
but homea will be brightened by
the happiness of elementary and
high school students who have
no classes those days.
FoHgptajfclhn uavusl ayjtumta
freshim Wilt -fl 1
cerlbrau palsy benefit football
game in Kenan Stadium, starting
nt 2 p.m. And there will be n
special presentation of “Star Pat
terns” at the Morehead Plane
tarium at S p.m. It will be re
peated at 8:80 p.m.
At 4 p.m. the Community
Church will have its annual open
house at Hillel House.
For the outdoorsman, hunting
season is open Thursday for
squirrel, quail and rabbits.
There will be no mail service
except the daily arrival and de
partures of mails and lock box
service.
The Duke-Caroling freshmen
football game is played for bene
fit of cerebral palsy victims and
is sponsored in alternate years
by the Chapel Hill and Durham
Jaycees. The game being in Chap
el Hill this year, the local Jay
cees are doing all the work.
Professors Are at
Meeting in Florida
Samuel T. Emory, chairman of
the Univeralty’a Department of
Geology and Geography, and two
other members of the department,
J. Sullivan Gibaon and David
G. Basils, are in Tallahassee,
Fla., attending the annual meet
ing of the Southeastern Divis
ion of tha Association of Ameri
can Geographars. The meeting
began yesterday and will con
tinua through today (Tuesday).
Mr. Emory and Mr. Gibaon are
on the program of the meeting.
Mr. Emory was scheduled to
give a paper on “The Political
Geography of Finland,” and Mr.
Gibson to give a paper entitled
"A Case for the Land-Use Type"
end to preside over e symposium
In urban geography, as wall as
to attend two committee meet
ings.
Mr. Basils is secrotanr of the
Southeastern Division of the As
sociation of American Geograph
ers.
At Lockhart Tarkey Farm
S. P. Lockhart reports that
many school children from Chapel
Hill, Carrboro, and Durham have
been coming out to hie turkey
farm to see the thousands of
Thanksgiving turkeys now reach
ing maturity. He says it la baat
for them to come when the day
is not windy, stnea on sueh a
day tha turkoys hide in the pine
woods to escape the wind and
are thus hard to aee.
T" :
Move to Dagwaad Aetna
Mr. and Mrs. Mark Hamm and
their sons, David, 6, and John,
S, have mowed from Victory VU
iago to, Dogwood Africa, Mr.
Mdaaa la a UnitonHg gradnaha