FRIDAY ISSUE Next Issue Tuesday Vol. 32, No. 49 Stage Is Set For Carrboro Folk Festival At 7:30 P.M. Tonight’s the night for the big Folk Festival in % •rboro. Heal fun is guar anteed for everybody on hand at 7:30 this evening (Friday) in the Carrboro Lions Athletic Park. Stars of the show will be Smilin’ George Pegram, famous Iredell banjoist and folk singer, and George Hamil ton. University student who writes funny songs and sings them in a manner his hear ers never forget. There will be many other performers and contestants in the festival’s amateur contest. Among those not previously announced are Haywood Pendergrass, who uses a harmonica to imitate a Model-T Ford trying to get across a railroad track while a train is coming; the' “Wildcats,” a square dance | team from White Cross, and Jackie Chamblee, pianist. Other entertainers and contestants will include two siring bands, Ed Norwood ;®d his Rhythm Hangers and another group headed by* Robert Butler of Carr boro; Linda Yancey, singer; a singing trio composed of Iycah Fitch, Alvene Williams, and Martha Ann Cheek; Pa tricia Simmons, dancer; A. T. who gives imi tation.Ognd Betty Butler, a tap-dancing Carrboro house wife. Pokey Alexander will be master of ceremonies. The festival is being held by the* Carrboro Cubs base ball team to raise money to. G nance its Ad mirsion will be $1 for adults* and 5* cents for children. In case o’ tain the event will be held at the same time in the Universiw Tin Can (be tween the Efcll Tower and Woollen Gymnasium). •jTrophies will ,be awarded to the winners jf>f first, sec ond, and third dace in the amateur contest The judges will be R. B. Tod 1, chairman; Mrs. James Stn et, Dick Ja rnerson, Jack J cDade, and Joe Augustine. George Pegri|m is noted here for his ba: jo perform-, ances in the annual Caro lina Folk Festi'iil, and also for his singing of “Here, Rattler” and “That Good Old Mountain Dew.” In 1954 tie represented the United States at a European folk festival in Italy and appear ed there before 45,000 peo ple. George Hamilton and his Country Gentlemen have be come extremely popular around here for their high pressure singing and unique styling. They have a regular l*how on radio station WCHL Tjfhd have made several rec-j ords of songs written by Mr.i Hamilton. j High School Library .Schedule The library at the Chapel Hill ( High school is open from 1 p. m. to 4 p. m. on Tuesdays, Wednes days, and Thursdays. , Chapel Jiillnotes On phone call from Atlanta for Chuck Hauser, long-dis tance operator, when told I Chuck had left the Weekly and gone to Russia, asking, “Can he be reached at another phone? • • • Seen at dusk on outer reach es of East Franklin Street: boy walking along with head bowed, looking for something; a half block behind him his grand mother doing same, and a half-block behind her his par ents likewise, bringing up the rear of alow-moving eyes down procession. »• • i Sight worth seeing: Thous and of roaea blooming in goo metric profusion all around the Morebead sundial. All calm Dollars Will Play Their Fourth (iame Today The Chapel Hill l.ittle League’s Dodgers baseball team (abo\e) will play its fourth game of the season at 5 o’elock this afternoon (Friday ) in the Carrboro Athletic Park. It will be op posed by the Cubs. Shown (from left to right) are. in front row. George Bowman. Joey Rob ertson, Bill Graham, Co-Captain Mike Pendergrass, and Reggie Moore; second row, Gardner Morgan, Co-Captain Kenny Oettinger, David Poe, Eddie Gendron, John Skinner, and Scott Parker: hack row. Assistant loach George Barclay. Kenneth Hackney, Head Coach Joe Hil ton, Bill Henderson, and Assistant Coach Elmer Oettinger. The other five l.ittle League teams will be pictured in forthcoming issues of the Weekly. Winning Streaks Are Kept Unbroken by Little League's Three Leading Teams Three teams continued their winning streaks in Little League baseball Wednesday, the Tigers defeating the Dodgers, 3-1, the Indians the Yankees, 15-2, and the Cubs the Giants in a no hit ter, 9-6. Larry Kenney pitched for the Tigers against Ronnie Pender grass and Kenny Oettinger of the Dodgers in the afternoon’s first game. Charlie Phillips had two of the Tigers’ four hits with Charles LeflCr and Howard l'en-’ dergrasx getting the other two.’ i Larry Campbell, at shortstop so the Tigers, played well with five : perfect fields in five chances and no errors. In the second game played at Chapel Hill Wayne Hudson of the Indians had nine strike outs pitch ing against Don Smith, Jimmy Bejester, and Vernon Howard of the Yankees who had eight strike Five Chapel Hillians Are in Cast of Carolina Playmakers f Next Production Five members out of a cast of 20 in the forthcoming Carolina Playmakers' summer production, "Goodby My Fancy,” by Fay Kanin, are Chapel Hillians. An other is from Carrboro. “Goodby, My Fancy” will he presented July 5 and 6 in the Playmakers Theatre under the direction of Kai Jorgensen of the U. N. C. Department of Dra matic Art. Robert Thomas of Chapel Hill plays the male lead, a college president. The four remaining Chapel Hillians take supporting rbles. They are Pat Liston as Congresswoman Agatha Reed’s brisk, sarcastic secretary; Myra l.auterer as her former room mate, who husn’t changed at all; Florence Corriher us the officious alumnae secretary; and Dot O’Sullivan as a man-shy sex hy giene teacher. Jo Deason of Enoree, S. C., a new graduate student at U. N. C.,; will make her first appearance Morwitz Resigns, Is Going to Switzerland I Ernst Morwitz has resigned from the University faculty af | ter teaching German for thirteen years and has gone to live in Zurich, Switzerland. He left here Wednesday and will leave New York tomorrow on the steam ship Berlin. , Mr. Morwitz, a native of Ger many, is 68 years old. He studied at the universities of Heidelberg, Freiburg, and Berlin, and be came a judge of the Supreme Court of Prussia, He was re tired in 1936—that was when Hitler was in full power—and in 1938, the year of “Munich,” he left Germany and came to the United States. He taught a course in the re ligions of arttiquity at Duke University from 1939 to 1943 and then came to Chapel Hill to teach German to soldiers in the Army Special Training Program. At the end of the war he was ap pointed a member of the Uni versity's regular faculty. In collaboration with Olga Marx ha translated the poems aadetherwrlUagsofhtoUte The Chapel Hill Weekly 5 Cents a Copy ■ outs between them. Leading hit-’ 1 ters for the Indians were Frank , Martin with a double that scored i two runs, Robert Oakes with an- I other double tnat also scored • two, and Wayne Hudson with two hits in four tries, one of ■ those being the game’s only home ■ run. The Yankees had only two hits, both by Jimmy Bejester. In Carrboro Ned Martin had < 17 strike outs to win a po hit ij victory over the Giants for the’ -jCubs. Butch Regan and Tony .1 Lloyd threw for the Giants. Mar ’Tin was also the Cubs’ leading t! hitter with three hits, including • a triple, in five times at hat. 1 This afternoon’s (Friday’s! contests see Yankees against the i Tigers at 3:30 in Carrboro, the Indians versus the Giants at 4:30 lin Chapel Hill, and the Dodgers ' playing the Cubs at 5:00 hack in i Carrboro. ’ with the Playmakers as the fe , male lead, Congresswoman Aga , tha Reed. Other members of the cast are Rosemary McLaughlin, Carrboro; Lorraine Swain, Laurel Fork, : Va.; Lore Schuller, Wudesboro; ■ Robert Chase, Georgetown, Conn.; ■ Liz Roberts, Philadelphia, Pa.; Paul McCauley, Fayetteville; Lloyd Borstelmann, Durham, Dan Rankin, Gastonia; Deris Weaver, I Four Oaks; Terry Beaver, States-. ■ ville; Joe O’Brien, Philadelphia. 1 ; Pa.; Elizabeth Niles, Garland; ; Kit Lee Singleton, Florence, S : C.; and Hal Ballew, Wintun. i “Goodbye, My Fancy” is a coin i edy about a congresswoman who returns to her old alma mater ; for her honorary doctorate and ; gives up an illusion of twenty ; years’ duration. Tickets will go on sale at Led better-Pickards’ and the Play-, i makers’ Business office, 214 , Abernethy Hall, on Monday, July ( 2. I were pubixhed by the German ■ ;department of the University, j, 1 After he became an American ' citizen in 1947 he received an . ' offer of the presidency of the i Denazification Court in Berlin < ’iand he was invited by the West i 'German government to be pre siding judge of its Court of Ap -1 peals, but he declined both of • ters in order to stay in the •j University. '! In Zurich he will finish his I commentary on the works of J Stefan George. » j Alex London in Virginia Alex London is in Williams-' . burg, Va , visiting Patch Rankin, j son of Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Frank 1 Rankin, now of Williamsburg and , formerly of Chapel Hill. He will f come home day after tomorrow. t Return From Caasp * Germ Ham, Neal Morton, Both Hunt, Suaan Keith-Lucaa, 1 Cynthia Kotins, Carol Molten, ■ and Winborao Shaffer recently ■ returned from a two-weeka it« CHAPEL KILL, N. C.. FRIDAY, JUNE 22. 1956 Summer Facility Is Honored at Party The University ..Woman's Club anil the Summer / School admin istration entertained at a recep tion hi honor of the Summer School's faculty members Wed nesday evening in the Morebead Building. Receiving at the doors between the dining room and the terraces were Chancellor ami Mrs. Robert B. House and Summer School Director Guy B. Phillips and Mrs. Phillips. Hostesses who served refresh ments included Mrs. William B. Friday, Mr*. William D. Car michael Jr., Mrs. Arnold King, M rs. William B. Aycock, Mrs. L. B. ltogerson, and Mrs. Carlyle Sitterson. I Calendar of EVENTS 1 Friday, June 22 i • 9:30 a. m., Bake sale at Glen Lennox Colonial Store spun sored by women of Aldersgate Methodist Church. • 2 p. m.j Children’s story hour at library in Glenwood Ele mentary School. • Little League baseball games: Yankees vs. Tigers at 3 p. m. iri Carrboro Park, Indians vs. Giants at 4:30 p. m. at High School; Dodgers vs. Cuba at 5 p. m., in Carrboro Park. • 7:30 p. in., Folk Kestivul in Carrboro Athletic Park for benefit of Carrboro Cubs base ball team. Saturday, June 23 • 6:30 a. m. to 6:30 pr. in., Vot mg in run-off of Democratic primary. Monday, June 25 • 8 p. m., Piano concert by Uni versity students, Hill Music- Hall. • • • At Morehead Planetarium; “From Pole to Pole,” 8:30 p. m. daily plus 11 a. m. and 3 p. mJ Saturdays and 3 and 4 p. m. Sun day. » • * At the Carolina: Friday and Saturday, “The First Texan,” with Joel McCrea; Sunday and Monday, “D-Day the Sixth of June,” with Robert Taylor and Richard Todd; also children’s cartoon show at 9:30 a. m. Sat-! urday. At the Varsity: Friday and Saturday, “Backlash," with Rich ard Widmark and Donna Reed; Sunday and Monday, "The Great Locomotive Chase,” with Fess Parker and Jeff Hunter. Bible dasa lias Picnic The women of the Stacy Bible Class of the University Method ist Church held their annual pic nic last week at the B. L. Smiths' i cabin on the Airport Road. The event was attended by about 50; people, including the children and husbands of the members of the class. Going to Camp Seagull The following boys will leave Sunday for a month at Camp Seagull: John LoGrand Jr., Brick Oettinger, Scott Parker, WUMMI “ U ***** Carrboro IKudKft lias Increase of Almost KaO.OMO A $119,600 budget was tentatively approved for 1956-57 for the town of Carrboro by the Carrboro Aldermen at their Tuesday evening meeting. An in crea.-e of $29,610 is shown over the budget for 1955-56. As required by law. a copy of the budget has been filed with the town clerk for pub lic inspection at the Town Hall on Lloyd Street in Carr boro. The budget will come up for its final adoption on July 12. Although the budget was increased over last-year, the tax rate will rerfiain 93 cents per SIOO valuation, the same as last year. This is be cause of the $37,000 cash on hand, as compared to only $15,000 for last year. Receipts from property tax are expected to be $43,- 000, which* is an increase of $3,000 over last year. Other main increases in ex pected receipts are: from SI,OOO to $2,000 for sal** of water meters; from $2,- 800 to $3,000 for sewage tax; from $1,500 to $2,300 in uncollected taxes; from $1,400 to $1,700 in North Carolina beer and wine taxes; from $l5O to SBOO for out of town sewage rent; and from S3OO to S7OO for out of town sewage connec t ions. The largest expected spending will be $45,000 for the sewage department, an SIB,OOO increase over last year. Most of this sum will be spent on the new sewage treatment plant now being built. ; Other, main Increases in spending are; from $6,290 to $7,700 for street work; from SI,BOO to $6,000 for the water department: from $5,500 to $9,000 for the sanitation department; and form $1,200 to $4,000 for the fire department. Most of the expected increased spending will be used for improvements in the vari ous departments. In sanita tion spending, $6,000 will be used to buy a new truck. A new fire-alarm system may also be installed as part of the fire department spend ing. Pittsboro Kiwanians Will Exhibit Pony And Sell Tickets Today in Chapel Hill Members of the Pittsboro Ki wanis Club will he in Chapel Hill today (Friday) selling tickets for an old-fashioned Independ ence Day celebration to be held July 4 in Pittsboro. Tickets, which are 60 cents each, will he sold at prominent places on the streets, and a pony, which will he given away at the festivities, will be brought along too. Money from the sale of tick ets will go to a recreation fund. The festivitiies will include two junior league baseball games, lunch on the ball grounds, three legged races, sack races, and po-| Novel Idea for Bridal Party Decorations An unusual idea for decora-) tions at a bridal shower was put 1 into effect in the staff house atj iiutner State Hospital last Tues-j day at a shower given for Miss I Nancy Lee Hanei, a clinical psy-J chologist at the hospital, who is to marry Robert Patterson Webb here tomorrow (Saturday) at the Chapel of the Cross. The follow ing news bulletin from Uutner reveals why the decorations were; unusual: “Forty-five guests assembled in the lounge, decorated, in ref-' erence to the name of Miss Manet's husband-to-be, with pas tel yarn webs adorned with pink paper roses. Pink candles and white flowers completed the de- ! cor. In onu corner hung a large pink web with black yarn spiders dressed as bride and groom. The gifts were displayed under the web. “As each guest came to the table she received as a favor a pink paper rose decorated with a delicate cellulose web. The table flowers were bridal wreath with Chapel Mill Chad L.G. That was a good story Billy Arthur had in his column about Joe Robbins' decking not to take vaca tions because he found that if he stuck to his job he would get promotions over men who had gone off pleas ure-seeking. "I had 11 pro motions in 14 months.” said Mr. Robbins,” all because folks went off on vacations.” Reading this sent my thoughts back 52 years' to the summer of 1904. I was a 21-year-old stripling who. i had been in New York bare ly over a year and had a job, that my older brother had got me. reporting for the New York Times. I was miserably lacking in self confidence and spent a good deal of my time being afraid 1 was not going to be able to hold on to the job. A young man named Stephen Chal mers, as far from lacking in self confidence as a ihaii could possibly be and a bril liant writer, had come on the staff two or three months before. When my vacation time came they put him in my place, supposedly for only my two free weeks, but how did l know what might happen when they saw how well he was covering my 1 assignment at tin* old Ten derloin poiice station? Be fore leaving Now York I gave an order to the Times circulation department to mail the paper to me. I’d have* had a much happier time if I hadn't done that. For, the first thing I did when 1 got the Times at the , post office every morning was to hunt up Steve Chal-! 1 mers’s stories and thyy were,! so well written, so sprightly and humorous, that they I spoiled my vacation. * * * I Here’s one more person who, after looking fearfully at airplanes from afar for years, climbs inside one, (Continued on Page 2) ‘‘Huspitslity lllues" j Doug Harrell’s recording of I "Hospitality lllues,” which is the best selling record in this area, is spreading out on a national basis this weekend. Tomorrow (Saturday) it will he played on Monitor, the popular NBC week- 1 end radio program that is heard mi Dis stations. tato races, with prizes going to the winners of each event. Bl • cycles will he awarded to the! hoy and girl submitting the best highway safety slogan, und an | automobile will he auctioned for • sale. Big Jim Tutum will ad . dress the crowd on “Sportsman ,! ship,” and a greasy pig und ! greased pole contest will he held : with prizes going to winners. The pony will also be given . away, und thut night, a minia • ture golf tournament will be held , at the Kiwanis Park with three • divisions for men, women, and Children. | The hostesses for the event 'were Miss Constance DeLancy,' | Miss Janet Haas, and Mrs. Gor-' jdon Kirschner. At Memorial lloMpital j Among y>cal persons listed as patients at Memorial Hospital yesterday were Mrs. Thomas Aus tin, Miss Beatrice Bacon, Stein ' Basnight, I). H. Buchanan, W. A.I I Burnett, Susan Goldstein, Tommy | Hackney, G. L. Johnson, Betty Pearson, Miss Carolyn Pender grass, Mrs. Eric Riggsbee and Miss Alice Stevens. Methodist Picnic Members of the Patricia Nel son Circle of the University Methodist Church held a picnic one evening last week at the B. ' L. Smiths’ cabin on the Airport 1 Road. The picnic was attended jby about 45 persons, including i members of the families of the i circle members. * " i Jeaxanoe in New Home i Tho Tony Jenxanoe moved laat I week into their new home on $4 a \ear in County; other rates on page 2 Candidates for State Senate And County Board Are to Be Chosen in Run-Off Tomorrow H here to Vote* in KtiifOff Tomorrow Voting in the run-off for the Democratic primary 'to morrow will be the same as in the first primary. The polls will be open from 6:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. The voting places and reg istrars for the Chapel Hill precincts are as follows: Precinct 1: Town Hall, registrar Mrs. Henry E. Royall. Precinct 2: Presby terian Hut back of Tele phone Exchange on Rose mary Street, registrar J. A. Warren. Precinct 3: Wool len Gymnasium, registrar Harold Walters. Precinct 4: Cone House next door to the High School, registrar Mrs. Irene Scroggs. Precinct 5: Glenwood School, registrar Mrs. Lindsay Neville. I’here will be only one voting place for Carrboro voters, at the Carrboro Town Hall. ( andidates to lie voted on are: For Board of County Commissioners, Sim Efland of Kflaiul and Donald M. Stanford of Chapel Hill; for State Senator from 16th Senatorial District, John T. Manning and Edwin S. Lan ier, both of Chapel Hill. I*l3llo Concert Set For Monday Ni^ht A piano concert will he given at 8 p. m. Monday, June 25, in Hill Hall by students who have studied in the University’s Muaie Department in the past year. Ad mission is fre* and the poUle ia invited. The concert, to consist of American music, is the first of two such events to be held in conjunction with the University's Sixth Annual Clinic for Piano I Teachers and Students. “Sonata American Gothic,” by I Harold Twiggs of the composi tion staff of Columbia Univer sity, will be played by Harvey Miller; “Celtic Sonata,” by Ed ward MaeDowell, will he played by Mrs. Sara Snornieks; Miss Marjorie Still will play "Excur sions,” by Samuel Barber, four kinds of fantasies on American ideas including blues and hill billy folk songs; and the fourth presentation will he Bela Bar tok's “Third Concerto.” Eugene Hudson will pluy the solo here, and Miss Polly Wilkerson will play on another piano the part usually olayed by an orchestra. The music clinic is under the I direction oi William S. Newman 'of the University Music Depart j merit. Carrboro Cubs (Jet Their 14th Victory The Carrboro Cubs had their fourteenth win of the season last .Monday night, defeating Ca-Vel, 0-0, on 10 hits. The winning j pitcher for the Cubs, Don Jaok |son also gave up 10 hits, but ,Carrboro’s hitting came where it counted to keep them in the I leud for most of the ball game.! Losing pitcher for Ca-Vel was Wiikin. Fenno McGinty with three hits in five tries including a home run in the third inning, pitcher Don Jackson with two hits for three ! tries, ami Jack Mitchell with a home run in the seventh were; leading hitters for the Cubs. Dan' Carroll also had a triple in the' second inning. Tonight (Friday) the Cubs will go tgainst Swepsonville In an away game, and Saturday ! night they will take on the Dur ham Rams in Durham’s Athletic Park. I Children’s Story Hour A story hour sos children of the third grade and below will he held in the Peter Garvin Li brary at the Glen Lennox Ele mentary School at 2 o’clock every Friday afternoon from today through August 3. It will be conducted by Mrs. Dorothy Ellis, the school’s librarian. Bake Sale Today The Woman’a Society of Chria tian Service of the Alderagate Methodist Church will hold a : bake sale today (Friday) at the XMna * u FRIDAY ISSUE Next Imuc Tuesday 1 A run-off of the first Democratic primary will be held tomorrow (Saturday) to nominate candidates for Orange County Commission er and Senator from this dis trict. The polls will be open from 6:30 a. m. to 6:30 p. m. County Commissioner Sim Efland of Efland and Donald M. Stanford of Chapel Hill are the two men running for county commissioner, and John Manning and Edwin S. Lanier, both of Chapel . Hill, are in the running for the Senate post. Mr. Efland and Mr. La nier, who trailed in the first primary, asked for the run off. Mr. Efland is known to feel personally that the peo ple of Orange do not desire a concentration of comrhis sioners in one section, name ly Chapel Hill, of the county. And he feels that the north ern section is justly entitled to representation on the board. Mr. Stanford polled 2.199 votes in the first primary, and Mr. Efland got 1.879. Two other candidates polled 2,256 together, and Commis sioner R. J. M. Hobbs, who was renominated, got 2,821. That makes a total of 5,077 votes that could be divided between the two candidates in the run-off. Mr. Manning got 2,025 votes in the first primary to JJr. Lanier's- 1,773. A third candidate got 1.362 votes in this race for the Senate nomination. Mr. Manning, in a state ment made thia*we**k, said. “I appreciated tne confidence expressed in me in the first primary which resulted in the lead over my opponent in Chapel Hill and Hillsboro and generally throughout the county. I sincerely hope for the continued support of those who made this lead possible.” Mr. Lanier, who has served as a County Com missioner and as an Alder man and then Mayor of Chapel Hill, said in his state ment: "For the past eleven years I have worked hard to help achieve good local gov ernment. I want to work hard in behalf of good state government, and l hope and j believe the people will en courage me to do so. “The nominee tor this of fice should know and feel that the voters in large num bers expressed themselves at the ballot box, and that he is the choice of the ma jority. If the people exer cise the right and privilege of citizenship by voting in force, I shall be content and grateful, whatever the out come, with their decision.” John T. 0 7 NeiTjr. Takes High Honors John T. O’Neil Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. O’Neil of 418 Westwood . Drive, was graduated magna cum laude from the Woodberry For est School in Virginia this month and is making plans to become a freshman this coming fall at ! Princeton University, where he has a scholarship. At Woodberry Forest the young Chapel Hiilian, whose father teaches finance in the Univer sity’s School of Business Admin istration, was active in athletic as well as in scholarly pursuits, having won his letter in track and soccer. John was also the winner of the school’s M. A. Turner Me morial Prize, given each year ■ to the best student in French, ' and the Leland Hume Lord Me i morial Medal, awarded for ex , cellence in mathematics. Faculty Club Luncheon Professor Joseph T. Snead of • the University of Texas Law > School will apeak on “What Ia i Qur Fadernl Income Tax Policy?” rat a luncheon muHag of tfca iTaflUty Club at 11 ■ Tilll