TUESDAY ISSUE Next Issue Friday Vol. 32, No. 52 Town Making July Fourth Holiday Plans Mpst Chapel Hill and (’arrboro merchants and bus- Oess men will close their places of business tomorrow (Wednesday) in celebration of Independence Day, and the University’s annual Water melon Festival will be staged to help students and towns people alike to celebrate the anniversary of the nation’s birth. All stores and places of business will be closed all day with the exception of several restaurants, drug stores and service stations. Public offices in Chapel Hill, Carrboro, and Hillsboro will be closed; there will be no mail deliveries,.but outgoing mail will be dispatched and incoming mail will be put in boxes. Some people will probably celebrate by relaxing at golf, swimming, fishing and engaging in other holiday activities. The Watermelon Festival l w ill begin at 5:,'10 p.m. under! the Davie Poplar on the Uni-! versity campus. Over 3,000‘ students and townsjMiople tinned out for the event last year, and an even larger number is expected this year, Everybody is invited, and there will be free water melon for all comers. The coronation of the king, a faculty member, and! the queen, a coed, will take place at 9 p.m. during an intermission of the dance, which will be held after a variety show. All of the con testants will form a group on the steps of South Build ing where tne coronation will take place. Chancellor K. B. House will crown the king and queen. During the variety show there will be a watermelon eating contest between a faculty team and a student *4|am. The teams will con sTst of eight members each. Also, as a part of the variety show, there will be a faculty combo featuring Chancellor House and his harmonica. | The festival dance will be held immediately following the variety show in the parking I<>l adjacent to the Y-Court and will last until 11 p.m. i Mi.ss Mafie Woody, queen of last year’s festival, and Miss Joy Lambert, Miss Ral eigh of 11)56, will be the guests of honor at the festi val. Bob Morrow, chairman of til Festival Committee, has urged students and towns people alike to come to the Festival to help celebrate the Fourth of July and to make this festival one to be remembered. This weejk also is vaca tion week flora number of Orange industries, The Carr boro Mills closed last Friday j for vacation and will resume' operations j next Monday,! July 9. In lilillsboro all but one industrial plant is closed this week. I In conjugation with the vacation we*k, a number of employees received bonuses. Jewelry designer Studying in West Charles Hopttins, well-wnown jewelry desigaLr-craftsman of Chapel Hill, haafleft for the Cal ifornia College! of Arts and Crafts in Oakland, California, where he will Mudy jewelry de sign under th«l noted designer, Margaret d« P*CTa of San Fran cisco. Mr. Hopkins iwill visit gem cutting establishments in the Southwest, as will as importers of Oriental geml stones in San Kr*icisco. He ixpects to re turn with many interesting gems and materials for] a formal open ing this fall of hia contemporary, hand-wrought jewjsiry studio ov er Sutton’s Drug fUore. Legion Auxiliary Installs Its New Officers —Photo by BiU Prouty Mrs. John J. Keller, Jr. (third from left) was in l stalled as president of the Chapel Hill American Le gion Auxiliary at an im pressive installation cere mony conducted at a ban quet meeting Wednesday I evening in the Pine Room of the Carolina Inn by Mrs. Ellen Newsom of Raleigh, Third Area vice-president of the North Carolina depart ment of the Auxiliary and j chaplain-elect of the depart ment. She succeeds Mrs.; John Carr Heitman (second from left), who was installed as second vice-president for the coming year. Six other new officers in stalled at the meeting are also pictured. From left to right are Mrs. I). M. Horner, first vice-president; Mrs. Heitman; Mrs. Keller; Mrs.! Musical Portraits Are to Give Free Concert Tonight in Hill Music Hall The Musical Portraits, two singers and a pianist who com bine opera, concert number), and musical comedy, will perforin here at 8 o’clock this . etening (Tuesday) in Hill Music Hall. The program, sponsored ly the University’s Summer Activities Council, is open to everybocy and is free of charge. The group consists of Dolores Baldyga, a soprano who sings with the Boston Symphony; Da na Lordly, a pianist and airang ei who started the grouj and Jay Wentland, a baritone who; was a student of Frederic k Jagel ! The members of the grou) met in the New England Comerva tory in Boston. There the; dis covered the suppressed bo'edom that so often accompanies the Jenkinson Art Exhibit at Planetarium A valuable collection )f 42 watercolors, drawings, anl oils by (ieoffrey Jenkinson, cebbrat ed English artist now livng in Thomasville, opened in boh the North and South Art G&leries of the Morehead Planetarium here this week. They will be on display during all of July Among them are waterolors,! pencil and wash drawings, and oils and pen sketches of North Carolina mountain scenei, in-, eluding Grandfather and Roan; Mountains, beach scenes after hurricanes, and New Yore and English buildings and landscapes.! One of Mr. Jenkinson’s works'on exhibit is valued at $1,500; some others he has labeled priedess. j Nationally recognized in Eng-j land and accorded the honor of having a painting hung in the' Royal Academy of Art when he was but 21 years of agt, Mr. Jenkinson now has two pictures on permanent exhibition in the Royal Cambrian Acadeny in Wales. He has exhibited threej times in large American shows) already this year, and las: year' at the Raleigh State Exhibition.! One of his works was adected for purchase for permanent dis play in the State Art Mureum. Another, that of Biltmore House at Asheville, was almost purchased by Grace Kelly, now; the wife of Monaco Prince Ranter 11, when she and Alec Guineas and Louis Jordan inspected Mr. Church Council Meeting The Church Council of the Un ited Congregational Curistian Church will meet Sunday even ing, July 8, at the churcl. Mem bers of the various conmittees are invited to attend with the committee chairmen, who with the church officers, main up the council. Plans will be „,de in anticipation of the arrivtf of the church’s new minister ind hi* wife en August 1. The Chapel Hill Weekly 5 Cents a Copy Norman Jackson, recording ■secretary; Mrs. Troy Hern don, corresponding sec’y; Mrs. Ruby Meilett, treasur er; Mrs. Arthur Ward, ser geant-at-arms, and Mrs. Al ta Singletary, historian. Mrs. Keller, the new pres ident, is a native of Durham and an alumna of Duke Uni versity. A resident of Chapel Hill since 1948, she is a member of the University Methodist Church and is em ployed at the University’s athletic ticket office in i Woollen Gymnasium. She and her husband and their two daughters, Fran and Barbara, live at 13 Oak wood Drive. Mrs. Heitman, the retir-j ing president, received, in the name of the unit, a mem-' hership certificate from De- Ipartment President MrsJ > formal recital approach. With this in mind, they conceived a I program idea that would incor i porate their serious musical and ■ dramatic training into various scenes and skits. Breaking from the tradition of using the established dialogue of musical comedy scenes, the trio preferred to set their arrange ments into situations that every one would- recognize, such as a scene in a living room or a mu seum, or a husband and wife dis puting over a television set. Featured in the program will I be anniversary tributes to both opera and musical comedy, which include scenes from “The Mar riage of Figaro,” in celebration of Mozart, and an adaptation of I “The Wizard of ~Oz.” Jenkinson’s works while they were filming "The Swan” in the Asheville area. Miss Kelly may yet buy the painting. Mr. Jenkinson’s greatest at tribute is the pitfall of many young artists —that of getting too much detail in his works, ltetail, however, is that which weli-qualifies him for his pres ent full-tirne work as a furniture illustrator for a Thomasville furniture manufacturer.. A s'ur- vey of his paintings and sketch es on exhibit at the Planetarium shows a keen insight of the mod ern metropolitan areas as well as an appreciation for the beau ties of the North Carolina mountains and the coast. Attend Astronomy Meeting Ray Graham and W. E. Shaw cross left Chapel Hill last Fri day for an automobile trip to Miami, Fla., to attend the na tional convention of the Amer ican Astronomy League. Mr. ! Graham is president of the (Chapel Hill Astronomy Club and a graduate student in physics at the University. Mr. Shawcross is a laboratory instructor in as tronomy and one of the narrat ors at the Morehead Planetar ium. The Chapel Hill Astronomy Club is a member of the league in convention. — Perfect Attendance Members of the Chapel Hill Exchange Club who had a per fect attendance during the first half of this year are Bill Blake, George Cannefax, C. M. Carroll, Coy Durham, Dr. Duncan Get singer, J. D. Golden, Les Foley, Herb Holland, George Poe, Bill Poe, Pat Pope, W. N. Tyler, Wal lace Williams, and Bill Ray. Kirkland Out Again Garland Kirkland ia able to be eut and around again after a stay in Memorial Heepital. CHAPEL HILL, N. C., TUESDAY. JULY 3, 1956' John W. Hern placing the unit on the Honor Roll of the North Carolina Depart ment of the Auxiliary. She also received a Department Citation for Meritorious Ser-, vice in 1956 and a past pres-i ident’s pin presented to her! by the local unit as a token of its members’ apprecia-! tion for her distinguished work during her year as president. Mrs. D. M. Horner, as a former president of the lo cal unit, was awarded a Certificate of Membership! in the Six and Fifty-Six! Club and a Certificate of Membership in the Century' Club of the Auxiliary. Each former president at the meeting gave an account of accomplishments of the unit that took place during her administration. Phi Delta Kappa Meeting The second summer meeting of the University’s chapter of Phi Delta Kappa, honorary educa tional fraternity, will be held at 6 o’clock this even ing in the north dining room of Lenoir Hall. The guest speaker will be Joseph Leese, visiting professor of education and an authority in the field of mental hygiene. Local Swimmers I)o Well at Kinston Meet The Chapel Hill Swimming Club took first in several races and placed well tn others in the North Carolina AAU Open Swim, ming Championships held at Kinston this past weekend but came out second to Greensboro; in the women’s division and| third to the North Carolina Ath-I letic ( lub and Greensboro in the men s classes. The Chapel Hill girls scored 61 points, while the men totaled Sorne of those to score for the Chapel Hill team were: Jimmy Jamerson, second in the junior men’s 100-yard freestyle; Minor Davis, second in the boys’ 50- yard backstroke; Virginia Tim mons, third in the junior wo men’s 100-yard backstroke; Mi nor Davis, third in the boys’ 50-yard breaststroke; Virginia Ellis, third in the junior wo men’s 100-yard freestyle; Dee Casey, third in the girls’ 50-yard breaststroke; in the men’s 200- yard medley relay, a team of Terry Stapleton, Jimmy Jamer son, Chris Fink, and Pete Tal bert, fourth; Chris Fink, second in the junior men’s 100-yard breaststroke; team of Minor Davis, Chris Fink, Jimmy Jamer son, and Terry Stapleton, first in the junior men’s 200-yard Fire Damages Residence Fire originating in a closet did considerable damage to the dwelling occupied by Cisco Mays and family near Whipple’s Store on the Durham Road Sunday. The Greater Chapel Hill Fire District truck answered the call and prevented total destruction of the residence. The Mays fam ily had planned to leave for Florida Sunday night for a vaca tion. “Ed Wives” to Be Entertained Mrs. Donald Tarbet and Mrs. Richard Beard will be co-hostes-j ses at the annual summer party for the Education Wives on Thursday, July 5, at 8:00 p.m. at Mrs. Tarbet’s home on 904 | Christopher Road. All wives whose husbands are enrolled in the School of Education at the University are cordially invited to attend. Neit Paper Drive The next Jaycee paper drive will be held Sunday afternoon, July 29. Everybody is aaked to save old newtpepera, magazines, and other waste paper' for the Jeyeees to collect that day. New Federal Tax I p« (iflNoline One Ont IVr Gallon Gasoline prices went up | one cent a gallon in Chapel Hill during the weekend as the new Federal excise tax went into effect across the nation to finance the big | Federal road-building pro gram. I The hike affects both high ’ test and regular gasoline. , With the added one-cent .jtax, premium gasoline in • Chapel Hill is now selling l for 33.2 cents per gallon for; S regular, and 35.9 cents per, , gallon for high test. > The increase makes the r Federal tax three cents per: ‘ gallon on all gasoline, and ‘ j the State collects seven cents! ■jin taxes, plus a quarter of ‘ ( a cent inspection fee charged dealers and passed on to mo ■ torists. j Rost Office Holiday Ihe Chapel Hill Post Office [ will be closed tomorrow (Wed-1 l nesday) for the usual Independ-j I ence Day holiday. There will be Ino window service and no town! ;or R.F.D. delivery, with the ex j rep tion of special delivery let ■( ters and parcels. However, the 'doors of the Post Office will be iopen from 6 a.m. to midnight, as usual, mail will he put up in the (boxes, as usual, and all incoming and outgoing mail will receive I the usual handling. Deadline Advanced During this July 4 week, deadlines for the Friday, July 6, issue of the Weekly will be advanced. For this com ing Friday's issue, the dead line for classified ads will be 5 p.m. today (Tuesday), and that for news will be 10 a.m. tomorrow (Wednesday). - ———— ■ i Four Join Exchange Club -, 7’tsw memb; a initialed 'J y t’o i Chapel Hill Exchange Club in < the last three months were John , .Webb, Dennis Williams, Nello . Clark, and James Neighbors. The club now has 31 members. * medley relay; Dee Casey, third in the senior women's 200-yard breaststroke; Ginger Kenney, third in the junior women’s 100- yard breaststroke; Minor Davis, first, and Terry Stapleton, sec jond in the boys’ 50-yard free style; and Virginia Ellis, third in the girls’ 50-yard freestyle. This coming weekend the Chapel Hill Swimming Club will enter a meet at Coluptbia, S. C. o'olondar of EVENTS Tuesday, July 3 • 6 p.m., Joseph Leese to 3peak at Phi Delta Kappa meeting in Lenoir Hall. • 7:30 p.m., Lutheran Church Council meeting, at the church. • 8 p.m., Free concert by Mus ical Portraits (two singers and a pianist), in Hill Music Hall. Wednesday, July 4 • 5:30 p.m., U.N.C. Summer School's annual Watermelon Festival (free to everybody), under Davie Poplar; to be fol lowed at 9 p.m. by dance on YMCA plaza. Thursday, July 5 • 8 p.m., Ed Wives party at home of Mrs. Donald Tarbet at 904 Christopher Road . • 8:30 p.m., Carolina Play mak ers’ production of “Goodbye, My Fancy,” In Playmakers Theatre. * * * At the Morehead Planetarium:; “Mars, Planet of Mystery,” 8:30 p.m. seven days a week and also at 11 a.m., 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. Saturday and at 2 pin., 3 p.m. and 4 p.m. Sunday. * • * At the Varsity Theatre: Tues day and Wednesday, “Suspense,” with Dana Andrews, Rhonda Fleming, George Sanders, Thom as Mitchell, Vincent Price, John Barrymore Jr, and Ida Lupiiiop Thursday, “The Man With the Golden Arm,” with Frank Sin atra, Eleanor Parker, and Kim Novak. At the Carolina Theatre: Tues day, “The Catered Affairwith Bette Davis, Ernest Borgnine, Debbie Reynolds, and Barry Fitsgeraid; Tuesday late shew at 11:30 p.m., “Santiago/’ with Alan Udd and Bus—a Fodesta. Chapel Mill Cha // L.G. Robert M. Lester and Or > ville Campbell met on- the [plane leaving New York »i Wednesday morning. Neith er had known the other was tin the city. In the course of! ■ itheir chatting Mr. Campbell ■ happened to remark that he had stayed at the Algonquin! i Hotel on 44th street. “So did I,” said Mr. Lester. They: ; could have stayed there for i weeks or months and never :|been aware of each other’s' • presence. That’s the way it’s ■ apt to be in a big city hotel.: 'But planes are different— .‘they funnel home-town peo • pie together. I hear every‘ ; little while of Chifpul/'Hill-! idans’ meeting one another on a plane. * * * One of the forms of read-! ing matter that interest me! in these days is what men and women who have re tired say about their new way of life. Retirement I comes in many different | forms and people have wide ly varied attitudes toward it. One person revels in leis ure (or as some people &11 it, idleness), another is un-j happy because he has to quit the work he has been doing all his life. A familiar case is that of the person who feels first one way and then the other—who expects! to be happy when he is free to do nothing but, after he has acquired that freedom, discovers it is a fraud. I see in the Knoxville, Ten nessee News Sentinel that this was the discovery made by my Chapel Hill playmate of sixty years ago. Dr. Eben Alexander. (He is the son of the Eben Alexander who was professor of Greek in the University and Minis ter to Greece under Grover i Cleveland, the father of Dr. Eben Alexander Jr. of the faculty of the Wake Forest Medical School in Winston- Salem, the brother and uncle of Mrs. Drew Patterson, MrsJ Mary Patterson Fisher and! (Continued on Page 2) Chapel Hillians (Jet Together in Denmark A group of Chapel Hillians had luncheon together in Copen hagen, Denmark, the other day' when the U. S. battleship lowa dropped anchor in the Copenhag en harbor. The host and hostess were Ro bert Caldwell, Second Secretary of the U. S. Embassy in Copen hagen, and Mrs. Caldwell. The guests were Mrs. l.ucy Sutton and Mrs. Marjorie Campbell, Chapel Hillians who are abroad this summer; Rob Fowler, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Fowler of Chapel Mill; Walter Coenen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Coenen of Chapel Hill, and Har ry Whitlock, a University 1 stu dent from out of town. The visit of the three young men to Copenhagen was part of the Naval Reserve Officers’ training cruise they are making this summer aboard the lowa. Embassy Secretary Caldwell is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Wallace Lieut. Thomas Named Budget Officer First Lieutenant Harry J. Thomas, Jr., son of Mrs. D. R. Brooks, 160 E. Rosemary St., Chapel Hill, is serving as an ad ministrative budget officer at Headquarters, Air Materiel Com mand at Wright-Patterson Air Force Base in Ohio. Lieutenant Thomas is assigned to the Central Procurement Fi nancial Division in the Office of the Comptroller. Air Materiel Command has world wide pro curement, supply and mainten ance responsibilities for the en tire Air Force. He was graduated from Chapel Hill High School in 1940 and re ceived his bachelor of arts de gree from the University here in 1960. He entered military ser vice in October, 1940, and was commissioned in June, 1949. He was stationed at Vance Air Force Base, Okla., from 1951 to 1954, and was in Europe from October, 1954, to April, 1956. The lieutenant wrote the prise winning play, “A Rapping at the Garrett Door,” that won the North-South Carolina playwrit ing contest ia 1941. Ho also wen $4 a Year in County; other rates on page 2 Public Hearing on Limiting Commissioners to Two Per Township Set for Sept. 10 The Orange County Board ! terday (Monday) called a public 10 on whether the number of from a single township should be Local Racqueteers Top Rocky Mount The Chapel Hill Tennis Club ■ defeated Rocky Mount, 7-2, at j Rocky Mount Sunday in an East jern Carolina Tennis Association Match. Singles Norman Jarrard (CH) defeated A. R. Weathers Jr., 6-3, 6-4; Fred Ruben (RM) I defeated Henry Clark, 2-6, 6-4, 6-3; H. S. McGinty (CH) defeat jed Jessie Joyner, 6-3, 6-4; Dick j Gregory (RM) defeated Ted : Sharpless, 6-2, 8-6; Charlie | -Shaffer (CH) defeated Ed Turn | ley, 6-3, 6-3. i Doubles Sharpless and Jar- , ! rard (CH) defeated Wimberly and Ruben, 6-0, 7-5; MeGintyj and Clark (CH) defeated Wea- ' thers and Gregory, 6-4, 6-2; Jor dan and Lee (CH) defeated Joy ner and Turnley, 7-5, 6-2. Furman Recognizes (Jordon Blackwell Jr. Gordon W. Blackwell- Jr. of , (hapel Hill has been awarded one of the five general excellence 1 scholarships at Furman Univer sity for the coming school year. The 17-year-old Blackwell is a | graduate of the Chapel Hill High . School, and only last Friday the Weekly carried a story about his • enterprising tree-chopping busi- I ness. In high school, he was co captain of the basketball team, j Student Council treasurer, and Monogram Club president. He 1 was born in Greenville, S. C., ■where his family lived from 11)37 - to 11)41 while his father was a ' member of the Furman Univer- sity faculty. The Furman scholarship is given to students havirg out standing high school records. The Blackwell family resides at 520 Dogwood Drive here. At Baptist Assembly Joan Anderson, Frances Burch, and Carolyn Dillehay, young members of the Carrboro Baptist Church, have been at tending a young people's con ference at the Caswell Baptist Assmbly Grounds. , E. Caldwell of Chapel Hill. The older Mr. Caldwell teaches his tory at the University, and Har ry Whitlock of the lowa is one of his. students. Mrs. Campbell, Mrs. Sutton, and Embassy Secretary and Mrs. j Caldwell were invited aboard the ; lowa and were shown around the 1 ship by the three young men from Chapel Hill. ‘host Colony’ Opens Paul (ireen’s “The Lost Col ony” opened for its 16th season at Manteo last Saturday night. Mr. Green was present for the opening of the symphonic drama depicting the founding of the first English settlement in the New World. Vacation in Maine Mr. and Mrs. Alex McMahon and their children, Sandy, Sal ly, and Elizabeth, left Satur day for a month’s vacation in York, Maine. second prize at Vance Air Force Base in an Air Force short story contest in 1952. He won third prize in an Air Force short story contest at Trier Air Force Base, Germany, in 1956. With his wife, the former Hel en Claire Alexander of Natchi toches, La., and three sons, Lieut. Thomas is making his home near the base at 178 Diana Lane North, Fairborn, Ohio. Donald Carroll Returns Donald C. Carroll, son of Mr. and Mrs. D. D. Carroll, has fin ished his tour of duty as a first lieutenant in the U. S. Marine 1 Corps and has come home to take graduate work at the Uni versity. He served first in Cali fornia, then in Korea, and final ly in Japan. He was graduated from the University in January of 1954 shortly before entering the Marines. He plans to enter tha second term of the Uni versity Summer Session and take work leading to an advanced degree in industrial manage- TUESDAY ISSUE Next Issue Friday of Commissioners yes hearing for September county commissioners i limited to two. In so doing, the commis sioners granted the request of the Chapel Hill League of Women Voters and of Ro land McCiamroch of Chapel Hill for a public hearing be fore asking that the change be made by the General As sembly. Mrs. Richmond Bond, president, also of Chapel Hill, was the author of the league’s request. The Commissioners at their June 5 meeting voted to ask the General Assem bly to limit the make-up of the board by statute. The decision was met with varied reaction throughout the county. Both the League and Mr. McCiamroch sought a pub lic hearing, because they said there was no immedi ancy attached to the action. The commissioners, there fore, yesterday set the hear ing for September 10 at 7:30 p.m. at the Hillsboro Courthouse. In othe action prior to lunch, the commissioners received a petition from Dr. C. L. Sockwell asking that 2,000 feet of Howell Street be taken over by the State Highway Commission for maintenance. Eight resi dences are on the street. New Pathologist In Medical School The appointment of Walter R. Benson as assistant professor in the Department of Pathology at the University School of Medi cate has been announced by Chancellor Robert B. House and has been approved by Acting President William Friday and the Board of Trustees. Dr. Benson, who will begin his duties at UNC this week, comes from the University of Louis ville Medical School where he was an assistant professor in 1955-56, He itaught at Duke University from 1952 to 1954. Benson obtained his M. D. at Duke University in 1944. He was born in Tamaqua, Pa., is married and has two children. Chapel Hillians to He in Golf Tourney Chapel Hillians who qualified for the championship flight of the 11th annual Durham Herald- Sun Amateur Golf, Tournament, to begin tomorrow on the Hillan dale course in Durham, are as follows: Roy Teague, with a 75; J. H. McCombs Jr., 78; Bob Watson, 77, and Rob Ruffin, 77. Chapel Hillians who qualified for other flights in the tourna ment included Merrfll Teague, Sam Patrick, Ted Oldenburg, Vernon Lacock, Hap Perry, Max Saunders, Charlie Phillips, and Herb Wentworth. At Memorial Hospital Among local persons listed as patients at Memorial Hospital yesterday were Miss Beatrice Bacon, Wescott Booth, Miss Ruby Lee Bynum, Mrs. Grover Bynum, Mrs. Allen Durham, George L. Johnson, Raymond Jones, Mrs. Gray McAllister, Mrs. Goldie Niggli, Larry Noell, Mrs. A. C. Rogers, Mrs. Eric Riggsbee, Jeff Thomas, J. A. Warren, Mrs. Jo sephine Winston, and Miss Mar ion Wood. Home From Convention North Carolina Jaycee Presi dent Bob Cox and five other Chapel Hillians have returned from the national Jaycee conven tion at Kansas City, Mo. The others were . Lindy Sparrow, Bruce Martindale, Sandy Mc- Clamroch, Henry Yates, and Ted Danziger. Chapel JHllnote* People so soon forgetful of the usual comfbrt of air-con ditioning In tho Bank of Chapal Hill complaining Monday whan It was off. e •> e Full-alaa slsctrk window fan