TUESDAY ISSUE Next Issue Friday Vol. 32, No. 55 Timers Win Championship Willi S-2 Record " ,j|Txr • ■ |. >|. 1«r /, so*, AiTfc i / Sj^^SSpjfcifc I'- \ \\ '> ffV f mikSt Jj-f ~'- W9HM t ItM m - jgfcyijMaMagA I ***~ The Chapel Hill Little League's Tigers (alum-) won (he league rluinipitinship with an 8-2 record Friday afternoon when they defeated the Indians, 4-1. If the Indians had won the game they would have tied the Tigers for first place. Shown Irom left to right (front row) are " al lace Nick, Howell I'endergrass, l.arry Campbell, Danny Fitch, John Hinson, and lim t.reene; (second row) Gene Hay, George Ham, l.arry Kenney, Assistant t ouch Martin Allen. David Mc- Connell, Charlie Phillips, and Hat-Hoy Andy Phillips. Absent when the picture was made were Head Coach Dick Jainerson, C harles Feller, Roger Kowdeii, and Arthur Straughn. By taking a 4-1 victory £it the Indians Friday af ternoon the Tigers clinched their championship of the Little League circuit for the 11)5(1 season. In other games the Liants had their third straight win, this time over the Dodgers, 7-5, and the Yankees obtained a narrow victory over the Cubs, win ning tt-8 in the final inning. The championship game was a victory for Tiger pitcher Charlie Phillips who gave up only two hits, both to Indian star Wayne Hud son, who opposed him on the mouijd. Hudson allowed four hits and two of these to Phillips. All scoring in this game came in the fourth inning. The Indians’ lone run came %when Robert Oakes walked, stole second base, and scored on a single by Hud son. The Tigers’ runs came when Larry Kenney walked. Phillips hit a single, and Roger Bowden hit another single to score Kenney, (leorge Ham then hit a trip le "to score Phillips and Row den. John Hinson then hit to the third baseman and Ham beat the throw to the plate. The Yankee victory in their close game with the Coenen Is Training % Aboard Destroyer Midshipman 3-c Walter 1* Coenen of Chapel Hill is partici pating in a Naval training cruise aboard the destroyer CSS Ross in the Atlantic Ocean this summer. The son of Mr and Mrs. Fred eric K. Coenen of ( hapel Hill, he is a sophomore here in the Uni versity's Naval R.O.T.C. pro gram. He left Norfolk, Va., June 5, bound for ports in Sweden, Nor way, Denmark, England and Germany. Gunnery training at Guantanamo Hay, Cuba, will cli max the cruise before the ships L return to Norfolk August 2. 1 At Memorial Hospilal I I/ical persons listed as pa- I |Wa at Memorial Hospital yes-' were Miss Heatriee Ha* ■rh' Michelle Denise Bradley, Hessie 1 ole, Kinston Cot- H'.m, Wulter Harrell, Mrs. E. D. gHnjl, Mrs. M H. Morrow, Wil liam D. Neville, Charles S. Rar- Mrs. Mary Thompson, and Hrs. l/ouis Williams. IjfcoOO Reported ■ In Cancer Drive tSKBM turned in to the Orange fekJty Cancel Society aa te rn- Hos the recent annuai cam Hi for funds, Chairman Jennings disclosed yee- Hay. Mr. Jennings said he @ to be able to make a PPW report by the coming 5 Cents a Copy Cubs didn't come until tin* bottom of the last inning. A home run by Ned Martin, who was the leading hitter of the day with a remark able four hits in four trip.- to the plate, in the sixth had brought tiie Cubs’ lead to 8-6. Then Archie Kelly got on base on an error, Don Smith got on with a single, and Jimmy Bejester hit a home run over the fence to bring in the winning runs i Vernon Howard was the Dr. Warner Wells’ Home Is Second to Be Entered and Ransacked by Vandals Mr and Mrs. J. Lyons were n’t the only (hapel Htllians whose house was broken into last week by vandals*. A person or persons unknown also entered the home of Dr. and Mrs. War ner Well* at 704 Fast Franklin Stieet and ransacked it from top to bottom. The entry was made in broad daylight while Dr. Wells was on duty at the hospi tal and Mrs Wells and the chil dren were out of town. Just about everything in the house had been disarranged but nothing seemed to have I wen. stolen except the money m the; children's piggy hanks. In a telephone interview with a Weekly reporter Dr. Wells said it wa- a shocking experience to j come home and find the place in , such a condition. “It is a great disappointment to me that such a thing should happen here,” he said. “We have always regarded Chapel Hill a> a community where people can leave their doors unlocked without worry ing about it." As reported in Friday’s issue of this paper, a great deal of damage was done in the Lyons home on Gunghoul Road, though nothing whs stolen. Furniture, carpets, upholstery, bed linen, table linen, pictures, and cloth Carrboro Cubs Will Meet Burlington in First Tourney Game Tomorrow at 6 P.M. Tomorrow (Wednesday) after noon the Carrboro Cubs will go to Koxboro to compete in the 195fi North Carolina semipro baseball championship. Th e1 r first game is with the Burling ton Warriors, whom the Cubs have not met ail season, and is scheduled for ti p.m. Yesterday (Monday) after noon the Cubs went to Ca-Vel for their last regular game be fore the tournament. The annual tourney at Kox boro is for the biggest semipro baseball title in the state. It is being defended this year by Roanoke Rapids. Finals are slat ed for August 11 with the cham pion qualifying for the* Nation als to he played in Wichita, Kan sas. . The Cubs go into the tourna ment with 21 wins and 10 losses for the aeaaon. Sixteen players are on the Cubs’ roster for play. They are: Bruce Crump, and Jerry Bryson, catchers; Russell Perry, first baseman; Brownie Fitch, second baseman, who leads the Cuba in batting with a ,361 avaraga; Ro The Chapel Hill Weekly winniißf pitcher with eleven .strike-nuts. Jimmy Den er itt was tlie Cubs’ hurler. In defeating the Dodgers in the last Little League game to be played this sea son the Giants brought their winning streak to three straight and, given a few more chances, would prob ably have been a resil threat to the league leaders. Butch Kagan was the winning pitcher, fanning fourteen (Continued on Page 8) ing were slashed. Mr and Mrs. Lyons are in Europe. The persons who broke into the two homes have not been caught. Police Captain W D. Blake went to Raleigh yesterday to check fingerprints to try to determine if the same person or persons broke into both houses Attend Navy Seminar Captain II D. Crockford and Conirnandei James F. Wads worth of the U. S Naval Re serve spent last week m Atlan ta, Ga., at a national meeting of the Naval Reserve.. Offieers School Seminar on tin rumpus of'Georgia Tech. Mrs. Duliois Leaves Hospital Mrs. M V. Duliois, who lives here with hci daughter, Mrs. Florence I) Barnes, came home Saturday from Duke Hospital and is getting along nicely She had been in the hospital about three weeks after having under gone a major operation. Return From Mountains Mr. and Mrs. IF R Totten came home last week from 'the second of two trips to the moun tains. On this one Mr. Totten at tended a meeting of the High lands Biological Association. ger Ilonecutt, shortstop; Ivalee Hill, third baseman and second in batting with a .343 average; Joe Shook, left fielder; Jack Mitchell, center fielder, and third in batting with a .2*19 aver age; Fenno McGinty, right field er; and Tom Maultshy, Don Jackson, Lloyd McKnight, and Don Saine, who has yet to lose a game this season, pitchers; Brinson Cannuda, catcher; and Delon I-urnbert, and Calvert Crabtree, outfielders. Over the weekend the Cubs were beaten in two games, 6-3 and 6-2. Nancy Woodard, who has been chosen Miss Carrboro Cub for the 1966 season, will go to Kox boro with the Cubs. She will compete in the Miss North Caro lina Semi-Pro Baseball contest held in connection with the tournament. The finals of this contest will taka place Saturday, July 21. Returns From Hospital Mrs. Robert Carter Burns cams home Saturday from a short atey in Duka Hospital. CHAPEL HILL. N. C.. TUESDAY, JULY 17. 1956 Local Banks Hike Interest Rate on Savings Accounts Both the University Na tional Bank and the Bank «it Chapel Hill have increas ed rates paid in saving ac counts one to two per cent per year. The new rates ye retro active to July 1 on savings deposits made by July ID ot this quarter. At the University Nation al Bank the interest will be compounded quarterly in stead of semi-annually and will be paid on savings de posits of $25 or more. At the Bank of ( Impel Hill the interest will be compound ed semi-annual!) on saving of S2O or more. At neither institution is there any maximum limit on the amount that can be in vested tor savings interest. As an added incentive to savers, the University Na tional Bank will also pay two full months of interest on September 30 at the new interest rate on savings de posited by August 5. Polio Vaccine for Everybody on Hand All I>r. O. David Garvin, dis trict health officer, knows about ttie announced polio emergency and planned mass free vaccina tion clinics is what he read in Monday’s newspapers. “We have plenty of vaccine for everybody,” said Dr. Garvin, “and are giving it free every Monday and Thursday afternoon from 1 :30 to -4 o’clock at the health department here.” I Focal physicians are also said !to ha ve sufficient Salk vaccine jto administer to all age groups, land that may be had by appoint j menU. v “We urge that no further de lay he made in taking the shots,” said Dr. Garvin. Monday’s papei s announced , that the N (’. Medical Society i Polio Vaccine Committee was alarmed lover the State’s rank u.g 47th in the nation in num i her of eligible persons immunu jed against polio Only one third of the eligible persons in the state have been immunised. The committee said it planned to ask ijfoi a halt million doses of vac | cine and to start mass flee dm j ics next Monday, July ”1 Theie have been times when • theie was a problem of getting , the vaccine I hut is true no l.ng ,:. r. Now it is said to he a proii lent of getting the vaccine t.* tin people. # alvndar of EVENTS I ■ - «*..•« hi nyur im™ Wednesday, July Is • 3 pin., Annual picnic spon sored by t ha pel Hill-Carrb.no 1 Merchants Association, a* Camp New Hope Thursday, July lit • 8 p in., Public meeting of In tel racial Fellowship fur the Schools, with talks by two Negro graduate students in the University, at the Fpis copui parish house. • • • > At the Varsity Theatre: Tue.- •day, “Footsteps in the Fog,” with * Stewart Granger and Jean Sim- I mons; Wednesday and Thursday, l "Trapeze,” with Hurt Lancas ; ter, Tony Curtis, and Gina Lollo- I brigida. At the Carolina Theatre. Tues; ■lay, “The Last Hunt," with KoL -1 ert Taylor and Stewart Granger; I Wednesday, “The Swan,” with 1 Grace Keily, Alec Guiness, and I-ouis Jourdan; Thursday, "The I Three Musketeers,” with I.ana ■ Turner, Gene Kelly, June Al’y son, Van Heflin, and Angela 1 Lansbury. I * * * j At the Morehead Planetarium: Planet of Mystery,” 8 30 p m. seven days a week plus 11 a.m., 3 p.m., and 4 p.m. Saturday ' and 2 p.m., 3 p.m., and 4 p.m. 1 1 Sunday. tj Attend Publicists’ Convention 1 Mr. and Mrs. Pete Ivey and ’ Mrs. Robert W. Madry recently spent four days at the Green brier Hotel at White Sulphur Springs, where they attended a i meeting of the National Asao i elation of College Publicity Di rector*. SiM'imd Torni of Summer Sphhioii To llogin To«lav Registration for the sec ond session of the Univer- , sity Summer School was ’ held yesterday (Monday', and classes will begin to- , day (Tuesday). At the same time yester day. t'.uv B. Phillips, direc tor ot the Summer Session, announced a schedule of ex tra-curricular activities for the seccr.ti six-week term. "Aftt r all,” he said, " t l ' work and no plav will make Jack.and Jill quite dull.” Mr. Phillips said that during the second session, five movies will be shown to students. Also there w.’.i be a number of •plays. music, and a matrv show bv the noted Polgur. It! addition to the extra curricular activities, the l NT Summer Session dire •- tor poi' . d out that Chapel Hi > t atholic, Protestom and Jewish churches we!-; come students to their ser v ices. He added that "Mars, Planet of Mystery” will be showing throughout the summer at the Morehead Planetarium. The (7 rah am Memorial Student l nion also sponsors g;rfnes, concerts, parties, dances, and picnics, Mr. Phillips said. Name Whid Powell To Merchants Body The president of the N. C. Merchants Association has an nounced the appointment of , Whid Powell of ('hupel ltill as a i member of the Research and Kx tenaion Committee for the 1950- .*? fiscal yaar. I Investigation of services of the organization and recom mendations of new ways to as sist merchants with their prob lems are the chief functions of ttie Research and (extension 1 ommittee. Mr Powell is a lo cal director of the North Caro lina Merchants Association. ’ v. Chapel Hill Swimmers Make Creditable Show in Greensboro Invitational Meet Although they managed to gain only a ti«* for fir.st place in one event, (’hapel Hill swimmers made a cred-j itahle .showing In the East ern Invitational outdoor age group swimming meet in Greensboro Friday and Sat-, unlay. I anal “fish” were competing with an outstand ing field of entries. Chapel Hill’s best per j forinance was in the 200- nieter free style relay for boys 13 and 14. Minor Davis, Terry Stapleton, R. Kenney! and Monte Milner came j through with a tie for first place with a time of two minutes 11.7 seconds. in other events, local swimmers placed as follows on Saturday: 100-meter freestyle, boys 13 14: Minor Duvis, second. 100-meter freestyle, girls 13- 14; Sue Haiti, fifth, and Bar bara Bounds, seventh. 100-meter breaststroke, hoys ,15-16. Jimmy Jainerson, fourth. 100-meter breaststroke, girls 1 15-16: Virginia Hardison, six'll. 100-meter breaststroke, girls, unlimited: Bue Ham, fourth, and I Virginia Timmons, seventh. 100-meter backstroke, boys »5- ;16, Ben Crutchfield, seventh. | 100-meter backstroke, girls 15- 16, Virginia Timmons, third, and .Neal Morgun, sixth. 100-meter backstroke, boys 13- !14: Terry Stapleton, sixth. 100-meter backstroke, girls, 13-14: Sue Ham, fourth, and Barbara Bounds, sixth. 100-meter butterfly, boys 15- 16: Jimmy Jamerson, third. 100-meter butterfly, girls 15- 16: Neal Morgan, fifth. 200-meter medley relay, boys 13-14: team of Minor Davis, Ter ry Stapleton, Monte Milner, and R. Kenney, third. Chapel Hillians placed as fol low* u» Friday's events: 100-meter freestyle, boys 15- Wc leu Crutchfield, eighth. 1— mater freestyle, girls 15* Chapel J4ill Cha(( By Joe Jones Part of my mother’s re cent celebration of her 70th wedding anniversary and 90th birthday was attend ance at the world premiere of the movie of James Street's novel. “Good-bye, My Lady.” Since she impar tially deaf she heard) little the actors said. That‘didn’t bother her, though. "I eti inyed it hugely." she told me. ”1 understood only two * 'fl words the whole time, but I knew what everybody was saving because 1 had read the book." When l was visiting her last month at the home of my sister, with whom she lives in Albany, (la., the Al bum Herald carried a red hot letter on school integra tion. It was all wrong and the Herald had no business printing it, my mother said. "I'm going to take this paper out in the back yard and burn it," she told my sister. "AH right." my sister re plied. surprising me. 1 had expected her to object. Liv ing away from my mother so long. I guess 1 had for gotten the folly of opposing her iron will. \\ hen 1 had accompanied her down the back steps she crumpled the paper page by page, set fire to it, and watched its ashes curl up land blow away. “Why go to all this trou ble?” I asked. “Why not 1 1 ust throw the paper in the trash?" \ "Because somebody might find it in the trash and read that letter and have his mind poisoned by it," was the firm reply, i Until this year my mother I hud all her own teeth but one, a molar. l>ast winter she hud a toothache, a new experience for her, and a dentist drilled and filled the tooth that was signaling for attention. In March another molar gave her trouble. This (Continued on Page 2) 16 Neal Morgan, sixth 50-rnetcr freestyle, hoys IF 12: Joe Twamlcy, fifth. 60 meter freestyle, git Is 11 12: Kate Talbejt, eighth :>tt meter freestyle, boys Ft 11, Minor Davis, thud. 60-meter freestyle, girls 13- 14, Sue Ham, sixth. 50-meter baekstroke, boys 11-12, 12, Boh Gilliam, sixth 60-meter breaststroke, girls IF 12, Judy Timmons, seventh. nO-meter haekstrqke, girls II 12, Beverly Davis, fourth, and Kate Talburt, seventh. 5l)-meter baekstroke, boys II 12, Twandey, fifth. 60 n#ter butterfly, buys 11-12, 12, Bob Gillian, eight. 60-meter butteifly, girls 11- 12, Beverly Davis, eight. 200-meter freestyle, hoys 13- 14, Monte Milner, fourth, Buddy Thompson, sixth, and R. Kenney, seventh. 200-meter individual medley, boys 15 18, Jimmy Jamerson, third. 200-meter, individual medley, boys 13-14, Minor Davis, third. 200-meter medley relay, git F Talbert, Casey and Guhus, sec ond. The Holmeses Here on Visit Mr. und Mr.' Joseph A. Holmes and their friend, Mrs. C. Galbraith, wtVe here at the weekend. The families became acquainted in Caracas, Venezue la, and the Galbraiths are fol lowing the Holmeses’ example and building a summer home at Black Mountain. Since Mr. Holmes’s retirement from his post with the Standard Oil Com pany in Caracas a year ago the Holmeses have been living in Miami, Florida. He is a gradu ate of the University. His father, the late Joseph A. Holmes, waa a member of the faculty for many years. At Meeting of Synod The Rev. Vance Barron, the Rev. Harry Smith, the Rev. Rob ert McMullen, and J. M. Saund ers will represent the Chapel Kill Presbyterian Church at th# Byiu>d of North Carolina tadajr and tomorrow at Red Spring*. $4 a Year in County; other rates on page 2 Annual Picnic Sponsored by Merchants .Association to Be Held Wednesday Afternoon 1 he t hapel Hill-Uarrboro Merchants Association will hold its annual community picnic tomorrow (Wednesday) at Lamp New Hope, and tickets can be purchased up », Tickets Available ; For Concert Series ! Season tickets for the * Chapel Hill Uonc* •“ Series 1 have arrived, an 1 persons who signed for tickels" but ; have not submitted payment ‘ are urged to do so as soon ' as convenient. Miss Eliza- ; both Branson, who has charge of ticket sales, said yesterday that checks should be brought or mailed b> the Cly»pol Hill Concert Scries headquarters in the Graham Memorial. Tickets w ill be. mailed out soon to al! who have made their payments. Miss Branson said that somebody had mailed in an unsigned check for $7.50. Since there was no return address on the envelope, it is not known who sent it and that person will net re ceive any tickets till he sends a signed check. The seasoiK, tickets are $7.50 for reserved seats and $5.50 for general admission and are still available for sale at the Graham Memor ial. Negro Students to Relate Experiences The Chapel Hill Interracial! Fellowship for the Schools will itneet at 8 o'clock Thursday even ing. July 19, in the parish house of the Chapel of the Cross. The public is invited. ;l Two Negro graduate student* •’at the University will give talks in which they relate tbeir ex periences as Negro students on ' the campus of u Southern in ! stitution of higher learning. 'j The meeting will be presided • over by Sam Hoyd, new co-chair [ man of the Interracial Fellow ship for the Schools. Canadian Dental . Profs Visit Here Dr, \\ J. Ross, professor of dentistry, and Dr. Gordon Nik iforuk, associate professor -of dentistry, both of the University of Toronto at Toronto, Canada, were visitors last, week to the University School of Dentistry. The two Canadian educators were in the United States to visit three leading dental schools to study the construction, f«cil> .ties, equipment and teaching methods. This information will jaiil them in the planning of a j new five • million dollar dental I school for Toronto. Peter Wilsoh on Visit Here Peter W'ilson, now with Lord and Taylor in New York, camu Wednesday to visit the Fred Pattersons. They spent the week end at Kerr Lake in the ISktter , son cottage. Peter made the rounds of his old friends in the ’ village and strolled about the campus, and later he made tours ’ of the many new outlying su burbs. Before returning to Ne.v York he visited Kdenton and Nags Head. Paper Drive July 29 The next Jaycee paper drive will be Sunday afternoon, July 29. Everybody is asked to be saving old newspapers, maga zines, and other waste paper to [ put to be collected by the Jay ( tees. The paper collected in the drives is sold and the money used to help with the civic pro ( jects sponsored by the Jaycees. Going to Newfoundland i Clyde B. Jefferson Jr. has reenlisted as a staff sergeant in ! the radio division of the U. S. i Air Force. He and his wife and their two-months-old daughter, , Linda, will live in Newfound . land, where he will stationed for • an indefinite period. Mr. and Mrs. Jefferson were married last year in Halifax, Nova Scotia. , Guests of Exchange Club Non-members at the last meet • ing of the Exchange Club were I Sandy McClamroch and Coach > Jim Hickey, who were guests c t f Dick Young, and Mark Short, who was • gaest of P»t Pop*. TUESDAY ISSUE Next Issue Friday until noon Wednesday at the association office in tho Carl Smith Building and at the picnic grounds at Camp New Hope Wednesday af ternoon. Tickets cost $1.60 for both children and adults. The picnic will begin around 3 p.m. and will in clude a supper prepared by the women of the New Hope Baptist Church and fearur- Going to Picnic The Koturiis and Rotary Clubs will not meet this week, but instead will participate in the annual Merchants Asso ciation picnic at Camp New Hope Wednesday afternoon. ing fried chicken, hanr and a lot of other good country food. Mrs. Jane Whiefield, the association’s secretary, urges everybody to come out and enjoy the annual community get-together and to get their tickets as soon us possible. A softball game will be held at 3 p.m. Doug Yates and Bucky Rosemond will be captains of the teams. Free bingo will be offered after the game, and prizes will be given to winners. The Rotary, Kiwanis, and Ex change Clubs and the Jay cees have been invited to come and participate in the festivities. Camp New Hope is eight miles from Chapel Hill on the Airport-Hillsboro Road and haa facilities for fish ing, swimming, #nd danc ing, and also has a play ground and various play equipment. Supper will be served around 6:30 p.m. Officials in charge are expecting about 500 persons to attend this annual outing by the jlocal Jimmy Wallace has charge of the event. This picnic is one of the ‘ community-wide gatherings • sponsored in Chapel Hili dur ing the year and is open to everybody. 1 Showers Given at i Mrs. Watts’ Home Mrs. IF F. Watts and Mrs. Robert Bartholomew entertain ed Wednesday evening? at Mrs. Watts’ home, honoring Mrs. Nathale Ciittenton of Durham | with a stork shower and Mrs. Ray Warren w ith a going away shower. Mrs. William Morris presided at the punch bowl. The guests included members I of the office staff of Memorial I I Hospital’s accounting depart- I incut. ■ Mrs. Warren is moving to Lin colnton, where her husband will i open a dental office. He is a • j recent' graduate of the Univer i sity’s School of Dentistry. i —— Move Here From Florida Dr. and Mrs. Van Burnette. ' have moved here from Winter Haven, Fia., and are living on the Durham Road. I)r. Burnette, who is associated with Dr. L. L. , Vine at the Vine Veterinary Hospital, received his B.S.A. de gree at the University of Florida and his D.V.M. degree last year at the Alabama Institute of [Technology at Auburn, Ala. Mrs. Burnette is also a former Au burn student. They attend the i Baptist Church. Trains on Battleship Midshipman First Class Rob ert L. Fowler Jr. of Chapel Hill , is training aboard the battleship . USS lowa this summer. He is I the son of Mr. and Mrs. R. L. , Fowler of 222 Vance Street and is a senior at the University • here. \ —— Chapel J4illnotei The semi-quietness that Fet tled over Chapel Hill during - the between-term weekend. i• • • t Sunday after calm shattered ! by caravan of motoreyciaa go . tot tkreugh town; all driver* wearing loag beards.