TUESDAY ISSUE Next Issue Friday Vol. 32, No. 72 New Policy Inaugurated By Airlines The scheduled airlines which «»rve Raleigh, Durham, and napel Hill have put into effect a plan designed to eliminate “sold out” flights taking off with empty seats. A joint statement issued by spokesmen for Delta, National, Eastern, Braniff, Mackey, Pied mont and Southern airlines, all of which serve Raleigh-Durham- Chapel Hill said the plan would' produce “a major improvement in the service the scheduled air lines render the public.” Airline officials said this sit uation of having empty seats on “sold out” flights is created mainly by passengers who cancel reservations so close to depart ure time that the seats cannot be resold to others who might want them, and by passengers who fail to cancel their reserva tions at all. Some people who make four or five reservations on different flights, knowing that they are only going to use one, also contribute to this sit uation, the statement said. Spokesmen for Delta, Eastern and National cited as one exam ple that in Miami (Fla.> on Jan uary 3 of this year the three carriers had over 1,000 “no show” —the people who fail to cancel or use their reservations. This meant that in most cases these seats did not become aflfcilable to others until justj before departure times, and in 1 some instances remained unused.; The plan, which went into effect Sunday, provides that a passenger who makes an ad vance reservation must pick up his confirmed ticket, indicating he has reserved space, before 12:01 a.m. the day of departure or six hours before departure, whichever is earlier. However, ail airlines have agreed to have passengers ticketed as soon as possible after confirmation of reservations. Failure to pick up the confirmed ticket by the dead line, the statement said, will re sult in cancellation of vafion. “The ticket pick-up time limit means that these seats will be available to others from several hours to several days in advance of departure rather than having many of them become available within a few hours of departure," H at the Civil Aeronautics Board according to the statement. The airlines pointed out that tickets may be picked up at their own ticket offices or at travel agencies representing them. The statement pointed out had issued an order approving of the ticket pick-up time limit, plan which said that the Board “looks with favor on the efforts being made by the airlines to find a solution to this long stand ing problem.” Airline spokesmen added a late cancellation service charge and no-show penalty plan may be imposed at a later date. Cole Reunion Set For Next Sunday On Sunday, September 23, the 10th annual Cole reunion will be held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. L. Hudson, 10 miles south of Chapel Hill off the Pitts boro Road on Mt. Gilead Road, one mile north of Mt. Gilead Church. All members of the family are invited to attend and take a picnic lunch to be served at 1 o’clock. Theatre Tickets on Sale The Carolina Haymakers’ sea son ticket books went on sale yesterday at the Ledbetter-Pick ard Store and at the Playmakera’ business office in Abernethy Hall. A book costs $5 and is good for admission to all six plays to be produced by the Play makers during the academic now beginning. This is a fif ty per cent saving over indivi dual admission tickets. Took Job to Get a Place to Park Car Buster Shepard, promoted to be treasurer and business of ficer of the Consolidated Uni versity, is typically relaxed about the whole thing. “The main reason I took the new job,” he laughed, “is so I can get a parking space.” He came to the University in 1932 on a temporary as signment. “Doris Humphreys had typhoid fever, so I took her place in the cashier’s of fice. And I’ve stayed on in one Job or another ever nince.” The Chapel Hill Weekly 5 Cents a Copy 'To Leave Chapel Hill Mrs. Winsor, for 27 Years Organist at Chapel Hill Baptist Church, Praised By Helene Ivey The simplicity and serene med- I osty of Mrs. Arthur Winsor re- I fleet the word “thee” that her I Quaker ancestors used when they I helped found Guilford College. j However, she also inherited a j streak of the dissenter. She not j only says “you,” but she belongs j to that group of Friends who I believe that music adds rather I than detracts from worship. It has been most fortunate ! for Chapel Hillians that Mrs. Winsor accepted that outlook, j For 27 years they have had the inspiration of her music at the I Chapel Hill Baptist Church ] where she served as organist, j An interesting sidelight of her playing at the Baptist Church is that at one time every organist | in town was a Baptist except 1 Mrs. Winsor, who played for the Baptists. She is a Quaker. Others in Chapel Hill "have profited by having Mrs. Winsor here. She has taught music to , many children. She is vice-presi dent of the Music Club, a newly organized group, chairman of the music department of the Com munity Club, and a director and Aldersgate Church to Vote on Building And Observe Anniversary Sunday Night . i , As a fitting observance of its (first anniversary, the congrega tion of the Aldersgate Methodist Church will vote next Sunday, September 23, upon adoption of the architect’s plans for its new I Students Reminded Os Music Contest ( All high school students wish ing to enter the music contest to ■ be held Saturday evening, Oc tober 6, by the Chapel Hill Mu sic Club should notify Mrs. W. A. Pollard Jr. of 311 McCauley Street, by phoning her at 9-3301. Awards will be given to the four highest scoring students in the contest, which will include sections for voice, piano, orches tral instruments, and band in struments. The club, a local unit of the State and National Federation of Music Clubs, was organized in January of this year for the pur pose of stimulating and encour aging the musical development of the young people of Chapel Hill. Next spring it will sponsor Chapel Hill young people of ull ages in the State and National Federation Contests. All music teachers in the com munity are asked to register with the club by calling or writ ing Mrs. Pollard. Coming to the Carolina Inn Former guests who will re turn to the Carolina Inn for the winter: jjKliss Freda Mitchell of Pears Island, Maine, Miss Grace Frisbee of Buffalo, N. Y., Miss Florence Bradley and Miss Es ther Johnston of Croton-on-Hud son, N. Y., Mr. and Mrs. Wyncie King of New York, Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Saunders of New York, the Rev. and Mrs. Sidney Robins of Center Conway, N. H., Mr. and Mrs. Walter Prichard Eaton of Sheffield, Mass., and Mrs. Reginald L. McAll of New York. Newcomers for the winter: Miss Louise Doughtie of Ahos kie, N. C., Mrs. Charlotte P. l«oew, of Chapel Hill, Mrs. Roy R, Roper, of Chapel Hill, and Mrs. N. F. Rodman of Norfolk, Va. Regulars for the year around: E. B. Jeffress, W. D. Carmichael, Dr. W. P. Jacocka, Mrs. R. O. E. Davis, Mrs., Alfred W. Church (who moved in about two weeks ago), and Mrs J. W. Jackson, formerly of Charlotte. Hillsboro Rallies to Tie Northern High Hillsboro High School came from behind to tie Northern High, 13 to 13, Friday night. With the ball on Northern’s 20 at the start of the final quar ter after having marched from their 46 in the final minutes of the third stanza, the Wildcats needed only three plays. Harvey Reinhardt passed 21 yards to Garland Spangler for a first down on the 8. Glen Collins moved up the middle to the three and Monroe Knight sliced off right tackle into paydirt. Col lins swept left end for the extra point. late comers missed the first touchdown of the night which came on the first play after the opening kickoff. The Knights’ Joe Carden scooped up a Hille boro fumble on thg_3i_aMJglllfid. V S. I —-Photo by Lavergne MRS. ARTHUR WINSOR patron of the Chapel Hill Con cert Series. Mrs. Winsor started playing the piano when she was four. At I the age of five she had her first public performance and at four (Continued on page 12) j: building, to be erected on the -jby-pass highway. L Plans for the structure were .'prepared by William Van Eaton' f Springle, well-known church ar f chitect of Durham. The exterior finish will be of antique brick, and provision is made for adding to the building later. ; The general specifications for the 4,000-square-foot edifice pro vide for pews to accommodate DO i i worshipers and a total seating | ■ capacity of approximately 175! • persons. Separate educational: . rooms and a kitchen are also in-1 ' eluded in the tentative plans. The estimated cost of the | , building, exclusive of property: i and equipment, is about $40,000.! The anniversary will also fea ture a family “bring-your-own” picnic on the church property. , The congregation will gather be- 1 , tween 4:30 and 5 p.m., and fol-j ■ lowing supper, the vote will be ! taken on whether or not to au thorize the architect to proceed wlth-blJieprints and specifications. In the event of rain, the pic l(nic will be at Glenwood Element . ary School, the temporary meet ! ing place of the congregation. At the morning service next (Sunday, Membership Rally Day will be observed in connection . with the anniversary. Leading up to the anniversary, the church commission on mem bership und evangelism will meet with the Rev. A. King, pastor, tonight (Tuesday) at 8 o’clock, ami the commission on finance with Gran Childress Friday night at 8 o’clock. Miss Little Leaves To Live in Alabama * ! After u series of goodbye par-; ties given for Miss Margaret Little since her recent retire-( merit from tthe Correspondence 1 Bureau of the University’s Ex tension Division, Miss Little said her final farewells to a small, group of friends who saw hert off on the bus last Friday. The group included Mrs. W. W. Prou ty, Bill Prouty, T. F. Hicker son, Miss Julia Staples, and Miss Mary Cobb. Miss Little, after many years of residence in Chapel Hill, has! gone to live in Tuscaloosa, Ala-J bama, where her iate father ‘ taught geology at the University of Alabama. Her address in Tus caloosa is 322 Queen City Ave nue. for the quick TD. The Wildcats came back early in the second quarter to tie the scoTe when Gary Bateman blocked a Northern punt and re covered on the Northern 43. Col lins picked up two yards and then Bennie Fueland broke off left tackle and raced 41 yards to score. Ray Barnes failed to buck over the extra point. Don Fish returned the follow ing kickoff 26 yards to the Northern 44 where he fumbled and Charles Recktenwald recov ered for the Knights to launch a 56-yard touchdown drive. Don Fish nailed Mike Smith in the end zone with a perfect strike. Score by quarters’ Hillsboro • 0 0 7—13 CHAPEL HILL, N. C., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 18, 1956 Chapel Mill Chajj J. J. Mr. and Mrs. Rupert By ,num are lonesome and even a little bit sad this fall on I their farm near Chapel HilL Rupert Jr. is in another part of the country with the Air Force, Barbara was mar ried last spring and went up north to live, and now Carol has departed to begin her freshman year at Elon Col lege. Only ten-year-old Steve is left. Like any small boy, he keeps things humming around the place, but he can’t be expected to fill the gap left by the departure of all the other children. V The days aren’t bad be cause then Mr. Bynum is busy at his job at the Chapel j Hill Post Office and Mrs. By-; num is busy at hers as a teacher at the White Cross School. It’s different in the evening, especially after sup per when the cow has been ■ milked and the chickens and pigs fed and Steve and his parents are maybe sitting on the porch watching the fields sink into the twilight. That’s when Mr. and Mrs. Bynum realize full well that something is missing that won’t return. > When Mr. Bynum was telling me about this the jother day I figured I knew 1 ,at least a little bit about ’ his feelings on the subject. Mrs. Bynum, the former Patty Jordan, was a mem ber of my class at the Uni ' versity. It seems only a short while since I used to I | see her hurrying across the ,'grass from the Y court to ija class in Murphy or Saun ders, as pretty a co-ed as, | anybody would hope to see ’ on a fine day in April.* It ‘ (hardly seems possible she has three grown children out ’,in the world, to say nothing .of her good prospects for grandchildren before many more years have passed. * 4* * 1 have received the fol lowing unsigned note, post-j marked Charlotte, abo u t (Continued on Page 2) Fall Activities of Boy Scouts Are to Be Planned at Meeting Here Tonight The fall quarter of activities] for boys in the Cub Scout, Boy! Scout, and Explorer Scout pro- 1 grams of Orange County will bej set at the first monthly round-1 I table scheduled for this (Tues-I day) evening at the University Methodist Church, according to Frank G. Umstead, district Scout Commissioner. The Tuesday session, for alb program leaders in the county,! 1 will feature Hill Roth of Raleigh ; who will work with R. G. Wind sor and the High School youth ‘and their leaders in a District Explorer Activity Conference. Cub Scout Leaders will meet !in combination with Boy Scout j leaders for general information 'items before they form a separ ate session under James Wads worth. Topics for consideration and approval include: Leaders Train ing Courses at Camp Durant, j Sept. 22-23; Court of Honor, J Sept. 30; Gold Rush Oct. o,| The Uniform Exchange, Finance,' Round-up of New Scouts, Boys Missing, Missing Are Old P. O. Pens If you walk into the Chapel Hill Post Office and some thing’s missing, don’t let it worry you. i Missing is the scratching i that usually crawls through the corridor like crickets whis- i pering on a still night. i Gone are the old Spencer- i ian steel-pointed pens with which people have not been able to write in post offices for lo these long years. In ' their place have come ball- • point pens of the latest type, i chained to the desks and roll- < ing along at a fast clip with- > out making any noise at all. 1 Postmaster Paul Cheek, who < is pleased with the arrange- > ment, received the new pens from the Post Office Depart ment over the weekend and had them ready to go for Monday i Village Prepares to Absorb Large Enrollment; Housing Is Scarce a Chancellor Welcomes Students Beginning his final year as Chancellor of the University, R. B. House welcomed new stu dents as follows: “I welcome you to the fel lowship of Carolina. “First of all to this beauti ful place. It is not the most beautiful place in North Car olina. It is simply the loveliest. It has been loved into its beau ty for 160 years. I ask you to love it and take care of it. “Second, to the fellowship of 7,000 students organized into 14 schools and colleges. It is a vast power-house of physi cal, mental, and spiritual en ergy, touched with courtesy and sportsmanship. I ask you to pull your own load in it. “Third, to fellowship and collaboration with one of the most distinguished faculties in the world. They are in your corner, but they are also in Aldermen to Ask Highway Commissioner j For New Street Projects in the Town ‘ Town Manager Thomas Rose and some members of the Board of Aldermen will travel to Gra ham on Wednesday to talk with Highwuy Commissioner J. Van Lindley about road-building op erations in Chapel Hill. Mr. Rose said yesterday that the aider men would make the following requests: 1. Connection of Merritt Mill Road and Nunn Street, to run through the center of the block bounded by North Graham and West Rosemary Streets, Sunset Drive and Nunn Street. 2. Extension of McMasters Street from its terminal point at the Northside School to con nect with Nunn Street. 3. Kxte *sion of Nunn Street- Sykes Street northward past the colored cemetery to connect with Weiner Street. Schwentker Gets Award Frank J. Schwentker, a mem ber of the School of Business Administration faculty at the University, has been awarded the Chartered Property Casualty j Underwriter award by the Amer ican Institute for Property and 'Liability Underwriters. 1 Life, distribution of free pro gram notebooks for the coming j program year, get-out-the-vote ] campaign plans and plans for an ! Annual Potluck Supper for par ents and leaders of ull Scouts in the County. “Meeting time is H:()0 p.m. and in spite of the full agenda jwe shall end our meeting at j'.t:3o," Umstead said. New Dean Assumes University Duties Maurice W. Lee has assumed his duties as the new dean of the University School of Business Administration. Dean Lee, who conies here from Washington State College, is a native of Chicago. He has 1 also taught at the University of Chicago, the Illinois Institute of ' Technology, and Utah State Ag | ricuitural College. In education work since 1935, Lee received his B. S. degree in 1933 from the Illinois Institute 1 ' of Technology, and his Ph. D. in 1 1939 from Chicago. Dean Lee is a member of the American Association of Colleg iate Schools of Business, the American Economic Association, the Royal Economic Association, the Western Economic Associa tion and the American Academy * of Political and Social Science. 1 He has had a number of arti- I cles published on such business * areas as tax structure, economic 1 fluctuations and expenditures. Paper Drive September 30 , The paper drive t will be held Sunday afternoon, i September 30, the last Sunday i in the month. JEverybody is asked 1 to be saving old newspapers and magazines and other waste paper \ for it. Bundles should be placed t on the curb that afternoon by c not later than 1:30. t Musk Club i The Chapel met Sunday evrningv the corner of academic value, i I ask you to make yourself ] worthy of their best efforts. |, "Fourth, to fellowship with j 50,000 alumni doing their ap- |, pointed work from Chapel Hill L to the four corners of the j earth. I ask you to sense their I, pride in you and their fierce , hope for you and the Univer- |, sity. , "Fifth, to the world of i learning and growth in body, mind, and spirit. I ask you to < express this through hard ' work and intelligent play. One ' is as essential as the other. I “Os all the pilgrimages you undertake, the vistas and op- j 1 portunity opened for you by the spirit of your university is j the widest and most thrilling. The quality of your future is j at stake in your attitude to- |‘ day. It is up to you.” 4. Pavement of the road run ning in front of the Glenwood School. The Board of Aldermen also plans to meet as a committee of the whole, with the Greater Chap el Hill Planning Hoard this week to' discuss the proposed subdi vision ordinance. The act would give the Board of Aldermen pow- ( er to pass on subdivision devel opment within the large Chapel Hill zoning area. Evelyn Anderson ! Named Professor i Miss Evelyn L. Anderson has I been appointed visiting associate professor at the University School of Public Health. She takes the place of Miss C. i Frances McKinnon, associate professor of public health nu trition, who is on leave to ac- ' cept a foreign assignment with the Food and Agriculture Or ganization of the United Na tions. Miss Anderson received her B. S. degree from lowa State Col lege in 1930 and her master’s de gree from the UNC School of Public Health in 1954. She spent three years in Newcastle, Aus tralia, as director of dietetics at the Royal Newcastle Hospital before World War 11. During World War II she served with the American Red Cross in North Africa, Italy and France. Following World War II Miss Anderson was assistant director of nutrition with the Red Cross in the eastern area of this coun try. From 1948 to 1950 she was. with the United Nations Chil dren’s Fund doing foreign ser vice in the Philippines und Chi na. Before toking her current position, she was with the U. S. Public Health Service und the Michigan State Department of Health. Going Fishing The following Chapel Hill men will go fishing this week, first at Lake Waccamaw and then off the coaHt for deep-sea fishing: I S. H. Grady Pritchard, Oliver i Cornwell, Hubert Patterson, and Joe Philips. Home From Michigan Mr. and Mrs. Karl Slocum re turned home last week after 1 'having spent the summer in ; northern Michigan. i Baldy Williams Stars as Chapel Hill Scores Late to Defeat Cary High, 13-0 Chapel Hill High School came to life in the final quarter and racked up two touchdowns —both by Baldy Williams Jr,—to defeat Cary High, 13 to 0, there Friday night. Williams had a clear field to the goal line on the game’s first scrimmage play, but the chance was nullified by a penalty. In the fourth period he tallied twice on a two-yard and a 20-yard scor ing plays. Coach Bob Culton’s visiting Wildcats marched 40 yards for the first touchdown, having re covered a fumbled punt, and then smashed 55 yards for the second, to sweep their second straight game. Bob Costello and Ruffin Har vHlc had sixeable gains in these $4 a Year in County; other rates on page 2 As Chapel Hill prepared itself this week to absorb the largest student enrollment since the post-war boom of 1948, University housing officials scrambled to find living quarters for the more than 7,000 collegians who will begin classes on Thursday, i Furnished rooms for single men and women students are in short supply, according to Hous ing Officer Jim Wadsworth. He (said furnished apartments for (couples are virtually exhausted, although some unfurnished hous [es and apartments are still avail able. “Campus housing takes care of about 3,000 men and between 550 and 650 women.” Mr. Wads worth reported. “The rest must be absorbed by the town.” How are housing prices in town running compared to pre vious years 7 “Prices are holding pretty steady. I think the people here have been very fair. Apartments continue to go up in price a little, especially when renova tions are made. I understand why the prices have to go up as high as they do in some cases, but that doesn’t help the stu dents find the money to pay for them.” [ Orientation week for new stu dents began Thursday and will continue through Wednesday. Some 1300 freshmen and 550 transfer students are expected to register for the fall semester, in total enrollment of 7,000. The first general assembly for all new students was held Fri-' day night at Memorial Hall, with Chancellor House as main speak er. Bill McLean, chairman of orientation; Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael, and Whid Powell, a representative of the Chapel Hill Merchants Associa tion, also spoke. Special weekend events includ ed an open house at Lenoir Hall Saturday and a show that night in Memorial Hall, featuring Pol gar. The annual Chancellor’s Re ception for new students was held Sunday in the Morehead Building and Grahum Memorial. The honor system and student government were discussed at Sunday night meetings for both men and women in Carroll and Memorial Hulls. Freshmen began registering Monday an d upperclassmen today (Tuesday) and Wednes day. The first fall semester classes meet on Thursday morn ing. The wdmen’s phase of orien tation is directed by Annette Ni ven, a senior from Charlotte. Among those assisting her ure Dot Greulach ami Barbara Ben nett of Chapel Hill. Return From Puerto Rico Mr. and Mrs. Paul Guthrie and their sons, Paul Jr. and Bob, have returned from Puerto Rico, where Mr. Guthrie hail been teaching. Mrs. Guthrie and the boys had joined him there re cently. Paul Jr. is a student at Nwarthmore College, and Bob is ut the Lawrenceville School. Blaine lo Give Talk J. C. D. Blaine of the Univer sity’s School of Business Ad ministration wilt speak today (Tuesday) in Greensboro at a luncheon meeting of the Greens boro Exchange Club. He will talk about transportation, a field in which he is a specialist. Fantbrough at Kxater Douglas Fambrough Jr., left yesterday for Exeter, New Hampshire, to begin his second year at the Phillips Exeter Ac ademy. around end on an option play for the second touchdown. Williams broke free and was in the clear from the Chapel Hill 15 when an official’s.whist le nullified what would have been a sure Wildcat touchdown on the game's first play. Cary -High penetrated no clos er than the Chapel Hill 30-yard line during the entire game and reached this far twice. Tommy Hogan, a tackle, and Haywood Pendergrass, a guard, . were standouts defensively for Chapel Hill. The Wildcats beat Selma in their first game. Northern High of Durham County plays at Chapel Hill next Friday night Score by quarters: Chapel Hill 0 0 0 It—H TUESDAY ISSUE Next Issue Friday - jv v v if itv Mayor Cornwell Issues Greeting To Newcomers Chapel Hill Mayor OUie Cornwell yesterday welcomed students and newcomers to the University and the commun ity. “We are happy to have you in our midst,’’ said the Mayor in a prepared statement. “Some of you have been here before; many of you are stran gers. Strangers now. But we in the community will spare nothing to make all of you our friends as well as neighbors in the hope that your stay in Chapel Hill, however long or brief, will be the happiest days of your lives. As mayor of the Town of Chapel Hill, 1 welcome you.” Allen Smith Gets Exeter Scholarship WEm S ■ggll s| HHgrYsfljß fflß I® % mBM* JR. Jfl I ■k ALLEN SMITH Allen Smith, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Smith of Arrowhead Hoad, has been awarded a schol arship at Phillips Exeter Acad emy in New Hampshire, and en rolled there yesterday. Allen was graduated last spring from the (lhapel Hill High School, where he was pres ident of the Stamp Club and a member of the Band. In his sen ior year he was awarded the Band Key as being the most val uable member of the organiza tion. He is an Eagle Scout and a member of the Order of the Ar row. This summer he was on the staff of Camp Durant. Mr. and Mrs. Smith will drive Allen to Exeter, leaving this morning (Friday) and stopping for the weekend in New York. Mr. Smith is the executive sec retary of the North Carolina Pharmaceutical Association and director of the Institute of Pharmacy, headquarters of which are here. Quiet Day Obaervance The Women’s Society of Chris tian Service of the Chatham- Orange Subdistrict will meet for a Quiet Day observance from 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.ra. Tues day, September 25, at the Uni versity Methodist Church. All women are invited. Sandwiches may be brought for lunch. Cof fee will be served. At Memorial Hospital Local people listed yesterday as patients at Memorial Hospital are Mrs. Joe Alston, Fred Bar bee, Dr. George Meyer, Dr. W. P. Richardson, W. O. Sparrow, Miss Lillie Taylor, Mrs. H. M. Wagstaff, James Noell, and Clifford P. Lyons. Y-Teena to Meet Today The Senior Y-Teens will meet at 3:45 this afternoon (Tuesday) in the basement of the Univer sity Methodist Church, and the Junior Y-Teens will meet at 3:45 p.m. Wednesday in the same place. Chapel Millnote i Local druggist explaining to lady via telephone how to apply Band Aida. e e o