TUESDAY ISSUE Next Issue Friday Volume 33, No. 97 Religious Parade Draws Thousands fn Sunday , afternoon the t annual Chapel Hill-Carr boro Christmas Parade using the theme of “put Christ back into Christmas,” moved from the Carrboro I.ions Park in Carrboro, through the business districts of Carrboro and Chapel Hill, and wound up at the Planetarium, as thousands of spectators lined each side "of the street along the way. The Parade, which was spon sored bv the Junior Chamber of Commerce in cooperation with the Chapel Hill Ministerial Asso ciation, was the first of its type to be held here and was in line with a nation-wide Jaycee drive to put more religion in Christ mas parades. The Rev. Maurice Kidder, pres ident of Ministerial Association, bad charge of the event. He was assisted'by Sandy McClamroch of the Jaycees. At the end of the parade, sing ers from the various floats form ed on the steps of the Plane tarium, where Norman Cordon led them in the singing of Christ mas Carols. Many spectators gathered in front of the Plane tarium and its grounds and joined in the singing. The churches and groups which participated in the parade were, New Hope Presbyterian, Chapel Hapti* .. k 2 —Stats Photo by Bill Prouty j ROCK AND ROLLER —Patrolman Amo* Horne looks over jack-knifed tractor trailer with its driver, Lin wood C. Dollar of Rt. 1, Durham, alter the big rig had jumped the curb in front of the Old Lawson home on East Franklin Street last Thursday. Dollar, who was shaken up but unhurt in the mishap, said the truck went out of control when he applied his brakes while just entering into the curve. Horne and ( apt. Hilly Blake, who investigated the wreck, agreed with Dollar and preferred no charges. The rig, which was to deliver goods to Chapel Hill mer chants, is ow ned by Pilot Freight Carriers of W inston-Salem. j > iii ?> ■. ! ; ■■■■ «: 'a;'■ %. ■; •>.■: i-x ' j I'iilentiiir of | EVENTS I i V i .Tuesday, December IS • 4 p.m.—Hermand Wold speaks to economists at Carroll Hall. • 1:45 p.m. Botany Depart ment tea at 102 Davie Hall. • 7 p.m.—Carol Sinn; with UNC Men’s Chorus at the Presby terian Church. • 7:.'to p.m. UNC Press Club, to hear News and Observer Managing Editor Sam Kagan at home of N. N. Luxon at Mt. Bolus. • 7:30 p.m.-—Carrboro P.-T.A meets at the school. • 8 p.m. UNC Chorus (fives j Christmas concert at Hill ' Hall. • H p.m. Final performance of j “'"Desire Under the Kims" at the Play makers Theatre. Wednesday, December 19 • I p.m. Research meeting of School of Medicine in the clinic auditorium. Thursday, December 20 • 8 p.m.—The Pulpit Players present “A Child Is Born” at Chapel Hill Baptist Church. • 8 p.m.—The Bryson Lecture in School of Medicine clinic auditorium. * * * At the Planetarium: "The Stai |of Bethlehem,” 8:30 pin. seven days a week plus II am, 3 p.m land 1 p.m. Saturdays and 2 p.m., I i p.m., and 1 p.m. Sundays. 4; * At the Carolina: Tuesday, “'Colorado Territory,” with Joel McCrea and Virginia Mayo; Wed nesday', “Cunslinger,” with John Ireland and Beverly Carland; Thursday, ‘‘Stagecoach to Fury.” ‘ At the Varsity: Tuesday, ‘‘The Killers,” with Burt Lancaster and Ava (iardner; Wednesday, “The 1 Caine Mutiny,” with Humphrey 1 Bogart and Jose Ferrer; Thurs day, ‘‘Mister Roberts,” with Hen -1 ry Fonda and James Cagney. At Memorial Hospital Local people listed as patients jut Memorial Hospital yesterday 'were Mrs. Nannie Andrews, Pink ' Basin, Mrs. Jessie Basnight, Mrs. Claude Best, Miss Mildred Coun ■ oil, Mrs. David Dixon, Mrs. Mabel 1 Findley, Charles W. (iardner, ! Mrs. K. W. (iitlin, Floyd Headen, 1 Jonh T. Johnson, Mrs. Wilhel '■ mina Lloyd, Mrs. Fred Massey, |Mrs. C. S. Maurice, Baxter N'or jton, Mrs. Eleanor Patterson, j Samuel Rogers, Julian Selig, Mrs. 'Gordon Taylor, and Mrs. Mary Wagstaff. D.A.R. Holds Christmas Music Program Mrs. Glenn Y. Lassiter, music director at Raleigh's Forest Hills Baptist Church, spoke and di rected Christmas carols at a D.A.K. meeting Wednesday after noon at the home of Mrs. Nor ! man Cordon. A business meet ing preceding the Christmas mu sic program was presided over by Mrs. B. B. Lane, regent. Mem bers brought gifts of food and Christmas presents for the fami- ! jy "adopted” by the chapter; | through the Empty Stocking project. Mrs. E. W. Noland and Mrs. C. 0. Cathey were welcomed as new members and Mrs. F. R. Weedon as a transfer member from Jamestown, N. Y. Visitors were Mrs. Mangel of New Bart! CHAPEL HILL, N. C., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 18, 1966 Summerlins Return From Argentina With Memories of Thick 25-Cent Steaks I Mr. and Mrs. lrl Summerlin have returned'from South Ameri jca with memories of many gay parties, including one at the American Embassy in Buenos Aires, Argentina. But their most 1 vivid memory is of the fact that while in Argentina they ate I Sewing Machine Is Prize in Drawing Everybody who visits Keith's Sewing Machine Sales and vice in the Cole-Dawson on West Franklin Street before December 24 will have a chance to win a new portable electric sewing machine. The winner will be chosen in a drawing to be held on Christmas Eve and need not be present at the drawing. An announcement of the con test says: “if you don’t need a sewing machine, you can help a good cause by filling out your stub in behalf of the Special Education Department of the Chapel Hill Elementary School. If you win, the machine will be given to the school.” ( ox Joins Staff of Auto Supply Store Dm tux has joined the staff of Brown’s Auto Supple l Store as a sales clerk and is being trained to become its manager, it is announced by F. L. Buber, operator of the store. Mr. Cox i , an alumnus of the University in the class of 1951. Mrs. Patterson in Hospital Mrs. Drew Patterson has been in the Memorial Hospital since Thursday. She, is expected to be at home in a day or so. Her son, Dr. Howard Patterson, came from New York Friday morning and was here two days. Coining Home Wilh a I’h.D. Mrs. James L. Godfrey flew 1 home from Chicago Saturday with something valuable that she didn't take with her when she flew there Wednesday: a I’h.D. in English history. She was examined for it Thurs ■ day and yesterday at the Univer sity of Chicago. Mrs. Himonds at Pinehurst Mrs. Lawrence B. Simonds . went to the Convalescent Home 1 in Pinehurst last week. Her sister and her niece were here for a few days before she left. and Mrs. Landis of the Mecklen burg chapter. Miss Helen Liner of the Ay cock School at Cedar Grove and Miss Hilda Strayhprn of the Hillsboro High School, winners of the chapter’s Good Citizenship awards, were introduced by Mrs. R. W r . Isley chairman of the award* committee. Each girl re ceived an award pin and a gift from the chapter. At the recent; ' district meeting in Raleigh Miss li Liner was chosen to compete for i'.he state award at the state con . vention in Charlotte. 11 At a social hour which followed . the meeting Mrs. George Smith ' and Miss Katherine Carmichael i served as co-hoaUsses with Mrs. 1 Cordon. i beefsteak three times a day be-' ■ cause for only 25 cents they ' could get a steak four inches m i diameter and an inch and a half i 1 thick. With Mr. Summerlin, the , steaks are more than a memory, i since he gained five pounds dur jing the trip. Mr. and Mrs. Summerlin didn’t go to South America as tourists but as parents visiting their son ‘,Sam and his wife and children in I Buenos Aire-,, where Sam is chief 1 1«>f the Associated Press Bureau. jThe grandchildren are Tony, two, and Calf, ‘who was born in Ha- 1 vuna, and Sandi, three and a half, born in Tokyo, Japan. Mr. and Mrs. Summerlin were! greatly impressed by the vast expanses of flat land on the Argentine pampas. Mirages are formed by rising vapor that makes a shimmering film on the surface of the plains, and once the Chapel Hill travelers saw a distant locomotive and train that :yenicd to be suspended in mid air. Mr. and Mrs. Summerlin saidi Brazil also impressed them by its great expanses and imparted| the feeling that it has tremen dous and rich natural resources.' That country has 301),000 more 1 square miles than the United. States but only one fifth the population. Cedar Grove School To Present Program X A musical pageant, titled “The Christmas Story in Music” will be presented at Cedar Grove i Elementary School tomorrow • (Wednesday) at 8 p.m. The pro . gram will feature the school’s rhythm band, lunette band, and i glee club. See Rembrandt Exhibit The following members of the ! Community Club’s Puinting and Sketching Workshop went to Ra leigh last week to see the Rem • braridt exhibit at the State Art 1 Museum: Mrs. Alfred Linde, 1 Mrs. J. Bright Kelly, Mrs. Flor ! enee Highsmith, Mrs. W. W. Cort, Miss Freda Mitchell, Mrs. Wil liam Neal, Mrs. Paul Wager, Mrs. W. E. Thompson, Mrs. V. ;Z, Cannon, Miss Frances Patton, Mrs. S. E. Leavitt, Miss Julia 1 Staples, Mrs. H. S. McGinty, Mrs. 1 Milton Loomis, Mrs. Frank Hanft, ' Mrs. I. W. Hose, Mrs. A. A. F. 1 Seawell, and Mrs. William B. Holmes. Their guide was Mrs. Mayne Albright of Raleigh. Recreation Group 1 To Meet Tonight A meeting will be held to i night (Tuesday) at 8 o’clock 1 in the Town Hall for all inter i • sled persons who would like to see the proposed Chapel liilil *250,(100 recreation bond . referendum pass. The meeting was railed by the Jaycees who spun tored the i referendum. The situation to date will be reviewed at the meeting, and officers and a | steering committee will be I named. i The Orange County Board i of Education has scheduled a . public hearing on the referen -1 dum f», I-—...- ■» Christmas Shopping Better As the Weather Turns Bad After getting off to a slow 1 start which admittedly had many local merchants worried aboutj large inventories, Christmas shop pers began besieging stores in all sections of the community Sat urday. The Customer Parking Lot on North Columbia Street was com pletely filled almost all day, and I at times during the afternoon] cars were lined up in the lot andi back into the street awaiting! ] parking places. The business upsurge was un-j hesitatingly attributed to a! change in the weather. As rainy! and chilly as it was, shoppers' turned out Saturday to some local stores as' their best trading day of; the season. Biggest buying here was said to have centered around men’s and women’s apparel. However, children’s presents of dolls and small fry vehicles were reported I in great demand. Household goods and appli ances were reported selling well, and indications are that house wives will be enjoying the bene fits of modern labor saving de ;'ices in almost unprecedented ! numbers. Indications ate, too, that the next five days will be even busier, j and the put-off-shopper may find it difficult to find exactly the —' . . Stores Open Till 9 All This Week Stores in the Chapel 11 ill - Carrboro area w ill remain open tonight (Tuesday) and each day of this wreck, except Sat urday. until 9 p.m. for the con venience of late Christmas shoppers. All stores will close at their j regular hours Saturday.and on Christmas Eve. They will be clotted all day Christmas. Jayvee Basketball Team Wins, 48-43 The Chapel Hill Junior High School basketball team defeated the East Durham team in Dur ham Friday night, 48-43, as three of the visitors scored in the doub le figures. High scoring, honors, however, went to sharp-shooting Billy Goodwin, who pumped in ]24 points for the losing Panthers. Leading the Chapel Hill attack were Warren with 14 points and Milner and Henry with II (mints each. It was the second win for the Chapel Hill juniors and the second straight loss for the Dur ham ipiint. The lineups: C. II (Is) K. Dur. (13) F Stevenson 4 Anderson 7 IF Giles 1 Daves C Warren II Wimberly 1 • i M ilner I I Cross 4 G Henry 11 Goodwin 21 Substitutions; ) Impel Hill I Yancey 1, l.arsh, llewett, Roberts, • lurk East Durham- Rigshee, Yates, Poole I, McGhee t>. Score nl half: Chapel Hill 28, East Durham 15. k Mrs. Thompson Honored The 1957 engagement calendar j published hy the North Carolina {Garden Clubs includes a photo s graph of a dried floral arrunge- I merit done hy Mrs. 11. Edward ■ Thompson of 715 Greenwood ■ Road. Mrs. Thompson is secre tary of the University's School Jof Nursing. Win Second Place Mrs. Vic Huggins and Mrs. Jim , Pinney of Chapel Hill took aec . ond place in the Durham Dupli , cate Bridge tournament at Dur i ham last. week. Exams May Have Halted Many of Us George Bryant Jr., the North Carolinian who is the Washing-' ton bureau chief for the Mc- Graw-Hill business and science publications, drove here from Washington last week with his son, George HI, who took en- 1 trance examinations for entry into the University's freshman class next fall. "If they’d had entrance exams 30 years ago when J first applied to come to school at Chapel Hill, I doubt if I would have made it,” Mr. Bryant told u friend here. One of the Mecklenburg Coun ty Bryants, who include H. E. C. (Red Buck) Bryant, George Bry ant, and Victor Bryant of Dur ham, George Bryunt Jr. came to UNC us a freshman in 1926. He said goodbye to Old Well environs in August of 1931 and headed for northern dimes. He. was bureau chief for several * a ear * n County; other rates on page 2 I articles he waited until too late I Ito buy. < Meantime, the community pre- ( ; pared to go on a holiday schedule ; with schools, including the Uni- i versity, closing and a number of < ffBHS! fiHi I' • HONOR STUDENTS—Twenty-three new members of the Chapel Hill High School chapter of the National Honor Society have been announced. Pictured above, they are Top row, left to right. Neil Clark. David Jones, John McCurdy, Sharon Sullivan, Jerry Hocult, and Elizabeth Green. Second row, left to right: h Susan Greulach, Vicki Greulach. Donna Hallenger, Virginia Tim mons, Betty Hayes, and Rudy Barker. 'Third row, left to right, Martha Adams, Jane Sherin, Lynda Ward. Elaine Hartness, Vir ' ginia Hardison, and Beverly Thompson. Bottom row, left to | right: Patricia Hunter, Vnn Proctor, Tammy Lefler, Janet Mc- Alister. and Judy Ferguson. UNC Chorus to Give Concert Tonight The first appearance of the 70- ] voice University Chorus under its new director, Wilton Mason, iwill be presented at its Christ mas concert tonight (Tuesday): at 8 o’clock in Hill Music Hull. The concert is one of the Tues day Evening Series presenta tions made by the UNC Depart-] ment of Music and is open to ‘ j the public without charge. The unusual oratorio of Hein rich Schuetz, “The Christmas' I Story,” is the principal work on the program. The oratorio was i written near the end of the I composer's life and represents • one of the finest expressions of ! this genius, an important (ire- 1 ■ decessor of Bach. • Soloists for the oratorio in- 1 ’ elude: Jan Saxon, soprano; Gene 1 Strasslcr, Roy Weaver and Jo • seph. McAllister, tenors; and : James Chamblee and David j Small, basses. • Miss Saxon will be heard as the angel and Strassler will have ‘ the role of the evangelist who ' narrates the episodes of the Christmas story. Weaver, Mc- Allister and Chamblee will ap ' pear as. the three wise men and 1 Small has the role of King Herod. 4 For this occasion the chorus I |‘A Child Is Horn’ To Be Presented ’ Walter Spearman, professor of journalism at UNC and prize ’ winning playwright, will he fea tured in the Pulpit Players’ pro duction of “A Child Is Born” r Thursday night at 8 o’clock in t the sanctuary of the Chapel Hill Baptist Church, .j The public is invited, free of I charge, to attend the last pres -1 entation of this memorable ex . perienee. 1 The play, directed by Louise I Lamont, is a Christmas play | written by Stephen Vincent Beri iet. Norman Cordon acts as the » Narrator and others in the cast - include Earl Wynn, Harry K. - Davis, Peter B. O’Sullivan, Gloria - Di Costanzo and Keen O’Sulli van. i i ml and later was a writer for I 'he Kiplinger Letter. The past seven years he has been Wash- 1 ington chief for the line of Mc- Graw-Hill mugazines which in cludes “Business Week” and a number of other technical publi- I cations of business and industry. The Bryants stayed at the jCarolina Inn. Carrboro FT A to See Yule Program The December meeting of the Carrboro Parent-Teacher Asso ciation will be held tonight (Tuesday) at 7:30 o’clock in the school auditorium. I A program of Christmas songs i »nd skits will ba presented. Mra, -Kebecea Carnes, Mra, Claude Baker and Mrs. James Phillips Only ,1 Shopping Day* Till f'hrinlma* business firms announcing holi day working hours. The local cleaners, for instance, promised yesterday that clothes brought in now would be ready in time for Christmas. will be joined by an orchestra made up by members of the University Symphony. An addi tional feature of the program, will be a group of unfamiliar j carols from many lands, includ ing Catalonian, Ukrainian, Rus sian and American mountain | songs. 1 Mr. Mason returned to Chapel Hill this fall after a year of study in Italy as a Ford Foundation fellow. The chorus was organ ized last spring at the end of the semester. This is the first time there has been a permanent mixed chorus of students. Schools to Close Christmas holidays for Chap el Hill, Orange County and University students begin this week. Students in all schools in | the Chapel Hill Administrative District, which includes White Cross and Carrboro, will be 1 dismissed for the holidays to morrow (Wednesday) at 2:30 o'clock. Classes will be re sumed at 8:30 a.m. on Janu ary 3. Other schools of the county "ill be closed after Friday’s classes. University students will be gin their Christinas vacation tomorrow (Wednesday) at l p.m., and will end it at 8 a.m. on January 3. MacKinoey Addresses Surgeons Loren Mac Kinney, professor of i medieval history in the Univer i; sity, gave an illustrated, lecture I on medieval surgery at the an nual meeting of the International “College of Surgeons recently in Chicago. He collected the ma terial for this lecture on visits to European libraries and headquar . ters of medical societies. Mr. . Mac Kinney has become well known in the medical profession , throughout the country, as well . as in academic circles, for his researches into medical instruc ' tion and practice in the Middle ‘ Ages. Hillsboro Bazaar Today The annual Bazaar, sponsored by the Home Economics Depart ment of Central High School, will be held today (Tuesday) in I Hillsboro from 11:00 a.m. until 6:00 p.m. Chapel Millnote i The burro Unconcernedly walking off the Christmas float of Aldersgate Methodist Church during the parade—and not coming back. * » * Seen on Franklin Street: Man bringing Santa Claus suit into cleaners to be cleaned and pressed. * * * Seen on University Lake Road: Two women out walk ing with half-grown pig fol lowing them like a dog. • * • E. A. Cameron giving hitch-