Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Feb. 17, 1963, edition 1 / Page 2
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Page 2 tontun Those little ncidou!.. are windows into ;i continuing tlnig that may tune been going on tor month- or iron years. "The researchers go to work organizing the material tor the writers, looking in the morgue, telephoning, interviews. The pub lie library work. Queries bre sent' out to the correspondents, and the correspondents write back very completely The correspon dents write much more complete ly than they would it they were writing for publication. This is what makes our reporting differ ent from most other people's, we get tae climate of the news, the feeling ol it. the environment, even the smells. The correspon de its write to make the writers understand everything, mention ing things they wouldn't use in . print, to give the writers a com plete picture. ‘'The writers do four or five stories a week, and this doesn't sound like much from a news paper point, .of View, Most news paper reporters could handle their share of thousand-word san ies in a morning, but. our writers really sweat those things out It'.- the hardest thing in the world to write briefly. The writers have to press, and repress and com press. aul still have to illumin ate a subject, make it interest ing. Nothing is really dull un less somebody writes.'dully about it. As' long as it s about real, live people, it's interesting “Sometimes a writer wilt tell the editor, this just isn't coming alive, it's not working out. there's not much story there, and the senior editor will say. then let's s, junk the story. The writers turn their stories in to the senior edi tor, who may say he wants it re written-. and he changes them as he sees tit, and then everything goes to the managing editor who reads just about everything that goes into the magazine, as an editor. “You may have noticed that our stories fit very snugly. They end over a cut. and a new one starts below the cut There are no widows,, no shirttails. The managing editor has to work up —Playmaker Glue Saves ‘Rhino’— (Continued from Pagp 1) ly pitched, at a Chapel Hill cock tail party It is the lowest com mon denominator of beast noise: it is also the magnified sound of human masses, everyone saving the same thing because they think * when they do tlrnk they think the same thing, and they do the same things, and conse quently are devoid of individual ity. bereft of moral heart.. It required tens of thousands of years for the population of the earth to reach, in t-he 1870's, one billion. By 1930. only sixty years later, it had reached two billion. Now, THIRTY YEARS LATER. itstandsatthreebillion.lt is pre dicted that by the turn ol this century, barring widespread war and fantastic natural catastro phes. six to eight billion persons will live on this obese planet. The Communist Chinese icgiine forc es millions of its ant-like people to wear blue quilted garme Us. the uniform of almost ultimate conformity in a land of com munes. But the cause of rigorous stand ardization of mind arid body is not to be found only in proving the .Malthusian theory. Hitler us ed the fiction of racial superior ity to rh : nocerosize the Germans. America's great, continuing. Hy dramatic-headed urge to con form into a vast river of gray, while subtle, carries with it a Puritanism that admonishes the individualist to "Get in line or get out of the game." lonesco introduces his first rhinoceros in the role of a gal loping propagandist, if you will, a torch bearer who lights at least one other torch early in the drama another convert to rhinoceros ism The logician arg ues. and re states the question, but no one not even the uni- T-versiry people who loam e\ery thing from books, "no! life" has the answer. The unbelieving are merely incredulous, being able only to speculate and philoso phize and argue in a turmoil of confused thought When the ma jority human being individual ists' weakens, the onee-infinitesi mal infection of the minority grows. The ranks ol the minority swell with hdrned novitiates who are happy to tlee from then un happiness. their responsibilities, their inadequacies; their immoral desire to escape from wound to tomb is proportionate to their desire lor safety:- Talk is cheap; free talk is al so essential to the survival of I Now available .. . COMPLETE Front End Alignment & Brake Service Factory Trained Technicians Carrbore Tire 8 Appliance Center 134 K, Main F ree. Parking in rear 942-2563 A Talk With Lawrence Laybourne— (Continued from Page 1) a layout, ahd he may have to say. cut Pres-- down to two col umns, '1 need an extra colun' .o for Education.' Our columns are seventy lines, and a story is thought of as being a thirty-liner, or a forty-liner. That's not count ing the headlines or the pie lures. "The managing editor cuts in type. All our type is set in Chicago, at- the R. R. Donnelley Company. They have a tremen dous plait out there. The man aging editor works with tele typesetter copy. Some things are positive, cuts, and some arc optional cut -. We give our print ers optional cuts or optional adds. Something may run three lines too short, or. it may she. Unity-two lines too long. The managing editor has to work with these things, all in the space of forty-three pages. He has to or chestrate toe whole tiling. "Then from the page forms mats are made and flown to pruning plants in Los Angeles for the West, Albany, and Old Saybrook, Connecticut.' tor print ing. After the researchers are finished researching, they pu; cl a different hat and become checkers. They check everything that gees into the magazine, for accuracy.’ They have quite a lot of authority, and I wish to God they'd exercise ii a little mure. Far example, we said a man was former Governor of Vermont, and it went through writers and editors and researchers, and eve-' rybodv kiow he bad been Gover nor of New Hampshire, but you know how people are. They're just human. "The magazine goes to press on Saturday night about ten or eleven, but the printers spend only about three hours Saturday afternoon making pages ready. Early Monday morning we’re in high-speed printing in ten places. Skipping Sunday is just an economic move to avoid paying time and a half, double time, triple time in some places. "We re printing in Los Angeles. Chicago. Washington, Albany. Old Saybrook. and (Montreal, and > democratic institutions While the small town of the playwright's imagination talks. Rhino burns" and multiplies, till rhinoceroses become 9 terrifyingly over whelming 4 majority. The one Homo sapiens hold-out the one last human being, or individ ualist falters when he ponders his own uniqueness. If he will but open the door of his apartment, he too will suc cumb to the totality of the ciph er And that is what the play is about. O; Man and Rhinoceroses, and a shred of hope. Were it not for writing that is clever enough just often enough and a farce-like glaze over the proceedings, the arama would tail into the category of a wordy but voiceless political tract. The small miracle is that it holds to gether for three entertaining ’ acts, for it is basically abstract, abstruse and,, at times, absurd. Playmaker glue, applied by the dynamic direction of Tommy Hezzuto, however, holds it to gether admirably well. The fin ished product is durable and en grossing, save for the over-abun dance of almost meaningless duologues created by the writer perhaps to challenge the direc tor's ability to "keep ihings mov ing." Major and memorable per formances are given by John Crockett, as Jean, who turns in to a rhino before our very eyes, and by Larry Warner, who al most does. Both roles are diffi cult ones, so to both of ihe-e gentlemen goes high praise for catching and sustaining tne mood. By the nature of things, all the other roles are subsidiary, ex cept perhaps tnat ot Daisy, por trayed .by Juaie.se flatten, the decorative and talented Play —maker who-dnrr-- well in"a"hnsrcah — ly weak part. There is no sub standard acting or sub-standard anything else, except perhaps the settings which suffer from a monotonous sameness of fore ground and background. There is a plug for the Animal Protection Society, for eats, both symbolic and tender, live and dead and a big plug ..tor In dividualism. If you want to ac cept this plug in person, lonesco, the thinking man's filter, is wait ing for you at the Playmakers Theatre, with two performances scheduled for today. If you ha I planned to take the kiddies to see real rhinoceroses butt about, you had better wait for Bnrnurh & Bailey. In Atlanta for the South Ameri ca!editions we used to print the South American edition in Cuba, but we got thrown out .and in Paris, Tokyo, and Mel bourne. For the overseas edi tions, proofs of the pages are made into film as positives, and tlown overseas. You’d think we'd be running a terrible risk with grounded planes, flying condi tions, you kiow. but we fly pro tection films, by alternate routes, so it's very rarely that there's a hitch anywhere. Distribution is by air in some places, to re mote little places, in this coun try it's mostly surface,'"truck or train. "It's interesting, how some weeks Time and Newsweex have the same person on the cover. We both had Caplan ca the cov er a few weeks ago. This week we had McNamara, they had Diefcr.baker. I think this results from the news magazine man’s mind, just the way the newspap erman's mind results in doze is of newspapers all over the coun try having the same lead story on the same day, the paper put together much the same way. But we-choose our covers com .pletely independently. We never know what they’re going to do." He laughed about “spies." but when pinned down about inter magazine espionage he suddenly blushed. '"Well, Set’s put it this way," he said. "It's interesting how in lormatici gets spread around ■sometimes. We watch our secur ity pretty well. Os course, when you have story lists going out to various places, there's bound to be a friend of a friend some where who will, you know, pass the word along. "Yes. I know about ’Timese.’ We don't think we have such a thing. We don't use mannerisms and tricks of writing. Os course, there was the oiu thing about Backward ran the sentences un til reeled the mind,' you may re member that: and there are the verbs, anti the adverbs. There are not many adjectives in Time. There are a lot of adverbs, though. We think we just have a style. Sometimes the style may seem to detract from the credi bility of the report. I know what you mean. It's a matter of con densation and color seeming to distort the facts. I guess this ef fect is possible " It is occasionally remarked among journalists that Time Mag azine demands will squeeze a man dry in ten years. "I don't think that's true," said Mr Laybourne. Just for the hell of it. let's look on the mast head and see how long people have been there." He turned to the title page in the latest issue aid ran his thumb down the names. "Twenty six years . . . twenty years . . . nineteen years . . . sixteen or seventeen years . . ten to twelve years . . Os course all those are senior men, true. But Time men are in demand. This is not to say that nobody's ever fired. Na turally, seme people come and spend a year, two years, a sort of drawn-out trial period, and it just doesn't seem to work out, so off they go. But nobody's ev er squeezed out." He mentioned a few Time men who had gone to different jobs: with Corning Glass, as a college processor of journalism, to own ership or editorship of small newspapers. And others: “. . . He became editor of a little weekly magazine called News week . . . And he became liter ary editor of another weekly mag azine called the Saturday Eve ning Post. . . "Our network of correspon dents is a wonderful working rela tionship. A lot of our correspon dents become writers. John Cof fin. who writes Press, was once our Omaha correspondent. It means that when a correspon dent goes to one of our bureaus or becorr.es one of the writers, there's no element of chance. The editors already know him, they can rely on his judgment. "I’ve only been assistant pub lishpr a cpunle ol months or so. ! started as a correspondent in Canada.” —Council— (Continued from Page 1 > sociation for the Aging and ((im munity Relations to the U. S. De partment of Health Education and Welfare for $17,000 to establish an information center for the aged. At the same time they empha sized that the endorsement did not commit future Councils to financial support should the Fed eral grant lapse after three years. The Association stated in its re quest to the Health. Education and Welfare Department that it would expect future support from | the Community Chest, County | Commissioners, : the University or I the public if the proposed center | proved to be of value to the corn | munity. QCJttUfQ). PAINTING & PAPERING Durham ! H 6 Morgan St. Dial *B4-0425 TLTF CfIAPFI. HIT!, TTfiFTxT V UNC Asks For More Funds— (Continued from Page 1) look: elsewhere.” In all. Mr. Friday “respectfully requested” restoration to the bud get of 50 percent State financing of the third structure of the Eh - ringhaus-Craige mens dormitoi\ group, to house 995 men: 50 per cent financing of additions to the heating plant’s steam piping sys tem: and 100 per cent financing of -the proposed $2 million stu dent union. Total capital im provements asked to tie restored: $3,962,000. In addition. Mr. Friday asked for Health Affairs, Memorial Hos pital. and Psychiatric Center sal ary raises totaling $206,874 the first year of the biennium, $56,000 the second year: and a video tape recorder for WUNC-TV Channel 4. which costs $50,000. On top of this, he requested a total of $400,000 for the biennium for new positions and supplies in the B budget, to be established or purchased on a priority basis. Chancellor Aycock said he was concerned with the University’s four B budgets (Academic Af fairs. Health Affairs, Memorial Hospital and the Psychiatric Cen ter*l and with capital improve mqht requests. He emphasized that improve ment of the University must not only be quantitative, but quali tive, that student growth does not represent the University’s full need. "All of us have been constantly mindful that merely accommodating numbers of stu dents is not enough. It is equal ly important that these students will not become the nucleus of an underdeveloped generation . . . We come . . . to appeal to- you to invest on behalf of the people in the State in a growing and a going University which not only aspires to but measures up to its increasing responsibilities." Chancellor Aycock gave illus trations of B budget requests which, if restored, would “enable us to move forward": —Funds with which to hire full time faculty to replace graduate students now doubling as part time instructors. He said the part time graduate student instructor situation was “nut desirable to the extent that the use of these students as teachers is determin ed on economic rather than edu cational grounds.” —“The University Press de sires to play a larger and more important role in scholarly pub lication. The Ford Foundation is willing to pay half the cost but on a matching basis.” —“More and more faculty members are doing which requires the use of com puter time. Funds to make this possible must come from the B budget.” —"The student union is in a real sense a quality education item . . . To me a student union adequate for the student body and suitably located is as essential as any other laboratory on the campus.” Chancellor Aycock’s reference to the proposed student union as a laboratory was in the sense of the present student union building. Graham Memorial, “for many decades" having been “an important educational venture for scores of potential leaders.” Chancellor Aycock concluded, “We hope the bright fiscal con dition of the State will enable you to respond to the needs es sential to a better as well as a bigger University.” The "bright fiscal condition” is the State’s $lO4 million surplus and the $22 million in bonds is suable by the Legislature with out an election. A Senator asked if any qualified student had been denied admis sion to the University. Mr. Fri day replied that none had. The same Senator asked Mr. Friday to explain land purchase items in the University’s budget. Mr. Friday said the land-was "future growth area.” Another Senator asked Mr. Fri day to comment on out-of-State tuition charges. Mr. Friday: “According to our most recent survey, our out-of- State student charges are among the highest in the seventeen Sou thern states." He said UNC had a 15 per cent quota for out-of- State students, but that there were seven categories of out-of- State persons exempted from the quota, among them persons born in North Carolina, children of people born in North Carolina, and sons and daughters of alumni. These persons, while not includ ed in the 15 per cent quota, are charged out-of-State fees. Question. I s it true that the Unhersity has about as many out-of-State students as there are North Carolinians going to col lege in other states? Mr. Friday said this was true and the “exchange" system had advantages. "For example we don t have to establish a school of veterinary medicine.” Mr. Friday also confirmed, in itw to another question, that cnm« r C f nt ° f UNC s sUl,k ' n( body ocmes from outside the State. dents SUrC ‘ ncludes forei «" rtu | .. Q “ e f ,io , n: “Do you have any of he late-defeated bond issue items j m your requests?" f hante or., to answer this. The I the T S,alod thal almosl all I rent requests had been in eluded in the bond issue proposal I defeated in 1961. Ppnsal I v, we sa y ‘his is a | budget for four years,” said Mr * * Friday. The record salary increases for the Academic Affairs Division of the University at Chapel Hill, which have already boon recom mended by the Advisory Budget Commission, total $1,870,345 for the biennium. The budget calls for $607,280 in the first year of the biennium and $1,263,065 in the second. If the budget is ap proved as recommended, this means the University will be able to grant $607,280 in salary in creases this coming July, and $655,785 in salary increases in July, 1964. Previously, the University had distributed all its salary increase funds at the beginning of the biennium. The change was made this year by the Department of Administration in Raleigh due to a new method which will be used in arriving at a base figure for tile 1965-67 budget. The change is expected to work to the Uni versity’s' ultimate advantage. Chaff (Continued from Page 1) ored was paying his way to Eur ope anti back by working, east bound, on a cattle boat. He en joyed trips across this country, too. The financing of these he trusted to luck, and often the luck was bad. He told me once about how, when he was returning "from the West Coast, he had crossed the Rockies and came to a place— I believe it was Salt Lake City— where a heavyweight prize figh’er was sitting in a ring while his promoter was shouting to the crowd that he would give a hun dred dollars to anybody who would step up and face him. "The fighter was a tremendous fellow," said Reynolds. - “He had an ugly grin on his face and look ed as if he was just crazy to bust anybody to pieces. 1 had done a little boxing but knew something awful was going to happen to me if 1 tried to stand up against that fierce-looking fellow. "But nobody ever needed mon ey more. I was absolutely dead broke. So 1 jumped up into the ring. He got up from his chair and I squared my fists against him. The next thing I knew that big bruiser gave me a left hook under the chin and I flew over the ropes into the laughing, cheer ing crowd. The promoter made good and gave me the hundred dollars, and I traveled back to Asheville in Pullman cars and having my meals in dining cars. * & * Clifford Lyons and his wife Gladys were close friends with Robert Frost in Florida, and after they came to live here sixteen years ago he paid them a week’s visit every February. Besides lecturing to English classes in the University he gave a public lecture to which students and faculty and townspeople flocked with delight. This was a notable event event in our year. The lovable, charming poet, a sturdy white-haired figure, stroll, ed about the campus and the vil lage, and along the paths in the surrounding woods, and became such a familiar figure that our people came to look upon him as belonging in good part to them. They were proud to claim him as a Chapel Hillian. Because of our friendship with Mr. and Mrs. Lyons they used to bring him to our home to call on every one of his visits. Os course this was a rare privilege, and we cherish deeply the mem ory of it. The straight - backed maple chair in our living room, made in North Carolina and called the Captain’s Chair, we treasure as symbolic of Robert Frost. It was the kind of chair he liked best. He knew it was kept for him and he made for it on entering the room. But before sitting down he looked at the birds feeding on the window sill and on the old millstone in the little court. He was especially fond of the white throat sparrow which he declared to be the same one who summer ed in his Vermont farm pasture. Another Chapel Hill connection —of-Mr.. Frost's was that-on a visit - to Davidson College, he present ed to George F. Bason Jr„ then a freshman, the Maureen Bell award for the highest excellence in literature in the student body. When I was looking through a scrapbook yesterday I came across this letter which Robert Frost’s devoted friend. Robert Hillyer 'who died a few years ago), wrote to him: Our friendship, Robert, firm through twenty years, Dares not commend these coup lets to your ears: How celebrate a thing so rich and strange Two poets whose affection does not change; Immune to all the perils Nature sends. World War and revolution and kind friends. Something there is that doesn’t love a wall: Your apples and my pines knew none at all, But grow together in that ghostly lot Where your Vermont meets my Conoecicut. Ours is a startling friendship, because art. Mother of quarrels who tears friends apart, Has bound us ever closer, mind and heart. —Chancellor House’s Reminiscences— iContinued from Page 1) peanut battles of the Pickwick Theatre. As for. business and managerial ability, all-time stars were A. L. At. Wiggins and P. L. Euless. They not only made a success of every < campus enterprise they touched, but they were already well-to-do capitalists as more than entirely self-supporting stu dents. Lee Wiggins has unfold ed exactly the business and fi nancial career his student days foreshadowed. His operations have extended from the great Coker interests at Hartsville, S. C., to the treasury of the United States. As for "Useless," as Eu less was called. 1 lost sight of him when he gradua'ed. And I remark that I don't know the full careers and the fates of at! the Thirteeners I happen to men tion. My theme is of their vital ity in 1912-1913, their variegated I personalities, and their class unity which makes me think of them as not many but one, a defi nite personality, 'l3 on the Cam pus. Classes did have personality as a class in those days. A student entered, remained continuously in residence if he possibly could and graduated with his fellows. By and large the members of a particular class studied about the same things and had the same experiences. They entered in relatively large numbers. But by their senior year they had worn down to a relatively small number. For instance ’l3 entered 188 strong. They graduated 78. The attrition was largely eco nomic. But by their senior year these 78 men knew each other inside and out. An attractive fea ture of their biographies in the 1913 "Yaekety Yack” is a tag of poetry discerningly used to characterize each man in his individuality. And yet running through these individual biog raphies is the sense of collective class personality. ’ 14, ’ls, and ’■l6 had respectively their own personalities too. I could charac terize each one favorably. But my present theme is 'l3. [ think Stokes, Tillett, Flutess and Wig gins are perfect 'l3 types, men of pronounced ability who took s%rious things seriously, but who did not take themselves over seriously. Considerations or numbers and convenience in scheduling have made this schooling in class uni ty more or less a thing of the past. It is impossible for enorm ous classes to know each other so thoroughly. Studies dre more diversified and graduation sched ules vary. Schools and programs vary. 'ln our day almost every student was definitely known as a freshman, a sophomore, a jun-. ior, a senior, usually in the Col lege of Liberal Arts. Moreover the baccalaureate degree was more predominantly a terminal degree than it is now. It was considered a major morai, in tellectual, and economic achieve ment. Students went to work on graduation. Today the baccalau reate is becoming more and more an introduction to graduate and professional schools. M.A.'s, Ph.D.'s, (M.D.’s and LL.B.'s are more common now than A.B.'s were 1912-1916. Two members of 1913. Rankin and Totten, began careers as Seniors that have kept them in the University ever since. Ralph Rankin, right-hand man of L. R. Wilson and N. W. Walker, began a fifty-year career in all sorts of high school relations. In the High School Debating Union and , in the several other academic contests he has kept more high school students in touch with the University than any other man, Roland Totten began a fifty-year career in Botany. He has succeed ed Battle, Cobb, and Coker in intimate knowledge of Chapel Hill and its environs. Another Thirteener, Guy 'B. Phillips, moved at once from Ed Graham's English 3 into the classroom of Raleigh ’High School. He ran every type of public school, and then about twenty years ago was called back to succeed Walker and Noble in the School of Education and the Summer Session. He is in the great tradition of Aycock, Aider man, Mclver, Joyner, and Noble, the Patriarchs of Public School Education. The eut-up of 1913 was Stein Basnight. He has been in busi ness here most of his life. His competence in business has not tamed his colorful and interest ing temperament. Mention of schools brings to mind a sue-* cession of strong teachers who stuck to the public schools. Among them arc Horace Sisk, Bob lsley, Elisha Joyner, and John Workman. E. M. Coulter has gone as far as a Professor of Ffistory at Georgia. This class has always been strong on reunions. Also in serv ice to the University and for sheer love of the place many have come back frequently to the campus There is Bob Huff man, the most scholarly gifted man of the class. 'He did every thing with easy grace and dis I Park Free 4 inCARRBGRO | tinction, even to chewing tobac co. Ilis study at home is a rev elation in books, music, religion, and general alertness to business, politics, arid fun. It is impossible to think of Bob without thinking of his equally gifted crony,'Doug Rights. They had everything that goes to the making of meet. Also they perpetrated the most atroc ious puns slice Shakespeare. Fred Morrison, who was Prin cipal of the Chapel Hill School before he graduated, has seldom missed a football game, not to mention meetings of the Alumni Annual Giving Council, the Lost Colony, and countless missions of politics and benefactions. Jasper Phillips is famous for his teach ing in the Men’s Class at the University Methodist Church eve ry Baccalaureate Sunday. George Carrington, editor, athlete, schol ar, surgeon of Burlington is in and out constantly on medical affairs. With him or independent ly, his wife, Fllizabeth. Governor Scott’s sister, is Irequently here on Nursing School affairs. I see Judge M. T. Spears frequently. I remember him best in the Phi Hall, and on the floor of Bynum Flail managing the dances along with George Carmichael. Nick Post. Speight Hunter, and Pey ton Smith. They were models of elegance and deportment. Also they were executive geniuses, for girls and music had to be im ported. A dance was a thrilling, exotic occasion not only to the dancers but to those of us who never shook a foot. We crowded the mining track on the second floor level of the gym to see the dances and to listen to the or chestra. '1 he couples came at the beginning, stayed till the end, and danced continuously. More over, in addition to the grand formal dances in Bynum Hall they danced the whole day in formally in the fraternity houses. An orchestra was too expensive for these small dances. I r or them a local Negro boy aanged out current tunes by ear on a piano. Henry Meeks, our great tenor, would relinquish operatic music tor a while. He would stroll about the campus strumming a guitar and singing love songs to a group of ecstatic girls, a troubadour in bedroom shoes to rest his tired feet. Thus 'l3 worked and played with competence and grace. They revealed to us the full range of mature enjoyment of campus Site from the serious to the innocent ly frivolous. They lived a lull life, and they shared it with us. I could continue to call off from memory just about the full ros ter of this able class. I wish I knew as fully their later careers as well as 1 remember tneir life and color as they were then. All that will come out in their re union reports. I shall be glad to see them and to hear them. 'l6 salutes 'l3 with lively anticipa tion. It is a healthy situation when Freshmen have reason to look up to Seniors as we did. It was beautiful to see the mu tual respect and easy fellowship of the faculty with this well-ed ucated class of Seniors. Dean Graham leaned on them with confidence, encouraged them to counsel us and, if need were to restrain us. Fie cited the prac tice at Oxford and Cambridge where older men would caution aberrant younger men: "That is not done here.” The men of ’l3 were good look ers-up themselves. They looked up to ’O9 who had introduced them to the University. And Frank Graham, the President and leading spirit of “Naughty Nine" was back here studying law in 1912-13. Hp was intimately in the counsels of T 3. We had the example of two great classes. TO BE CONTINUED Use Weekly classified ads for best results. s hO/» A M * IW* I lllM w - F"ai*lin ph. 9fi7-1272 ( *T*Ln / STORE HOURS: Mon., dosed for stock work tyftl pr Tm ‘ s ,hni Sat ->0 a.m. to 5 p.m. * Needs: YOUR CONTRIBUTIONS— USED CLOTHING, FURNITURE, DISHES, APPLIANCES, TOYS, BOOKS, ETC. YOUR SERVICES AND INTEREST Contributions are fax deductible. For tax deduction purposes, you are Allowed one third to one half original prices. Contributions may be left ot the Thrift Shop or at Pick-up bins located at AAP (Easteato). Colonial Store (Glen Len nox), Fowler’s Food Store (uptown), Grace’s 5 & 10 (Carrboro). Profits Help To Provide: ★ EQUIPMENT FOR SCIENCE CLASSES ★ BOOKS FOR SCHOOL LIBRARY ★ ART AND MUSIC SUPPLIES + SCHOOL LUNCHES ★ PLAYGROUND EQUIPMENT / ★ PAY FOR TEACHERS ON SICK LEAVE ★ WHICH REGULAR SCHOOL APPROPRIATIONS ARE NOT AVAILABLE Program Sponsors Carrboro School P.T.A. Chapel Hill Junior nigh School P.T.A. Chapel Hill Senior High School P.T.S.A. Sunday, February 17, 1963 —Recreation— (Continued from Page 1) pool is a private corporation,” said Mr. Boyce, "but I see no reason why the pool should not be a part of the recreation program. We will consider the matter as new business if the tax passes.” The Commission also discussed the possibility of the tax failing to pass. No clear position was reached, although the members felt that one must be reached be fore the May election. “I don’t think we will ever go back to the co-directors, but we may revert to the program as it was before 1958,” Dr. Sessoms said. “Employing one full-time director is a possible action.” “The tax decides for or against the present recreation program,” Mr. Boyce added. The March meeting of the com mission was moved up to Feb. 25 *to prepare for the March 6 public meeting on the recreation tax, to be sponsored by the Lea gue of Women Voters. Other plans for distributing in formation on the tax were discuss ed, and a report from the cal endar committee responsible for mapping out the campaign was heard, Handicraft Exhibit Planned Feh. 23 February 23 is the date set for a Handicraft Exhibit for 4th, sth and 6th graders, sponsored by the Recreation Department. Any "pupil is welcome to exhibit something he. has made in the way of arts and crafts. Flxhibits must be brought to Unistead Cent er from 3:30 to 5:30 p.m. on Tues day. Wednesday or Thursday af ternoons. The Exhibit Saturday will be from 3:00 until 6:00 p.m. at Urn stead Center. Prizes will be awarded to outstanding entries at 5:00 p.m. and refreshments will be served. The department has announced that classes in handicrafts for 4th, sth .and 6th graders will be offered as soon as possible after the exhibit takes place. These will be at Unistead Center from 3:30 to 5:00 p.m. on as many week-days as the demand indi cates. The instructor for the handi craft program is Miss Coley who has a master's degree in Dra matic Art from the University and has worked extensively in arts and crafts. If your child is interested in the program call the Recreation Department immediately to reg ister for classes. Definite times will be announced soon. Krrr. ■ r*TTTj7j ■ »11 yJI *1 aln 11 wmmm Our watch and jewelry repair 7 experts will restore your proud possessions to their original beauty and usefulness. T. L. Kemp Jewelry Home of the Old Well Charm Estes Hills School P.T.A. Frank P. Graham School P.T.A. Gienwood School/P.T.A. Lincoln High School P.T.A. Northside School P.T.A,
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 17, 1963, edition 1
2
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