Some politicians are like rest* | less sleepers: first they lie on | one side, then on the other. Volume 41, Number 20 Wr fl K ■ ■■■ ■ St >4 MRS. WARREN WICKER Explaining Procedure . . ’. Reminiscences Bv ROBERT B. HOUSE In 1915 the old Pickwick movie theatre up near Sloan’s corner was supplanted by the new Pickwick on the other •side of Franklin Street down about where the town office of the University Service,Plants now stands. It was an elegant theatre for the times. The feature of features in the new Pick was the first showing of “The Birth of a Nation” in Chapel Hill. This picture w’ith an accompanying orchestra and sound effects was stupendous. It fired our non-too dormant loyalties to the Old South to a frenzy of nos talgia and “what might have been if. . . We were like Chaplain Jones, a local preacher in the generation pre ceding ours. lie had been a chaplain with Stonewall Jack son. He said the South had never really been deteated. It collapsed he thought Ijecause “it was wearied out w'ith victory.” Chaplain Jones even questioned the righteous ness of Providence in allowing the Yankees to win. Like his hero, Stonewall Jackson, he gave supreme allegiance to General Lee. He took a dim view of President Lincoln and, for that matter, of the Union. Lee’s birthday came and we celebrated that with gusto. Lincoln’s birthday came and we were considering that as just another day until President E. K. Graham spoke to us that morning in chapel. He praised us for our loyalty to Lee and the South. No man had ever voiced that theme better than Ed Graham had done in welcoming the old veterans back in 1911 to receive their diplomas, those who left for the war and never got back again as students. We went wild with enthusiasm and leaned back to hear more of the great epic. But Ed Graham shocked us. He moved right on to Lincoln, praised him and tied the greatness of Lee to the greatness of Lincoln. It was not, he said, a matter of Lee or. Lincoln but one of (Continued on Page 3) Town Clerk Will Retire On May 1 Mrs. Mary Lovejoy, Town clerk here since 1954, will retire May 1. Her resignation from the posi tion will be acted on by the Board of Aldermen when it meets to morrow night at 7:30 in the Town Hall. Mrs. Lovejoy and her husband t. i SCENES I -..>■■ ■■ 1 COLLIER COBB 111 beating an amiable path up the street in the season’s first spring suit . . . JOHN MANNING getting his way with the Planning Board without loosing one single verbal broad side . . . Interlopers at Jeff’s Campus Confectionary discussing renovation of the place, to the horror of established clientele . . . Shack proprietor TROY HAR VILLE taking a tolerant view of customers who wanted to watch The Flintstones on TV . . . UNC Development Director CHARLIE SHAFFER overseeing the re-zon ing of his neighborhood . . • HIL LIARD CALDWELL jumping in and then back out of the Town Board race in record time ... One of Chapel Hill’s most parti-' san Democrats openly backing a • Republican in the Town elec tions . . . ANDY GUTIERREZ vacuuming the Varsity lobby at 1:30 a.m. Opposition To Tax Appears Public Recreation: Pros & Cons Several matters/and a few minds were aired more or less thoroughly at a panel discussion of Chapel Hill recreation and recreation taxes Wednesday night. The Town Hall courtroom was almost filled with citizens, including the Mayor, the Town Manager, Aldermen, the School Superintendent, and members of the Chapel Hill Recreation Commission. None of the pros or cons of the recreation tax to be voted on May 7 were actually settled, but a few relatively new points were brought out, among them the fact that a recreation tax district can be legally established by referendum. Panelists were UNC sociology professor. Douglas Sessoms, Chapel Hill Alderman Mrs. Harold Walters, and Chapel Hill Recreation Commission Chairman Robert Boyce. moved here from Warren, Ohio, 13 years ago. Prior to becoming Town clerk, she worked three years as secretary to the Depart ment of Housekeeping at N. C. Memorial Hospital. She will leave her post April 1 for a month’s accrued vacation, and the Aider men hope to name her successor prior to that time. She and her husband will continue to make their home in Chapel Hill. In other business coming be fore the Aldermen, the re-zoning of the Gimghoul Road Area from RA-10 to RA-15 has been reported out favorably by the Planning Board and is expected to be adop ted.. Also scheduled to come before the Aldermen is a dual request for re-zoning and a special use permit for developer Jack Car lisle's fi2-unit Hillsboro Street apartment complex. No action on the request is anticipated since the Planning Board declined to act on the basis of “incomplete plans” submitted by Mr. Car lisle. Town Attorney John Q. Le- Grand and Carrboro Town At torney Judge L. J. Phipps have completed work on a bill setting up the Carrboro Planning area, and final Alderman action on it is expected. Further modification of the Town sien ordinance will also be discussed, new changes to the cemetery ordinance, reports on fluoridation and the Highway De partment’s view of the Chapel Hill Thoroughfare Plan are also on the agenda. The Chapel Hill Weekly Serving the Chapel Hill Area Sinee 1923 5 Cents a Copy •-'>m BBBMMHMMB W i inumm "IK* IHPf nflH p >.«**» ■ . •* * mm V 7 P .^Ja » fEB <' XK fWWIMBBI P THr iMuaffMKß: r,..-'-''® liy** j. <4HHv | fSlllr tlt V.: WBSKSKm i Xm. i .*K£SSt -Mjflllllwf . - ■ - I HKBIbS llwr ’ «• LJi.4HL. ftT ••. HM. -•*. • % -'.tt . g'.iK \ \ - -^§•--.' • ,~ •> m fc|. JWGiI > v , .- „■• -¥ ~ v • •'•/'.' -.'■- r '- '".J. '■'. OUT AGAIN—The chairs and the tables in front of the Scuttlebutt have been stored away all winter, while ice crusted the brick-paved terrace. Now they are out again, filled with students hastening the coming days of lemonade and laziness by pretending that the 1 }>&?■■* ••• HB JHB. , jHH DR. WILLIAM LASSITER Gets Markle Appointment Dr. William E. Lassiter, assist ant professor of medicine in the University School of Medicine this weejt was named a Markle Scholar in Academic Medicine, one of the most outstanding hon ors that can be r iven to a young medical scientist. Dr. Lassiter is one of 25 scien tists in this country and Canada to be so honored. He is the ninth member of the UNC medical fac ulty to receive this coveted award. The appointment from the John and Mary R. Markle Foundation of New York provides a $30,000 grant to the Medical School here where Dr. Lassiter teaches and engages in research. The sum is given over a five-year period to supplement salary, aid re search. and assist in the scien tist’s development as a teacher and investigator. Dr. Lassiter, a native of Wil mington. joined the UNC medical faculty In 1958, as a research (Continued on Page 3) CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, MARCH 10, 1963 Editorial comment is on Page 2-B. Avery Cohan had been scheduled to present the op position on the panel, but the recreational activities of his son’s Cub Scout pack interfered. “Not so many years ago, any child who wanted could find a tree to climb or a vacant lot,” said Mrs. Andrew Scott, moderator, “. . . then came the population ex plosion.” Dr. Sessoms spoke first. A recreation program must be built around the needs of a community, he said. No two communities’ recreation programs are alike. A public recreation program is not a babysitting facility, and not just a diversion for bored minds. “A recreation program Chapel Hill Businessmen Inspect ‘Smithfield Plan’ Nine Chapel Hill businessmen visited Smithfield Thursday to find tout how an outdated town could bring itself abreast of the times. Merchants Association execu tive director Joe Augustine, Town Manager Robert Peck, Mayor Sandy McClamroch, Carrboro Chamber of Commerce President George Spransy, Ted Danziger, R. B. Fitch, Jim Heavner, Doug Powell, and J. B. Robbins heard a presentation of “The Smithfield Plan," given by Smithfield town, Chamber of Commerce, and Jay. cee representatives. “The Smithfield Plan" is a community improvement plan by which Smithfield hopes to be chos en one of the winners in the an- Carrboro To Act On Planning Area The Carrboro Board of Com missioners will set its seal on the necessary paperwork for creation of a Carrboro Planning Area Tuesday night at its regu lar meeting in the Carrboro Town Hall. Town Clerk R. B. Todd said letters approving the establish ment of the new planning district had been received from the Chape! Hill Board of Aldermen and the Carrboro Commissioners, aid that Judge L. J. Phipps had completed preparations lor the enabling act to be submitted to the General Assembly. The Carrboro area will com (Continued on Page 3X current warmer-but-not-yet-summery weather is balm ier than it is. Girl-and-traffic-watching at the corner of Columbia and Cameron is looking up. Pretty soon a chair outside the Scuttlebutt will be a treasured pos session. nual All-America City contest. The contest is sponsored by a women’s organization and Look Magazine. The co-chairmen of “The Smith field Plan” explained the details of the project to the nine Chapel Hillians and conducted them on a tour of the town. As a collection of buildings and streets, Smithfield was obsolete by about fifty years when the citizens started their improve ment plan some months ago. Buildings were old, streets were A Talk With Stephen Bede •Stephen Bede is ehief of Radio Free Europe’s Hungarian Depart \ ment in Munich, Germany. Last' week he was in Durham under the auspices of Chemstrand. speak ing in an effort to raise contri butions to Radio Free Europe. Private contributions are RFE's only means of support. By J. A. C. DUNN Stephen Bede < Beydeh> has thick, prominent eyebrows that look like wisps of grey hay, and a broad, sad, slightly harried countenance which time, strain, and adversity have turned into a magnificent poker face. His eyes are weary with a hint of nostalgic melancholy, but otherwise his should provide opportunities for people to use their leisure constructively.” > A recreation program should cater to all age groups, and should operate all year round, “not just in the sum mer when the kids are out of school,” and every day, not only on weekends. A recreation program should also cater to special interest groups such as young married couples and the elderly. Dr, Sessoms said a survey of North Carolina’s public recreation activities showed that the per capita expendi ture on recreation in the State was $3.50, of which $1 was spent on parks. “If we follow this in Chapel Hill.” he said, "we should spend $30,000 on recreation and $12,000 on parks.” He mentioned towns roughly comjiarable in size to (Continued on Page 6! old, tlie town was not as attrac tive as it could be, and no major improvements had been made in the town's business section in half a century. Beginning with a townwide, “What Smithfield Needs” contest, sponsored by the Merchants’ Committee, a plan of Improve ment was developed. Among im provements now either completed or in process are an extensive downtown canopy with lights and piped-in music, color-styled buil (Continued on Page 5) face contains his emotions with ali the expressive display oi a wooden bucket. Mr. Bede objects to being called an “anti-Nazi underground lead er." “Oil, look, this is wbat I do not like." he said. “There was no organized underground in Hun gary during the war. There was resistance, but every man did what he could to make it diffi cult for the Nazis, by himself. There Was nothing like a general staff operation, no organization. "I was Information Chief of the Hungarian Ministry for Foreign Affairs in the early part of the war. I had all the newspapers in Hungary under my control, and Published Every Sunday and Wednesday Work To Resume ()n School Budget Hoard To Get Alternate Figures Tomorrow In Second Rough Draft School Superintendent Howard Thompson will present to the School Board a second rough draft of next year’s current expense and capital outlay budgets at the Board’s meeting Monday night at 7:30 in the home economics room of Chapel Hill High School. Dr. Thompson presented an initial draft at the Board’s last meeting. The Board took no action. Dr. Thompson said this week’s draft would U» separated into Plan A and Plan B. the first assuming a County pen-pupil allocation of S3B next year, the second assum ing an allocation of $42. Since the Board's last meeting. Dr. Thompson has conferred with the State Board of Education in an attempt to clarify vaguely explained items in the State's “B” budget. The provisions of the “B" budget directly affect Chapel Hill’s budget next year. David McDowell, a representa tive of the Public Service Co., will appear before the Board Monday to explain the cost of gas heat at Frank P. Graham Ele mentary School and the new Chapel Hill Junior High School. Gas bills at Graham have been about 50 per cent higher than an ticipated. Dr. Thompson said that more very cold weather could put the Graham School's heating bill over its budget allo cation. The Board expects Mr. Mc- Dowell to explain why the bills have been so much higher than anticipated. In addition, Dr. Thompson will (Continued on Page 3) ) \ \,iik * tT* J I Weather Report - j Cloudy and cool today, with partial clearing tomorrow. High I-ow Prec. Wednesday ~65 45 .87 Thursday 59 32 Friday 61 28 Saturday .... 64 33 Bermuda shorts are all the rage right now, with the balmy weather. But don’t drain the anti-freeze; you’ll sec another icicle yet. MR- BEDE K*-; - - . ■ v ,< SUNDAY ISSUE H BrO ys Swl HAROLD BIERCK ... He’s Against Tax '■■■■ ' ■ ■ . Chapel Hill CHAFF By LOUIS GRAVES It looks as if the newspapers and magazines, the radio and tele vision. and one’s ordinary acquain tance, in making a choice between the words give and donate, are leaning more and more toward donate. This tendency pains some peo ple who are concerned for the purity and the dignity of the lan guage. and nobody has comment ed on it in such spirited opposi tion as A. P. Herbert, the Eng lish novelist, poet, essayist, and dramatist, and for many years member of Parliament. He has been knighted and so is now officially Sir Alan Herbert, hut to writers and to the great body of his readers he is still known by the simple name under ' which he first distinguished him self. A few years ago, in a little es say on the subject of give and donate, he insisted that donate was a “snob word,” that “the rich donate and the poor give.” He had some fun translating iamiliar passages to include do nate, for example: “Donate us this day our daily bread.” “Tls more blessed to donate than to receive,” and "Twas all he do nated. ’twas all he had to do nate.” Herbert was bom 72 years ago (Continued on Page 6) this gave me an opportunity to make difficulties for the Nazis. 1 held briefings every morning for all newspapers, and without falsifying anything 1 could em phasize some things, and make it unpleasant for the Nazis to deal with our govertunaL Any thing that would harm the Nazis I did. Then when they occupied Hungary I went into hiding be cause they were looking for me. I could not do anything while 1 was hiding. It was dangerous, the Nazis wanted me because of my activi ties against them. First they put cut posters saying I should re turn; and then when I did not return they said that anybody (Continued m Page V