The auto has proved to be a 1 i great moral force in America. It | I has stopped a lot el horse stealing. | Volume 41, Number 66 Orange Classified As Disaster Area County’s Tobacco , Grain Crops Suffering From Severe Drought Orange is one of seventeen North Carolina Counties officially listed as an agricultural “disaster area.” The classification was announced yesterday by an of ficial of the U. S. Department of Agriculture. The,move follows a severe drought that has hit the northern part of the County. In some areas the last rain fell on March 1. Orange farmers will, under the classification, become I TOWN I and I GOWN I Is*** By PETE IVEYgraJI Leo Wagoner came upon his children in the house, quietly fishing from a garbage pail. They had hauled the garbage can into the den and filled it up with water. Equipped with poles and lines, they patiently wait ing for fish to bite. He asked the question a father usually asks when some unex pected and imponderable thing is going on in the home. Why, he asked, are they sitting there in the den, fishing from a garbage can? Who told them they could do that? The reply is classical also: “Nobody ever told us we couldn’t fish from a garbage can in the den.” j This is the second time Mr. Wagoner, a former school teach er, has run into that kind of thing. Years ago he discovered a first grade pupil behind the school house barn, smoking a cigarette. i "Don’t you know you’re not supposed to smoke on the school grounds?” he asked. The boy explained that he was only in the first grade and that the regulation against smoking had not been explained to his class. “Nobody told me about the rule,” he said. » * * When Hugh Mulligan and Sid Moody, the well-known feature writers for the Associated Press, came to Chapel Hill in the spring, they stayed about a week, making side trips to other towns in the State. They produced the widespread story about the “Class of 1938”,. It was published in over a thousand newspapers, with read ership above 80,000,000. Mulligan and Moody are ex cellent news craftsmen. It was an inspiration to watch them at work. They were at once casual and curious, easy-going and ag gressive in asking penetrating (Continued on Page 6) Integration Group Holds ‘Unity 9 Meet Hie Committee for Open Busi ness, without a chairman and with its leadership badly split, is seeking to restore unity to its ranks. Several leaders of the segrega tion protest organization which has been sponsoring demonstre -3 Families Still In Need Os Help This admittedly is no longer fresh news, but there are still three families in Chapel Hill suf fering from lack of cooking stoves and refrigerators. One of the families —a mother recently released from the hos pital and teenage children can’t cook for lack of a stove. An electric stove, any sort that will work, is desperately needed. Another stove is needed by a family in which there are four smal children. The mother is ill and soon will undergo major surgery. A family with six children from 2 to 12 years old needs a refrig erator, mainly for keeping milk. If you can help in any way, call M 2-2321 around noon or af ter 6 p.m. Transportation far the appliances will he provided. eligible for Federal assistance, particularly on feed grains and possibly hay necessary for win ter silage on dairies and beef cattle farms. County Agricultural Agent Ed ißames said yesterday that while Orange farms all over the Coun ty had suffered from inadequate rainfall, 'the whole thing is spot ty, with the worst over-all areas being in the north.” “A large area of northern Orange is unusually dry,” Mr. Barnes said. He made a survey trip through the area Friday, and the extent to which tobacco and grain crops had been dam aged could not be ascertained. However, he said, "Things look ed bad. I couldn’t get anyone to tell me how bad, but everybody said there would be less pound age. And you just can’t tell about the quality. If we got rain at this point it would save the to bacco.” Orange tobacco farmers had made what Mr. Barnes termed “an unusual effort to raise a high-quality crop. A State tobac co specialist surveyed the area the other day, and he comment ed on the obvious effort to pro duce good quality.” Pastures in northern Orange especially “look dreadful, just burnt out and brown. They look like they'd burn if you touched a match to them.” Drought damage both to to bacco and pastures is not as se vere in the southern portion as in the northern part. The bulk of Orange’s grain growers are in the north, a large percentage of its dairies in the south. “The hay crop this year will be the shortest we’ve had in years. With the bad pastures a lot of the farmers have fed eve rything they can feed.” With the hay crop short, and with normal summer pastures severely dam aged, many dairy and beef farm ers are feeding their animals sil age and hay that normally would be used for next winter’s forage. Federal relief is possible in some areas, Mr. Barnes said. “We’ve had no indication of the extent to which we can get sur plus grain, or at what price. In other areas there is a reduction of the freight rate on hay. We don’t know if we'll get that cith er.” Some of the damage will be covered by crop insurance, but Orange is not one of the coun ties participating in the Federal Crop Insurance program. The (Continued on Page 6) tions here, met Wednesday night with NAACP Attorney Floyd McKissick of Durham, who is also National director of CORE. During the meeting two who had resigned from the COB exec utive committee were reinstated. They included Harold Foster, who was ousted as COB chair man last weekend and Pat Cusick, director of the COB civil disobedience workshops. The Wednesday night confer ence was described as a "unity meeting" during which new goals were discussed. Mr. Fos ter said the group discussed broadening its scope. “In the future there will he definite ac tion toward voter registration and general civic improvement." Besides the reinstatements, three vacancies on the execu tive committee were filled. The executive committee is expected to name a new chairman at an other meeting today. Demonstrations were resumed here last week with two side walk marches and scheduled street march down Franklin. * In a sidewalk march at noon Friday. 53 persons participated. There were about 35 in another sidewalk march Friday after noon. The street march was scheduled to begin at do**) yes terday. rl« v« The Chapel Hill Weekly 5 Cents A Copy I&&F : r I’ _ n L 1 Hlk *** mm mßmmm r Si % PUTTING UP A FRONT Two businesses on Franklin Street are pet ting a new front. The businesses are 1 TheH’B Bakery and University Florist. The new front will be of Colonial de Search Starts Soon r • » For New Chancellor UNC President William C. Fri day will set machinery in mo tion sometime, this month to choose a successor to Chancellor William B. Aycock. Mr. Friday announced last week that he would appoint a committee which will be charged with considering possible re placements and recommending Mr. Aycock’s successor to the UNC Board of Trustees. The Committee, he said, would consist of fifteen or sixteen mem bers, including representatives from the faculty, the Board of Trustees and University Alumni. An organizational meeting of the group will be held some time in early September. Mr. Friday will request the committee, once its deliberations are complete, to submit to him a list of three choices for the position. He indicated that the list would probably be in his ‘Policemen’s Fund’ Has Nearly SI,OOO The Chapel Hill “Policemen’s Fund” has reached nearly SI,OOO. Joe Augustine, director of the Chamber of Commerce which established the fund as a com munity gesture of appreciation to the Police Department, said the drive would be wound up possibly within a week. The drive is still considerably short of the goal, however. ‘ The Chamber had hoped to raise enough money to permit the policemen to proceed with construction of a SIO,OOO building at their recreation area. About ss,ooo will be needed for financ ing to be arranged on the bal ance. Members of the Police Depart ment already have purchased a tract of land off the Hillsboro Road and have built an access road, cleared trees, dug a well and brought in electricity. The new building would serve as a recreation center. Most of the contributions so far have come from merchants and civic clubs. Individuals wishing to contribute may make checks pay able to Policemen's Fund, Cham ber of Commerce, and mail than to Policemen’s Fund, Chamber of Commerce, P. O. Bax 127. Contri butions are deductible for tax purposes. Serving the Chapel Hill Area Since 1923 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, AUGUST 18, 1963 hands by early spring. Under procedures outlined in the Uni versity’s Administration Code, Mr. Friday will nominate the new Chancellor from the list. His nomination will be presented to the full board of the Univer sity Trustees at their 1964 Spring meeting. Mr. Friday said the commit tee in the course of making its choice would hear petitions and requests from all interested par ties, including representatives from the student body. A student representative will not be ap pointed to the selection commit tee itself, however. Full notice of procedures for the committee will be announc ed at the time the membership of the committee is announced. The committee is expected to interview, candidates for the Chancellorship both at Chapel Hill and at other institutions and locations as they are deemed necessajy. The hew Chancellor will be named by May, 1964. Mr. Aycock announced his resignation from the position last July 8. He stated at the time that he would return to full-/ time teaching duties as a pro-! fessor in the University School' of Law, effective September, 1964. He has served as top ad ministrator in Chapel Hill since 1957. Admission Standards Raised By UNC Minimum qualifications for ad mission to the University for students entering later than May, 1964, have been raised, Consoli dated University President Wil liam C. Friday has announced. The new standards will apply to all three campuses of UNC, Chapel Hill, Greensboro, and Ra leigh. The changes were made at the recommendation of the faculty's Advisory Committee on Admis sions and Records after a study of admission statistics for the pest several years. Comparion of last year's freshman class with the year before documented the steady rise in quality of UNC’s applicants. The College Entrance Exam ination Board’s scholastic apti-, tude tests, known popularly as "College Boards." will continue sign, with planters in front of the dis play windows. Exterior renovation also is being done at Wentworth & Sloan Jewelry Company and at Chapel Hill Laundry. & Cleaners on Franklin. UNC Looks For Record Enrollment A record enrollment of 10,300 to 10,500 students is expeejed at the University this fall. The 2,000-member freshman class is about 300 students larger than ever before. It includes 22 coeds in the General College un der a new policy that opened non-speeialized programs to first year women students. Dormitory rooms designed for two occupants probably will op en with three students, accord ing to Housing director James Wadsworth. However, he said he expects the overcrowding to be eliminated as students drop out of school or seek off-campus lodging. Thirty new courses, mast of them in the departments of his tory, education and zoology, will bring the total University offer ing to 2,200 courses. Soon after the students return to the campus, ground will be broken to enlarge Woolen Gym nasium. Nine new married stu dent apartment buildings will be open by fall. The University has already announced that no more rooms are available in women's dormi tories. Dean of Women Katherine Carmichael has asked Towns people with suitable rooms for rent to make them available to graduate women students. to be one of Carolina’s admission crJeria. These examinations consist of two tests, one on verb al aptitude, end one on mathe matical aptitude. Top score on each of these is 800. In the fall of 1962 UNC fresh men made an average score of 505 on the verbal section and 546 on the mathematical. In the fall of 1361. the scores were 497 on the verbal and 530 on the mathematical. In the past, a prospective stu dent could not be admitted to the University without a special review of his records unless tiie total of the mathematical and verbal scores was at least 750. The new standard is 800, with a minimum score of 350 on each of the test’s two sections. Carolina's other major stand out! tor admission to Carolina is In New District Redistricting Plan Would Help Orange ★★★ ★ ★ ★ Top UNC Officers Given Pay Raises Several officials of the University at Chapel Hill were among the 105 State executives awarded pay raises Friday by the advisory Budget Commission. The raises are effective Sept. 1. Those from Chapel Hill included in the list are: Dr. Henry T. Clark, director of the Division of Health Affairs, from $20,000 to $22,000. UNC Chancellor William Aycock, from $18,500 to $20,000. (Chancellors at the other two branches of the University got the same increase.) Donald Anderson, the Consolidated University’s vice president for graduate studies and research, from $18,500 to $19,500. A. H. Shepard, business manager of the Consolidated University, from $14,000 to $15,000. J. A. Branch, .comptroller and business manager at Chapel Hill, from $13,700 to $14,200. The Advisory Budget Commission is responsible for the pay of the State’s top officials. Other State em ployees, whose pay is controlled by the Personnel Coun cill and the pay schedules of the Personnel Act, received a $lO-a-month increase from the General Assembly. House Member Will Be Picked Sept. 3 The Orange County Democrat ic Executive Committee will meet on Sept. 3 to name a suc cessor to Judge L. J. Phipps as a member of the State House of Representatives. The dinner meeting will be held at the General Sherman Restaurant, near Hillsboro, be ginning at 7:30. The 57 members of the Executive Committee will be guests of Judge Phipps, who is also Orange's Democratic chairman. Judge Phipps was appointed to the State House seat during the 1963 General Assembly, suc ceeding veteran Rep. John Um stead. Mr. Umstead resigned be cause of his health. Judge Phipps resigned from the General As sembly this summer in order to serve as North Carolina Com mander of the’American Legion. <- L. I I H Weather Report § • I Mostly fair today. High Low Wednesday 83 66 Thursday 81 56 Friday 83 56 Saturday 88 60 The unseasonably cool weather last week signaled one thing: the arrival of the new air-condition ing system. As soon as it turns hot again, the system will be turned off and field-stripped for inspec tion. the “predicted grade average,” a mathematical formula for com paring applicants’ entire pre-col lege records, including the Col lege Board scores. At Carolina, the numerical points assigned to grades are. an A equals four points, a B three, and so on un til an F, for failure, equals zero. The minimum predicted grade average for admission under the old system was 1.4, or a little better than a D. A student must have an over-all four years’ av erage of 2.0, or C, to graduate from Carolina. Under the new system, applicants must have a predicted average of 1.6, or a lit tle less than a C, for admission. Freshmen are required to earn an average of at least 1.25 to return for the sophomore year. "What this predicted grade average standard means," said | SUNDAY | L ISSUE 1 Published Every Sunday and Wednesday The Legion does not permit its Commander to hold elective pub lic office. Judge Phipps said the official call for the meeting would be mailed early this week to Exec utive Committee members. On the Executive Committee are the chairmen and vice chair men of the County's 25 voting precincts, plus seven designated members. A majority of those present end voting will determine the new Representative. Gover nor Sanford's approval of the Executive Committee choice is mandatory. t . Judge Phipps said he would * remain neutral in the selection ol his successor. Although he has declined to comment on the possibility, the Judge has been mentioned as a possible candi date for the 1965 General As sembly in next spring’s primary. The Orange Representative chosen by the Executive Com mittee on Sept. 3 wil serve in the special session of the Legis lature which Governor Sanford is expected to call this fall to consider Senate redistricting. Among those who have been mentioned frequently in connec tion with the appointment are former Rep. Umstead, Hillsboro newspaper publisher Ed Hamlin, YDC President Fred Cates of Hillsboro, County Commissioner Gordon Cleveland ol Chapel Hill, Chapel Hill Precinct Chairman Bill Merritt, Orange Parly Sec retary Earle Wallace, and Orange Grove Precinct Chair man Hugh Wilson. Charles Bernard. UNC Director of Admissions, “is that a stu--' dent who makes the minimum College Board total score of 800 must be well within the upper half of his graduating class to quali'y for Carolina. The lower he ranks in his high school class, the higher his College Board scores must be.” Last year, 91 per cent of UfiC’s freshmen were in the top half of their graduating classes in high school, as compared with 85 per cent the year before. Over half of the 1962 freshmen were in the top quarter of their high school class. Last year, Carolina bad fresh* men from 96 of North Carolina’s 100 counties. Out-of-state stu dents, limited to 15 per cent of the undergraduate student body, came from all over the world. Senate Seat Every Other Legislature Orange County will send a State Senator to the General As sembly with greater frequency, if Gov. Terry Sanford's propos ed re-disfribution of the Senate’s representation is adopted. Gov. Sanford’s plan calls for Orange, Durham and Person Counties to form the new 18th Senatorial District, to be repre sented by two Senators. The 18th under the plan would be one of ten districts represented by two senators. In an explanatory report ac companying his recommenda tions, Gov. Sanford noted that in effect the old 14th Senatorial District remains intact, except that Orange has been substitut ed for Granville County. The dis trict will have e total popula tion of 181,359, or 444 persons less than the median ratio of one senator for each 91,123 persons. Orange together with Ala mance County presently consti tutes the 16th Senatorial District, represented by one Senator. The ( two counties had. a combined population of 128,644, and under the optional rotation system us ed by the two counties, Ala mance sent a senator to Raleigh three times to Orange’s two times. State Senator Ralph Scott of Alamance presently represents the District. Orange elected Ed Lanier (now State Insurance Commissioner) to the 1955 and 1957 sessions of the General As sembly. Prior to that Alamance had chosen the senator for the 1949, 1951 and 1953 sessions. Sen. Scott served in the 1961 and 1963 Assemblies, and would be eligible to return for the 1965 Assembly. Governor Sanford's report states that “Alamance is entitl ed to be a district, so that leaves Orange to find a new home. Orange and Durham have much in common, so add Person, and you have the Old 14th with Orange in for Granville, with two Senators and a population of 181,359.” The ratio of Sena tors to inhabitants will be one to 90,679. Within the new district, Dur ham would probably retain its present Senator full-time, with Orange and Person alternating for election of the other. Since Orange has about 16,000 more population than Person a system similar to the old rotation be tween Alamance and Orange might be used. t'.. : ..i ,‘:U W.A SCENES t® i - , 1 Guests at Villa Tempesta be mused by barefoot waitress. . . . Novelist BETTY SMITH coping smoothly with the hubub at tending publication of her latest. . . . Patrons of a downtown beer parlor eyeing a State ABC agent with open hostility at closing time. ... JOE NAGELSCHMIDT making grandiose plans for be coming an amateur printer (an increasingly popular hobby, ac ebrding to “The New Yorker”). . . . Resident of Justice Street astounded at the ease with which his two Siamese cats routed a full-grown Weimaraner. . . . Chapel Hill attorney attempting to leave on vacation, being delayed by client, ordered by his wife to tell client to come back next week, all the way from Michi gan. . . . JIM MOUSMOULES taking friends on a tour of the foundations of his king-size new home in Pinebrook. . . . Chair man of one of Chapel Hill’s num erous committees trying in vain to round up a quorum. . . . Stu dent sitting on one of the bench es in front of Battle-Vanoe-Pet tigrew inspecting Franklin Street pedestrians with field glasses. . . . Chapel Hill linguist noting that “wral” is about as dose as you can come to the Russian equivalent for “liar”. . . . JOE JONES, of the UNC Alumni As sociation office, up at the crack of dawn for an early start on a Saturday of golf at Finley.