Page 4-C Rec Facilities Open To Public The facilities of the Chapel Hill Recreation Department are open to the public. The Recreation Department is supported by the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Community Chest and by a Town recreation tax. To be eligible for recreation programs for which there is a registration, a non-resident. of Chapel Hill (residing outside the town limits) must pay a fee of $7. This is a family fee which makes all members of a family living in the same house eligible for the same local public recrea tion benefits as Chapel Hill resi dents for the fiscal year, July 1- June‘3o, 1963*4. This fee is not to be confused with the small fees for special programs which all participants must pay. Open-house type programs (for which there is no registration) are open to residents and non residents alike. The family fee is not charged. All program no tices state whether the program carries a registration. Church Will Hold • - . -jt' -» •*' .:i %■- Barbecue Oct. 4 Plans are nearing completion for the Church of the Holy Fam ily's sixth annual community wide barbecue to be held on the church grounds Friday afternoon and evening, October 4, between the hours of 4:30 and 8:00 p.m. Last year’s barbecue was the most successful ever sponsored by the church. Under the lead ership of Chairman Dr. Robert J. (Jack) Shankle, 200 men and women of the church sold ap proximately 2,500 tickets. Jim Harper is serving as chairman for the 1963 barbecue. A number of men and women of the church have agreed te serve as team captains. v Jhis group in cludes Mrs. Joan O'Brien, Mrs. Jeanne H-u d s o n, Mr 3. Anne Payne, Mrs. James King, Sam Boone, Dr. Robert H. Wagner, Dr. John I. Boswell, Mrs. Al bert Jowdy, Mrs. John Cox, Eld Robertson Mrs. Roy Holsten, .Mrs. Sam Taytor, Mrs. John Sowter, Dr. Robert D. Langtell, I Welcome Fall ■ I inCARRBORO I YOUR RUGS Will Look Better Last Longer with Care By ■HU *"* ck “ amu * Only Qualified Rag Cleaner” PW Operator, Ask hr Dirtnm WX2BBO, Benson BABY HUPEI SEDUCE WE DELIVER TWICE WEEKLY ONE WEEK’S SUPPLY Your Diapers __ $1.75 Our Diapers $2.25 Call Durham 383-9881 . ° I FROM THE SEAS OF JAPAN COMES AGAR, AN ESSENTIAL INGREDIENT OF MODERN medicine ... ... and your druggist is the K man who-is trained to know / how to use its -tital properties MwvmWp: /. to work for your health, just as he uses the other treasures w ‘ of the world for your benefit. 1 Glen Lennox Pharmacy FREE DELIVERY Phene 917-7014 taw Lennox Shßpptm Cwnter—Pree Parking Fees for special programs are charged in order to add variety to the programs, sometimes to make them possible at all. Fees are designed To cover or partially cover only the costs of the prograrrC for which' they are charged. When the number of people registering permits, fees are lowered accordingly, the program is extended, or the pro gram is made more attractive in one way or another. During this week the Recrea tion Department will keep office hours from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Normally, of fice hours are 2 to S p.m. Recreation notices and sched ules will appear.in the local news papers and on station WCHL. Registration for most fall pro grams will be open this week through Friday, September 27. Persons interested may come to Umstead Park to register, or call the office there, 942-6054. Pros pective participants are urged not to wait to register. A program might have folded for laek of par ticipation, or might be full. Mrs. Philip McMullen, Mrs. Rob ert Varley, Mrs. W. C. Satter field, and Dr. Henry C. Thomas. Griffins of Goldsboro will pro vide the barbecue for the oc casion. The prices will be as fol lows: whole, two-pound barbecu ed chicken (2.00), one pound pork barbecue <51.75), barbecue chicken plate ($1.50, and pork barbecue plate ($1.25). The plates will include potato salad, slaw, and hush puppies. The bar becue wil be packaged and dis tributed at stations for those desiring to pick it up and take it home. Facilities will also be provided for those interested in eating at the church. Mrs. Robert Lang deil and Mrs. John Sowter head the committee planning the ar rangements for those who will be served at the church. Ap proximately 250 persons were served at the church last year. The entire profit from the sale of the tickets will be used for missionary work, possibly to start work on a new Episcopal Church In the Durham-Chapel Hill area. Mrs. Jim Harper ii chairman of ticket sales. Previous chairmen of the bar becue were Mrs. Alton Sadler, Alton Sadler, Tom Bost Jr., Dr. John B. Sowter, and Jack Shan- Ide. Poem In ‘Reporter’ A new poem by Charles Ed ward Eaton of Chapel Hill en titled “Chores,” appears in the September 36 issue of The Re porter. This poem will be includ ed in Mr. Eaton’s fifth collec tion, which is now nearing com pletion. Other peoms by Mr. Eaton are appearing in*(he current issues of The 9 with west Review, Fora Quarters, Impetus, and The Lyric. Recreation Roundup The Chapel Hill Recreation Department has announced its fall schedule of activities, as fol lows: Archery Club For boys and girls, ages 10 through 16. Club activities will begin with complete instructions on selecting and maintaining tackle, safety, and the funda mentals of addressing, nocking, drawing, positioning, and loos ing. Activities will be held at Um stead Park each Monday after noon at 4. Registration will be open through September 27. Archers may register at the recreation office at Umstead Crater either in person or by telephoning 942- 6054. Mike Riggsbee, depart ment sports supervisor, will con duct activities. Baton Twirling The children’s Baton Corps will resume activity, starting Saturday, September 28. Twirl ing is tentatively scheduled for Umstead Park. Children, ages 6,7, and 6 will met at 11 a.m., and children ages 9, 10, and 11 will met at 12 noon. The classes will last twelve ' weks, after which another regis tration will be hid, this time for advanced classes, as well as for beginners classes in each age group. Linda Dixon, Chapel Hill High School student, will instruct. Ronnie Packard, department supervisor of social activities, and Mrs. Jean Sparrow, depart ment secretary, will supervise. Bridge Registration for bridge classes will be open all this week. There will be beginning classes for teen-agers and beginning class es for adults. At the close of the 8-week session, there will be an other registration, this time for intermediate classes for each age group. That session will be followed by beginning classes. Classes will be held at Um stead Park, for adults, Monday nights at «, and for teenagers, Wednesday nights at 7. There will be a registration fee of $3 for each participant to help pay the cost of employing a skilled instructor. Creative Dramatics to • «• ' <«.-«&*i Each year the recreation de partment conducts a program in creative dramatics for children. This is an excellent opportunity for children ages 6 through M to learn to express themselves freely. The program does not call for learning lines from plays or even reading them. The em phasis is on a child being him self and on developing creativ ity, imagination, and free ex • pression. Registration, for the first twelve-week session is open all of this week. The program will begin next week at Umstead Park, for the 6-8 age group, on Tuesdays at 3:36, and for the 9- 11 age group on Wednesdays at 3:30. The student-instructor ratio will be held at 15 to 1. Contact the office early. The services of a qualified leader will be ob tained. Medem Dance Modern Dance will be by Mrs. Edith Hinrich, a professional in the field. If sufficient interest is Shown, there will be a series of weekly classes, meeting Thurs days at 4 p.m. at Umstead Park, each series lasting six weeks. A fee of IS will be charged for each session. Sadat Dance Social dance classes for be ginners and intermediate levels will be offered to adults. Classes will be at Umstead Park each Tuesday night for beginners and each Thursday night for inter mediates, both at 9. Instruction will be by Airs. Janet Moore, who holds a mas ter’s degree In Recreation with emphasis is the dance area. Her lessons will include the tango, cha cha cha, limbo fox trot, rumba, twist, and maybe more. Couples only. The fee will be $5 per couple Ibr the eiglt-Week session. Reg istration is open this week. A similar program for teen agers may be arranged Satur day mornings just before the teen radio program. Contact the Recreation Department office. Wettest Square Dance The Department has been ask- carton THE CHAPKjHILL WEEKLY ad to form a square dance unit, preferably western »§tyle, and is in a position to obtain some quali fied help in getting such a pro gram started. Anyone interested in joining a Western Square Dance group, contact the Recreation office this week. ". Football The announcements have been made and teams are being form ed now for this year’s touch foot ball league for boys. A schedule of practices and games will be announced. Registration is still open for boys, ages 9-12. Tentative plans are to have a similar program for boys, 12-15. If in teres tod, inform the Recrea tion Department. Horseback Riding Again the Department will make available (at reduced rates) a program designed to teach the skills of riding, and pleasure riding. There will be individual instruction, but in classes. Transportation to and from the stables, and professional instruc tion and supervision will be pro vided. Classes are open for children, ages 8-13. Children will be encouraged to progress at their own rate (four instructors are usually on hand), and advanced classes will be of fered at the end of each session. Classes will meet once each week at Pine Knolls Stable and each session will last six weeks. A fee of sl2 will be charged for each session. Classes will be limited. Music The Recreation Department is interested in forming glee club, barber shop group, and string band groups for any and all age groups. The teaching of skills in these areas might not be a part of the program in die begin ning, but the program could grow to that. Those who have some skill in any of the areas mentioned and who would be interested in join ing such a group should contact the Department office this week. Physical Fitness With sufficient interest from the public a local gym may be available for a fitness program fbr men. Such a program would include casual basketball, volley ball, running, supervised Cana dian Air Force Fitness exercises and more. An early morning or a noon schedule can be arranged. Contact the Recreation office. SUraaastics The slimnastics program for ladies will resume the week of September 30. Registration is set for this week of September 23. Interested persons must register before the program starts. The program is a fitness ac tivity, with emphasis on exercises of a modern dance type. Weekly classes will be conducted for be ginners and advanced partici pants at Umstead Park; begin ners on Tuesday mornings at 10, and advanced participants on Thursday mornings at 10. Mrs. Edith Hinrich will direct. A fee of $3 will be charged each person for the six-week session. After each session there will be another registration, at which time ladies may join either the beginners or the advanced class. Participants may join both class es. Uttte Sportanaa’s Club The Department will organise a Sportsman's Club for teen-age boys. Hunting and fishing will be the main areas of concentra tion. Classes will be held to teach the philosophy, safety as pects, and skills, and there will be outings for on-the-spot ex perience. A nucleus of interested boys has been farmed, but there is plenty of room for more. Meet ings will be each Friday after noon at 4 at Umstead Park. Call thJFrecreatioo office to register. Ten Program A popular teen program, fea turing combo parties, sock haps, and after-game get-togethers has been started. Each week there will be an organized, supervised activity for each high school. There are activities designed specifically for junior high stu dents. The program is planned far Friday and/or Saturday eve nings. The time and place for each event will be announced. No reg istration is necessary. jw - ?S&9$gJL * W! n a ffflnTr' if LES BOYS Members of Chapel Hill Boy Scout Troop 9 will perform an Indian dance, for. which they are prac ticing above, at the Fireball Camporee, the largest Boy Scout camporee ever held in Orange Boy Scout District, to DONI LET THIS HAPPEN TO YOU NEXT SUNOA Y! .r. It just makes sense to get plenty of extra Long Meadow Milk and other fine dairy products for the weekend. There’s an extra day between deliveries, and youngsters seem to raid the refrigerator every hour when they’re at home ' Why not double your ©rder on Friday or Saturday of each week? Then you can be pretty sure you won’t run out. 7 ion ® Dairy Specialists Since 1915 « Ite/MEADOW || ' V FARMS \UiCall for home delivery today! . i take place Friday, Saturday, and Sun day at the Glenwood School lot. The camporee has been planned by Police Captain Coy Durham and Dr. William E. Bibb of the j Orange District Boy Scout Committee. * * ; Wednesday, Sept. ,25, 1963 Lewis At Bowman Gray Med School Ronel L. Lewis at Durham is one of eight Reynolds Scholar ship students who have enrolled at the Bowman Gray School of Medicine. The 56 students accepted for • the first-year medical class were selected from 663 applicants. They represent 17 states and 27 colleges and universities. Thirty one of (he new students are from North Carolina. Mr. Lewis, son of Mr. rad Mrs. Lacy R. Lewis of Durham, at tended Davidson College on a Dana Scholarship, receiving the B.S. degree last June. He is married to the former Miss Becky Merritt of Chapel Hill. Read the Weekly classified ads. Instruction in PIANO LYDIA E. JAMES Bachelor of Music Master of Music Registration for Fall Now Open 47 Valley Park Phone 968-5333