Page 6 ESTATE tim&\ REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE v "’ REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE IIVEY REALTY I 227 East Fraaklia Slraal „„«*» S«-2852 aai 942-2165 I For EXCLUSIVE LISTINGS I First in Listings First in Sales Mrs. Pete Ivey, Phone 942*2165 Arthur Parque Miner 942-4821 Mrs. Charles Milner _ 942-2224 Robert C. Deßosset _ 942-2137 Mrs. Peter Johnston 929-1651 Mrs. Clifton Brock __ 967-1008 Mrs. Arthur WhitehiU MSts. Frank Klingberg 942-5524 Don Miller | •-" l : • ________ “j REALESTATE REAL ESTATE CHAPEL HILL "V. * $ « - t REALTY Tankmley Bldg., next to Post Offtc* 942-5361 Phone 942*3726 |* John Allen Cates Thomas L. Hannaford |g| • Sales • Rentals * Insurance | ■ >■. ' - H if i^-> REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE I DIAL 968-4431 I I TOP LISTINGS I I SALES I I SATISFACTION I Available to you, Foushee-Olsen's Realtors have the top buys, the most sales, the longest and most experience, a center of town location, the most advertising money and work-time spent to sell reasonably priced exclusive listings (at no extra cost to sellers or buyers.) Volume has to keep on being Foushee-Olsen’s answer! New houses and a number of well located and unusually good listings available now . . . Dial 968-4431 or visit our first floor North Columbia Street office at (free) parking. REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE HORNADAV 6 COMPANY Realtor Exclusive Agents for Estes Hills Lots WE HAVE NICE LEVEL LOTS 5 MILES OUT ON OLD DURHAM ROAD FOR SALE. 8 Collier Cobb A Associates Bldg., 1407 E. Franklin Phone 942-5365 REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE ? Fambrough Realty Co. I TWO HOUSES FOR RENT f 942-4961 , 'Vi- - Jk-Hi, . - AHA.*, vtfc' THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY REAL ESTATE |^»O4BX>4BaHnHHnRMWMi Parkwood ! NATIONAL AWARD-WINNINGI COMMUNITY j PRICE RANGE: >13,400-121,450 SSO total cash tor qualified vet- J erang to move in. Maximum I FRA and Conventional finahcii j arranged. 10 Minutes from Chapel Hill! on Raleigh Rd. OFFICE OPEN ! Weekdays 104 ! Sundays 14 j DIAL DURHAM j 696-3441 ! l t _____ REAL ESTATE jMfcv / Tewn.Cmntal Auto"* BUD OJ Ph. 942-3462 READY TO MOVE IN— clean 2 bedroom home on charming Urge wooded lot, fenced to play area tor the tots, school 2 blocks away for the older chil dren. Selling for SIO4OO. M Mato St. at toe -Rexall” SIKa REAL ESTATE j ' PIMtM IQ! 3 Betowon house with fireplace on Puretoy Road-Couple with not more than one child—year lease -1105.00. REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE 1 HEY MOM! I ,1 “Come away from the kitchen” (that scrumptious I I stainless steel, built-in kitchen designed for maxi- I I mum efficiency with separate utility room and I adjoining expansive panelled family room). “Come I I down here to mine and brother’s and sister’s great I big basement recreation room next to the shop I I and garage and half bath! This one really has the I ■ room!” ||l And this is my room with the built-in desk I I shelves and light. And brother and sister have I their own desks. Also walking distance to schools. ■ I Proved GOOD value! Another of Foushee-Olsen’s I I fine listings in all ranges. || DIAL 9684431 I REALTORS REAL ESTATE REAL ESTATE Chapel HiU*s Finest Address i i '•fofi/vw) inmnnAAAAAnr ’ u yiMJ lojd wJuyy [. \A'nm^-J/rlr=rr, TOWNE HOUSE .OF CHAPEL HILL PHONE 942-2163 9 A.M.-6 P.M. NOW RENTING • 65 Ft. Swimming Pool o Water Furnished o Recreation Areas • Individual Patio & Storage • 3-Bedroom Luxury Units Room • 2 Ceramic Baths o Washer ft Dryer Facilities • Complete GE Kitchens o Paved Parking Area with Disposal ft Dishwasher o Telephone Jack o Master TV Outlet 1,2, 3, & 4 BEDROOM APARTMENTS Entrances on Hillsboro Street and Airport Road REAL ESTATE REAITeSTATE “Service with a personal touch** 1 Herb Holland Company REAL ESTATE .942JL869 HEADQUARTERS OF GOOD LISTINGS ir Homes ★ Farms ★ Acreage • Commercial Property ★ Building Sites FOR SALE - NICE HOMES IN CHAPEL HILL AND SURROUNDING AREAS WOULD YOU LIKE TO BUILD? We can help you with the lot. the building, and the financing. LICENSED REPRESENTATIVES: <- j fc J. P. Goforth Mrs. Gladys Williams Jim Watson I 968-8204 967-3251 842-1894 L REAUrOtsfl AtMActtVß iSlm 1<« rfwwiioo jsi Housing Project Site On Agenda The Planning Board and the Chapel Hill Housing Authority will hold a Joint meeting tonight in the Town Hail at 7:30 to dis cuss the Authority’s tentative site selections for low-rent public housing. Housing Authority Chairman Bill Cherry said a number of sites had been examined. How ever, all selections thus far are "tentative, or tentatively defin ite," and final selections will hinge in part on Planning Board approval of the sites. The Planning Board was ap pointed several months ago to C Os C Campaign To Open Oct. 15 A membership campaign for a new Chamber of Commerce in Chapel Hill will be opened Oc tober IS. Hie decision to organ ize the new chamber was made at a meeting of ten Chapel Hill and Carrboro businessmen last week at UNC Chancellor William Aycock’s house. The group agreed unanimous-, ly on the need for a Chamber of Commerce in Chapel Hill. The group also agreed unani mously to investigate the possi bility of combining the new chamber with the existing Car boro Chamber of Commerce, whose past work it praised high ly. If the tiim-jorganiaations do not combine, they will at least work very closely, it was agreed. The purpose of the Chamber will be to provide a channel through which expressions of community-wide opinion can be voiced, and under the sponsor ship of which projects for the betterment of the Town and the University can be conducted. At present there is no coordinat ing factor of this type in the community. The businessmen also agreed that the chamber would be more effective and beneficial if it encompassed rur al parts of the County as well as Chapel Hill. Carrboro, and the University. A five-man steering commit tee was chosen to direct the membership campaign, but no permanent president or board of. directors will be elected un til the membership cam paign is completed. Articles of incorporation already have been Fair Set Saturday At Camp New Hope The public is invited to attend the New Hope Community Fair Saturday at Camp New Hope. Games and contests begin at 10 a.m. and continue until 5 p.m. The Senior New Hope 4-H Club will set up an exhibit about 4-H Clubs in different Nations; and the Junior 4-H Club will display antique farm implements and antique cooking utensils. Other exhibits will be in the fol lowing categories: Field Crops, Horticulture, the Arts, Cooking, Clothing, Home Furnishings, and an egg show. Ribbons will be awarded to the winners in each category. Items to be displayed should be in place by 9 a.m. to be eligible for judging. Mrs. Frank Spencer, chairman of the Grange Fair Committee, says that judging in the women's divisions will be carried out by Miss Woodard Byars and other ladies from Home Demonstra tion Chibs. The men’s division judges will be headed by Ed Barnes, County Agent. For those who wish to come early and stay late, the conces sion stand will serve hamburg ers, hot dogs, candies, soft drinks and coffee. Odom Gets WWPCA SSOO Scholarship A new scholarship valued at SSOO per year has been awarded to Jerome David Odom of Bur lington. The award, established this year, is based on the stu dent’s scholastic achievements and fkiincial need. Mr. Odom, a senior majoring in chemistry, was president of Mangum Dormitory here last year and was a member of the Inter-Dormitory Council. He is also a member of Alpha Chi Sig ma chemistry fraternity. The scholarship, known as the Water Works and Pollution Con trol Association Scholarship, will be presented annually to a senior whose major field is related to water works and pollution con trol problems. HJLLEL SERVICES Yom Kippur services will be held at the HiUel Foundation on Cameron Avenue Friday at 8 p.m. and all day on Saturday, begin ning at 10:00 am. Wednesday. Sept. 25,1963 serve as a "Citizens Advisory Group” to the Authority, as re quired by Federal Public Hous ing Authority regulations. The Authority will present the Planners its choices of suitable land. “W e are not ready to dis close the exact sites yet, how ever," Mr. Cherry said. Several proposed sites are outside the Town limits, and their availabili ty will be determined by Plan ning Board approval, whether they can be annexed to the Town and whether they can be pur chased from the present owners. drawn up for the chamber, spec fying two kinds of membership: individual, and business or organ izational. But the chamber is not expected to be officially activated until next year. No dues will be collected until January 1, 1964. Those present at the meeting were Chancellor Aycock, Dr. Dwight Price, Chapel Hill Mer chants Association president T. L. Kemp, Doug Powell, Sion Jen*- nings, Crowell Little, Orville Campbell, Ted Danziger, Ira Ward, Carrboro Chamber of Com merce President George Spransy, and Chapel Hill Merchants As sociation executive director Joe Augustine. Press Publishes Agronomists’ Text Two agronomists from the North Carolina Department of Agriculture have written a text entitled “An Introduction to Soil Science in the Southwest,” which has been published by the Uni versity of North Carolina Press. They are Charles D. Weftb and Gerald D. McCart. j" The book was written with three objectives: —To provide subject material and a guide for a block of instruc tion in soil science for vocational agricultural students; —To provide high school sci ence students with suitable baftic reference material on soils: » —And to provide adult farmer classes and fertilizer industry personnel with useful information. Welch and McCart have written a book dealing with basic soil information, beginning with a definition of terms to be used, and ending with a careful discus, sion of soil testing methods and procedures. The book is carefully and copiously illustrated. The information contained in the book is basic to an under standing of problems related to soil management and crop pro duction. With the growing com plexity of modem farming, a knowledge of soil management will become more and more es sential. Red Cross Board Os Directors Mee^. The Annual Board of Directcii meeting of the Chapel Hill Carr boro Red Cross will b e held at the Chapter House at 211 West Main Street. Carrboro, Monday. September 30, at 7:30 pm. Mrs. Caro Mae Russeil, execu tive secretary of the chapter, has announced that a nominating com mittee composed of J. Temple Gobbel of the Bank of Chapel Hill, Attorney Robert Cooper, and Miss Margaret Blee, will submit nom inations for chapter officers for the coming year. The committee*: will accept additional nominal; tions from the floor, and elec-li tions will take place before the . meeting adjourns. j; C ?! apt f L Chairman E - A - Brecht'’ f the School of Pharmacy will" Kfid and 0,6 public k tavited ii ' ;i I* —Committee— |i (Continued from Page l) jj Press opinions and to partid-il pate in ihe recommendation pro-: ; cedure by having Student Bodv t: Mikc Lawler mect '’ with the committee in its early.'' deliberations. 3 j* President Friday said that ini accordance with procedures specified under the University!' Code concerning the recom- ; mendation of persons to be fin- •• ally named by the trustees, Uic'i advisory committee will con-!' sider individuals on faculties in- ’’ side the State and in other!’ states. The committee will sub mit three names to President- Friday and from these President Friday will nominate one for consideration by the trustees. ;• "I hope we will receive the ' advisory committee's sugges-j: tions as early next spring as*- may be possible," President Fri day said.