Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Sept. 29, 1963, edition 1 / Page 8
Part of The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Page 8 ■Bp* ’ ' ■ I jHL : &>V’ V ' jfrfc. ;. JaH JBHHS ■ jH CT' : DR. JACQUES HARDRE Dr. Hardre Will Receive High Honor A University professor will re ceive the famed Palmes Acad emique given by the French gov ernment for distinction in French letters. He is Professor of French Jac ques Hardre, of the Department of Romance Languages, honored for his distinction in French af fairs, teaching scholarship, and administration. Dr. Hardre will receive the rank of Chevalier, one of the three ranks conferred by the so ciety. In the near future, a rep resentative of the Cultural At tache of the French Embassy will come to UNC to confer the decoration on Dr. Hardre. The decoration was founded by Napoleon I in 1808, and is given to only a few men throughout the world who have distinguished themselves in French letters. In 1955 the statutes were revised to include three ranks, that of knight or chevalier which Dr. Hardre will receive, the officer, and the commander. Prof. Hardre is national presi dent of the American Association of Teachers in French. He has participated widely in academic affairs and is well known for his distinctioil in French letters. A native of Dinan. France, Dr. Hardre received his Baccalaur eat Sciences-Langues in Paris, his B.A. degree from Guilford College and his M.A. and Ph D from UNC. Dr. Hardre joined the UNC faculty in 1945. H e has publish ed widely in professional journ als and is a member of the Mod ern Language Assn., the South Atlantic Modem Language Assn., and the Association des Profes seurs Franeais en Amerique. Charles lionkiii^^SS^^ of chapel hill designer-craftsman ' in amber alley—near die rathskeller jjk 253 to 1 we can fit you with the “custom tailored look’’ of Hart Schaffner & Marx I Whether or 'B f or 295 lbs, or anywhere in be- K ( tween, the odds are in your ) favor we perfectly ,*• » fV/ in an HS&M suit. Or we can get I it for you. HS&M tailors 253 sizes M / to fit almost any build, any pos tore. If you haven’t yet enjoyed |f|p|! !|jf the youthful and ea.,y comfort isSf? I ol a P 6l-^1 f hting HS&M suit, B 1 it's time you did. Vj M I From $89.95 to SIOO Jjjj Ift HSr| j saratttj ilftt’a Wear 147 E. Franklin St. I Stoves Needed For The Needy I 11 I With cold weather coming | on, several needy families 1 I in the Chapel Hill area are | I in bad need of heating | § stoves. 1 Especially needed are | 1 cool and wood stoves. ® Anyone who has such a I 1 stove and is willing to con- I r| tribute it to the cause is I I asked to call 942-2521. Trans- g I porta tion will be provided. | Integration Group To Meet Tomorrow Citizens United for Racial Equality and Dignity, the integra tion group successor to the old Committee for Open Business, will meet tomorrow at 8 p.m. at St. Joseph’s Church to elect of ficers. An 11-member executive com mittee, which will include a chairman, secretary and treasur er, will be elected. A constitution under which the organization will operate was completed and adopted at a meeting last Thursday night. Carrboro PTA Will Sponsor Meetings Instead of a regular meeting in October, the Carrboro Ele mentary School PTA will spon sor a series of orientation meet ings for parents concerning cur riculum. Participating in the meetings will be Mrs. Jessie Gouger, Chap el Hill’s instructional supervis or: Carrboro Principal Klay Box, and teachers of the grades con cerned. All of the meetings will be held in the lunchroom et Carr boro Elementary, beginning at 8 p.m. The first meeting will be held next Thursday and will be for parents of first-graders. On Oct. 10, a meeting will be for parents of first-gr3ders. On Oct. 10, a meeting will be held for parents of children in the fourth, fifth and sixth grades. SUBCOMMITTEE MEMBERS Dr. Dan H. Martin, internist, of Chapel Hill, and the Rev. Fred Reed, Memorial Hospital chaplain, are members of a Subcommittee on Medicine and Religion of the North Carolina Medical Society. The subcommittee is planned as part of a nationwide AMA pro gram to “unite physicians and clergymen in total health care.” MBjfe.. ■ll NEW CONCEPT IN OUTDOOR THEATRES James Fitzgibbon (far right) representing Synergetics Inc., of Raleigh, who designed the model out door theatre pictured, explains its in novations to Paul Green, noted author and playwright (far left); Richard Ad ler, Broadway lyricist and song writer; Carrboro .Thief Given Two Years Shelton Jones, 19, of Broad Street in Carrboro, was convicted in Chapel Hill Recorder’s Court Friday of a recent series of break-ins at Carrboro businesses. Jones was sentenced to two years in prison on each of two charges of breaking and entering and larceny, me charge of break ing and entering, and one charge of attempted breaking and enter ing. The sentences will run con currently. The businesses involved were Riggsbee Hinson Furniture Store, Midway Grocery, and University Cleaners. The break-ins were committed week before last. Jones was caught last week while forcing his way into the Univer sity Cleaners plant on Lloyd Street for the second time. Funeral Today For Mrs. Andrews Funeral services will be con ducted today at 2 p.m. at Cane Creek Baptist Church for Mrs. Rhett Lloyd Andrews of Rt. 3, Hillsboro. Mrs. Andrews died Friday afternoon at her home. She was 81. The funeral will be conducted by the Rev. Jack Ray and the Rev. Richard L. Park Burial will be in the church cemetery. The body will lie in state in the church for one hour before the services. Mrs. Andrews is survived by several nieces and nephews. Pallbearers will be Cecil Craw ford, Manley Snipes, Clarence Lloyd, Robert Kirk, James Snipes Jr., and Earl Lloyd. —Holmes Talks— (Continued from Page 1) the site of the 1963 0. W. Holmes Lectures by the Congressionally appointed Oliver Wendell Holmes DdVise Committee. Authorized in the will of the late Justice Holmes, the lectures are held at a different university each year. A nationally-prominent authority in law is chosen as the speaker each year. The central theme for Prof. Sutherland’s three lectures is “Apology for Uncomfortable Change.” Prof. Sutherland is a native of Rochester, N. V., attended Wes leyan College and Harvard Law School. Later he was law sec retary to Supreme Court Justice Oliver Wendell Holmes. He taught law at Cornell and in 1960 went to Harvard as the Bussey Professor of Law. ■ AT ASD MEETING Dr. James B. King Jr., and Dr. Roy L. Lindahl, both of Chapel Hill, will participate in the 1963 annual meeting of the American Society of Dentistry for Children in Atlantic City, N. J., next week. Dr. King will present a clinic on “Intercep tive Orthodontia” and Dr. Lin dahl will speak on the “Main tenance of Occlusion with Func tional Restorations”. THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY and William C. Trotman, director of the Ifistitute for Outdoor Drama at UNC. The four attended a conference on the design of outdoor theatres at UNC. The design features a dome-like structure which allows flexibility of lighting and scenery. Planning Board To Tackle Signs The Planning Board will ple once more with the size of signs in the Town’s regional and suburban commercial zones when its meets Tuesday at 7:30 in the Town Hall. The Planners agreed last month tfert sign regulation in the Town's outlying commercial areas was perhaps too stringent, and enforceable only with great diffi culty. The Board’s recommended amendment to the zoning ordi nance is expected to provide for a system whereby the size of per missable signs will be increased in direct ratio to the distance they Binkley Memorial ' Activities Today “Where Art Thou?” (The sec ond in a series trom Genesis* will be the topic of the sermon at The Binkley Memorial Bap tist Church, which worships each Sunday at 11 am. in Gerrard Hail on the University campus. Dr. Robert Seymour is Minis ter. The Church maintains a Nurs ery at 507 East Franklin Street. Church School commences at 9:45. Classes for adults and stu dents assemble in Gerrard Hall, and all childrens’ groups meet at the Franklin Street address. The Supper-Seminar Program of the Church is at 5:45. Follow ing a light supper, there are seminars for students, adults, and teen-agers. The Student group will hear Dr. Sam Hill speak on “The Baptist Concept of the Church”. Dr. Hill is Head of the Department of Religion at UNC. The Reverend and Mrs. Jim Cansler will lead the adult group in a study of “The Crea tive Years,” a stimulating book for adults. fine homes in (^tU&ufuxocL) fUf Cl fan.f mwmmmm Dial Operator, ask for Durham WX2OOO, Benuoa are set back from public rights of-way: the further the setback the larger the sign. The present ordinance permits three small identification signs totalling 12 square feet in area within ten feet of rights-of-way. Larger signs must be set back 60 feet from the right-of-way. The ordinance was challenged last summer by Harriss - Conners Chevrolet, which erected a sign within 13 feet of the right-of-way of 15-501 Highway between Chap el Hill and Durham. As amended, the larger signs would be per mitted within 15 feet of the right of-way, or at any point further back. The Planners will also act on requests for a small subdivision within Glenn Heights, requested by J. B King, who wishes to re align lot boundaries to permit two building sites on property he owns there. ON SARATOGA Henry B. Jones, seaman ap prentice, USN, the son of Mrs. Walter S. Berry of Carrboro, is serving aboard the attack air craft carrier USS Saratoga, op erating m the Atlantic Fleet out of Mayport, Fla. I JUMPER W 911(1 -A “WINNER” HL Avondale Corduroy <M || Cranberry A Loden Teal Small Medium— Large < $e 98 [«p] I ■A / 133 E. Franklin St. Phone 942-2051 Symphony Begins Membership Drive Chapel Hill supporter* of the North Carolina Symphony will launch a (5,000 membership drive today at a meeting at the home of President and Mrs. Wil liam C. Fridey. Dr. Benjiman Swalin, the sym phony director, and Mrs. Swalin will be on hand to receive guests from 3 to 5 p.m. and Mrs. Fri day will speak to the gathering. Memberships in the Symphony Society range from (1 for stu dents to (100 in special contri butions. By purchasing a mem bership, anyone can attend ail of the membership concerts of the Symphony anywhere In the State. This would enable Orange County residents to attend con certs not only in Chapel Hill, but anywhere Iran New Bern to Asheville. Mr. and Mrs. John B. Chase Jr. are chairmen for this year’s membership drive. Mrs. Chase said , the local chapter' hoped to extend the drive “so that all the people in the community may give.” She emphasized that memberships can be purchased directly through RECREATION ROUNDUP The Chapel Hijl Recreation De partment announces that registra tion for fall programs will re main open during the coming week. Register i»y calling the de partment office, 942-6054, from 2 p.m. to 5 p.m. Programs requiring regisration are: Archery—ages 10-16. Baton Twirling—one class ages 6-9, one class ages 9-up. Bridge—one class teens, one class adults. Creative Dramatics—one class 6-8 ages, one class ages 9-up. Modern Dance—teens—tee, s 3 6 weeks. Social Dance—Adult beginners, Adult intermediates—fee, (5 cou ple—B weeks. Western Square Dance-couples only, beginners—Jee (1 per cou ple per class. Western Square Dance Club Advanced only. Football—Boy’s touch. Music—Barber shop, string, glee club. Physical Fitness-men. Slimnastics—ladies—fee, (3, 6 weeks. Sportsmans Club—boys. Cali about these or other ac tivities, the Chapel Hill Recrea tion Department, 942-6054. Use the Weekly Classified sec tion. They work around the clock for you. the Symphony office in Bingham X on the University campus as well as through the drive work ers. The drive will begin Monday and will last for two weeks. Mrs. Chase said she hopes “very much for a successful drive be cause it is a worthwhile cause and does so much, particularly for children in the state.” Single memberships will be sold for (3 and joint member ships for (5. Persons contribut ing (20, (15 and (10 are con sidered active members in the Society. Those giving (75, (50 and 126 are donors and contributors of (100 are recognized as patrons of the symphony. ■ SERVE YOURSELF— EVERY SUNDAY I ■BUFFET 6:30-7:30 P.M. I featuring; I RARE ROAST BEEF I I 4 Meats—7 Vegetables _ ........... *2.85 All You Can Eat—-It’s a Cowboy’s Treat Recommended by Duncan Hines and Gourmet BM.CH HOUSE I HUGGINS’ advises NOW™ Sow Grass! —if you want a green lawn this winter .. . (it’s nature’s time for sowing grass). Come in today and get your seed in now so germination can take place during warm Indian summer, and your grass can get started before cold weather. Now-not spring— is the best time to seed a lawn Sure, we sell a lot of gra*s seed in the Spring. But if you were to ask us what’s the best time of the whole year for getting results, honesty would compel us to say add seed in late summer or early fall.” During these next few weeks everything is in your favor. Warm ground. Weeds on the wane. Good growing weather ahead. And then if you were to ask us what kind oi seed to plant we would give you an honest answer to that too. For a permanent lawn plant scotts. It’s all perennial. It’s 99.9% weed-free. It makes the kind of lawn your neighbors will envy. Honestly now—isn’t that what you want? * iflgg Sunday, September 29, 196; Elisha Mitchell Society Meeting The Elisha Mitchell Scientif ic Society will hold its 566th meeting on Tuesday, October 8, at 7:30 p.m. in room 265 oi Phillips Hall. This will be the first meeting of the current year. Other meetings will be held on the second Tuesday of each_ month during the academic year.J The speaker for the first meet-* ing will be Dr, S. Y. Tyree, Pro-i fessor of Chemistry at The Uni-S versity here. His topic is, “Com-fj pound Formation by the Rare! Gases”. This represents a new® area of knowledge. Within the® last year a number of chemical* compounds of the rare gases® have been prepared. These com-® pounds and their properties will® be discussed by Dr. Tyree. A question-answer period will® follow Dr. Tyree’s lecture. Read the Weekly classified ads.®
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 29, 1963, edition 1
8
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75