There’ll always he an England— | unless, of coarse, Christine has a I sister. I Volume 41, Number 81 UNC To Celebrate 170th Birthday Saturday Morning Playwright Paul Green Will Deliver Principal Address Paul Green, prize-winning dramatist and playwright, will speak at the University’s observance of its 170th birthday Saturday at 11:15 a.m. in Hill Hall auditorium. Mr. Green, one of the nation’s outstanding literary figures, will address faculty, trustees, alumni, students and visitors on the anniversary of the cornerstone laying of Old East Building, Oct. 12, 1793. Chancellor William B. Aycock will preside. The Glee TOWN and GOWN saw By PETE IVEY awn® A best-seller in Europe is the book on dogs by Dr. Lou Vine. Mr. and Mrs. Arpad von Lazar of Chapel Hill were in Switzerland and Austria in August. Brows ing in bookstores and window shopping, they saw the book “Hunde tn Mein Leben.” The book seemed to crop up every where. Looking closely, they saw that it was the German for “Dogs in My Life" by veterinarian Lou Vine of Chapel Hill. * * * Many choice, but enigmatic, remarks are overheard. One of them was spoken by dramatist Tom Patterson. He has written pageants, one of them in the far west. “How in the world can you write dialogue for a play that has more than 40 horses in it?” he asked. * « • A speaker at the University’s Medical Lectures on the kidney last Saturday, biologist Roy Forster of Dartmouth, took a poke at politicians who sometimes sound off in ridicule of science research with lower animals. Congressmen have been known to hold up titles of science re search supported by the govern ment-such as "Bonelessness of the Jellyfish,” or “How to Cure Asthma in the Octopus.” Why, the Congressman will ask, is good money being spent to find out why a jellyfish has no bones? And who cares if an octopus catches asthma? Or gout, for that matter? Perhaps it ought not to be necessary to answer such char ges. But they persist from time to time. Some newspaper edi torial writers, when they have nothing better to do, often take off in deploring taxpayers’ money being spent on research like “What Kind of Noise Annoys an Oyster” and “The Emotional Problems of the English Spar row.” Dr. Forster showed how some simpler forms of animals have certain bodily functions that are related to the same things in (Continued on Page 2) SCENES Chapel Hill policemen delighted with brand-new badges, bigger and radically different from the old ones. . . . Town’s 1914 Model- T fire engine parked on Colum bia Street, poised to strike at the first sign of combustion, moving one Townsman to observe, “It would be great for dousing cigar butts”... Novelists JOHN KNOW LES and REYNOLDS PRICE sampling the Zoom-Zoom’s con tinental cuisine. . . . Sonic boom early this morning setting plate glass windows and downtown merchants to vibrating. . . . AUNT FANNIE McDADE, now past 100, taking an early morning stroll around her front lawn on Cameron Avenue. ... A large contingent of the Town’s lawyers striding purposefully down Frank lin Street. . . . Resident com plaining that police apparently were tracking him all over Town due to the accidentally gutty roar of his small foreign car License plate tally report: count now up to 47 (including plates from three foreign countries), the latest finds being USA Eur ope (extremely rare), Montana, Utah and Oklahoma. . . . SPERO DORTON making an agonizing re appraisal of his" chances in the 1964 Gubernatorial campaign. Club of the University, directed by Prof. Joel Carter, will sing. There will be an academic procession by the faculty, begin ning from the Old Well at 11 a.m. An honorary degree will be awarded during the ceremonies. The name of the recipient will be announced at that time. In observance of University Day, classes will be dismissed after 11 o’clock. The birth of UNC has be come legendary. The men who set out to find a place to build the University of North Carolina lay beneath the shade of e giant poplar tree. They had stopped after a long trip, were now rested, and they had reached a decision. This was the spot. Here would be de veloped the state university. The year was 1789. Four years later, in 1793, the cornerstone of the first building, Old East, would be constructed. But on this day, they watched a bird that flew nearby. The bird seem entranced. Flying to and fro, the bird seem fixed on a certain grassy place be neath an oak tree. The men stood and looked. What they saw astonished them. A snake was poised in the grass and was weaving back and forth. The snake was charming the bird. The bird flew closer and clos er. Then one of the men threw a rock. The snake glided through the grass and from the scene. The bird flew away. That story was handed down around Chapel Hill by a woman who kept a boarding house. She got it, she said, from a reliable North Carolinian who had heard it, from one of the founders of the University. No other docu mentary evidence can be found which gives any credence to the story. It may or may not be authentic. If it did happen, one may won der what is the symbolic signifi cance of a snake trying to charm a bird just after a party of men determined the site of the University? And what is the meaning of the abortive attempt to capture the bird that is, the throwing of the rock to drive away the snake? This is just one of the stories about the University and its early days stories people tell about this time of year when the University' celebrates tits birthday. Coming This Sunday THE ANNUAL CHAPEL HILL House Tour sponsored by the Art Guild is becoming known throughout the State as a showcase of gracious living. Weekly Women’s News Editor Paqui ta Fine gives a preview of some of the homes on this year’s tour. ★★★ ★ ★ ★ CAROLINA’S TAR HEELS will be at Maryland Saturday for an Atlantic Coast Conference game, and Billy Carmichael will be on hand to cover the action and the coaches’ post game comments. ★★★ ★ ★ ★ ANDREW TURNBULL whose biography of F. Scott Fitzgerald won acclaim throughout the literary world is in Chapel Hill doing research on another giant Thomas Wolfe. W. H. Scarborough tells about the latest Turnbull foray in a Book Page feature. ★★★ ★ ★ ★ You’ll find them all in this coming Sunday's issue of The Chapel Hill Weekly, along with columns by Billy Arthur, Bill Prouty, Pete Ivey and Bob Quincy, plus the latest news of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro community. Be sure to get a copy. Also useful for making dress patterns. ' The Chapel Hill Weekly 5 Cents a Copy * K ■ mm mm W jz.- r ‘ : -c. fipaMßHaEHHrara v jr 3 a Jr R m !v, i 3 lUi I# JUI - -fH \ . i * • '• 1 ‘ :> MRBRBRBWmBbi 1| . H S /,v 5 , v: , 5 ...... . m | : ‘ ' hi POLICEMEN’S FUND Merchants Associa tion president T. L. Kemp presents Chapel Hill Po lice (Jhief W. D. Blake with a check for $2,500, ac cumulated during recent weeks from contributions to the Merchants Association’s Policemen’s Fund drive. The Chapel Hill Police Department will use School Fees Might Be Realigned School Superintendent How ard ard Thompson will confer with Chapel Hill school princi pals to make necessary realign ments in the schools’ fee sys tern. Dr. Thompson told the School Board at its meeting Monday night that some of the schools’ programs could not operate without fees. The slightly er ratic nature of some aspects of the fee system is partly the result of mis-labeled fees, Dr. Thompson said. The "physical education” fee at Guy B. Phil lips Junior High and Lincoln High, for example, is actually for buying uniforms. Pupil pur chase of uniforms at the two schools is of particular concern to Board member Dr. Richard Peters, who objects to Phil lips athletes being allowed to buy second-hand uniforms, while Lincoln athletes are re quired to buy new uniforms. The Board also reiterated its disapproval of “arm-twisting” requests for money, sent to par ents from teachers via students. The work books and other items for which money is sometimes requested are nominally op tional, but in effect arc manda tory if a child is not to be plac ed in the position of being the only member of his class who (Continued on Page 6) Serving the Chapel HiU Area Since 1923 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 9, 1963 Road Is Proposed To Solve Merritt Mill Area Problem Orange County Commissioners Monday advanced a new proposal involving building a new road— tc solve the persistent problem of pedestrian traffic on Merritt Mill Road. Commissioner Gordon Cleve land proposed and said he will explore extending Cameron Ave nue in Chapel Hill beyond the town limits and connecting it to Johnson Street. Most of the proposed road would involve a new roadbed. It was the second time in as many months that the Commis sioners officially considered the problem, which has concerned Chapel Hill and Carrboro town boards, the Chapel Hill School Board, and the Commissioners. About 500 school children walk on Merritt Mill Road td Lincoln High School and Frank P. Gra ham Elementary School. The chil dren must walk on narrow and sometimes non-existent shoulders or the pavement of the narrow road. Right-of-way difficulties have stymied a solution for more than two years., Also contributing to the problem is the fact that most of the road lies outside the town limits of both Chapel HUI and Carrboro. In advancing the idea (if a new road, Mr. Cleveland said previous efforts to gain a sidewalk right- Hearing Held By Carrboro The Carrboro Board of Com missioners last night held a pub lic hearing on enlargement of the Carrboro Planning Area to in clude a strip of land along High way 54. Residents of an area west of Carrboro had requested annexa tion of the area a month ago. The area, nine-tenths of a mile in length, joins the Carrboro Plan ning Area at Morgan Creek. As outlined, the strip will extend to a depth of 280 feet on each side of the and will extend the Planning Area nine-tenths of a mile westward. Landowners along the stretch requested inclu sion in order to prevent what they termed "undesirable devel opment.” The land would be zoned RA-20, if annexed. No opposition to the move was registered at the hearing, and the Commissioners referred the petition to the Carrboro Planning Board for recommendations. The Commissioners also set a second public hearing for Nov ember 5 at 7:30 in the Town Hall, to hear two additional re-zoning petitions. One, from William T. Durham, requests that his prop erty on Jones Ferry Road be re zoned from residential to indus trial. The other, from Rudolph Hardee, requests re-zoning of his (Continued on Page 6) the money for a down payment on a recreation build ing on its land off NC 86. Funds are no longer being solicited in the drive, but contributions are still wel come. Checks should be made payable to Policemen’s Fund and addressed to Policemen’s Fund, Box 127, Chapel Hill, of-way along Merritt Mill Road seemed hopelessly bogged down and even if achieved, such a side walk might not be the best solu tion. Mr. Cleveland's proposal would extend Cameron Avenue west ward and Johnson Street north ward until the two join. The sou thern end of Johnson Street then would be connected to the Lincoln Noon Or Evening , They’re Marathon Almost by tradition. Chapel Hill School Board meetings are end less. The Board goes over each session's agenda with all the thoroughness of a Scot looking for a lost dime on a prairie. This takes time. At the Board's meeting Monday night Superintendent Howard Thompson suggested a change from night meetings to lunch meet ings. Speaking off the cuff before the meeting began, Dr. Thomp son had mentioned a school sup erintendent he knows whose board meets at lunch in a school cafe teria, and who abruptly signals the end of each meeting by hav ing dessert served. Dr. Thompson did not envision commanding the Chapel Hill Board that sharply, but did suggest to the Boaid that lunch meetings would shorten what are now al most interminable evening ses sions. But Board member Dr. Richard Peters said he had open-heart surgery and other commitments scheduled for every weekday lunch hour through January. A Talk With Dr. Frederick C. Mays Dr. Frederick C. Mays is the new Dean of the UNC School of Public Health. By J. A. C. DUNN Frederick Mays is tall and clean. His nearly white hair is combed into gentle waves with care, arid his hands and nails look as if they have just emerg ed from pre-operational scrub up. His black shoes arc almost new and scrupulously shined. He wore dark blue trousers, a sub dued tartan sport jacket, a white shirt with French cuffs, and an intricately patterned tie with a turquoise background, all evi dently a balance between dean; ish dignity and casual comfort! Dr. Mays’ office is dusted with clinical care. The papers on High School property, a matter of a few hundred feet. In other business, the Commis sioners instructed County Admin istrator Sam Gattis to investigate the cost of purchasing freezers for storing butter, a commodity now available under the federal sur plus food program. Welfare Director James Wright (Continued on Page 6) Board chairman Grey Culbreth suggested an automatic adjourn ment hours of 10 p.m. as an al ternative. Dr. Peters said that was accept able to him, but Board member Edwin Tenney said it was not. “We should take care of all press ing business,” he said. It was pointed out to Mr. Ten ney that a simple vote of the Board could waive the adjourn ment hour during any meeting, but Mr. Tenney did not think the proposal a wise one. The matter was called to a vote. ‘‘Aye,’’ came a chorus of voices. “No,” said Mr. Tenney. . “Then we’ll just leave you here,” said Mr. 'Culbreth. Mr. Tenney muttered a motion that the automatic adjournment rule take effect in 1969. “When does your term on the Board expire?” Mr. Culbreth ask ed. “1969,” said Mr. Tenney. “That’s what I thought,’’ said Mr. Culbreth, who has been at tending marathon Board meetings for upwards of a 'dozen years. the desk are arranged in neat stacks. The ashtrays are not on .Jy emptied, they are washed. Dr. Mays does not look cap able of sprawling in an ungain ly luxury of relaxation. He has an air of tightly controlled pre cision ki his even, pleasant voice; in the disciplined perfec tion with which his clothes hang; in the behavior of his hands, which do not toy with a cigar ette or rub his chin or tug his ear or tensely intertwine fingers. He has an atmosphere of deep inner peace, but with no over tones of lethargy. ‘ I’m not a stanger to Chapel Hill," he said; He has known Dr. E. G. McGavran for many years, and his ancestors came from Virginia, the. Carolinas, and WEDNESDAY I ISSUE ■ I Published Every Sunday and Wednesday Franklin Street School Property Will Go On Sale ♦School Board Agrees To Call Public Auction For Nov. 12 The Chapel Hill School Board will offer the Frank lin Street school property for sale on November 12. The Board agreed at its meeting Monday night to advertise the sale. Board attorney J. Q. LeGrand said advertisement would begin next week. At the same time, the Board began considering the need for im mediate planning to replace the Chapel Hill Senior High School and the West Frank lin School should the property be sold. Board Chairman Grey Cul breth said he and Mr. LeGrand had compiled a description of the property as best they could from a map. The property is comprised of about half a dozen old tracts, he said.-4»ne of them bought some time ago from the University. He said that tracing the deeds to these tracts had not been easy, and that one deed traced back to 1855 had been so vague that the boundaries of the land it involved were de scribed only by the names of owners of neighboring tracts. However, Mr. Culbreth said the boundaries of the school land had been pinned down with suf icient accuracy to warrant a legal advertisement for sale. The school property is 620 feet across its Franklin Street front, 720 feet on its east side, 600 feet on its west side, and com prises about 9.3 acres. School Superintendent How ard Thompson asked the Board to set a definite date on which to decide whether the school property ‘would be sold, and consequently replaced, or re tained and renovated. Dr. Thompson said he wanted to stop maintaining the fwo school buildings simply by “slap ping on a little paint,” if they' were not to be sold, and that furthermore he had $7,000 bud geted for a new heating plant for the West Franklin School and did not know whether to spend it. The Board told Dr. Thomp son that such a decision could I not be made until it was seen (Continued on Page 2) Rec Center Is Possible The Chapel Hill Housing Auth ority may include a recreation center in its plans for a new-unit low-cost housing project. At its monthly meeting Monday night the Authority discussed the possibility of a center as describ ed and authorized by the federal Public Housing Authority. The recreation center would be built with federal funds to be op erated and maintained by the local Housing Authority. The building would have 1,000 square feet (25 by 40 feet). The Recreation Commission and other agencies would be able to use the center. Mrs. Ruth Metz and Dr. Sidney S. Chipman, Authority members, were appointed as a committee to dedde on other appropriate agencies that might be interested in the plan and to report to the Authority at its December meet ing. DR. MAYS v / #t. m 3 - „. dais mm ’ Ifql _jg|HJra JAMES H. SHUMAKER Weekly Editor Is Appointed Chapel Hill Weekly publisher Orville Campbell today announc ed the appointment of James H. Shumaker as editor of the paper. Mr. Shumaker has been gen eral manager of the Weekly since 1959, when he left the Durham Morning Herald to come to Chapel Hill. Mr. Campbell said Mr. Shu maker has been largely respor stole for the production of the newspaper and for its editorials for the past several months; that his editorials had been widely read and reprinted; and that the appointment would formally place Mr. Shumaker in the editor's position. Mr. Shumaker was managing editor of the Durham Morning Herald when he became general manager of the Weekly in May of 1959. Prior to that time he had worked for the Associated Press in Charlotte and hod done free lance writing. He served with the United States Air Force in Europe during World War 11, and later attended the University (Continued on Page 2) Weather Report J Generally fair tomorrow. High Low Sunday 77 39 Monday 80 39 Tuesday 85 51 This is quite possibly one of the screwiest seasons in modern his tory: 85 degrees in mid-October and the Yankees lost it in four straight. Tennessee. There is a Dr. Fred Mays in Maysville, S. C., and other Mayses are scattered ov er the Southeast. Like UNC president William Friday, Dr. Mays has a new speak word he uses frequently. Mr. Friday's is "ongoing.” Dr. Mays’ is “outreach." He used it three times in fifteen minutes of talking about public health; out reach of opportunity, outreach of the UNC School of Public Health. "One thing that made this job attractive to me is the Univer sity’s attitude toward public Health. When I came down here they had me see Mr. Friday and Chancellor Aycock and Dr. Clark, and they all spoke of the , (Continued on Page 2)