(Wednesday, October 23, 1963 | .... EVENTS | Activities scheduled for Chapel Hill and C'arrboro from today through Sunday, October 27: TODAY o 8:30 p.m. Carolina Playmakers presents “Little Mary Sun shine,” Playmakers Theatre. THURSDAY o 7 p.m. WUNC-FM’s “Carolina Roundtable" opens with a pan el discussion of “Educational Horizon, 1963-1864,” 91.5 FM, telephoned questions to the pan el invited. o 7:30 p.m. Guy B. Phillips Jun ior High School PTA meets, school cafeteria. • 8 p.m. Chapel Hill Branch of the American Association of University Women meets. Mrs. Thomas Patterson of Chapel Hill, speaker. In Peabody Hall. • 8 p.m. Graham Memorial Se ries presents Max Morath in a one-man show entitled “Rag time Revisited.” Admission free to all. • 8 p.m. Meeting of persons in terested in Simple Burial, a plan for reducing funeral costs. Sponsored by the Chapel iHll Ministerial Association, in the Presbyterian Church Fellow ship Hall. Public invited. • 8 p.m. Newcomer’s Evening Bridge Club meets, at the Faculty Club. • 8:30 p.m. “Little Mary Sun shine,” Carolina Playmakers Theatre. FRIDAY • North Carolina Music Teachers Association begins its fifth an nual convention, to last through Saturday. • 9 a.m. to noon Second Eastern Theoretical Physics Conferen ce, in the auditorium of the School of Public Health. Just Arrived IMPORTED English and Dutch PEWTER Pitchers, Vases, Mugs, Coffee Sets, Creamers, etc. AND REMEMBER Your gift means more from a famous store. “Yon Wash” B FRIGIDAIRE Soak Cycle Washer sphs dry, dry, dry! Soaks automatically, washes automatically! Soaks clothes better than overnight. • Ask us about Frigidaire underwater Action Zone r washing-helps get all ypjr wash fabulously clean! - Suds Water Saver Model A r WDR-64 at extra cost In V t J Snowcrest white only. *** M a * t Dependable! It's the J Sturdy Frigidaire washer. *§*»•?-W. * “And rn Dll” B Budget priced FRIGIDAIRE Dryer “thinks” for itself! • AtftaaaHo Dty ehuts diyer rtf automatically when clothes are just-right dry. Or tirae dryingyounelt « New, improved Flowing Heat it speesKer than ewer, dries breeaf-fresh, Ends llwKjirfng w aod tear. • Set Fabrics dial tog* & m *10^95 e luMWWIb nootpppX I •anas right on door, I Jr W "kmeit & ELOCKSIME frig Main Sales A Sanies < 105 E. Franklta St Phone 942-5141 • 2-5 p.m. More Theoretical Phy sics Conference. • 4 p.m. Mathematics Colloquium, University of Toronto Profes sor F. V. Atkinson, speaker, on “Multivariate Sturm-Liou viUe Theory,” 383 Phillips Hall. Tea and coffee served at 3:30 in 277 Phillips. • 7:30 p.m. Opera Workshop, Wilton Mason director, Hill Hall auditorium. • 7:45 p.m. Duplicate bridge, hall of Chapel of St. Thomas More. • 8:30 p.m. NCMTA convention's public concert, Hill Hall, sec ond act of Verdi's “La Travia ta” to be performed. SATURDAY • 9:15 a.m.-2 p.m. Second East ern Theoretical Physics Con ference, School o f Public Health auditorium. • 9:30 a.m. NC-Virginia College English Association, registra tion for annual meeting, sec ond floor lobby of Mo rehead Planetarium. • 10.30 a.m. NC-Virginia College English Association, panel dis cussion in Faculty Lounge of Morehead Planetarium. • 11 a.m. Medical Science Lecture Series on the Kidney, School of Medicine’s clinic auditorium. • 12:30 p.m. NC-Va CEA lunch meeting, Carolina Inn, UNC Faculty Dean James Godfrey, speaker. • 12:30 p.m. Lunch and fashion show for wives of the North Carolina Radiological Society who are attending the Society’s convention here. At the Villa Tempesta. » 2 p.m. NC-VA CEA, Duke Pro fessor Robert Lumiansky, speaker, in Morehead Planet arium Faculty Lounge. • 3-5 p.m. United Church Wom en's Fellowship tea and bene fit sale, at the home of Mrs. Robert J. Crossen, King’s Mill Road. Thomas Atwater Funeral Friday Funeral services will be held Friday for Thomas Atwater of Chapel Hill, who died Sunday in Baltimore, Maryland. He was 38. The funeral will be held at the Second Baptist Church here by the Rev. J. J. Reece. Burial will 1)c in Chapel Hill Cemetery No. 2. Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Cora Atwater of Carrboro; and two brothers, James of Carrboro and Louis Atwater of Washington. BRIDGE GROUP MEETING The Evening Bridge group of Newcomers Club will meet at 8 p.m. Thursday in hew sur roundings. Evening bridge will meet this year at the Faculty Club rather than Lenoir Hall. Hostesses for the first meeting will be Mrs. Kenneth Schoof, Mrs. Troy Sluder, Mrs. Thomas Davis, Mrs. Frank Pierce, Mrs. Edward Barry, and Mrs. Cole man. Estes Hills School Will Be Beautified Saturday will be work day at Estes Hills school. Parents will he busy from lb-12 and from 2:30 to 4:30 weeding, hoeing, and planting shrubs ami bulbs. A concentrated effort will he made to beautify the lower level grounds near the new classroom wing. Mrs. P. H. Hobson, chairman of the PTA grounds committee, will be in charge of the opera tion. She asks that anyone wishing tc donate flowering or evergreen shrubs, liriope, periwinkle or daffodil bulbs leave the plants at the school on Friday. Children accompanied by their parents are welcome at the work sessions. Fallout Shelters Are Tax Exempt The Carolina Legisla ture, in the 1963 Regular Ses sion, amended Chapter 105 of the General Statutes of North Carolina by adding a new sec tion, 105-294.4, exempting from local property taxes the value of privately owned family fall out shelters up to $2,000 in valuation. The State Civil Defense Agen cy will, upon request, inspect family fallout shelters and issue to the owner an exemption cer tificate if the shelter meets pro tection criteria and standards of the Office of Civil Defense, Unit ed States Department of De fense. All persons wishing t<# obtain a tax exemption certificate for their privately owned shelter should contact the local Civil Defense Agency, telephone 942-5650, or write to P. 0. Draw er 350, Chapel Hill. \ Carolina Bridge Winners Listed Winners of the Carolina Bridge Club monthly Master Point Game Monday night: SECTION A NORTH-SOUTH -1. Mr. and Mrs. Rex Hudson; 2 (tie) Jack Strickland and C. Wayne Patty, and Edith Quincy and Vic Huggins. EAST-WEST -1. Mrs. Guy Bransoq and J. C. Masson 2. Mrs. M. A. Roycroft and Mrs. R. R. Whitley; 3. Wiley Haith cock and Charles Gillian. SECTION B NORTH-SOUTH -1. Ben El liott and Mrs. G. B. Parrott; 2. Mrs. George Tennyson and Mrs. John McLaughlin; 3. David Dean and Ancel Mewborn. EAST-WEST —l. David Lay ton and Dan Fowler; 2. Ron Henson and Charlie Wright; 3. Marvin Greene and Doug Stew art. For guaranteed results, use the Weekly classified ads. They work around the clock for you. THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY f §|||, wgPPffi figli 1 HlliSjp A' P Vtn IfflP* 'JsHb 'wMk *■,' i&T i 'VAk’’ 1 fBgBL ■ ' A :' Hh. H - n v h s j- 1 WMi $!& 4 If- ' i HgV > ’fc- ' ' v ' i /■' jgr JF'lkMmpi’j'?';, REHEARSING ‘LA TRAVIATA’ Pictured are three members of the cast of “La Traviata” to be per formed at the N. C. Music Teachers Association con cert Friday night at Hill Hall. Wayne Zarr, seated left, portrays the role of Alfredo Germont. Rebecca Carnes of Chapel Hill portrays the role of Violetta. Burt Ad ams of Chapel Hill, standing, portrays the role of Giorgio Germont, Alfredo’s father. ‘Opera Workshop 9 Concert Is Friday The University's newly formed “Opera Workshop” will give its first public performance Friday at a concert sponsored by the North Carolina I‘usic Teachers Association at Hill Hall Auditori um at 8:30 p.m. The Opera Workshop will per form the second act of Verdi’s “La Traviata.” “We are performing this act because it is a wonderful vehicle for three splendid singing actors and because it has such a wealth of fine solo and ensemble num bers in it,’’ said Wilton Mason, professor of music and director of the Opera Workshop. Rebecca Carnes of Chapel Hill will portray the soprano role of Violetta. In the tenor role of Al fredo Germont will be Wayne Zarr of the UNC Music Depart ment, the new director of both the University Chorus and the Chapel Hill Choral Club. This will be Mr. Zarr’s first singing appearance since he has been here. Burt Adams of Chapel Hill will portray the baritone role of Gior gio Germont, father of Alfredo. Mary Beeman Is Dean’s Guest Miss Mary Beeman of Muncie, Ind., is a house guest of Kath erine Carmichael. Miss Beeman is retired from the Ball State Teachers College, where for many years she was head of the home economics department. After retirement, she was Ful bright lecturer to the Silliman University in Dumaguete, the Philippines. Subsequently, she was a professor at the Amer ican College for Women 4n Bei rut, Lebanon. She is prominent in women’s clubs and in church work in Indiana. Miss Carmichael and Miss Beeman travelled together in Japan and on the continent of Asia in 1951. In the spring and summer of 1952 they continued together on a trip around the world. «r 1 nr r • ' Over 100 varieties for * lo«l» «P rfß * £p) - iP I Direct from Hoi- DUTCH BULBS \T;V land. Top Quality. PLANT NOW. Come in while our stock is complete. Wif&r Supply is Short This Season. ** Quality Seed & Garden Center 15-501 Bypass at Eastgate Phone 968-2911 Mr. Adams did this same role when a full performance of the opera was given here in 1961 with Phyllis Curtin in the leading role of Violetta. Others in the cast will include Martha Gibbs of Greensboro and Joe Turpin of Hickory. The performance will be stag ed ‘complete with costumes. The members of the cast have been spending the past three weeks in rehearsal for the performance. The next performance of the newly formed Opera Workshop will be in January when the workshop will perform Hinde mith's modernistic, comic opera, “Hin und Zuruck,” and “The Lowland Sea,” a modern Ameri can opera based cm folk themes by Alec Wilder. In addition to the performance by the Opera Workshop, the NCMTA-sponsored concert will also feature a performance by the North Carolina String Quar tet, and a performance by Eu gene Mauney, organist of St. Stephens Episcopal Church at Goldsboro. The concert is open to the pub lic, without charge. Pumpkin Contest Opens On Friday The Recreation department .has announced the following schedule for its second annual pumpkin-carving contest. Children ages 6 through 12 may pick up pumpkins at the Ranch House Friday between 3 and 5:30 p.m. The pumpkins should be re turned (carved) to the Ranch House on Wednesday Oct. 30 between 3 and- 5:30 p.m. for judging Awards will be given to win ners in the following categories at a party Monday Nov. 4 be tween 4 and 5:30 p.m.: Best All Around, Scariest, Funniest, Most Original, and Honorable Mentions. Two age groups (6 through 8, and 9 through 12) will compete for the prises. Re freshments will be served. All entrants are invited to the party. School Fellowship Attacks Illiteracy . Under the auspices of the Chap el Hill Fellowship for School In tegration, a small group of Chapel Hill townspeople has started a reading class to combat illiteracy among first and second grade pu pils. Six children attended the first reading class held Monday by two readers. Program director Mrs. Thomas Donnelly said she expected more 1 children to at tend in the future. Last year the Fellowship con ducted a study hall at night for students not accustomed to using reference materials and who had no mastery over study techniques. The reading program was sug gested by Chapel Hill School Su perintendent Howard Thompson. Dr. Thompson said reading weak nesses were the “number one problem” in schools across the nation. “I think reading is the crux of learning all the way up,” he said. He added, “A goodly number of dropouts result from embarrass ment over not being able to read assigned material.” Duplicate Bridge Winners Listed Winners in last Friday night’s Duplicate Bridge Club competi tion. NORTH-SOUTH-1. Mrs. P. F. Jones and W. E. Hales of Dur ham; 2. Mrs. J. M. Pinney and Tom Reid; 3. Mrs. W. F. Rogers and N. D. O'Briant of Durham. EAST-WEST—I. Mol Fox and Merv Griffin. 2. Mrs. Jeff New ton and Mrs. George Caldwell; 3. Mr. and Mrs. Vic Huggins. The next game will be played Friday, beginning at 7:45 p.m., in the hall of the Chapel of St. Thomas More. All games are open. Mrs. Phil Jackson is the director. the fashion house of • *• \ # s * Silililß 9 INSTANT SAVINGS! Group of Famous Makers’ Transitional DRESSES Regular $12.95 to $39.95 Vs off ™ LIMITED TIME ONLY Transitional cottons and silk-cottons in shirtwaist, sheath and dressy styles. 411 first quality ... All from our regular stock! Hurry in for best selections white stocks are complete! - - Duke Man Named To County Board The Orange County Democratic Executive Committe last night elected Duke University Alumni Affairs Director Roger Marshall to the Orange County Board of Education. Mr. Marshall. 42, replaces board member Charles M. Walker Jr., who resigned. The new board member is a Duke graduate, a former newspaperman and a resident of Orange County. County party Chairman L. J. Phipps told the committee that recent changes in the elections law will require a ruling by the state attorney general to de termine the length ot Mr. Mar shall's term. “Apparently, this was not ac counted for when we wrote the law,” Judge Ptiipps. a former state representative, said of the vacancy-filling procedure. Judge Phipps said he hopes to have the attorney general s rul ing before Mr. Marshall is sworn, scheduled for Nov. 4. when the school board next meets. Mr. Marshall, of Rt. 3, Hills boro. won tlie job over two other candidates, Paul Gates of the Caldwell Community and Reid Roberts of Rt. 1, Hillsboro. In other business, the commit tee defeated a motion directed at the Legislature and favoring an across-the-board 10 per cent pay increase for state employees? ex cluding college faculty members, public school teachers- and the top state officials who recently received pay hikes. Hugh Wilson, who introduced the motion, said the teaching statOs employees were—excluded from his proposal because they come under special job classifi cations and. also, because they might desire pay raises of more than 10 per cent. Orange County’s State Rep. Ed win Hamlin and Judge Phipps * joined in reporting on their con tacts with Person County Demo cratic leaders on a Senate ro tation agreement, necessitated by the recent Senate redistricting. Both counties agreed, they said, to wait until after Jan. 14, the date of a constitutional amend ment referendum on redistricting, before making a rotation agree ment. “In my thinking. Orange Coun ty would get a senator tor 1965 if the amendment passes and 1965 and 1%7, at least, if it fails,” Mr. Phipps said. Mr. Hamlin added that he thinks Orange should get a three-two rotation, that is. keeping the Sen ate seat for three consecutive terms and then turning it over to Person for two terms. Mr. Hamlin also said he will vote for the redistricting proposal in the Jan. 14 referendum. In the General Assembly’s special ses sion. he voted for the bill that established the referendum. Chatham Society To Hear Lefler Dr. Hugh T. Lefler, Kenan pro fessor of history at the Univer sity. will speak at the quarterly meeting of the Chatham County Historical Society at the court house in Pittsboro. Wednesday night, October 30. at 8 o’clock. Anyone interested in hearing Dr. Lefler or in joining the So ciety is cordially invited to at tend. _ Page 5