Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Nov. 10, 1963, edition 1 / Page 8
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Page 8 SCHOLARSHIP WINNER * The Ernst and Ernst Scholar ship in Public Accounting has been given to Robert D. Skees of Greensboro, a senior in the School of Business Administra tion at the University. The scholarship, given for the 1963-64 year by the Scholarship Commit tee of the School of Business Administration, is awarded on the basis of scholastic achieve ment, leadership qualities, and financial need. University Florist and Gift Shop what you don’t pay extra for in a SAAB {But may have to in other imports) In a SAAB, you don’t pay extra for: • contoured SAABstukdv . »tyush . twiotiH foam bucket seats . windshield washers # electric' ■ * * 3Trll,H • clock • factory undercoating • safety-padded dash IIIdADTEA AA DO and visors • dual'horns • heavy-duty heater- I FII 1-fIMfX ventilator-defroster system • steering wheel lock • IIVII Vl' R kW rear ashtrays • courtesy lights • seat belt fittings. ' It costs SAAB a little more to build cars this I IMITEI) way, but unlike most stripped-down imports, SAAB ■■IHII I Ell does not stint on comfort. 301 E. Main St., Carrboro Phone 942-7151 HEADQUARTERS FOR THE yTM| ■■ ■■ | FINEST SLEEP COMFORT ■H QI9 H 9 I BEAUTYREST MADE ONLY BY SIMMONS 17. jT fnr 462 w. Franklin St. jjidbl _____—FRFF PARKING* Parking Lot Located SrW /\ rnnnmu. Q in rear of store ... I / STORE HOURS: dailysa.m.. 6 p.m. M^fwlHryYl YOU CAN BUY A OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS ’TIL 9 P.M. BEAUTYREST FOR f fL\W W# ANY SIZE PEOPLE m Jj fm The size of your mattress is as personal as the size of clothes you wear— n I /7 I \ TWIN SIZE. Perfect FULL SIZE. Most famous Beaut* .. - for the smaller and rest Os them all. Sleeps two in sin- m " \.4t\ A A A. feaeA A*sMßg.V. average size sleepers. g l e bed comfort for a finer rest LONG BOY TWIN. 5 inches - * 79 ‘ 50 $79.50 longer than a regular twin 54 size Beautyrest mattress. LONB BOY FULL. 5 inches longer _ M- j-i —,i ■ j - $89.50 than a full size Beautyrest. Perfect |U*|jj 'y y tuf h? jj'' 1 11! ’Jjj jM 1 com,or t today’s taller simpers. il 11 * D uii l ki 7 *jjlf 1l I f|j| If Ml H you’re tall or short, more than ample or merely n u‘, Ih|i I | II jJ I y ||l jj petite there’s a Beautyrest mattress just right for 1 |l?|v|rl f■n ■ | y°u. Simply select the size you want, the firmness ilyf I tjjfl jy Illyf I t M 1 fin In I you want and the cover you like most. With it all 80" 1 j, § |Hll jjy )■ Ui ly 111 fl |!tf I U construction that provides single bed comfort even I ;y!f| 1 1 y I y lr y|l jj ■ in S double bed. Come in today, see and try our | j jj ' { I I womlertul assortment of Baiutyrest mattresses. QUEEN SIZE. 5 inches longer and 6 KING SIZE. Two feet wider and 5 inches longer jeo PRiNKI IV SSTRPPT inches wider than full size Beautyrest. than fuH size Beautyrest.. 54% more sleep area. WISSI r KAINnUIIN MK15151 Set of mattress and matching boxspring. Set inc | Udcs mattress and 2 twin-size boxsprings. CHAPEL HLL 968-4451 * 199 - 50 $299.50 ________ _________ Ideal for unlimited size people with Why sleep crushed, cramped and crowd- FREE PARKING EASY BUDGET TERMS limited size bedrooms. Remember, «l on a sinall-size double bed when a 0 , xru _ ~,, Beautyrest is guaranteed for 15 years- s,z< : Beautyrest gives you room Store Houre—Daily 8 A.M.-6 P.M. Frl. Nite 9 P.M. . to roam in stretch-out comfort. Carrboro Board To Meet Tuesday The Carrboro Board of Com missioners will consider recom mendations from the Carrboro Planning Board on two rezoning requests at its meeting Tuesday night at 7:30 in the Town Hall. The two rezoning requests were presented at a public hearing last Tuesday. The Rev. Rudy Hardee requested rezoning of a lot beside the Calvary Mission ary Baptist Church on NC 54 from Agricultural to RA-10; and William T. Durham requested re zoning of a Jones Ferry Road lot from residential to industrial. The Commissioners will receive the Planners’ recommendations on Hie two requests before Tues day night’s meeting, and will take action Tuesday night. In other business the Commis sioners will: —Receive official word that a sewer line from Lincoln High School to Fidelity Street has been completed and is ready to be tapped. Property owners wishing to tap the line must first pay the Town’s SIOO sewer tap ping fee at the Town Clerk’s office. —Hear a request from Fisher . and Fisher Realty for rezoning a Carr Street lot from residential to business. The lot is behind the Senter Drug Store business block in downtown Carrboro. —Hear a request from John Allen Cates for paving the Spar row’s Pool Road. —Receive official notification that Cheek Street. Sue Ann Court, and the part of Hanna Street inside the Town Limits have been paved. Sue Ann Court has also been curbed and guttered. —Hear a request for issuance of a beer permit for the Dash Ser vice Station at the corner of West Rosemary and Main Streets. Help the underprivileged througi the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Community Chest THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY Funeral Thursday For Mrs. White Funeral services were held Thursday afternoon for Mrs. Ly dia Henry White, who died Wed nesday morning at the home of her daugiter here, Mrs. Vernon Crook. Mrs. White was 80, and had been in declining health for several months. The services were conducted at the University Methodist Church by the Rev. Clyde Mc- Carver. Burial was in Chapel Hill Memorial Cemetery. Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Crook, Mrs. Kenneth Cheek of Chapel Hill and Mrs. Elwyn Lewis of Morristown, Tenn.; one son, Sheldon White of Chapel Hill; one sister, Mrs. Robert Mor gan of Rt. 1, Chapel Hill; and 10 grandchildren. Pallbearers were Harvey Ben nett, J. S. Bennett. Dr. William Waddell. Luther Tass, Henry Burch and J. B. Linker. Chapel Os Cross Supper Tomorrow Thomas C. J. Smith, from the Churcn of the Good Shep herd, Rocky Mount, will speak at a parish suppear in tte Par ish House of the Chapel of the Cross tomorrow. Mr. Smyth was one of tthe delegates from this diocese to the Anglican Congress in Cana da last August. The parish supper, for adults of the church, will begin at 6:30. Those who attend are asked to bring e covered dish, a salad, or a dessert. TO LECTURE Dr. Orville Bandy, professor of geology at the University of Sou thern California and Distinguish ed Lecturer of the American As sociation/ of Petroleum Geolo gists, will give a public lecture here Thursday at 8 p.m. in room 112 New East Building. Dr. Ban dy will speak on “Paleoenviron mental Analysis as a Means of Defining Oil-Producing Trends.” WUJVC Panel Airs Town Integration By DIANE HILE 1 “How public is e public ac commodation?” was one of the many questions argued Thurs day night on WUNC-FM’s first program in the three-part series entitled “Desegregation in a Small Southern Town.” Panelists were Joe Augustine, executive director of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Merchants Asso ciation, Hilliard Caldwell, chair man of Citizens United for Ra cial Equality and Dignity (CURED), and James Shu maker, editor of the Chapel Hill Weekly. Earle Wallace, associate professor of political science at UNC, was modera tor. ! “If a business is a public ac commodation—that means it is for everyone,” said Mr. Caldwell, “and I in my power to see that it is kept ptfclic.” “A businessman has difficulty in assuming the role as a public accommodation,” said Mr. Au gustine. “I differ with Mr. Cald well is that I believe that a businessman should be able to exercise his prerogative.” "Very few businessmen in Chapel Hill maintain segrega-t tion,” said Mr. Shumaker. “To those who do hold to segregation! it’s a matter of principle. To change these businessmen and. force them to abide by the idea of ‘public accommodations,’ you will have to change their prin ciples.” Mr. Wallace stated that sev eral states had adopted'public accommodations laws, making segregation illegal. Such a law is also being discussed in Con gress. ' “All a public accommodations law would do is make illegal the procedure a business fol lews,” said Mr. Augustine. “The courts would find it impossib 1 * to handle all the many infrac tions. The passage of such a law doesn’t cure all the ills.” “A public accommodations law passed in Congress would be meaningless in Chapel Hill,” said Mr. Shumaker. "Only a small minority of businesses would be affected, and then there is the problem of enforce ment—how? I never see trials or suits being brought to court for infractions of this law in these other states.” “Public accommodations laws are needed to protect the Ne gro because we are in a minor ity,” said Mr. Caldwell. "When we travel, the law would help find us a place to stay. But, for example, if an innkeeper does not allow me to stay in his motel and the case is brought to court, other innkeepers would hesitate to turn me down the next time. I realize that this law is almost impossible to en force and it would depend on most people obeying the law.” The moral, economic and psy- SATURDAY November 14, 15, 16 SPECIALS TO BE ANNOUNCED IN WEDNESDAY’S PAPER free Every adult visiting our store Nov. 14 , 15, 16 will recieve a free COLORIZE ABSTRACT PAINTING Create your own design given you in a beautiful frame. SEE OUR BEAUTFUL Glidden Paint Center /jih (I fj , REGISTER II (for free prizes, drawings daily- jf(J| ■■ 'll m B EXAMPLE OF OUR SPECIALS- - ||||| Here’s the sort of Grand Opening Specials 1 j llf I you can expect this Thursday. I// !| If a 13 CU. FT. FROST FREE Westinghouse I / I U REFRIGERATOR || I Regularly $349.95 m IIL Special at *263.00 f|( IN ★ ★ ★ § 111 You’ll find complete stock, reasonable n | Prices and Courteous Service. Famous name Ij / jll/I/$ ill merchandise. See us before you buy. I f HomE M BUILDING Mg k SUPPLY JfSI COMPANY, Inc. * 1 103 South Graham ‘i |j|j - Ph. 929-1555 - We Deliver chological aspects of integrat ing businesses in a small Sou thern town were also discussed. All agreed that there was no moral justification for segrega tion. However, there was some disagreement over the use of economic pressure and civil disobedience to achieve integra tion. “I can truly say that eco nomic pressure works,” said Mr. Caldwell. “In 1962 we boycotted two businesses and in less than a month they admitted their in come chopped. We went back and they probably had more business from us than ever be fore. I think a boycott starts a man thinking not only from his pocketbook but from his heart.” “In most cases it is a case of embarrassment here, not so much the boycott itself," said Mr Shumaker. "This summer proved this fact ot be true. You know perfectly well there is one restaurant owner in town who maintains segregation and will keep maintaining it no mat ter how much or how long you boycott. He cannot- be hurt fi nancially and he would plow his establishment under before he would integrate.” 6ive to the Community Chest. Sunday, November 10, 1963 - J For savings that are designed | for your own special needs be| sure and read the Weekly classi-f. lied ads every issue Adger Wilson About this question: “The neighbor’s duplex was bad ly damaged by fire. They esti mate three months to complete repairs so it is livable. Under his Homeowners Policy, will he col lect both his ‘additional living ex pense’ away from home and the ‘lost rent’ from his duplex until he and the renter can inhabit the home?” for the answer to this, and all your insurance questions, Consult the Fonshee-Wilson Agency, Phone 968-4431
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 10, 1963, edition 1
8
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