Page 2
strators singing freedom songs
as those arrested are carried
into Town Hall. Sit-ins have occur
red at Brady’s Restaurant, Leo’s
Restaurant, Clarence’s Bar and
Grill, and the Tar Heel Sandwich
Shop, as well as at the Pines.
Sit-ins occurred Wednesday
nigit simultaneously at the Tar
JHeel Sandwich Shop and Brady’s,
tttrested at the Tar Heel Sand
jytrich Shop, .charged with tres
passing and resisting arrest: Rup
•rt A.■ Buchanan, a Duke student;
Thomas N. Bynum, Negrdk Henry
£ Campbell, a Negro high school
student; Joseph H. Tieger, a
DORE representative; David G.
■' ’analos, Marshall D. Hay. Chris
opher E. Munger, Thomas N.
lead, Ralph W. Mitchell, James
i. Smith, Negro; John T. Shive
y a UNC student; and May T.
Slack, Negro.
: Arrested at Brady’s, charged
with trespassing and resisting
(arrest: Riclfard G. Doble, David
3avis, Negro; James V. Henry, a
X)RE representative; and Walter
(litchell, Negroes. Seven juveniles
ivere also arrested Wednesday
and were released to the custody
as their parents.
• At about 5:30 Thursday after
>oon 14 persons, all but one of
hem Negro, were arrested at
re's Restaurant and charged
nth. blocking the sidewalk and
esisting arrest. Leo’s was lock-
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—More Than 130 Arrested In Sit-In Demonstrations Here—
ed when the group arrived, so
the demonstrators sat on the
sidewalk outside the restaurant
until police carried them away.
Arrested; Robert Lee Thompson,
Evelyn J. Walker, Peggy J. Jack
son, O’Fleta R. Rankin, Wayne
' Harris, Ruby E. Farrington, Clar
ence Roger, Johnson H. Neville,
Gale Nevilles, and Joseph Tieger,
the only white person among
them. Four juveniles were also
arrested and released to custody
of their parents.
At about 9:30 Thursday night
almost 60 demonstrators gather
ed on the opposite side of North
Columbia Street from the Tar"
Heei Sandwich Shop and sang
while 17 demonstrators tried to
enter the Sandwich Shop. When
admittance was refused and toe
doors were closed and locked,
the demonstrators sat on toe
pavement outside. University stu
dents gathered in a semi-circle
around them. While the demon
strators on the other side of toe
street sang “We Shall Not Be
Moved,” the onlookers sang
"Dixie.”
Police carried all seventeen
away, charged them with ob
structing the sidewalk and resist
ing arrest. Before they were
arrested, however, one of them,
David Davis, was kicked in the
head while sitting in front of the
shop. He was taken to Memorial
Hospital and treated for minor
(Continued from Page 1)
injuries. Howard Fendergraft
was subsequently charged with
the assault. Police Lt. Graham
- Creel said Davis’s injuries were
not serious, and that the next day
he bad volunteered to dean up
the jail.
Arrested Thursday: Mary A.
Benton, Negro; Betty G. Farring
ton; Richard N, Creel; Barbara
R. Brittain, Negro; WHHam F.
Griffith Jr.;. John T. Shively; L.
B. Page; Karen Lynn Parker,
Negro; Charels L. Thompson;
Henry Sanford, Negro; Christo
pher E. Monger; Theodore By
num Jr., Negro; David L. Davis,
Negro; Jo Ann Johnson; Freda
A. Laney, Negro; Brantiy F.
Kearns Jr.; and one juvenile, re
leased to the custody of his pa
rents. '
Friday night’s sit4a, agate at
the Tar Heel Sandwich Shop, did
not go entirely as planned. A
large crowd of demonstrators
again gathered opposite the Tar
Heel, while eight persons sat
down in front of the Shop. But
the Tar Heel was closed for
cleaning at the time, the proprie
tor was not there, and nobody
requested the demonstrators to
leave.
Police Chief W. D. Blake said
—Pete Ivey’s Town And Gown—
when the alarm sounds.
Without a sign of a Ho! Ho!
Ho!, methodically and quietly,
gently if possible, but authorita
tively, he enforces toe law,
makes arrests, and employes his
frame and muscle to lift and
tote the culprits.
• • *
Greetings gay and Christmas
cheer
To Aycock, Friday, Palmatier,
Allcott, Alden, Jofre Coe,
Godfrey, Shaffer, John Thibaut.
Deck the haH with yuktide
holly
For Whid Powell and Ray
Jolly;
Santa’s reindeer, presents take
To Paul Eubanks and Chief
Bill Blake.
On this brilliant Christmas
' mom,
Bring a million books to
Jerrold Ome,
For all the folks of Town
and Gown,
Obie Davis and Otway Brown.
Ring the bells and whistles
shrill
, For everyone in Chapel Hill, .
k Do-se-do and shake a leg,
For Fletcher Great and
Carl H. Pegg.
Bring wassail and tinsel
garland
To Bill McKnight and J. P.
Harland
Tell Santa Claus to do a job
For Y. Z. Cannon and Collier
Cobb.
• * •
Twas the night before
Christmas
And through Danziger’s
Rat
No students were roistering
For they had all left for the
Gator Bowl. .
afterwords that the eight had
not been blocking the sidewalk,
and because nobody from the Tar
Heel asked them to leave there
was no reason to arrest them
immediately.
the demonstrators sat lit front
of the Tar Heel for almost half
an hour. "Then toe cold began
to get them,” said Chief Blake.
The demonstrators on the other
side of the street crossed to the
Tar Heel side and gathered in
front of the Sandwich Shop. Chief
Blake said toe sidewalk than be
came blocked, and that be ashed
HrtHard Caldwell and John Dunne
to part tbe crowd to open die
sidewalk. This request was not
complied with. The two, and
Louis Calhoun, were then arrest
ed and charged with blocking the
sidewalk. When they went limp,
they were also charged with re
sisting arrest. The right sitting
in front of the Sandwich. Shop
were also arrested and similarly
charged.
Those arrested, in addition to
toe three leaden: Robert L.
Thompson, Negro; Thomas E.
Bell, Negro; Walter Mitchell, Ne
gro; Ben L. Jones; Michael J.
Edwards, Negro; John Shively;
and one juvenile, released to the
custody of his parents.
(Continued from Page 1)
Or were home for the holidays.
* * *
Jingle bells to Fred H. Weaver,
Eggnogg for Joseph Sloan,
A wreath and ribbon to
Albert Coates,
Sugar plums for Claiborne
Jones. -
Cheers to Cathey, Holman,
Branch.
Huzzahs for Henry Clark,
A cup of tea for Maurice
Lee;
For the rest a place to park.
Buttered rolls for Porter
Cowles,
More scholars for Roy
Armstrong,
Winter fuel for C. P. Spruill,
To Glen Haydon a Christmas
gong.
More muscles and grammar
for Coach Sam Barnes '
Good will to Clarence Heer;
More alumni for Maryan
Saunders
For Charlie Mangum a boer.
* * * -
%
O'er ail the village you may
go,
”, At*4 see throe Shepards nigh 1
They are Carlyle, Buster, 80,
Like stars up in toe sky,
* * *
There’s Bennett, Vance,
Rupen, Flinn.
Cleaveland, Davis, Boat,
McCall and Wellman, House
and Koch,
Couch and Clifford Fpust.
A new kind of pHTm
Berry hill,
A wagon that doesn’t wobble.
A great big hand for Jack
LeGrand
And thanks, again, to Tony
GobbeL
Hang a sprig of mistletoe
High for Paul N. Cheek.
Twenty sips for Judge Jim
Phipps
All during toe Christmas week.
Sweet pickles and Dill
For George Watts Hill,
Salute to Bernard Boyd.
To Preston Epps and Clifton
Ki-eps
And also to Joe C. Floyd.
Merry Christmas to everyone,
To all those named and
more,
Wear this crown from Town
& Gown
In Nineteen Sixty-four.
Help toe underprivileged
through the Chapel HIH-Carrboro
Community Cheat.
HI
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BOY SCOUT GIFTS
HI If n k iFiniS aifcHili
IK EMI frWKHVI
THE (KAPBL HILL WEEKLY
By SUSIE LEW*
The WUNC Carolina Round
table panel Thursday night
agreed that much of the spiritual
lost and suggested that current
civil ngms GK?nionsirauGits m
Chapel Hill might point people
back to toe frue meaning of
Panelists for the station’s final
IMS broadcast were toe Rev.
Jones A. Devereux of toe Chap
el of St. Thomas More; Dr. John
Dixon, associate professor of Re
ligion and Art at the University;
and the Rev. Harry E. Smith
of toe University Presbyterian
Church. Hie program was mod
erated by Dr. John S. Clayton,
associate professor of Radio,
Televirion, and Motion Pictures
at the University.
“I don’t tank this it an in
appropriate time for these dem
onstrations,” Mr. Smith said.
"These people are not perverting
the spirit tori actually prevails,
but they may f* perverting us
to toe spirit tori should prevail.
Hie concept of non-violence acts
out toe thought tori change can
be brought about by toe humble
who are willing to accept real
humiliation.”
“The birth of Christ was a time
of sacrifice,” Father Devereux
said, "and perhaps the demon
strators thought that their ac
tions were a sacrifice and, in
deed, it was a real physical sac
rifice.”
"I can not judge whether this
is a tactful time to demonstrate
or not,” Dr. Dixon said, “but
perhaps those who have had to
endure the humiliation of segre
gation are more likely to receive
the rewards of toe nativity than
we of more comfortable circum
stances. I don’t know any of
these people personally, but per
haps some of them have listened
to the words of toe carols, such
as 'O Come AH Ye Faithful,’ and
taken them seriously—it’s some
times frightening when people
trie the gospel seriously."
Dr. Dixon added that most
people don’t listen to toe words
Activities Today
At United Church
In this morning’s worship ser
vice at United Church, 211 W.
Cameron Ave., the fourth Sup- ;
day in Advent, will be heralded
by the reading of the Christmas
Scripture in Luke 2:1-20. The
sermon, "Miracle Dreams,” will
be delivered hy the minister, the
Rev. DeWitt L. Myers Jr.
The choir, under the direction
of Lynn Ikenberry, will sing
“On This Day Earth Shall Ring.”
Mrs. Add Morris, organist, will
play “Now Sing We, Now Re
joice’’ by Bach as the Prelude,
“Beside Thy Manger, Here I
Stand” by Tbate as the Offertory,
and “O Come, AH Ye Faithful’’
by Maser as the Postlude.
Church School classes for all
ages wtH meet at 10 a.m. During
the church hour, Mowing a
Christmas story by the minister,
children of the first through toe
fourth grades will retire to Fel
lowship HaH for a program of
Christmas carols and games.
A supervised nursery and a
kindergarten are available during
the church hours.
At 6 p.m., the Junior High
FWldwsMp will have a Christinas
party. At 6:30, tbe choir, and
anyone else wishing to partici
pate, will leave toe church to
sing cards to tbe community.
On Christmas Eve, at 11 p.m.,
a program of music and scrip
ture, climaxed by die observance
of Holy Communion, will be held
in the sanctuary. This service,
inaugurated four years ago, has
come to have great significance
in the celebration of Christmas at
United Church.
• .»
/
Lemola Gem’s Sybil
Sets Milk Record
In the herd of L. R. Cheek of
Chapel Hill, a six-year-dd regis
tered Ayrshire cow named Lem
ola gem’s Sybil has completed an
official milk production record of
14,760 pounds, with 616 pounds of
butterfat, on twice daily milking *
and for a testing period not ex- !
eroding 305 days in length.
The record is one of many be
ing made by an increasing num
ber of registered Ayrshire* on
the Ayrshire Breeders' Associa
tion official HIR and DHIR test
ing programs. It la equal to
over 22 quarts of milk per day for
the MMnouto test period, and is
twice the national average for
all dairy cows.
HOTELLING TO SPEAK
Kenan Professor Harold Hotel
ling wiß address a Statistics Col
loquium on Monday, January 13,
on "Effects of Non-Normality and
Dependence on Student and Fish
er Distributions" In 3R Phillips
HaH nt 4 pm. Professor Hotelling
has made numerous important
contributions to too theory, prac
tice and teaching of statistics and
is too recipient of many awards
of distinction. honor
ary dagrooa, treft scientific pro
fessional societies and universi
ties.
Panel Seeks True
Christmas Meaning
of % carols although theological-,
ly the carols are the most senti
mental of all the hymns.
“fence visited a college to a
town about toe sice of Chapel
Hfll and a group of students
wanted to do something about
the spirit of Christmas so they
asked the merchants to play car
ols on toe pa. system. 1 would
rather join a committee to ask
toe merchants not to play the
cards. It’s like telling your
wife you love her over a p.a.
system.
“I wonder If persons who com
plain of commercialization
shouldn’t look at our religious
traditions and our ways of cele
brating,” Mr. Smith said. “For
example, my denomination has
divested itself of anything hav
ing to do wito toe church year.
Protestant denominations don’t
look at it as a vtoole season, so
there b no anticipatory under
standing of Christmas.”
"What we’re anticipating is
salvation—a savior,” Father Dev
ereux said. “The original mean
ing was that a savior was born.
We may now have to express it
in terms of toe 20th century be
cause we are celebrating an
event of long ago, but it goes
beyond time.”
"We must ask what happened
to make us lose toe meaning of
Christmas,” Dr. Dixon said. “We
make the merchants toe fall guy,
but we’ve set up an economic
system that makes them depend
ent on the Christmas trade. Eco
nomists toll me that Christmas
is toe difference between profit
and loss for merchants. This
doesn’t absolve the merchants,
and yet we cannot tell them not
to do it.”
Mr. Smith felt that toe com
mercialization of Christmas had
caused such symbolism as open
anticipation and awe to be lost,
“There may be advantages to
this commercialized Christmas,”
Dr. Dixon said. “Now that mer
chants have dominated and ex
ploited people's greed, we can
look at what realty happened.
There were no great choirs at
the nativity—just a few shep
herds. The merchants of Beth
lehem were busy exploiting the
unwilling tourists just as they
exploit people today.”
The panel agreed that Santa
Claus does not detract from the
true spirit of Christmas.
“Children have much more ca
pacity for imagination-and won
der than we do. They don’t wor
ry so much about the literalness
of things,” Mr. Smith said.
“It’s qever bothered me,” Dr.
Dixon said. “Os course, it just
occurred to me that I’ve never
seen Santa Claus on the street
corners in Chapel HHI. Maybe
we’re talking more about the
problem in other cities rather
than Chapel Hill.”
Mr. Smith suggested that the
tree meaning of Christmas might
be found by putting more em
phasis on toe family.
"The family is also the corp
orate family,” Dr. Dixon said.
“AH that we can defend about
our traditions, such as the sym
bolism of giving, emphasizes that
toe center is not ourself but
others.”
tDoes He Have
A Turkish
Water Pipe?
For that individual who becomes a Knotty
Problem on your gift list a Turkish Water
Pipe could very tOeU be the answer. Where?
to * ftoto J
OmnMLShop
■ • "V Jto
OTHER UNUSUAL GIFTS FROM THE ORIENTAL SHOP:
Ran Rica, Tea, Chopsticks, Herbs and Spices.
Jade Canines, Rings, Topaz, Moonstone Hack*
v laces, Ivory Bracelets and Pins-Etcetera-tke
etcetera perhaps containing the very thing ...
the Oriental Sfaon EAST FRANKLIN STREET
NEn TO
KEMP’S
9-9 D4JLY
Merry Chistmas
-Junior High Math Whiz—
ment' is not in toe discovery of
the proof itself, but ip its discov
ery by a ninth grader. Proof
of congruence of this kind of
figure by toe hypotenuse-leg
i theorem is usuaUy done with tri
gonometry, which Kathy has not
begun to study.
"I like mathematics,” she arid
simply, after going through a de
tailed explanation of her proof.
For most adult minds, geometry
is so far to the past, if toe)
studied it all, that trying to un
derstand something as compli
cated as Kathy has produced is
not unlike trying to pick a phi
out of a jar of molasses. But
mathematics is Kathy's best sub
ject and she b startlingly glib
about col inear segments and con
gruences «ad interior prints.
Mathematics circulates in her
mind. While toe was trying to
work out her proof rile once woke
uo in the middle of toe night
thinking about it.
She doesn't know why she likes
mathematics. She has bright
brown eyes and a nice smile, and
she thought about this question.
There don’t seem to be words for
t it. “French and I don’t get along
verv well," she said. “I guess
I like to take facts and work
out something with them, instead
of just memorizing facts and
then giving them back again.
“My whole family has a scien
tific background, so maybe
there’s some kind of heredity.”
Her father worked on the de
velopment of the atom bomb at
Los Alamos dining World War
11. Her grandfather was head
of BeH Telephone's research de
partment in New York City, and
supervised the development and
laying of a trans-Atlantic cable
that would carry more than one
call at a time. She has an aunt
who is one of the ten leading
women scientists in the nation,
one of toe nation’s eight leading
geneticists. Her mother is chair
man of freshmen in toe UNC
School of Nursing.
"My brother, he’s in the sev
enth grade, any time anything
breaks down in the house, he goes
and fixes it.”
The discovery of the applica
bility of hypotenuse-leg proof of
—Holiday—
(Continued from Page 1)
Cross, a Christmas Pageant will
be presented at 5 p.m. Christmas
Eve, with an open house at 5:30
in the Parish House.
At St. Thomas More Catholic
Church, Christmas High Mass
will be celebrated at midnight'
Tuesday, with a specially train
ed choir singing the liturgical
chant and traditional Christinas
carols for 15 minutes before the
Mass.
At Carrboro Methodist Church,
the Sunday School will present a
Christmas program tonight at
7:30 in the chuch.
COMMUNION
Communion services will be
held at 10 a.m. Friday and Sat
urday (December 27 and 28) at
the Chapel of the Cross, accord
ing to Dr. Thomas Thrasher, rec
tor. There will be two services
Sunday, communion at 7:30 a.m.,
and morning prayer and sermon
at 11 a.m.
Sunday, December 22, 1963 4
(Continued from Page 1)
congruence to triangles other
than right triangles is not neces
sarily the end of tbe mathematic
al road for Kathy. With her
ability, it is probably only a high
light in a career. But at the
moment, ail she can say is that
she likes mathematics.
“I just don’t know what Fm
going to do,” she said, shrugging
her shoulders and giggling shyly.
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