of orange county Chapel Hill, Hillsboro, Carrboro—Between and Beyond' t* • LEGAL NOTICE OF THE UNI (Versity’s request for a hearing on its superior court motion for dis missal of the anti-fluoridation lawsuit has been served on the attorney for complainant Man ning A. Simons, according to As sistant N. C. Attorney General Horton Rountree. The Univer sity’s legal counsel is hopeful of a hearing on the matter any time after this week during the sec ond week of the current civil term of court in Hillsboro. A NEW TROPHY—A CONSOL idated University flag, the first for Carolina, State and the Wom an’s College—will be presented the winner of the Tar Heel-Wolf pack football clash here on Sat urday. It was designed by Con solidated University Council member Bill Criswell with the in tention of initiating a tradition akin to the Carolina-Duke Victory Bell award. "WILL THE REAL FOOTBALL road please make itself known.” Latest designation of this tag for a highway leading out of Chapel Hill is officially recorded for what has been variously known as “new Greensboro highway” on the State Highway’s newly-re leased secondary road improve ment plan for Orange County. Other roads that have borne this title, or epithet, if you will, are the Chapel Hill-Durham boule vard, the dual-laning of Raleigh Road, Manning Road, and N. C. Highway 54 west. THE TOWN OF CHAPEL Hill, in having 7,OOO-iuroen mer cury vapor lamps installed to re place 10,000-lumen incandescent ^ Franklin St., will be making an $ .85 a month saving per lamp. Cost of running the incandescents is $3.85 a month, the mercurys, $3.00. The new bulbs, it is reported, will give off as much light as the more powerful ones, and are col or-corrected, to boot. —No yellow skin pallor appearance from their rays. ANENT ROAD NAMES, AS ' noted above, the hot-rod set calls the road into the Glendale devel opment of Chapel Hill “Thunder Road,” also “Hell's Hill.” R’s be come quite a speedway.for youth ful speedsters. Police learned of the Thunder ’ Rdad appellation this week when they were called about a ’61 Buick that had 'thun dered itself ftroiind a power line -pole. A 13-year-old girl who’d been driving the car owned by a TJNC student was uninjured. An other teen-age girl was unhurt; the owner, slightly injured. MRS. JAMES R. (RUDIi) FAR* low of Chapel Hill is the only an nounced candidate for the Presi dency of the Orange County Young Democrats Club. The group’s an nual elections meeting wlil be held at the courthouse in Hills boro tonight at 8. THERE WERE 78 ORANGE District Boy Scouts among the 4,000 from across the Occopeephee Council at kst weekend’s annual camporee near Ft Bragg. The lo cal contingent did quite well in patrol competition, the boys from Troop 835 capturing first place in More pealings, page 8 Circulation Today ^7,407 n PCT. DISTRIBUTED IN MANGE COUNTY Race precedent again seen in action of school board —Story on Page 3 * * * * * ★ ★ ★ ★ Local CAP aids at crash scene... THEY WERE PREPARED—Members of the Chapel Hill Squadron of the Civil Air. Patrol were on the spot to give much-needed* emergency .help when •a C-123 Air Force transport crashed fust after take-off during a CAP-spon sored air shotwat Wilmington on Sunday afternoon. Photos taken by Chapel liill.CAP communications officer Jim Botsford show a fireman racing toward the burning plane (above) and (below) the local unit’s emergency communi cations vehicle which was pressed into service as an am bulance. Squadron members Art Storm, Sam Wilburn, P. E. Barrow, and W. D. Neville, in addition to Mr. Bots? ford, loere watching atop a hangar when the plane carry ing newsmen and sky divers crashed a quarter-mile across the field. Their vehicle was used to transport injured men to a helicopter for air ambulance to the hospital, and also as the only direct radio communication from the crash scent to the airport tower, J ,