of orange county Chapel Hill, Hillsboro, Carrboro—Between and Beyond HILLSBORO AND CHAPEL HILL, N. C., THURSDAY, AUGUST 15, 1963 VOL. 71, NO. 32 32 PA«€S Orange Pealings THE HOMING PIGEONS pictured is last week’s issue of The News made their flight from Chapel Hill to their native loft on Long Island, New York, quite satisfactorily. They were released here at 6:15 a. m. by pigeon fancier Bob Logan, and one of the birds was home by dusk — just under 12 hours la ter — 550 miles northward. The others came in the next morn ing. Mr. Logan is currently training 17 homing pigeons of his own, taking ’em out for gradually longer flights home, beginning with a half • mile. WHILE THERE’S SPIRITED political jockeying for the Or ange County Democratic seat in the General Assembly — to be decided on Sept. 3 — there are several “patriots” who'd like the job, but for various reasons can’t run until the primary campaign of next spring. ’T’wouJdn’t be political cricket to publicly bandy their names in print now, except for one of the more obvious: Ex-Rep. Jim Phipps, who’ll be free from his American Legion commitment, and may quite likely seek the legislative post in his own right. Some additional candidate tim ber is tied up in other elective offices for the nonce, too. SOME OF ms FRIENDS ARE touting retired Chapel Hill Su perintendent of Schools C. W. Davis—now of the Union Grove Church community — , for ap. pointment — to the County Board of Education when the inevitable resignation of Charl ie Walker is filed. Mr. Walker has accepted employment in Edgecomb County and will soon move there. The County Demo cratic Executive Committee will recommend his successor. Oth er names around the cracker barrel are Remus Smith Jr. and Clarence Jones. An additional half - dozen were noted by “J. C,” in his Hillsborough Observ er column last week. DR. BOB MURPHY, NEWLY appointed chairman of *the 29: . member- Hillsborough Historical Commission, plans an organiza tional meeting of that group at Colonial Inn in Hillsborough one weekend this month. He said he’s currently contacting the membership in an effort to de termine the most advantageous date for the meeting. CHAPEL HULL POLICE PA trolman Jimmy Farrell tells this stranger - than - fiction tale for real. He was seated in his patrol car downtown early one Sunday morning a couple of weeks ago, reading a News and Observer feature story a bout the vicious attack training of German Police dogs by state prison authorities in Raleigh. Suddenly he heard a noise be hind him, and turned in stark shock to see that a huge Ger man Police dog had leaped through the open rear - door window of his car onto the back seat. The policeman, though quite "shook,” simply opened the door and the dog quietly hopped cut. —A fantas More PEALINGS, Page 8 ' ' • • .J . . ^- v- • ■- v.^'r' Democrats to meet Sept. 3 to pick Orange legislator —Story on Pogo'2 ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Salary increases granted for all county employees; wage scale plan adopted ____ —Story on Page 2 1Tourists see farm... m ON AREA DEVELOPMENT PROGRAM - Visitors from Orange, Durham, and Person County climaxed their afternoon tour of the Chapel Hill area yesterday at the Hogan brothers dairy farm north of Carrboro. Above, Bob Hogan (second from left), is seen with three of the ‘tourists’ — Southern High ' School agriculture teacher Johnny Evans (third) of Durham, and Marion Clark and Everette Kennedy of Hillsboro. The moppet on the horse is one of the Hogans’ family visitors — Christy Reyn olds of Miami, Fla., sitting astride ‘Champ,’ one of the Hogans’ riding horses.