Newspapers / The News of Orange … / Nov. 21, 1963, edition 1 / Page 2
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UNC to convert onUec. 1 . . . , Carolina instrument effective- at. MiOi »mn«ec» t #ai^wds itilbbo-eftrtNHUas tSNXJo«wiWtfcjt« a private- system -tailed .Gen Iitex Aoutytt* Pmite.-wfwntie. branch >ewskaMel^ining in the I ' • , --- i ,j»ms^m*pl*»idH«bomble teitdeMbfs) ?(4h An.jMmM»y .hssefar, .a® OOt Sfftsch During'4ho partsovorai-moathsr'ChspcfBHT Telephone'Cov in TitaOers and central office representatives have been re-arranging • station equipment for the oonvsrsion. A telephone official stressed .yesterday that regular residential or business subscribers will not be affected directly oy the UNC number change from a dialing standpoint. The only change will be in referring to the proper sec tion of the direetery to call eamptia lumbers. v > The. stow directories mailed individually to, regular, cei today. No is printed on the back caver. A total -of Jttw&DQ heve.peea print ed.- Delivery -on campus -will be handled by telephone company . representatives 4o~ make sure each station- receives the 3-pisrt directory. Instructions on dialing changes affecting 933 numbers appear on the third page of the blue rectien which is bound between the NOTE IMPORTANT CHANGES 9 Company officials railed attention tq.jw*, telep.hftnei.num ! bers-for thejChppel Hill Pgjtoffkelhthe Chapel Hill loumHall, m** 4be.Wl4P*WH»NNl|ico ap#F»r« Departments! Th* .changes wire made to give these offices rotary service with several lines j * » Single number The telephoneofficials noted that numbers published elsewhere for these above mentioned offices would be ineomeci after Dec; 1. white, and yellow pages; easier, small instruction cards with sim ilar instructions were left at each instrument as dial cards wer changed. When students return firm Thanksgiving Holidays, the net Centrex system will be in and working as UNC takes-its first ste] to redesign and upgrade academic and special service areas: 7/4 show interest in public housing units me vnapei-nun «o»s»pg.Au thority, in order f to. getu^vUiled. information for planning a fed-, ;«ral subsidized y publichousing project for,the Chapel, Bill, tafen^ has requested .funds fcem.the, Pufblic u Housing Administration with whkh to conduct a com ! m unity ^housing survey. r The survey was, coinpleted late in August, rand.v was,j directed): by ■''■9b*. cMwcgaretriHanny. m Housing Market a Analyst,, oft >*he p public Houaingv Administration' office, an Atlanta. The survey covered a majority “ ' of renter families now living in substandard ..housing in Chapel1 Hill and Carrboro who will be' qualified as, tenants. Owner f am - Jilies were excluded ■ . because ex perience, haatahown that owners, even though '.their ^houses •may clearly be. substandard, . seldom apply for. admission to public housing. i Complete information was oh THE news \ OF ORANOF COtfNTV | Vol. 71, No. 45 Nov. 21, 1963 Published nvcry Thuiedav Ir. i The Year By The News, Inc. . Subscription Rates Payable to Advance): In Orange and Ad joining Counties. $2.50, plus 3% Sales Tax; Otherwise in U. S. ,-A4; Overseas . $$.» Entered As Second Class .Mat ter In The Postoffices *♦ Hilts! borough and Chapel HU1, N.C. tained : on \o2 Tenter families. iDf» these ..families, eight were white and 4.44,colored. The* num . her indicating no interest in ap plying for .accommodations in ..pnhlicu hMuiltg, >ior .whom were undecided^waa 27. Eleven, were v.xclttded xbecause r their s income . was, /wer • iho, aetlimitof., $3,200. pea.sean.ffttaU, Jdi/eligible fam (iilies expressed, ai,desire for low public.,houaipgi. atjthis. time, •ftiber -iowiincome. Jaxnilies were excluded,, 6mm, ttitis ,, survey be cause they ,are, rat, present living i in, standard,,housing. Highest <ount-t»850outbound cars in ptfih hour . . . A preliminary report on the Chapel HiU-Garrboro traffic sur vey recently undertaken for the i local Planning Board shows Main : St. iaCarrboro to have the faeav 1 iest traffic of any of the places '< cheeked at various pericds of the day. ] The preliminary report was re leased yesterday by Lucien Faust j of the Research Regional Plah i ning Commission, who headed tba survey, made last month. He noted that figures from the spring cf 1962 showed there were 22,400 persons living in the Chapel Hiil Carrboro •area?' This -fail; • he add ed, about 8,500 lived ia the Uni versity housing, and the remain, der occupied about 6,300 house- ] holds in aad around the two towns. fe" The traffic count on Main St at the railroad tracks in Carr boro topped that of any of the places checked in the two towns traffic totalled 615 cars tor the 7 till 8 a.m. period, and a- total normal week-day load of 5,846 cars. The out-bound (westbound) traffic totalled 851 cars for the 4:30 till 5:30 p.m. peak period, and a total of 5,648 cats during The next busiest spct accord ing to the survey data released to date was the Durham boule vard, as computed on the basis of a traffic count at the Durham County line. This showed a total of about 4,700 cars daily both in. HUL The 5. till 6 p.m. traffic toward Chapel Rill' totalled 533 cars, and the 4 tin 5 p.m. count toward Durham showed 447 cars. In comparison to the above, noted heaviest traffic areas, her* * Xhe lfr-mwaher beard of tfkec dtors of the Chatpel: HilbCarrboro Chamber ot Commerce wi» meet, next week to electt officers ot the newlye bartered organisation. j **< tormallx ifftaHed-jat a function early aex^year,* ifewas announced, yesterday by J<oe An gustine, Executive Director ofthe local Merchant* Association, spon sor, of the newiy^rgaiiioed <*»“ *er. About 60 .personsattended the group’s charter fight hensptet on Monday.atv«|fehMJi*'Ml«Mfry( .Mr. persons, were elected ton the Board of Directors, as presented by * aomiaating committee; Roy Armstrong, Charie*Shaffer, Ber nard Whitelield, Ira Ward, George Harper, Paul Crabtree, Dwight Price, . Bob Hogan, Syd Alexan der, Earl Somers, Neil Luxon, Bernice Ward, Walt Baueom; Cro well Little,- Mrs. Harold Watters, and Miss Elisabeth Branson. Ex officio members of the board by their local offices will be UNC Chancellor W. B. Ayccck, /sday cees - A*eesi#nt \ Tom Udferery, Chapel, m - Mayor BapdyvAtc Clampoch, Garrboro Mayor C* T, Ellington, and ■ -Grange ■ County Ccmmissioner Harvey Bennett. At next weed's meeting lots the group had 168 charter mem fears. The charter memberships will be held open through Mon s4«y,- ©ec. 2, Mr. 4ugu*tine ! -Te«oced. an Community Chest While not all pledges and contributions to the (our C’s drive have been received or tabulated, it appears that it may trice longer to meet the «uota of *44,000 than had been anticipated As of late yesterday a total of $20tb»o~a ihad been turned in. V i Divided eripinrily into lour main prmipo, the rrionw break Quota ~ Pledged PercowUpe Residential Area $15,500 $11*406*54 «% -Business Area 12,000 * 5,284.00 - j 48% Main Campus „ 8.000 4,344.57 /■ 79% Health Affairs 7,500 4,990*04 87% Totals . 43,000 Q9J83A45 49% There have been a few reports from- residents who have not received solicitations. Everyone iiv the community was to have been given the opportunity to contribute. If^there arf any families that have not yet bepn ^pQEQagAed, they were urged to call Mrs. J. D. iWebb, Secretaryyof the UHapel HillCarrboro Community Chest, at 887-708ik<hriweep 8:30 a,m. «pd 3:80 p.m. to arrange- the pledge. “Nin^paiorcactivttMS i*Hthe community benefit from the Chest. Unless the full quota - is reached, it may be necessary for one or i*q*rn of theso^activ.ties to conduct individual campaigns, something that all concerned wish to avoid,” a drive official said. quota Sponsors assure . . 'Beat Dook' paradeTriday '.will be clean' A scrupulously - clean "Beat Dook” parade will be staged in Chapel Hill tomorrow at 3 p.m. The traditional parade sponsor, ed by Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity, will have .31 floats entered in com petitive judging. Mindful of strong community reaction against and University administration censure of obscene motives in last year’s float entries, fraternity officials said .that a committee would twice examine and clear for entry all floats in the parade. The march will form on Ra leigh Rd. beside Woollen Gymna sium and proceed, down Raleigh St. to E. Frankiin, thence.. «wst through mid-town south on Co lumbia St., and through toe cam pus on E. Cameron-Ave, In..addi tion to the floats the parade, will include tthe Lincoln .High, - Air Force, and' NavycROTC bands, and a spedal float for the “Beat, Dook” Queen. She’ll be selected by judges from the five coed fi nalists—Joanna Houston, Jeanne Yeager, , Nancy . Pruett, Susan High, and Joye Cain. for shotgun suicide victim (Funeral services for Anthcny Lynch of Chapel Hill, who follow ed his son in suicide by shotgun here recently, were cotidacted Monday afternoon at the New Hope Presbyterian Church Ceme tery. Father Francis J. Murphy of the Chapel of St. Thomas More conducted the graveside rites. The body of Mr. Lynch, 61, was discovered about 3 p.m. last Sun day in the Green Point woods be low Gimghoul Castle in Chapel Hill Coroner AUen Walker Jr. ruled that he committed suicide approximately a week earlier by! shooting himself in the head with a single blast from a .12 ,gauge shotgun that . was found across the body. His son, Thomas Lynch, t-wk bis own life in a similar manner at Christmas time in 1961 at nis trailer park home in the New Hope community. ? There was no explanation . of the elder Mr. Lynch’s death in scant identification papers found in his clothing. A hospital out patient card gave his address as that of the Durban! County home in Sherwood Forest of the widow of his late son, now living in another state. However, after en tering the?e premises on Monday, officers reported that nobody ap peared to have lived in the home in quite some time. Chapel Hill police said they had not been able to confirm anybp^s having spen . Mr.. Lynch in mote than three weeks. He had no known relatives, and was understood to have., moved here about lo years ago from Illinois to live with his son. Fraternity clothing thefts are cleared up as youth confesses A series of clothing thefts from University fraternities,, earlier this year was cleared up this week with the arrest of a High Point youth, according to Chapel Hill Policy Detective Howard Pen dergraph. He said that Numa Charles Crawford, 20, had admitted par ticipation in night-time robberies at the Tau Epsilon Phi, Delta Kappa Epsilon, Pi Kappa Phi, and Sigma Chi fraternity houses - in Chapel Hill, along with, several others who have not yet been ap prehended Charged with felon- * ious breaking, entering, .larceny, Crawford is currently in jail in Greensboro pending settlement of another charge. Sgt. Pendergraph said he was linked to the local robberies through clothing found in his pos session when he was recently ar rested in High Point. Nearly $600 worth of elsthing and other per sonal articles has already been recovered, the officer said. morning hour, 311 out-bound at the peak afternoon hour. U. S. Hwy. 15-501 at Chatham County line, 229 in-bound at the . peak morning hour;; 248 out-bound at the peak afternoon hour, N. C ’Hwy. 54 1.5 miles west of Carr boro, 446 in-bound at the peak hour, 435 out-bound at ak ifterpoon hour; Pitts, feet south of Man; ®ing Drive.. 401 northbound at the .peak morning hour, 404 south bound at the peak afternoon hour.
The News of Orange County (Hillsborough, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Nov. 21, 1963, edition 1
2
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