Newspapers / The News of Orange … / May 21, 1964, edition 1 / Page 2
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(Educators and public officials from all over WOHh Carolina, led by Gov. Terry Sanford, wi'l honor Guy B. Philips of Chapel Hill at dedication ceremonies tills afternoon for the new junior high school that bears his name. The public is invited to attend (the 2:30 p.m. ceremonies at the $1 million 35-clssrocm school on Estes Drive. A dedicatory ad dress by Gov. Sanford will be*, the highlight of the StKmihute rites. i " Edwin W. Tenney Jr., Vice Chairman of the Chaipel Hill * School Board and chairman of j the program; said the Governor would be introduced by Univer sity President William C. Friday. A reception in the School Cafe teria will follow the dedication. Ilfie • Rev. Clyde McOarver of the University Methodist Church will give the invocation and the Rev? J-'Jt' Mtedley, metnher of the School Board, the benediction. Prof. Phillips, retired Dean of the University School cl Educa tion, is on—the: program fd? Re marks! '• • ■ ’State fttSfierals ejepected to* be present lor the occasion are Board ol Education Chairman Dallas Herring, Treasurer fjd^vin Gill, and CotoptroHef A:-C; Da vis. Deal Phillips’ four children, including ' Chari otte Mecklenburg Superintendent cf Schools Craig Phillips, will also be present. School Board members ■ and County and municipals officials will share the stage. ■ School Board Chairman Grey Culbreth will give the welcome and Dr. Howard Thompson, Su perintendent of- Scboofer wMtntee o@hize; the gufeirts.«l®asie wilfpw presented-bj^-fhe sehoors mixed chorus wider dirptjfia. of. Mrs Sylvia Friday, of apprecrsrthnt .given by 'Pritidipal Clyde PresSfey, PTA President Roy Moisten #111 make a apedial presentation^, _§ r Public invited to n house ‘tifiimn Dedication rites for the new Orange High School will be held Sunday alftemoon at 4 o’clock, during a two-hour* open house pe riod from 3 to f? p.an. The public is cordially invttfed to attend, inspect* theiww school facilities and enjoy the refresh ments and dedicatory program being .planned by a Commi ttee of parentsranischool officials. —.The high school band; will par 's icipate and Dr.'John Ott of the UNIC School of Education will de liver ithe dedicatory address. Pre ceding the address, former Bcbocl Beard member Charles Walker Jr. will tell the back ground of the school. The- Bov. Ed smith Will lead the devotion al. Supt. G. P. Carr will be mas ter of ‘cerefrtbnTes.-' " ~ Forming the receiving line for the on&Jtsion wHH&e tj^rriB5Ts"'6f the Orange Connty B&acd of Kd uoaMon, State Rep. Bd'lftwnlfn, I County Commissioners Donah} I Stanford' art#* Gordon ^Ctevefaftd, I PTA President Gordon Liner and sdiool leaders from various parts *of *he county, including Mrs. Pranle; iStpeae^1 and’ ifirs. Ervin ipiff * ft Wallace Murray and Aubrey Gra ham of Bfianid; Mrs. Harry Wal ker, Pleasant Green Community; Clarence D. Jones and Grady Brown cf yfSlsIbowittgfr; Mrs. Rae ford McKee of iCahtaeli, Iffrs. •James Snipes of WWte CrOfe) %nd Howard MOKee aftd *^1^1 Rogers Sr. of Cedar;: Grove. * County total—16,401 are signed up by registrars Almost 3,000 now votors have boon added to the registration books in Orange County, bring the new total to 16,401. ■ • These figures, released yes-1 terday by Board of Ri actions | Seeratary James W. Prothro, are about IS per cent over the total of 13,651 before the two week registration period that closed last Saturday. Actually, he pointed out, the new total is an increase of 2, 750 Over the previous figures. However there were 285 names removed from the books by the registrars in the 25 Orange vot ing precincts during this pe riod. Thus the number of new registrants was actually more than 3,000. Secretary Prothro noted that this also included persons who * simply moved from one precinct, to another and who changed party affilia • Hons. The breakdown of voters by ' parties in Orange County now ■ looks this way: Democrats — ' i 6/401; Republicans — 1,834; and independents—229. 'forties Revue' ) to be staged b% Exchangeites * The Exchange Club of Hills- j; borough will present "Forties Heyue" this Friday and Satur day nights at 8 p.m. in the Or-j' ange Senior High School Audi*; torium. "Fogies Revue" will feature all local talent, and the pro ceeds of this event will be pre sented to the Orange County School Bands. Admission charged will be available. There will be a dance'in the Orange High School Lobby im mediately dollowing the show on Friday fiigfhr only, and bach;' ticket holder will be admitted to the danca free. “SEKW'for id8ffs aod 59e rer students, and reserved seats are < A mAt^i session for tiie oral polio vaccine campaign, sponsor ed iby the Dunham-Orange Coun ■ty Mediear Foundation, will be MM for Orange County this Sat urday. afternoon from 2 till 4 * o'clock* in the UnWSrsity Iftftrtn • ary. (Dr. Rdfcert senior, chairman of ' <the drive for QiiaRge, noted that 23,510 persons received the sug a * eufbe doses? of -vaeOine at eight feeding stations in public schools Mroes the county last Sunday. Almost ail of these were second and final doses for initial vac *cines taken eight weeks earlier. —--|,n—n—MjjLj TttE NEWS OF ORANGE COUNTY Vol. 72, No. 21 May 21, 1904 Published Every Thursday lit The Year' By The News, In*. Subscription Rates Payable la Advance): In Orange and Ad ^ Joining Counties, $2:so, pfu* 3% Sales * Tax; OtHanwisr in ' O.' & $4; Overseas Sintered Aa Second €ftras> Mat Jar In The~ Poatofficta a* Mill* bortmgJ^aadChapelHill-, N.C ages, Dr. Senior «3^?eeted tMI the response for the seeoht^lM er “shot” would he elbout 26 per cent' less then fot the tkst amm. There were -just.over 25;0OO of the original dtses given iff fl ange County: Thu^rh^ nottedi the response ltet vW^end wgs^ttifelt ■greater than wape&eA. %£EV/. ■. , # • eor wits _3®it*raay>s session 1*666 vaccine have bee# purchased, Dr. Senior said. Prisons who wish to take their initial treatment this time may do so, paying the standard price of $ .50, then may , oflBItain the booster shot eight peeks later from their private physician, he said. ®lhe make-up session was ar ranged, he pointed put, in re sponse to “at least,509 calls from Prisons who -were out of tow# last weekend and missed out on this.” 1C. Volunteers Two college students from ■Ch*Pel Hilt hav#;' bttgii ngipied among l^tfstudents who .will work this summer as North Carolina Volunteers'; in the North Carolina Pund’B poverty fighting projects throughout the state. . They are Kathryn F. Calhoun, • student at Swart hmore College, s and Katherine H.-Parrish, stu .. dent at the University in Chap {■ The^^^ee^rarfa total of 750 applicants in col- ] leges all over the state and will start their 11-week service pe riod with a June 14-18 training session at Duke. i>" The Volunteers will work eleven weeks receiving room • and board and a $250 honora rium. .Some student teams will' live at college campuses near their work sites. Others will Jive in private homes in' the TOtatitninity. Precinct Circuit..) ... Xcighharhoad political trends and go.Siip . * -. WHOCP IT UP IN ^RALEIGH . ... There is a peculiar sort of intra-party harmony af the democratic; party convention in Raleigh every four years just Before tjie gubernatorial primary election. While, all of the party faithful who attend make out like they’re rest buddy-buddy at a pep rally, there’s an inevitable undercur rent of eiweasiness between the factions supporting iffaf Candidates iit the state'and county contests for office.-^Tlijs is a general observation in retrospect on yesterday’s1 bien nial Democratic party convention in Raleigh. CHANGE FARES WELL IN STATUS ... j The: fcandllSf; 0ra»ge came off well in- terms oh.jfejes'S tige at the Sixth District convention of Democrats in Ra loigh yesterday. -.Retired Congressman Carl Durhaih . a'gaiff- chosen 'as the District’s presidential elector lof the general elections this fall. He was elected to this post .four years ago, too, but had to step aside to avoid the double office-holding restriction, since he was in Congress then, rr: itntlectlonof national convention delegates at the -District caucus on Tuesday night the Guilford delegates asked that, an alternate be chosen for L. Richardson Prayer, named as one of their delegates. They noted that the Governor-nominate is always designated as e- / delegate-at-large* to the convention, thus thay were co.n* . fident that Preyer, certain to the the nominee, would go on that basis. .( ,. This request brought Orange County Chairman I* J,; Phipps to his feet with the observation that Orangey too,. had a candidate for Governor (Stansbury!) in the Dejno; cratic primary and similar action might well in in order, for that situation, tool PONDER NEW FIGURES ... The back-room boys will have a bit of chin-stroking to do oyer the huge new registration in Chapel Hill Towh^ ship this month, Of the 3,000 new registrants, over 2,000 were in the lb prepiilets of Chape! Hill Township. This.also increased the proportion of the total eligible electorate in Chapel Hill Township. —Of course those are strictly voters —on the-bookSf. and not votes in the ballot box! i Wf COMPfcAllSfjPiBN REJECTS ... ■"■"E* TherdSavelbieen no complaints formally Tiled on the “Better to i&te£4>at: according to ‘official records of the 'Bbard of Elections, there were 141 instances of persons being refused, registration by registrars during the imme diately past .registration period. Some of These were for failure iit the literacy test, others for failure to meet the h%sSIeflce ^dhairgmb* ts," etc. In the memory of local elec tion officials there have not been any instances or com plaints of registr»tionH?#£usals on the basis of racial preju dice. EMILY CHARMED 'EM . . . About 200 men and women alike ttimed out to meet Mrs. Emily Preyer at a reception in the Carrboro Town Hall last Thursday night. Emily Charmed one and all With ^"IBir^feryeg&ght and MVackras "personality; Her visit to Orange, 6h4 recalled, was the 88th county in which she’d 'Campaigneg'Th behalf of the- father of her five children. In beginning her impromptu 10-minute talk to the group shefoked about her speaking voice,'recalled that Kay Kyser once sold she "talked like' Mickey Mouse with a gas mask en." ' -Dari Moore was later than he planned getting over to the"‘Democratic coitvffftlon doings in Raleigh on Tuesday teiffeiaoPt The detey^ame as a. result of his-hand-shaking .jinfliet- through the <awpel- Hill business district. Hand shaking is of course one of the most fundamental and ef s feptive forms of politicking. There were slewing reports of the reectiens to the •tapper Dan's whirlwind walking four of tfee town. And as would be inevitable, there were some sour apples tossed by folks who Were overlooked. tAICE CANT SPEAK HERE? . . . ■ _ in keeping with its plan to sponsor talks on the UNC dfflfepus by all three major Democratic gubernatorial con tenders. the campus and County Yogpg Democrat Clubs • had hoped to get- Beverly Lake over to Orange for a speech. Moore and Preyer spoke on YDC-sponsored platforms ear r lier this year. ' r ::vz Wyilret primary voNhg dat* because of his .many other commitments. When contacted ear- ' liar Lake said ha was unable to come on any of sev eral possible dates proposed. POLITICAL PATTER ... The Democratic candidates absent from the party rally picnie at Hillsborough recently missed a good feed. But they also missed out on the $10 fee assessed all of the hopefuls-who chose to mount the platform for a three minute speech in their own behalf . . . Retired County Commissioner Dwight M. Ray of the Smith Level Rd. com munity Went to the hospital for surgery on April 30. But he returned to hi$ duties as Dogwood Acres Precinct registrar early this month. Republican gubernatorial candidate Don Badglay ^ was in Chapel Hilt making the- rounds recently. : —iHe didn't deign to visit this newspaper1 office-, but then he didn't lose any votes by sochoverMght. YDC President Bob Cooper re k Lake's campaign manager Allan , -varty would''be unable te speak
The News of Orange County (Hillsborough, N.C.)
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May 21, 1964, edition 1
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