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TWO
CHAPEL HILL NEWS LEADER
If/ Durham Helps To Pass
lompromise Atomic Bill
lenying that it was a “give
jly” but admitting he did not
everything in the measure,
presentative Carl T. Durham of
iapel Hill helped the compro-
se atomic enei’gy bill to pass
le House in Washington Mon-
h-
' He was the only Democrat to
ign the conference report design-
id to get rid of differences be
tween the House and Senate bills,
le gave as his reason the necessi-
Ity of dealing with “the problem
we face today in the international
' field.”
Durham argued that the com
promise bill would preserve the
government monopoly of fission
able material, but pointed to the
provisions regarding patents as a
a possible source of weakness.
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Pointing to the need for an ex
change of atomic information with
our allies, Durham said it was
nothing but common sense and de
cency to cooperate with countries
such as England.
“It has been said, and I rightly
think so, that seven atomic weap
ons could destroy the British
Isles,” he told the House.
Thus it is easy to see why those
people are worried. The measure
that is now worked out, he as
serted, provides the cooperation
that is necessary to the free
world’s defense.
Domestic factors in the legis
lation as it passed the House have
been labeled a “giveaway” of the
potential public power benefits
and patent rights to special inter
ests.
That is one of the reasons for
'Foolishness' And 'Disappointing'
Prof. Debunks Theory Hamlet Edition Buried
By Shakespeare Beneath Castle Of Elsinore
wedge eere
By ED YODER |if not of every day or week, cer-j “Elesennre Laede
This June, Ib Melchior, an ama-' tainly of every year of Shake-1 aamleet edeeasen.”
teur British cryptanalyst, shouted speare’s life after he completed] In spite of the well-known lib- i nual summer retreat of the Council
what must have been a near e- “Hamlet.” And there are no rec-ierlies of Elizabethan spelling, the of Presbyterian Men of the Synod
Race Ruling
Is Meet Topic
“The Christian Church and the
Supreme Court’s Ruling on Racial
Segregation” will be one of
chief topics of discussion at tne an-
quivalent of Archimedes’ Eureka! ords of sub rosa expeditions to professor said, this spelling leans
He decided he had decipered a Denmark to bury manuscripts or | too far toward the bizarre side to
hidden message in William Shake- first editions. j be interpreted as “Elsinore laid
speare’s weird epitaph and the ' Shakespeare, in fact, knew that wedge here Hamlet edition.”
decision led him off to a frenzied his plays had already been pub-{ The professor was of the opin
digging expedition under Elsinore' lished in printed form for poster!- : ion that the whole thing runs in
of Catawba at Camp New Hope:
this Friday and Saturday. It is j
expected to draw delegates from |
throughout North Carolina and
part of Virginia.
The schedule opens with regis-
— the castle in Denmark where ty. He could have seen, and prob- llike vein to the “Bacon Controver-'ti-ation at noon Friday, and includes
Shakespeare’s play, “Hamlet”, was ably did see, the 1608 edition* of j sy” — between bona fide Shake- j a worship service and discussion
laid. Melchior claimed that, Hamlet which bore his name over i speareans and some who hold that period during the aftei’noon.
through a logical cryptogarm, he _ his picture on the title page. j Sir Francis Bacon wrote the plays, j The panel discussion on the
The strange epitaph, which sent j Other contentions say that peers Supreme Court ruling, scheduled
Melchior on his .adventure, reads: | of th» time, among them the Earls ' foi- Friday night, will be Trioder-|
Oxford, migE' ated by Woosley W. Hall of Wash-'
had shown that an edition of
“Hamlet” is buried in a wedge-
shaped subterranean chamber un
der Elsinore. The story is related
in a recent issue of Life Magazine.
A University English professor,
who asked not to be named, had
stand taken against a concise total evaluation of the
the strong
that phase
quarters.
While he said he did not like ' disappointing.”
The whole question in his mind
of the bill in some: whole business: It was “foolish-
Iness” he said — and “singularly
everything in the measure, the
I charge which has recently been
made on^the radio and in the
press that this bill constitutes a
giveaway, Durham said, “is sim
ply not true.”
Prevent Giveaway
The legislation, he contended,
provides a program, which if prop
erly executed and carried out by
the executive branch of the gov
ernment, will prevent a giveaway.
“There will be some who will
argue that it is a giveaway, but as
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SAKE forbeare
To digg THE Dust En-
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Blese be THE Man Tliat
spares These Stones
And Curst, be He That
moves my Bones.
The odd interspersion of
:aps
I of Darby and of
have written Shakespeare. 1 ington, D. C. Mr. Hall is first vice
I But a great Shakespearian schol-1 j.}jairman of the Citizens Advisory
lar once tweaked the noses of the Council of the Commissioners of
I apocryphal controversies by prov- jjjg District of Columbia.
|ing that a menu, for a dinner he other members of the panel
iwa.s attending, was written by
j Shakespeare.
Richard Ml By Elizabeth
he said, was “why?” Why would i
Shakespeare want to have an edi
tion of “Hamlet” buried under.
Elsinore — any more than he I
wiuld have buried a copy of “Mac
beth” under Dunsinane or of “Ju
lius Caesar’” under the Roman
Forum?
His Favorite Play?
Melchior’s explanation in the
article is that Shakespeare consid
ered “Hamlet” his favorite play.
But the English professor count
ered that there is little, if any,
evidence of that. Furthermore, he
said, an account could be given.
and lower case letters, which a-!
To illustrate what you could
roused the crpytanalyst’s curiosi-' r^ad into Shakespeai’e, the protes-
ty was not necessarily rare in E-i®°'' concluded, he once wrote a
lizabethan times, according to the ' burlesque scholarly article prov-
evidence,
I professor. There is no
either, that Shakespeare himself
wrote the epitaph.
Jumble Of Words
Yet from the regularity, or ir
regularity, of placement of the
capital letters, Melchior, after
years of work got this jumble of
words:
long as this government owns and
controls every gram of fissionable
j materials, the duPonts or any oth
er concern in this country can
build a reactor to the sky, but it
is not worth two cents without
that material,” he said.
“Any cooperative and any duly
authorized government agency can
produce and sell atomic power if
it gets the license to do so,” he
declared.
Pearson's View
Drew Pearson in his syndicated
column appearing Tuesday wrote:
“The question that chiefly snarl
ed the closed-door conference de
bate over the atomic energy con
trol bill was the control of pat
ents. This sounds technical, but it
goes to the root of the question
of whether your children or a few
big corporations will monopolize
atomic energy in the next genera
tion.
“At present the U. S. govern
ment controls all the patents on
atomic energy—606 of them. Some
Congressmen, led by Chet Holi-
field of California, want some
kind of public control for the fu
ture — in other words control for
the next generation.
“In the secret debate, however.
ing that Shakespeare’s “Richard
11” was composed by a woman—
and that woman was Queen Eliza-
zeth.
North Carolina’s flue-cured to
bacco crop is e.xpected to be
slightly larger this year than
last.
will be Julius T. Douglas of Greens
boro, Prof. Joseph Straley of
UNC Physics Department, the Rov.
Miss Jolee Fritz of Greensboro,
N. T. Williams of Danville, Va.,
and Charles Freeman of Raleigh.
iThe principal address Friday
night will be delivered by the Rev.
John H. Marion of Bon Air, Va.,
acting minister of the Community
Church here this month.
Saturday’s schedule includes an
address by Leigh M. Kagy, a mem
ber of the executive committee of
North Carolina Presbyterian Men.
Another panel discussion on “Mak
ing Our Religion Real” will fol
low. The retreat will end with com
munion and worship services Sat-
ui'day night. Interested persons
from Chapel Hill are invited to
attend.
James Street To Talk At Writers Meeting
BUR-MILL INCOME DOWN
The purchase of Pacific Mills
James Street, Chapel Hill au-
‘thor, will be the principal speaker
•at the third annual News and Fea
ture Writers Conference to be held
at the University Saturday, Sept.
11. Mr. Street will speak at the;
dinner session at the Carolina Inn
that night at 7 o’clock.
The tentative program was an
nounced today by Jim Parker,
Chatham News, Siler City, and
Prof. Stuart Sechriest, Chapel Hili,
and the School of Jortz
Registration will 1
in Carroll Hall.
and Goodall-Sanford by Burlington ;conference chairman and
"Francis," moviedom'i talkir^Amule, stars in his funniest pic
ture yet in "Francis Joins The Wacs," which opens Saturday at the
Varsity Theater. Others featured in the Universal-International movie
are Donald O'Connor, Julia Adams, Chill Wills, Mamie Van Doren,
Lynn Bari, and Zasu Pitts.
Mills did not figure in the latter’s
financial report issued yesterday.
The corporation reported a net in
come of $5,594,000, equal to 67
cents a common share for the nine
months ending July 3. For the
seert-
like period a year ago the figures g^Qj.,gg
were $6,611,000 and 80 cents a ’
share.
Sales for the nine months to
taled $243,532,000, compared with
$276,071,000 a y^ar earlier.' The
•tary, respectively. This year’s con
ference will include a critici.sm of
news stories by Norval Neil Luxon,
Dean, University School of Jour
nalism; a symposium on “What
Feature Editors Like In Feature
corporation’s income tax bill was
$6,288,000 in the recent period as
compared to $8,693,000 in the same
nine months last year.
CARRBORO Social And Versonal
and a discussion of the
libel laws and the reporter’s re
sponsibility in court reporting led
by James C. N. Paul, of the Uni
versity Institute of Government
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FIRST LOCAL SHOWING
When N. C. State plays the Uni
versity of North Carolina here
Sept. 25, it will be the first North
Carolina appearance of the Wolf-
pack under the direction of new
coach Earle Edwards. The Wolves
open the season the week before
against Virginia Tech at Blacks
burg, Va.
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Congressman Sterling Cole, New'day night, August 4, at 11:30 fol-
York Republican, battled hard to lowing three years of declining
wipe out future control and per
mit the corporations to begin tak-
LUXTON DEATH | dinner on the grounds at the noon
Mr. John Virgil Luxton, 80, of hour was thoroughly enjoyed by
all present. The Rev. Caldwell Wil
ing out atomic patents immediate
ly-
“Senator Bricker of Ohio, anoth
er Republican, agreed with him.
In fact, Bricker was even more
stubborn than Cole. Siding with
them were Van Zandt of Pennsyl
vania and HinsHaw of California,
Republicans, with Durham of
North Carolina, Democrat.”
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Glen Lennox Gets
'Valley' Drive-In
“The
Glen
A new drive-in theater.
Valley,” will open in the
Lennox area in the early fall.
The outdoor show, to be located
on the east side of the intersec
tion of the bypass and Durham
highway, will be operated by J W.
Thompson of Chapel Hill, veteran
theater manager in this vicindy.
Mr. Thompson’s new theater will
be equipped to show cinemascope
films. Other concessions to be
opened in connection with the
theater will include an aiv-condi-
tioned restaurant. The manager
plans also to supply playground
equipment, with train, merry-go-
round and other rides for the addi
tional entertainment of young
children.
liams brought an inspiring mes
sage at the afternoon service, and
health. Funeral services were j for that service also the church
held Friday affternoon at 3 o’- was well filled with members, for
elock from the Zion Christian
and friends. Everyone is invited
to evening services this week.
Church in Lee County of which he
was a member. Mr. Luxton is sur
vived by his wife, Mrs. Fannie
Smith Luxton, seven daughters, PERSON..4LS
Mrs.^ Arthur Ellis, Pittsboro, Mrs. j ]\jj-. and Mrs. Donald Peninger
Cliff Moore, Spring Lake, Mrs. and jvir. and Mrs. Aubrey Harw'ard
mer members, of the community
Thomas Potter, St. Joseph, Mis
souri, Mrs. Bernice Kelly, Mrs. Ed
ward Wicker, Mrs. Rex McLeod,
and Mrs. Joyner Williams, of San
ford; seven sons, Coy, of Durham,
Fred, of Bahama, Huep of San
ford, Louis of Chapel Hill, Curtis
of Lumberton, Jesse and Hayden,
of the home, one brother, Charlie,
of Rt. 4, Sanford, a large number
of nieces and nephews and twenty
grandchildren.
JONES DEATH
Lonnie C. Jones, 64, of Glenn
Raven, father of Mrs. Leon King,
of Carrboro, died last Wedne.s-
day, Aug. 4. Funeral services were
held on Thursday from the Glen
Raven Methodist Church with ser
vices in charge of Rev. Frank Shu
ler, and the Rev. S. E. Elmore.
HARRELSON REUNION
Fifty one members of the Har-
relson family were present last
Sunday at a family reunion of
Mrs. I, F. Hardee’s family held at
the Hardee home here on Gi’eens-
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boro Street. A dinner was held on
the lawn as a family picnic. Mem
bers v,-ere present including Mrs.
Hardee’s two brothers,* Oliver Har-
relson and Mayo Harrelson, and
others from Fayetteville, Stedman,
Roxboro, Norfolk,' Va., Hillsboro,
Yanceyville, and the nearby area
here.
The annual Hardee Reunion will
be held on next Sunday, August
15, at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Bill Hardee, on Weaver Street in
Carrboro.
and family have returned from a
week’s vacation spent at Cresent
Beach, S. C.
Bucky Vickers has returned to
his duties with the U. S. Coast
Guard at Norfolk, Va., after a
leave of several days here with
his wife and his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. T. Wickers. ,
Mrs. J. B. Powers and Mrs. Joe
Dickens of Moncure were guests
last weekend to Mr. and Mrs. Otis
Neville. On Sunday afternoon the
party attended the homecoming
services at Antioch Church.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Holloman
i of Hope Mills visited relatives
here last weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Isaac Durham and
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Doster and
family were visitors in Rocky
Mount last weekend. The party
drove to Rocky Mount to return
Tommy Leigh to his home there’
after his visit here of seveal
weeks.
Avery Andrews has been spend
ing the past week in Pulaska, Va.
Mrs. Andrews and* the children
who have been spending the past
two weeks with her mother, Mrs.
K. S. Manuel, in Pulaski returned
home with Mr. Andrews on Sun
day.
Johnny Johnson, HI, of New
port News, Va., has been spending
the past several weeks here with
his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs.
Talmage Johnson.
Mr. and Mrs. Jess Taylor and
Mrs. Nellie Williams were mem
bers of a party who spent the
past weekend at Carolina Beach.
Mr. and Mrs. Ashwell Harward
and children. Miss Roxada Har
ward and Bobby Williams remain
ed all last week at Carolina Beach.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Shelton and
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ily. Their daughter Sandra Shel
ton, who had been spending the
past week here, returned to Nor
folk, Va., on Sunday with the
family.
Those attending the homecom
ing services from Carrboro at the
Antioch Baptist Church last Sun
day included Mr. and Mrs. Clai-
bourne Oakley and family, Mr. and
Mrs. Ira Mann, Michael CJark,
Mrs. Nancy Glenn and family and
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Bradshaw.
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ANTIOCH HOMECOMING
The Antioch Baptist Church was
filled to overflowing last Sunday
for the annual homecoming of
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