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Chapel Hill News Leader
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Leading With The News in Chapel Hill, Carrboro, Glen Lennox and Surrounding Areas
No Park/^ ;parking
The proposa’ terves ap-
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proval—savi study,
also nee^s paal.
Page 'Pvo ^
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PAGES THIS ISSUE
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CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1955
$4.50 The Year By Mail
OPLE
Brief
01
ledskins
NELL'.
s;%i
dren/s^
eai
duringi
)n all
finevill
>991
92il
JUSTICE WILL BE
fill be with the Wash-
again this season,
in’tibe on the playing
assist Jim Gibbons in
df^he Redskins games
for Amoco.
JUSTICE, the ATOs'
dlierpnd one of the mo-
,tie-year last spring, is
terof the t'jp prize drawn
at [Huggins Hardware’s
fening. She got a Cosco
i chair set. Ne.xt best prize
Jersal coffeniatic coffee-
to student Jeff Corbin
[irahani Dormitory.
PRIZEWINNERS AT
«ins (opening were Mrs.
[B. Cobb, Mrs. Charlene
J.!S. Williams, Millard
‘Robert Phelps, Mrs. Ola
Mrs. A. M. Whitehill,
dsonjDr. David Hawkins,
Allen Kingman, W. W,
[Miss [Martha Jones, Mrs.
[cGuire, Claude Wheeler,
4rs. Mark Burnham,
3, Mrs. Baldy Wil-
liry B. Pierson, Mrs.
t, [Mrs. Grover Bush,
I^rker, John Howie,
JH. Jones, Mrs. Dan
(G. R. Brown, Mrs.
Susan Andes, and
old McCuydy.
JaCYEES — ABOUT 25
hafe formed a conven-
with the local Junior
an! they’re planning to
earn money by various
I this year in order to
and fly to their na
tion in Kansas City
ndy McClamroch is
10 group.
T. PORT, A UNI-
was shaken up
ed this morning after be-
, a car as she crossed the
l.he|main corner down-
lie driver of a pick-up
.was turning right across
id
lure
Hiring Of Policewomen IsSuggested
The employment of women as
leputized members of the police
-orce to relieve regular policemen
n regulating traffic at local
schools has been proposed to the
Ooard of aldermen.
Both the board and the Parent-
Teacher Association, through which
t was suggested the women be
■ecured, seem to faVor the idea
on preliminary considteration of
t. Alderman William M. Alexan
ier forwarded the idea at the re
cent meeting of the , board, and
Town Manager Thomas D. Rose
las since contacted Chapel Hill
Parent-T'Cacher Association Presi-
.lent A. K. King.
The women would have full au- j ty Student Affairs Dean Fred
-hority as law enforcement offi- i Weaver to increase the $1.00 park-
cers during theii’ part-time duties ing fine to $2.50 per infraction,
at the beginning and end of school: Repairing of broken . window
each day. They would relieve the ' panes at the Negro Community
tour policemen—all that are on
duty during the day shifts—for ^
their regular duties. j
Also at their Monday evening
meeting the board voted to change
ihe date of the weekly Chapel Hill
Recorder’s Court from Tuesday to .
VIonday beginning today as an ac-'
comodation to highway patrolmen
who a.e generally off duty on
Tuesdays. |
The aldermen heard but took no ■
action on a request from Universi-
Center .was authorized. In a formal
hearing before the meeting, the
board approved the re-zoning from
residential to commercial of prop
erty on the bypass highway where
M. M. Fowler wisihes to erect a
service station. C. M. Mayse was
denied a request to operate an in
dependent taxicab, while Thurman
Atkins, representing Hollywood
Cab, was granted permission to
add one mpre vehicle to his fleet
of five.
first In 11 Starts
Wildcats Look Good In 20-0 Win
ffttes,
Co-Captains Ciyde Campoell and
Gene Smith
f -ASl' ''’.JJ
; to yiCTcr'
SERVICES V/ERE
' afternoon at 2:30 at
/Hill Baptist Church for
[• .Sadler Cleveland, who
[er 3 at the home of
ijMrs. Floyd H. Ed-
pv. Samuel T. Habel,
j and the Rev. R. J.
fciated. John H. Crab-
fsolo accompanied by
finsor, organist. A
[Ibermarlc, Virginia,
Slaijd, 99, was daughter
ist minister. She had been
lerested in the com-
^Jl926 when she came
makS her home with her
' the TEN AMERICAN
whose release is promised
’hii^and on whom a “re-
P_ha*‘been i.ssued is Wal-
. tt, 34, a Fulbright
faiii |Se;,ttle whose wife,
as ffrmerly a UNC coed,
frped last February. The
kickett says he was
lo'a term of .six years
Ting Chinese military
itelligence ... his be-
to be fairly good.”
In a decisive 20-0 victory over
Dunn here Friday, the Chapel Hill
-Tigh School Wildcats won their
irst game in the last 11 starts.
Coach Bob Culton’s charges
'.bowed a lot of spirit throughout
he n,m-conference contest under
he lights at Carrboro Lions Park,
scoring a touchdown each in the
second, third, and fourth periods.
Vt no ■ time in the game did the
visiting team produce a scoring
threat. The game was delayed an
nour because of trouble with the.
ights but a crowd of several hun
dred remained in the- stands. I
This Saturday night the Wlidcats
vill face Northern High School of'
Durham County at Durham Athlet- j
c Park in their third game of the
leason. Northern lost to Hillsboro ■
YDC To Pick Officers '
This Friday Evening
line annual elections meeting of
■he Orange County Young Demo
crats Club will be held this Fri
day evening at 8 o’clock in the
County Courthouse at Hillsboro,
■ t was announced today by YDC
President William S. Stewart.
At that time the Orange dele
vention in Durham on September
'29, 30, and October 1 will also be
elected, the President said. All i jimmy Turner who made a
interested Democrats, as well as
club members, were urged to at
tend the meeting by Judge Stew
art. i a clipping penalty. Tommy Good
rich kicked both of the extra
points.
The team looked good all-
around in Friday’s play and many
of the early season reserves will
likely find themselves alternating
it starting berths, according to
Coach Culton. Charlie Todd at cen-
ler and Paul Cheek at end both did
well in substituting for Richard
Gunter and Wayne Poe who were
out for the game.
“If the boys will keep on im- 1
proving and working hard and I
not be satisfied with just winning
one ball game,” said Coach Culton,
”1 think they’ll really do all right.”
ligh Winds
From lone'
Hit Town
Ciusl)' winds from
the edge
of fleeting Hnrneane
13-21 last Friday, but has been
an improving team this year.
In the high point of the game
Co-Captain Ciyde Campbell, top
ping an 80-yard scoring drive in
the second quarter and on fourth'
down with 13 to go, ran over the '
goal behind good blocking from I
the 17-yard line. j
In the third period Gene Smith, ’
Ruffin : Harville, Campbell, and I
Tommy Goodrich each pai-ticipated
in a 59-yard scoring drive. Smith '
hit pay dirt oh an eight-yard run, I
- -JG
the final quarter,
Longest run of the game was by
beau
tiful 75-yard punt return for a
touchdown that was called back on
Scientific Assembly
Is Planned Each Week
The Department of Psychiatry
has announced plans for a weekly |
scientific assembly to be held dur- j
ing the academic year for all fa- 1
cultv members and students. r
^ VII—Shown with his guardian, Glenn Hogan, at his home at the Hogan farm on
HERE'S RA/V^^j y||^ Carolina's new mascot and son of Rameses VI .who died earlier this month.
Route Two is R^^^ will be formally christened at the Oklahoma game this Saturday.
The 18-month-r _ News Leader Photo
Father Sept. 10 . . .
Timeses VIT Is To Be Christened
ti Ceremonies At Game On Saturday
lone
were estimated at slightly ov-
er So miles an hour early this
afternoon, and the Weather
Bureau at Raleigh - Durham
Airport said they might reach
70 miles at times.
However there -were no re
ports of damage locally, and
the sustained winds barely sur
passed 30 miles an hour. With
little rain accompanying the wind,
business activity and public school
and University classes were con
tinuing as usual.
TDe Red Cross Disaster Com
mittee headquarters was set up in
the board room of the Town Hall
wih Harvey Daniell, a committee
sub-chairman, manning the post in
the absence of Committee Chair
man Roland McClamroch. He re
ported at 1 p.m. that there ‘had
been no calls for assistance, but
that the Committee was remaining
ready for action.
Also in the Town Hall Fire
Chief J. S. Boone called all regular
firemen on duty early this morn
ing an readied the department’s
auxiliary power generator for use
in the event of an electricity fail
ure.
While the streets were littered
with natural debris there were no
reports of fallen trees.
WUNC Going
Back On Air
Wednesday
The first meeting will be heir Jameses VII—a direct descen-
Wednesday at 8 p.m. in the Schr j
of Nursing Auditorium. John^
Sen. Wm. Knowland To Speak
Here Wednesday Next Week
U. S, Senator William F. Know- j um, announced today that Sen
land (R-Calif.) has been announced j Knowland will visit the campus
as the first speaker in the Caro-I'Wednesday, September ,28 and
lina Forum’s annual series of pub-j speak that night at 8:1.5 in Hill
lie addresses by political, educa-jHall, in a speech open .to the pub-
tional and economic leaders of the j lie, and will also appear on tele
world, who visit the University of vision and attend a dinner in his
dant in a line of Carolina mascots
, „ ,, for the past 33 years—will be for-
Gilli.L professor of anthropr’^^ I mallj christened in special rites
and research professor in tl^” I preceding this Saturday’s Carolina-,
1“'.. -fr- "I
'Klkd “An Anlhropolog*! IS montl.s-old ram, kept at
Of a Curing Shaman uiteh Doc- the Hogan farm on Route Two, is ^
tor). , ■ I scccessor to his four year-old fath- i
Christinas Season Plans Laid
By Merchants Trade Con7mittee
The University’s FM radio sta
tion will be back on the air Wed
nesday. WUNC, which has been
silent during the University’s re
cent vacation period, will resume
operlations with higher power and
an extended schedule.
m I I BxB jL® . ed'horns; Karrieses .VII is a^hpri’ttCfi'l 'fhe siatt-sn 'wiil ■•inau.gurate ■ its
1^0TiOnS'i animal of about 120 pounds fajj broadcast season with a four-
day “Festival of Music,” featuring
er, Rameses VI, who died in ser- j by a whack over the horns with a
vice at the farm on September 10.; bottle of “some appVo.priate liij-
The fresh mascot will be formally I uid,” according to his guardian
ushered in as the spirit of the i Glenn Hogan, who’s taken care of
fighting Tar Heels football team Carolina’s rams for 27 y.ears.
I Newdy-decked but in blue paint-j
North Carolina campus.
Tom Lambeth, a junor from
Winston - Salem, and 1955 - 56
chairman of the nonpartisan For-
1
F September 19
• Oa.kvicw Garden Club
Poland McClamroch,
f^oach Road.
September 20
|"'■^hapol Hill Concert
%(1 Meeting, Graham
September 21
_ (Scientific Assembly,
‘ ursing Auditorium. I
h- lAstronoiny Club,
F building, I
September 22 j
B’rith, HiHel'
MmTalTTTd
^5*gister of patients
*1 Hospital includes ^
Lp Batchelder, Mrs.
f ■ ^odenheimer, W. L.
f »lolph Dewalt, Carl C. i
Tp . Edwards, Miss Ella I
P fnest King, Mrs. Flossie '
n Mason, Floyd Pearce, •
Poole, Dr. Arthur!
L, 1 bowman, Dr. Louis'
Lizzie Whitted.!
, 1
Building Code
Violation
Is Charged
Building Inspector P. L. Burch
ha.s charged a local contractor with
violating the Chapel Hill Building
Code by leavings, building materials
on a public street.
Paul Roberts, according to the
warrant drawn for trial in the
Chapel Hill Recorder’s Court, is
alleged to have unloaded his
building material on Westwood
Drive where he’s recently started
building a house. The building in
spector said that bricks, sand, and
mortar boxes have been unloaded
and left in the street for over a
week in front of the Roberts pro
ject. He said that Mr. Roberts did
not heed repeated warnings to
move the materials, and that the
warrant was thus drawn and sei -
ved last Monday noon.
Residents of the Westwood area
complained that the sand stretched
nearly half-way across the street
and one man said he nearly wreck
ed on the sandpile.
Mr. Burch said he baseed the
charge on Section 57 of the Build
ing Code which states in part
that “outside matei’ials and equip
ment shall not be stored in any
street except by special permis
sion of the building inspector and
under such conditions as he may
impose .. ■”
honor while in Chapel Hill.
Senator Knowland’s appearance
will open the 20th series of out
standing national and international
speakers On the UNC campus, the
seventh, year under Forum spon
sorship.
Plans for the opening of the
Christmas shopping season in the
community are already being made
by the Trade Premotions Commit
tee of the Merchants Association.
The group has voted to set the
date of the start of the season on
Monday evening November 28, or
as soon thereafter as arrangements
for the Christmas parade to be
staged on the opening day will
permit. Committee Chairman Joe
Robbins is investigating Lie var
ious possibilities for rental of
floats to be ased in the parade.
It’s expected these would be
sponsored by individual merchants
in most cases.
In addition the community sing
ing festival in front of the Merch
ants Association office downtown,
with the high school choir leading
Program Sef
For October 24
United Nations Day will be ob
served in the Community on Oc
tober 24 by individual group prog-
grams rather than at a single mass
[ event as has been the practice in
the past.
the singing, is expected to be held
again following'the early evening
parade. Santa Claus is to appear
both in the parade and at the
event afterwards.
annouced the
of
John D. Riebel, Chairman of
■ this year’s observance, today an
nounced plans for the occasion
that were made at the organization
j meeting of the UN Day Commit
The same iighis and ornaments tee on Friday evening. He also
that were used last year will again
be erected in the business district
of Franklin Street and along the
fir'ri blocks of Columbia Street.
Tom Rosemond was directed to
check over the large candle stand
ards and other illuminated orna
ments which he has stored for the
Association, and get them in shape
for erection.
with black face and legs. “I don’t
think he’ll butt,’’ said Mr. Hogan,
“but he’s a frisky young’un.” His
grandfather, the blue-ribbon win
ning Ramses V, was a present from
loyal Carolina alumni in Texas at
the time Raymond “Bear” Wolf
was coaching the Tar Heel teams.
' He died following the Duke game
I in ’51, “from eating too many cigar
I and cigarette butts and beer cans,”
[ according to his keepers.
1 Took Over In '52
appointment
j Dwight Rhyne as community-cam-
i pus coordinator for the committee
! and Jack Lasley as finance chair
man.
music throughout the five-hour
broadcast period each evening,
j Wednesday’s broadcast will mark
! the beginning of the fourth year
I of operation, the station having
first gone on the air regularly in
the fall of 1952.
This is the first year the station
has begun its schedule with its new
higher power of 15,500 watts. The
station’s frequency is 91.5 mega-
I cycles, which marks its location on
Rameses VI took over from his pjyj radio band,
famous sire at the 1952 games at , ^.yNC will extend its operating
age of seven months, and ' gghedule again this fall, according
to Station Manager John Young.
“The University students who
comprise the station’s operating
’ 4 ■
V’
/
/
/
./
He said that a booth would be
set up down town on UN Day at
which United Nations literature
would be given out. In addition
the UN flags- will be displayed
from the sidewalk standards in
the business di.strict. Literature
for various grades in all local
schools will be distributed and
UN displays will be sot up in stra
tegic paces in town and on the
ca.mpu.s.
All civic clubs and church
groups will be asked to have an
educational program on the United
Nations during the week, Mr. Rie
bel said.
the age of seven months, and '
traveled with !his bearded keeper, j
Bushy Cook, to Carolina games j
around the country, for several j
seasons. |
While the present ram is figured
to be a thoroughly legitimate mas
cot he’s a bit young for gridiron
service, according to the Hogans.
They’ve delegated Miss Jane
Hogan, daughter of Mr. and Mi's.
Henry Hogan and a WAC medical
technician at Fort Sam Houston,
to scout around and find another
top-notch ram to replace number
VH next season.
The tradition of having a ram
mascot at Carolina started when
Vic Huggins was head cheeileader
at Carolina in 1924. “State had
their wolf. Army its mule. Navy its
goat, and Georgia its bulldog”
(See RAMESES, Page 8)
staff unanimously approved a pro
posal to go on the air earlier each
evening,” said Young.
Wind in gust up to 70 miles
per hour this afternoon, expect
ed to diminish late afternoon
and evening. Expected low to-
Thursday
Friday
Saturday
Sunday
60s.
High
Low
Rainfall
81
67
.00
85
64
.00
84
58
.00
81
65
.00
3 %
JS/ Jt /
7 ^ /
/
/
' A' r ' - -
RIDGEFIELD LOCATION—The 29-acre Ridgefield development (cross-hatched area at right), sit
uated on the bypass highway east of town, lies about 200 feet north of the ''duckbill'' eastern limits of
town which touch the bypass at the intersection of Battle Brook and Bolin Creek, as outlined on the
above location map. Annexation of Ridgefield, as asked by its owners last week, presents several unus
ual problems in annexation which town authorities are now considering.
C. B. Robson Is Named
To National Post
Charles B. Robson, chairman of|
the Department of Political Science
at the University, was elected to
membership on the Council of the
American Political Science Asso
ciation at the 51st annual meeting
of that organization held recently
at Boulder, Coilo.
Prof. Robson participated in the
program of [lie meeting in a panel
discussion of the topic, “Political
Science and Political Analysis.”
Other staff members of the De
partment of Political Science at
tending the meeting in Boulder
were Professors Fredico G. Gil,
Robert A, Agger, Harry Scoble and
Frederick H. Harris. Prof. Gil par
ticipated in a panel discussion on
■'The Community Study of Political
Parties and Politics,” and Prof.
Agger read a paper on “The Com
parative Study of Political Behav
ior in Local Communities.”
HOPING TO WIN A PRIZE in the News Leader's final two-
weeks amateur photo contest, Milo A. Crawford of 73 Maxwell Road
submits this coastal landscape entry. There's just one more -week
left for entries in this final contest. All amateur camera fans are
invited to enter. No charge and valuable merchandise and cajsh
awards as prizes. Leave your entries at Foister's Camera Store or
mail to the News Leader, Chapel Hill. All entries may be retrieved
later.