A*, tvuv ^tvA:ii»OAit 'll 1^ I I ~~ Chapel Hill News Leader Leading With The News in Chapel Hill, Carrboro, Glen Lennox and Surrounding Areas Public Library Board Selects Name, Elects Mrs. Richmond Bond As Head , NO. 78 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, MONDAY, OCTOBER 6, 1958 SIX PAGES THIS ISSUE PASTOR INSTALLED — Father Francis J. Murphy, J. C. D., left, was installed Sunday eve- tor of the Catholic parish of St Thomas More in services at the church on Gimghoul Rd. Of- s Rt. Rev. Monsignor Herbert A. Harkins, center, rector of the Sacred Heart Cathedral in Ra- •legate of His Excellency, Bishop Vincent S. Waters. Guest speaker at the installation cere- The Rev. Francis M. Smith, right, pastor of St. Anthony's Church in Southern Pines. Father istant pastor here in 1947, is a native of New York City and an alumnus of Fordham Uni- (News Leader Photo) Founding Day Ceremony Set At UNC Saturday St. John's Seminary, Little Rock, Ark. n Streak To Five University Day, the comniieniora- tion of the physical founding of the University will again be celebrated here wi.th traditional pageantry Sat urday. October 12 is the actual anniver sary of the laying of the corner stone in 1793 of Old East—the Uni versity’s first building, but its oc currence on Sunday this year brings the celebration a day early. Gen. William R. Davie and other Revolutionary leaders who founded the University will be portrayed by members of the Carolina Play- makers in the reenactment of the cornerstone laying. The ceremony will begin at 11 a.m. Saturday on the steps of South Building. Chancellor William B. Aycock, who .will lead the assembly in the traditional memorial tribute, will be celebrating also his first year as head of the University in Chap el Hill. It was on Satirrday, Oct. 12, 1957 that he was officially in stalled as chancellor. The Men’s Glee Club, directed by Joel Carter, and the UNC Band, di rected by Herbert Fred, will have major roles in the celebration which traditionally ends with a pro fessional march to Davie Poplar for the program’s conclusion. Members of the University’s Board of Trustees and retired facul ty members will be special guests for the occasion which will be at tended by students, faculty, admin istrative personnel and visitors to the campus. Although 1793 saw the physical beginning of the University, its doors were not opened for over a year after that. It was on Feb. 12, 1795, that the first student, Hinton James, arrived in Chapel HUl. The University had been char tered in 1789, 13 years after the adoption of the Revolutionary State Constitution, which provided that “all useful learning shall be duly encouraged and promoted in one Or more universities.’’ ipel Hill Clips Hillsboro, IS At Undefeated Roxboro 'Doorbell-Ringing' Campaign For Chest Drive Set Nov. 3 OPLE Brief ATION WCHL’S TREAS- contest came to an morning when a Pitts- teacher. Miss Doris d up the $200 treasure itimate Bookshop. Had found it a few hours would have received . $100 -1 the deadline for as Saturday at 6 p.m.) has been giving out all, as to the money’s for several weeks, last ones was “our hlace is a spot for ghouls,’’ implying, ac. )no station official that draws the intellecuals. with strings (Kemp's), )ooks in the bookshop), (at the adjacent Dairy “hunt” ran into only . . one clue send hun- iasure seekers errantly mghoul area . . . and dn’t like it. HILL TOWN OFFICI- 1 working hard to get e mails for loeal pro 's and said today they “two-thirds” through gel them out this week, iisked whether they had ly complaints because So late, one clerk said: ? Who ever heard of for not getting bills?” ), Town Clerk Winslo'U' id today that he hasn’t working on Carrboro’s ermine the town’s valu- NG WILL BE HELD IN ednesday at 7 p.m. for rested in Cub Scouts, interested boys aged to BRIEFS, Page 6) Skeptics who believed Chapel Hill’s Wildcats have been riding along undefeated on a measure of luck are probably reconsidering their doubt today. Coach Bob Culton’s charges marked up their fifth straight vic tory of the season and their fourth without defeat jn District Three Eastern AA conference, by down ing strong and stubborn Hillsboro Saturday night on the latter’s home grounds, 13-0. The victory, attained on slow footing and after a day’s postpone ment because of steady rains Fri day, ended a long victory drought for the local Wildcats. They hadn’t teaten their north-county neighbors since 1949. Chapel Hill took the “Battle of Orange” after fighting their bigger Hillsboro adversaries to a 0-0 stand off for the first half and then strik ing twice w^hen the opportunity was there in the last half. Roxboro Next Next comes the biggest showdown of the season flor Chapel Hill. Their opponent here Friday night, in a game that’s bound to draw the 'season”s biggest crowd if the weather cooperates, will be with powerful Roxboro, which also has not dropped a game and is tied with the local team for the AA conference lead, Roxboro has buried everything in sight with a potent running game and a stout defense. Chapel Hill can run but, when the oc casion arises, is even stronger in the air. It shapes up as the “game of the year” for local prep school fans. An opportune fumble and a slunning pass proved Chapel Hill’s formula against Hillsboro. The two neighborhood rivals scrapped virtually to a standstill in the first tw'O' quarters, Hillsboro's big line containing Chapel Hill’s running and keeping the pressure on Chapel Hill’s ace passer, Subir Roy. At the same time, the lum bering Hillsboro attack was stalled by alert Chapel Hill defensive play. The turn of fortune that changed the game came shortly after 'half- time, when Hillsboro Quarterback Harvey Reinhardt bobbled and then fumbled the ball on a punt on his ow'n 15 yard line. Chapel Hill End Bobby Larsh quickly covered it. TD The Hard Way It took a while, but Chapel Hill made it. Fullback Bill Whitney banged for two off tackle, and Halfback Dave Henry cut for eight. Roy made a first down on the three, and then smacked over right tackle for the touchdown. Larry Crabtree’s try for the extra point failed. That was all the scoring until the final quarter, when it came like a thunderbolt. Roy spotted fleet halfback Charlie Hubbard in the open from his own 37 and hit him with a pass. Hub bard got behind the Hillsboro sec- (See CHAPEL HILL, Page 6) 11,000 ^Shell Cracker" Fish Put Into Two Orange Creeks londay, Oct. 6 ipel Hill Coilcert Se- 1 Warren, baritone, 1. ;ulty wives of School Administration meet- lall. sday, Oct. 7 miry Club luncheon. Ballroom. Administrative wives 'sity tea in honor of ^comers, Morehead hghborhood meeting leaders. United Con- aristian Church, udent Wives Club iker Dr. Robert Sen- illage Day Care Cen- iarrboro PTA room rep- workshop, Carrboro School. dnesday, Oct. 8 .—Chapel Hill Country ' party, open to in-town bhouse. Orange County Wildlife Protec tor Bob Logan said today that 11,- 000 shell cracker fish have been put into two county creeks to pro mote fishing in the areas. Mr. Logan said that 5,500 of the game fish have been put in Eno Creek for benefit of fishermen in the Hillsboro area, and 5,500 more in New Hope Creek for benefit of anglers in the Highway 86 area. The fish are said to be similar to bream but grow up to two pounds. The fish were brought here from the state’s hatchery at Fayetteville. A similar number of shell crack ers were put in the same creeks last year, Mr. Logan said. Meanwhile, the protector noted that the first half of the split dove season ended Saturday. . “The first part of the season in the county was very good, but the latter part wasn’t so hot,” Mr. Lo gan said. The second half of the season begins early in December. Two hundred and fifty Chapel Hillians will ring 2,500 doorbells during the Community Chest cam paign starting November 3. Mrs. Earl Wynn and Mrs. Harold Walters will lead them as co- chairmen of the residential area solicitation. “We couldn’t have two ’ better people for the job,” said Orville Campbell chairman of the chest drive. “The residential solicitation reaches more people than any oth er division, so is one of its most important phases.” The co-chairmen are both lead ers in Chapel Hill and state activ ities. “Their belief in the Com munity Chest, and their willing ness to work hard to assure its Homecoming Is 'Supposed' For Lincoln Lincoln High School is to play its Homec(>ming game here Thurs day night. Or is it? School officials could only say today that the homecoming activi ties are “supposed” to be held at the scheduled Lincoln-Monroe Ave. High School football game. “It all depends on whether our guests are coming,” a school spokesman said. It seems that transportation problems may force Monroe, of Hamlet, to forego the game, the official said. If they don’t come, he said, the homecoming activities will have to be held at a game later in the schedule. A decision on whether the game and the homecoming will be held was to be made later today. A queen will be selected by vote-selling when it is definitely decided. Lincoln boasts one of the most all-winning high school football teams in the nation, with 26 straight wins. Five of those wins have come this year, as Coach Willie Bradshaw's minions have al lowed only one touchdown. TATUM WILL SPEAK University Coach Jim Tatum will be the speaker at the Faculty Club luncheon to be held tomorrow at the Carolina Inn at 1 o’clock. Prof. George M. Harper is president of the club. MRS BOND Members of the Board of Trus tees of the new public library, who were appointed recently by the Board of Aldermen, met lor the first time last week. They elected officers, as required by North Carolina law, chose a name for the library, decided on quarters, appointed a librarian, and discussed other important matters. The officers elected are: Mrs. Richmond Bond, Chairman of the Board; Miss Cornelia Love, Sec retary; Gordon Perry, Treasurer. Other Board members are Mrs. Robert Wettach, Mrs. Carlyle Sit- terson, and George M. Harper. The name chosen for the new library is the Chapel Hill Public Library. . It will be located in the Hill House on Franklin Street, in first floor rooms at the east en trance. This is known to old- timers in Chapel HiM as the Bryan place; it is now owned by the Baptist Church. Mrs. Gerald MacCarthy has ac cepted the appointment as li brarian. Mrs. MacCarthy is a trained librarian of wide experi ence, which includes both uni versity and special libraries. The Board is now proceeding with plans for purchasing shelv es and other equipment. In addi tion to the town’s appropriation the Library is receiving $3,000 in federal funds for equipment and a basic collection of refer ence books. It is not yet possible to set a date for opening, but Mrs. Bond said the date may be .set at the board’s next meeting. Local Recreation Group Pondering Proposal To Increase Site Acreage Lenard Warren To Sing Tonight Metropolitan Opera star Leonard Warren will appear in Memorial Hall tonight at 8 o’clock in a concert sponsored by the Chapel Hill concert series. Student's will be admitted to balcony seats free upon presenta tion of Identification cards. Student wives with their husbands will be chai'ged $1. The public will be charged $3. Warren started the current sea son in September with the San Francisco Opera with appearances in three of his great roles, Scar- pia in “Tosca.” "Simon Boccane- gra” and “Falstaff.” Accompanied by Willard Sektberg at the piano, Warren will render selections by Beethoven, Caldara, Caccini and Bach to open the per formance. The second part of the program will be "Don Quichotle a Dulcinee” bv Maurice Ravel, and the third LEONARD WARREN 'part will be Credo, from ‘“Otello” by Giuseppe Verdi. After a slight intermission, the concert will continue with selec tions on the piano by Sektberg, and Warren’s rendition of parts of “Faust” by Charles France is Gounod. The final numbers on the pro gram include “Colorada Trad” and “Blow the Man down,” two tradi tional arrangements by Tom Scott; “Tell Me O Blue, Blue Sky,” by Vittorio Giannini; and “M i s t e r Jim"’ by Albfert Hay Malotte. Newsweek magazine recently called Warren “the world’s finest dramatic baritone.’’ He made his debut with the Metropolitan Opera in 1939 and rose through minor roles to dom inate the company's baritone rosier, success in Chapel Hill means a very great deal to all of us,” Campbell stressed. “If we are interested in the future of our community,” Mrs. Walters said, “we must work lor the welfare of our young people. We must help fill their needs, as we will through the Communitv Chest program.” Mrs. Wynn pointed out that the ten Community Chest organiza tions “benefit every citizen of the community. I am willing to put in many hours on this drive because I can help all of these agencies at one time.” Mrs. Wynn is very familiar with the programs of the ten Chest-sup- ported agencies as she has been ice-electcd chairman of the Com munity Council which has a mem bership of more than 60 local or ganizations. One of its major ac tivities is support and sponsorship of the Community Chest. She was president for three years of the American Association of University Women, has been chair man of the nursery at the Presby terian church, and was social chair man of the Chapel Hill Country Club. Mother of two children of pre school age, Mrs. Wynn also works for the Service Insurance and Realty Co. She has an MA degree from the University of North Car olina, and taught for five years as an assistant professor in the De partment of Radio and Television. Mrs. Harold Walters is a mem.- ber of Chapel Hill’s board of al dermen, the first woman to so serve. A former teacher of history and social science, she has been pres ident of the League of Women Voters, and vice president of the North Carolina Council of Women’s Organizations. Two summers ago she directed the latter group’s leadership training workshop. Mrs. Walter’s interest in the Community Chest is also due to her positions as chairman of the recreation committee of the board of aldermen, and director of the Carrboro - Chapel Hill Recreation Center, a Community Chest project. “I want to do what I can to see that the programs of all our Com munity Chest activities are ade quately financed,” Mrs. Walters said. 'Speaking of the residential area drive, Mrs. Wynn stressed, “It gives every family, and home, a chance to contribute. Our part as co-chairmen is no more important than that of all who work on it.” Merchant Association Officers Nominated; List Not Made Public Nominations have been made for new officers of the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Merchants Associa tion but everyone concerned has not been contacted for acceptance. Thus, Association President C. Whid Powell said today, the list of new officers will not be made public until later. The nominations were made at a meeting of ■ the association's nominating committee last week. The names will be placed in nom ination at the group’s annual meet- in,g 0.cf, 20, NAMES, NAMES, NAMES—Mrs. Lou Ayers, seated, and Miss Claudia Cannady, Western Union employes. Inspect part of » tele gram sent by 974 Chapel Hill residents to the University football team in Los Angeles Friday. The message must have done some good—the Tar Heels jolted Southern California in an upset, 8-7. (News Leader Photo) 974 Residents Back Tar Heels By Sending Lengthy Telegram Nine-hundred and seventy-four cess. Chapel Hillians let the Tar Heel football team know, they were be hind them E’riday. That night. Coach Jim Tatum’s warriors up set the University of Southern California, 8 to 7, in Los Angeles. Town officials, civic organiza- ions and fans-On-the-street signed a long telegram forwarded from the local Western Union office here urging the Carolina club to “take' the gold in them thar hills away from Southern California.” University students sent another telegram wishing the team suc- According to Miss Claudia Can nady of the Western Union office here, it took two operators an hour and 55 minutes to send the long message. It read: “The townspeople of Chapel Hill, merchants, their employees, residents and various local organi zations send you the best wishes for a successful venture to the West Coast . . . They say there’s gold in them .thar hills . . . take it away from Southern California and bring it home to us.” 280 Girl Scout Applications Call For 19 Troops In Area On the basis of more than 28(J applications for troop membership, the local Girl Scout service team has assisted in organizing 19 troops for the three neighborhoods of Chapel Hill. Tuesday, the neighborhood meet ing of Girl Scout leaders will be held at 8:00 p.m. at the United Congregational Christian Church on W. Cameron Ave. Troop record books and leader’s materials will be distributed for each troop and Mrs. Grant Hurst, district director working in Orange County this year, will be in attendance to dis cuss plans for Ihe fall. More than 15 adults are enter ing the local scout program as new leaders this year. For thon,' and any others interested in lead ership training, the basic leader ship training course will begin Thursday, October 8, at 7:30 p.m. at the United Congregational Christian, Church, and continue on Tuesday and Thursday evenings in October. This course will be given by Miss Patricia Markas, execu tive director of the Bright Leaf Girl Scout Council, and Mrs. Grant Hurst, district director in Orange County. I.ate applications, for troop mem bership indicate a need for another 3rd grade Brownie troop. Anyone interested in working with this scout level, has been asked to call Mrs. F. S. Chapin, before 'J'hursday, when the training course begins. Chapel Hill-Carrboro Recreation, Inc. on Oct. 20 will consider the proposal of John Umstead, Jr., for the donation of an additional three acres of land providing the group builds a “suitable" recreation center. “Suitable,” according to Rev. Charles Hubbard, president of the association, “means one big enough for the community to use.” The additional acreage would increase to almost 10 acres the nurnber available to the associa tion for construction of a recrea tion center. Mr, Umstead also donated initial acreage. At a meeting last week, mem bers of the executive committee and Mr. Umstead concurred on the idea that plans for the center were not adequate for the community. Mr. Umstead told the group that it was his suggestion to build a building twice the size of one cur rently being planned. When the problem of financing the plan was made, Mr. Umstead suggested ac quisition of a loan. The proposed building is ex pected to cost around $75,000. At the meeting last week, it was dis closed that the group has $20,000 in the bank, $12,000 is still out standing in pledges, ami $10,000 additional is to be raised. 'Ideal' For Diamond 'rhe proposed building for the site would be 8,800 square feet. Rev. Hubbard said the site is also “ideal” for a Little League and softball diamond. He said the lo cal Kiwanis club has agreed to put up a professional - type backstop if they can spend the money on it before the end of their fiscal' year Dec. 31. The proposed building’s main floor includes plans for a 4,500- square-foot ballroom, a kitchen, two club rooms, a snack r(jom, a large lobby, a crafts room, an of fice, a check room and rest rooms. A lower floor will be an open 342 square-foot activities room, with fireplace. Rev. Hubbard said that the con tract for the building should be let between now and the first of the year and the building completed, possibly, by next June. Officers Check Thefts Reported In Chapel Hill Chapel Hill Police are investi gating thefts involving everything from a pen and pencil set to a dis posal unit. 'Officers said that the disposal unit was taken from a partially- completed home on Fern Lane be ing constructed by Ellington and Sparrow, Inc. for Dr, Ernest Wood, Also taken from a tool shed on the lot, they reported, were a 100- foot steel tape, a wire cutter, and a level. Total theft loss was esti mated at $135, Gerald Freedman of Zeta Beta Tau fraternity, 121 West Rosemary St., reported to police last week the theft, on Sept. 20, of an elec tric razor, a coat, a pen and pencil set, and a European watch. Mr. Freedman estimated his loss at $175.' Officers said that Joe Hilton of Chapel Hill reported that $50 in cash was taken from his room but that the money mysteriously reap peared. AT DETROIT MEET Dr. Daniel A. Okun and Dr. Charles M. Weiss of the University School of Public Health are attend ing the annua] meeting of the Fed eration of Sewage and Industrial Wastes Associations this week in Detroit,