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Joel A, Wier, jr., owner of White &
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F. E. McHugh, manager partner of Gal
lant-Belk Company, inspect the truck
load of Chrysler Air Conditioning upon
arrival from the Dayton, Ohio, factory
for installation in the Gallant-Belk Store.
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i S let 2 e B i R AR W 343
FIRST OF MANY outi.cor symphonie dramas along Nerth Caro
lina’s “starlight” circuit was “The Lost Colony” at Roanoke Island.
In this scene, a minister is praying for help for the siruggling
young colony.
Outdoor Musical Dramas Flourish
Along North Carolina Mountains
By HENRY LESESNE
NEA Special Correspondent
CHARLOTTE, N. C. — North'
Carolina playwright Paul Green
seems to have really started some
‘ thing when he introduced the out
door symphonic drama to the
| American theater,
Nearly a million people have
seen the play, “The Lost Colony,”
which this year is in its 12th sea
son at Roanoke Island. Now
these symphonic dramas are
springing up everywhere, particu
larly in North Carolina, running
nightly through July and Au
gust. They all deal with home
grown history and have a spiritual
tone. Their theme is that man’s
courage and faith enable him to
move forward despite his cruelty
to his fellows.
New productions this Summer
constitute what might be called
a “starlight” circuit. Along the
magnificent Blue Ridge Parkway
alone three such productions are
und®®way. This area has become
lthe great white way of the Sum
| mer outdoor theater.
“Horn in the West” is making
its bow at Boone. Second out
door drama by Kermit Hunter, a
pioneer in this form of drama, it
tells the story of the trail-blazers
of the Revolutionary period. At
Asheville, “Thunderland” by Hu
bert Hayes, starts this year in a
2400-seat amphitheater on the
Biltmore Estate.
Both ¢f these dramas deal with
the story of Daniel Boone, but
they are altogether different. The
drama at Asheville is somewhat
the life story of Boone. “Horn
in the West,” presented in the new
Daniel Boone Theater at Boone,
deals with a period in history
(1770-1780) in which the pioneer
is symbolized as a leader of other
frontiersmen who followed the
wilderness trail, such as John
Sevier.
Last Summer the drama, “Then
“Unto These Hills,” written by
Hunter, is having its third season.
This authentic saga of the Cher
okee Indian is presented in a
mountainside theater above the
Indian village of Cherokee, in the
shadow of some of the highest
peaks in eastern America.
Green's pioneer, “The Lost Col
ony,” was first started as a local
enterprise and was later under
written by the state. The drama
is based on the mystery of the
disappearance of Sir Walter
Raleigh’'s colony established on
Roanoke Island in 1578—the first
attempt to found an English set-
THE BANNER-HERALD, ATHENS, GEORGIA
Installation was completed in 32 days.
White & Wier is located at 295 College
Avenue, and is prepared to demonstrate
their air conditioning and heating line.
There is a Chrysler Airtemp unit to fit
your every need. ’
tlement in America. In panto
|mime, spoken word, and dance
|zmd music, the play is performed
on the very spot where the events
on which it is based took place.
“The Lost Colony” had the field
1o itself until six years ago when
“The Common Glory,” also by
Green, was started at Williams
burg, Va. It takes its title from
a phrase in the writings of Thomas
Jefferson, a central character in
the story. The third of the Green
symphonic dramas, “Faith of Our
Fathers,” is presented each Sum
mer in the nation’s capital. The
second season last year drew an
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ON THE OUTSIDE in North Carolina, summer visitors see musi
cal pageanis that recreate lecal history. This is a seeme in “Unto
These Hills,” given near Cheroke?, showing Spanish explorers
meeting Indians.
attendance of around 100,000,
These outdoor historic dramas
are projects of non-profit making,
educational Institutions or are
state-underwritten. Though not
on so large a scale as some of
the rest, North Carolina has still
another outdoor historical drama
which is being projected as an
annual attraction.
Conquer We Must,” was present
ed for a few nights late in the
season in a natural amphitheater
at Kings Mountain, which is al
most astride the North Carolina-
South Carolina border. Plans
are underway to stagegit this
Summer for a much longey period.
It is based on the Battle of Kings
Mountain, a turning point in the
American Revolution.
While North Carolina has gone
in for this type of attraction more
than any other state, it is catch
g;g on elsewhere. An outdoor
ama of the same type is pro
jected this Summer at Erwin,
Tenn., and will depict the early
1 history of the Volunteer State as
it became the gateway to western
expansion.
Playwright Green, one-time
Pulitzer prize winner, is writing
a new symphonic drama which
will have to do with the landing
of the Piigrims and is scheduled
for production at Plymouth, Mass.,
with the beginning of the 1953
Summer season. It is sponsored
by the Plymouth Historical So
ciety.
Winferville Church
Plans For Third
Annual Homecoming
Plans are being completed by
Winterville Baptist Church for its
third annual Homecoming, to be
held on Sunday, July 13, starting
at 10:30 a. m.
One of the highlights of the day
will be the service in the church
: with the sermon being given by
Rev. L. Alton Morris, who former
ly served as Winterville School
Superintendent, and is now pastor
of First Baptist Church in Mur
| phy, N. C.
At the conclusion of the service
a basket lunch will be enjoyed by
those attending at the Winterville
City Park. The lunch is customari
1y held on the church lawn but at
the present time that is filled with
building materials.
There will be plenty of parking
space for autos and a corps of
alert and competent young boys
will assist with the parking.
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White & Wier, local Air Conditioning
and Heating Contractors, unloading
Chrysler Airtemp Air Conditioning for the
ultra modern Gallant-Belk Store. Mr. F.
E. McHugh, manager partner of Gallant-
Belk, states, “I purchased Chrysler Air
temp Air Conditioning because of its out
Rome Novelist's Story Utilizes Sel
Of Georgia Boffled Beverage Business
“BIG BEVERAGE,” a new novel
by William T. Campbell of Rome,
Georgia, will be published by Tup
per and Love this Fall, It is be
lieved to be the first novel em
ploying the fabulous soft-drink
bottling industry as a background.
It is a robust, often ribald, story
of Pop Butts who married Miss
Bertha Mae Adams of Yazoo City,
Mississippi, and reluctantly ac
cepted, gratis, the perpetual fran
chise to bottle Solo Soda. He made
millions; but found in juggling
money and culture, like oil and
water, they did not always mix.
The author has:been an air pilot,
oil wildcatter, soft drink bottler,
breeder of race horses, radio com
mentator, and holds several world
records in flying. He attended the
University of Georgia.
The author is very emphatic in
saying his novel is not “one of
those lah-de-dah-way-down-yon
der-where-I-was-born-at” kind of
things. When asked what made
his novel different from other
Southern novels, he replied:
“BIG BEVERAGE is a novel
which has successfully bypassed
the you-alls and overalls, long
panatellas and long pantaloons,
crinoline belles and plantation
bells, and also the usual corn of
the so-called realists; and has
‘ emerged a humorous novel of the
New South, repeat New. Like old
Pcp Butts (an offspring of indigent
sharecroppers who heard very
much but saw very little of gray
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SEALED COMPRESSOR UNIT
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Chalk up another FIRST on the Chrysler Airtemp scoreboard. i : "
Once again the air conditioning industry has been scooped by iv : ul{
: ’ R . 111 | ' |
Chrysler Airtemp’s bringing out the FIRST sealed radial com- il‘ ‘ nli
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pressor ever to carry an optional five-year warranty*. Since 1937 jm“ 4, ‘*“
: “ i 111 it
—when Chrysler Airtemp produced the FIRST “Packaged” i 111 | 1 e | l::}
air conditioner—it has led the field in developing better, longer- i
. . . . - . '_““_—-h_"; | |
lasting equipment for indoor climate control. Chrysier Airtemp |l
pioneered the FIRST Sealed Radial Compressor—the FIRST —_————— !‘,;
Year-Round Air Conditioner and many other products for i% NL
greater health and comfort—in the home, at work and in %1 ;
R.- g R G
industry. See your Chrysler Airtemp dealer for more details. e 3 L "'“[
S 53;?:? ”‘f"‘ R
; e - | g“v Jv& it
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TO-BE WARRANTED FOR 5 YEARS 4 "®* 5, fi“
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The first complete five-yaar warranty—here’s what it 7
covers: repair or replacement of compressor; freight UTHE
to and from the factory, and compressor removal and k c”m‘[ W
replacement allowance. 1 “Mons gy, R’B’an
€ooling " Coolj,
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AIR CONDITIONING « HEATING « COMMERCIAL REFRIGERATION £ "9 cou. "Coder g, iy ;
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standing record, its 5-year warranty, and
the minimum amount of floor space re
quired, and the fact that White & Wier
are local people with an outstanding engi
neering and service department, an we
believe in patronizing home folk.”
ing and decaying white columns
and Uncle Toms and Old Massuhs,
but who was yanked from poverty
row and catapulted onto the celes
tial rundles of the extensible Solo
Soda financial ladder through the
neck of an empty Solo Soda bot
tle), BIG BEVERAGE offers
something new and revolutionary
in Southern fiction.
For instance, as far as can be
ascertained, it is the first novel to
employ the fabulous soft-drink
business as a background for fic
tional writing. Too, it is a com=-
plete departure frony the usual as
it portrays the Southern Re
naissance, so to speak: the new
rich, new and current South, de
void of congenital memories of
crepe myrtle and moonlit wisteria,
a South whose bloodstained jac
ket-of-gray has been tansformed
into one of expensive, fuzzy tweed
with stylish cut, and whose übi
quitous mule-and-wagon has be
i:ome a low-swung, fuchsia Cadil
ac.”
Aviation Trainees
Find Homesickness
Cure In Ham Radio
A *ham” radio station ean be
a powerful force against home
sickness for aviation trainees who
come from abroad to the Aero-
SUNDAY, JULY 6, 1952,
nautical Center of the Civil Aero
nautics Administration at Okla
homa City.
Several years ago, enthusiastic
CAA employeeg of the Center or
ganized their own “ham” or ama
teur radio club, and set up their
“ghack” in the corner of one of the
surplus military barracks at Will
Rogers Airport where the Center
is located. They used surplus mili~
tary radio equipment to fashion
a good “rig” and members spend
their spare time there talking to
other “ham” friends all about the
world.
When tranees in various avia
tion activities are sent to the Cen
ter, they react like any other boys
away from home. Through long
experience, CAA instructors know
the symtoms, and at the propar
time they ask the trainee if he
would like to talk to his folks in
Peru, Brazil, India or Australia.
A CCA employee works out a
schedule, the trainee’s friends back
home gather in the radio shack of
a local “ham” and the air waves
crackle with Spanish, Portugee,
Hindustani or Greek.
“It works wonders” according
to, Claude Gardner, veteran chief
of the Facilities Branch, “This
little corner of an old barracks
build.in% titted with regaired and
remodeled surplus radio equin
ment that has been thrown away,
builds better morale than all the
entertainment in Oklahoma Citv
or all the hospitality we Americans
are able to show to our foreien
visitors. It builds more good will
for the U. S. with the average
trainee than all the aviation know
ledge which we are sharing with
our world neighbors.”