Newspapers / The Carolina Times (Durham, … / Aug. 30, 1969, edition 1 / Page 12
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I—THE CAROLINA TIMES X ~SATURDA.Y, AUGUST 30, 1969 12 PEACH OF A DUMPLING ,:■ * j^ - Dumplings were, no doubt, developed by peasant ctM>ks who were attempting to avoid waste and secure every possible bit of nourishment from their limited food supply I hey carefully wrapped choice bits of meat. fish, or fruit in a dough and cooked them The dough sealed in the juice and flavor. A far cry from peasant fare is this sweet peach dumpling. The dumpling is delicately flavored with bran: cooked in the hollow of a poached fresh peach: and served warm, heaped with whipped cream FR£SI! PEACfI Dl MPUMiS Sj rup '•» cup granulated Migur 1 cup %*ater 1 \ -2 teaspoons grain! lemon rind 3 tablespoon* currant jelly 2 tablespoon* lemon juice 4 large ripe peaches, peeled. pitted and hahed Dissolve sugar ami water in a medium-size skillet, owr low heal. Add lemon rind and curranl jelly, Cover; simmer 5 minutes. Add lemon juice. Remove a thill slice from the rounded side of peaches; place in skillet. Hollow side down. Cover and simmer 5 minutes. Meanwhile soak bran ill eggs for 5 to 7 minutes. Add sugar and nutmeg to biscuit mix. Cut in butter until mixture resembles coarse rornim*al. Add bran mixture; mix lightly with fork lo form soft dough. Turn peaches. Drop dough into hollows. Simmer gently for 10 minutes. Cover and cook 10 minutes. Serve in sherbet or parfait glasses topped with whipped cream. Makes 8 scr* ings. This recipe may also be prepared in an electric skillet, with con trol _»et at 212 F. It is important that tha liquids simmer all the lime. Hampton's Head Coach Eager To Begin the Long Hard Grind HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Hampton, Virginia Hampton Institute new head football coach Whitney Van Cleve is a man who likes a challenge and because of that and his love of the game he can hardly wait for the 1969 football season to get underway. Why so eager to begin the long hard grind? In a capsule, Coach Van Cleve finds a lot of unanswered questions on his mind concern ing the HI Pirates and the prob lems he as coach will have to tackle. What are some of these ques tions which might create a problem for the HI coach? Well, preparation for a col lege football season actually begins in the preceding spring season. Spring drills are es sentially given to arouse in terest through strenuous con ditions. However, in the early part of the 1969 spring Hamp ton Institute was without a football coach. This lack of leadership created a serious spring training problem for the HI Pirates. Coach Van Cleve feels that "if a boy is a foot ball player he will show of spring drills as a handicap to the team for the 1969 cam paign. Coach Van Cleve is a vete ran mentor of the strong Southern Intercollegiate Athle- tic Conference. He coached at Tuskegee Institute, Tuskegee, Alabama, in 1955-64 where he compiled a 42-35-5 record. He also coached at Alabama State College, Montgomery, Alabama where his team amassed a re markable 35-14-1 slate. These colleges turn out anywhere from 100 to 200 prospective players. At HI Coach Van Cleve anticipates a maximum turnout of about 75. Will this alter his coaching philosophy? It does not seem likely. Coach Van Cleve ponders the feasibility of 4 practices per day during the summer. He plans to have the backs and ends run a 6 minute mile the first day. The hotter the tem perature the better the coach likes it. "A 95 degree temperature in the shade is ideal football practice weather," says Coach Van Cleve, half jokingly and half aeriously. Van Cleve is looking for the boy who will not quit when the going gets rough. He realizes that his team Dumplings Vi cup NABISCO 100% Bran 2 eggs, KCII beaten 1 4 cup granulated Migar 1 4 teaspoon ground nutmeg 1 ;l cup packaged biscuit mix 1 tablespoon butter or margarine Whipped hca%y cream will be small in number and size but plans to make up for it with tenacity, hustle, and de sire in his players. In his initial season as a coach in the Central Intercol legiate Athletic Conference Van Cleve brings much enthu asm. He looks forward to facing CIAA champion Mor gan State, 5.1.A.C., Morehouse, and Tuskegee Institute, his alma mater. However, Coach Van Cleve is not overlooking the strength of any opponent and will play them "one at a time." LDF attacks in fight to free Panthers NEW YORK - New York attorneys, backed bv the IMPORTED "RAKE SCOTCH 1 't A ! WV£k !; tfovse. j it s ■M MH 3K lwi§ [House {SCOTCH WHISKfI \ BLEND ofAgkjjJlM jSggUlp INK HUM sutci nittr MITT mir amiu ii iim NM WIIUIU. in., nu. No Gain For 0. J. In Pro Debut The Buffalo Bills' O. J. Simpson (36) slips away from the Detroit Lions' Lew Kamanu in the fourth period of the teams' recent exhibition clash at Detroit but he couldn't elude Bob Williams (not shown in the photo) who stopped him in an instant later for no gain. Simpson, who made his professional debut in the NFL pre-season contest, and the Bills dropped a 24-12 decision to the Lions. (UPI Photo) Stengel Thinks Mets Can Overhaul ST. LOUIS Suppose you were the greatest living manager in baseball, a Hall of Famer yourself, and you had 25 of the other 36 living members of the Hall of Fame to chose from. Who would you pick to make up the best team possible? "I won't answer that. I can't answer that," said Casey Stengel, the man picked by sports writers as the greatest living manager. "They've been trying to do that for years, and they can't. Every ten years there's another great pitcher comes along, so you can't say." "And I might get in trouble for spying this," Casey added, "but the playing fields are better now, so you can pick the ball up like a cowboy picking something up on horseback, like in a rodeo, instead of coming in and worrving about blocking the ball." Stengel went on from there to talk about expansion, Billy Martin, manager of the Minnesota Twins, and the National League pennant race. Stengel and 25 other Hall of Famers were on hand over the weekend in St. Louis, where the Cardinals were celebrating baseball's 100 th anniversary NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund are awaiting a ruling on their challenge of this city's bail system in behalf of 14 Black Panther party mem bers. The LDF filed a "friend of the court" brief arguing that New York State offi cials "have employed the bail determination as a means to detain, to punish and prejudice the fairnesi of trial." U.S. District court Judge Edmund L. Palmeri al lowed the LDF to argue its amicus brief which asked that the Panthers be re leased if New York State "does no reset bail to amounts which are within petitioners' means" io n'av. CARPENTER'S The Action Dealer Can Do! „ _ Will Do! 1969 Chevrolet $195 Down TO DO BUSINISS WITH ... rMi rtWlltllHW. TM.MMMI Om 1 • PJL by bringing the Hall of Famers together for an impressive reunion. Players like Joe DiMaggio, the Yankee immortal; Frankie Frisch; Bob Feller; Lefty Grove, and Bill Dickey traded memories, jokes and hand shakes. Frisch and Stengel were teammates on the New York Giants in 1921, '22 and '23. Later they managed against each other. Frisch has an unlimited stockpile of Casey Stengel stories. "There was the time," Frankie recalled, "when he was in a hotel and ordered a big steak dinner. The waiter and Stengel arrived at the same time. Stengel told the waiter to put down the tray by a window, because he had a lot to talk to Mr. Frisch about. The waiter did, Frisch Sports Tips £ \j / TAKE 4 STEPS J L BACK FOR fIJIQ) 3 STEP di/VTb APPROACH I I DIVING To estimate the proper dis tance for your approach when diving from a board, go to the end of the board and face in,away from the water. Take four walking steps along the board for a three step approach, (five steps for a four-step approach) and add six inches. Turn, face the water, and begin your approach from this spot. Don't let skin beauty take a dive because of sun, salt and chlorine. You'll make a splash—socially—if you pro tect your skin from summer dryness with Desert Flower moisturizing fragrance veil said with a laugh and a "Shake of his head, and Stengel ate the meal. Frisch had already signed for it. Stengel recalled th e incident. He also remembered that Frisch was immobilized because of a leg injury and had to stare furiously w.iile Stengel savored the food. "And when I walked out." Stengel said, trying to sup press a grin, "I told him 'don't worry, things are tough lor me, to*".' " The third video of a Theo dore H. White book aibout a presidential campaign will be a Xerox special on the CBS network Sept. 9. This one, of course, deals with the 1968 campaign between President Nixon and Hubert H. Humph rey. ■j '""' ' ./" '; ' ' ' ' '' : ' ' J FORDM^ERICK The new Ford Maverick is a simple, dif ferent machine Simple and yet ex citing simple in it's styling, exciting in it's new bold colors. It's the hottest sel I ing new car to come along since Mus tang! If you're going to class, why not go in class... in a new Ford Maverick from Alexander Ford! at Alexander Ford will beat MAVERICK any deal on any New Ford On-the-Spot Car or Truck. BANK FINANCING! Only 14 Vets Among 48 I Grid Candidates At EC ELIZABETH CITY, N. C. —•After looking in on the Washington Redskins, New York Jets, and Boston Pa triots, Elizabeth City State University's grid mentor, Tom Caldwell, cut short his visit to professional camps in order to prepare for 48 gridtlers who were expected to report on Monday, Aug ust 25. "'With the pro teams now Involved in exhibition foot ball, I did not get a chance to see many of the things I had hoped I would observe for future jse," he reported upon his return to ECS'U. THE EARLY opening of practice sessions at ECSTJ means that the Vikings will have only five days of two-, a-day sessions, and less than • month to prepare for the Sept. 20 opener against Va. State College, at Petersburg. "This is the toughest opening schedule I've seen .sjnee I've been coaching at ESSU," Caldwell recalled. HE WAS referring to the fact that after the Vikings and Trojans meet for the first time, then come Nor folk State and Winston-Sa lem. Just how much re building Caldwell- can do befor e the OIAA grid race starts i s a major question. The loss of Quarterback Johnny Walton, Defensive Back Waide Robinson, Of fensive Guard Clarence Lawson and Linebacker Willie Stewart, plus eieht others, means that the enr tire defensive and offensive Stale post for Perkins SANTA FE, N. M. Former Delias Cowboys football star Don Perkins has been named to Gov. David F. Cargo's Com mittee on Children and Youth. The former University of New Mexico All-America, who ended eight seasons with the Cowboys in fifbh place among all time Na tional Football League rushers, retired from the game this year. •- * * Perkins, who has done extensive broadcast work for CBS, served as director of ,the Department of Courtesy and Information during Cargo's first term as Governor. alignment will have' to be changed considerably. To ready 22 expected freshmen for possible start in P roles awaits the Cald well staff of Roy F. Knight Alvin T. Kelly and Marion Mendenhall. The ECSTJ coaching staff will have only 14 lettermen as a nuelejs from last year's squad, that compiled an 8- 1-0 record, to work with. CALDWELL'S efforts to hnvp six running backs ready for the hard grinding ahead will be strengthened when fres h men John Thorn mon 111 (205), Beau fort. N C., and Danny Con ley 085), Winchester, Va., renort. With Grover Armstead and Grady Sessoms, two of the best backs in th P CIAA, returning. the Viking s should have a potent ground attack this year.' THE COMPLETE 1969 grid schedule for the ECSU Vikings, which includes five home games, i s a s follows: Sept. 20—Va. State College 'A); Sept. 2T—Norfolk State College (H): Oct 4—Win ston-Salem State (H); Oct. 11—Va. Union University (A)'; and Oct. 18—Shaw Uni versity (H). . Oct. 25—St. Paul's Col lege OA); Nov. 1 ((HOME COM IN G) Fayetteville SEE A.E. 'Spike'Spears pTj For That Next' j | FORD |l§fj^ Pick the plan of Your Choice TEACHER, PLAN - STUDENT PLAN - FARM PLAN OR YOUR OWN DEAL Alexander Ford 330 E. MAIN STREET PHONE 688-2811 State University; Nov. 8— Del. State College (A); and Nov. >ls—Livingstone Col- • lege (iH High School Sen ior Day). HI Tennis Players To Represent CIAA In Natl Tourney HAMPTON INSTITUTE, Hampton, Virginia Two Hampton Institute tennis play ers will represent the Central Intercollegiate Athletic Asso ciation in the American Tennis Aasociation National Tourna ment. The tournament takes place August 17-24 in St. Louis, Missouri. Arthur Carrington, a 1969 graduate of H I, will be entered in the singles. Carrington cap tured the CIAA singles cham pionship for three straight years - 1967, 68, 69^ Ed Eleazer, who teamed with Carrington to win the CIAA doubles championship for H I in 1969, will play doubles with Carrington in this tournament. Both H I players developed their tennis games on their hometown courts of Elizabeth N. J. They graduated from Thomas Jefferson High School.' The ATA Nationals will bring players from the South ern, Intercollegiate Athletic Conference, Southwestern In tercollegiate Athletic Confer ence, and other athletic con ferences throughout the U. S.
The Carolina Times (Durham, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 30, 1969, edition 1
12
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