Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 27, 1964, edition 1 / Page 3
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Founded Feb. 23, 1893 I 1 1.,. ; t i r .Sunday, September 27, 1964 THE SUNDAY TAR HEEL Page 3 Saturday Afternoon At Kenan Stadium By KERRY SIPE The nice thing about a football game is that you don't have to like football to enjoy it. A football is just one dull color brown. Yesterday, while the Tar Heels were busy with the dirty work of pushing Michigan State to a 21 15 upset, Kenan Stadium was radiant with more colors than an artist's palette. The sky was blue and the grass was green. ' The man who paints the bound-" . ary lines on the field, had done it in pink and yellow. Overhead a bright red and white striped airplane circled and. 'did whatever sirplanes do at football games. Old Glory . fluttered from the . flagmast and a Dixie flag waved in the. stands. : ; ; . Blue paper streamers waved, from ' the goalposts and blue skirts waved .around the cheer leaders' legs. People came from all over, dressed in prints and checks and stripes with Scotch plaid thermos : jugs and leather, binocular cases and colorful Japanese transistor radios. Parties Meet fa. Fill SL Seats Both campus political parties will hold interviews tonight, to fill vacancies in Student Legisla ture. . The executive committee of the University Party has announced that it will hold interviews to. fill four vacancies at 7:30 p.m. .in the Grail Room of Graham "Me morial. . One seat for the district out side the Chapel Hill corporate limits is available, as are three seats from the district surround ed by West Cameron Avenue and South Columbia Street on the South and West Franklin Street on the North. The Student Party will alsp fill four legislative seats at a meetr ing at 8 o'clock in 08 Peabody. The vacancies occur in Men's District I (outside the Chapel Hill-Carrboro city limits), Men's District X (Ehringhaus, Women's District II (Alderman, Kenan apd Mclver), and Women's District V (Cobb). Pres. Friday .On GR Boaj;d ' Consolidated University pre'si-. dent William C. Friday has been appointed by President Lyndon B. Johnson to the National Citi zens' Committee for Community Relations. - The committee, headed Dy Ar thur Dean, held its first meeting at the White House in August ut Friday was unable to attend. The committee was named by President Johnson to work with the U. S. Commerce Department's Community Relations Service in efforts to obtain peaceful and voluntary compliance with the Civil Rights Act. . Commerce. Secretary Luther Hodges and former Florida Gov ernor Leroy Collins, head of the Community Relations Service, rliave wired President Friday ex pressing appreciation to him tor serving on the committee. President Friday is one of a rumber of North ' Carolinians Earned to the committee. Tonisi Yon Boii't Coca-Cola vendors shouted their wares from every aisle and section of the stands. They cheer for first one team and then the other, depending on the senti ments of the nearest customer. GET MEAN! Loudspeakers, powerful exten sions of the cheerleaders' power ful voice boxes, blasted forth their native chants: "Get mean,. Big Blue, get mean!" Team Mascot Rameses, the blue-horned sheep, who had his own ideas about the whole bar-' baric affair, lay down and took a nap in the shade of one of the" giant loudspeakers. ."Who up there needs some, ice?" someone shouted from the bottom of the stands. "We have . plenty here: just ten cents a cup." Unable to make any sales, r he finally ' agreed to share his supply without financial reward. On the field, the blue team and ' the green team battled it out. If the blue team missed a pass, the cheerleader hung his head and apologized to the crowd: "IhatV okay. We're gonna catch the next one!" V ; - ?- . " CANINE CAPERS "A black mongrel dog. one of : . Chapel Hill's renowned canine "r athletes, bounded onto the field in the middle of a crucial play.. ANGEL. FLIGHT - The Angel Flight will begin se lecting a now pledge class, with' a tea at 5 p.m., Wednesday in the Cadet Lounge. ' The Angel Flight, the auxiliary; of the Arnold.' Air Sfociety, prp- motes interest in the UNC Air Force ROTC . program. The Angels assist the. corps with cof fee hours, the Air Force-Navy" Military Bali, corps picnics, and -other social events. PATRONIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS 1 NOW PLAYING Pr2 J (ulasrjtiifi'Sy -IPblSyEsrSSa iri . Lifssssf The hilarious . i story of r America's first . rvvrnan President.. ARLENE DAHL EDWARD ANDREWS EU WALLACE rssSTT?B it WABNER BROS. f , !. ;. News Vrt3 J - . . campus tradition J irfc I h-v'v ; : Square-ply " A at the new" JV 7 the &s F?il weight Dacron "First Lady"! JJ. polyester and cotton fabric r B Fl i' - for your casual slacks. J jr J ; ! ; :Y In aUthe right cplors' A L 4J .l . . A and the classic neutrals. H Have and ran interference for the hometown team. A cousin of his, a black and white stray dog, poked his nose among the bleachers in the stu dent section looking for some one's discarded, half -eaten hot dog. The people who led the cheers had gathered about them a mass of machinery designed to make their job easier. A fire engine bell mounted on a trolley and affectionately called the "victory bell" was used to entice the gods of victory to Carolina's side of the stadium. An odd device similar to a' Fifth Dynasty Chinese gong and constructed from the mangled " -ato. Aw -rSS A -- ir lb h i GO CA'LINA 1 1 M k nv- I : To ike goalposts of . the 1963 Carolina Duke game was wheeled out and beat to further attract the spirits of Tar Heel victory. Forty thousand, five hundred screaming fans, arranged on three sides of the battlefield, watched, and listened, and yelled, and loved every minute of it. Both teams had to request the crowd to be quiet when signals were being called on the field, but, big as they are, the football players wore no match for the enthusiastic mass. HAPPY AND SAD - When the umpire tripped over a Spartan player and fell on his Fans roar as UNC Whips MWMMMiltlfCT-MQMMWWIIIIt 'i it iww i.ii m m Vi JM. . . rf i ft-..Wtf.W . n mitt Vi fnWaWT'lKil vm ..A.UkwiKAal face, the crowd laughed. When injured end John Ather tpn was helped, limping, from the field, the crowd wept. When the ball was kicked info the stands during the extra point attempts, the crowd scrambled to retrieve it. When the ball made it through to the enemy end-zone the crowd waved five fingers and a thumb into the air and yelled about it. It may be true then, that it was the 11 men on the field who have been in training all year to amass the 21 hard-earned points against the tough Spartans Eut it's the 40,500 in the stands who are going to take the credit. Photo by Jock Lauterr Michigan Statp 3 I I M I a i 211 r"
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 27, 1964, edition 1
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