Wednesday. SentsmW 01 i96Q THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page 5 1 i s i 1 I I t i ! i f ' " Dodgers Lead Pirates I The close National League vveekg ThV? m0re this Zf' Th Ls Angeles Dod- Phia Phillies for a couple of aCtSt0aTosehe k The Dodgers lead Pittsburgh an and one half games and are up on San Francisco by four games. The Pirates and Giants slug it out for two more games in an effort to Pick up some ground on Los Angeles. Tho Dodgers seem to have the edge because of superior pitching in Sandy Koufax, Claude Osteen and, if he's a minid to help out, Don Drys dale. They also have a splen did bullpen. The Pirates have a pack of guys to hit the ball, but few pitchers. The Giants are starting their traditional late-season nosedive and may be out of it. In the American League, it is all over but the shouting with the Orioles' leading Min nesota and Detroit by nine games. NOW PLAYING r IN WILLIAM WYLER'S IL.Z 'jJ?j wonderful f- crime... you -si were vLM here! eMLliTaiiiiacJii ? IffUlUffia-ROKUUM V ; moouciwi V4 FRED KOHUUR WILIAJI WYLEX HARRY K0TZ MiMnMHHjn imm PANAYISSONCOLOR by DELUXJ 1 :00-3 :04-5 :ll-7 :18-9 :25 k. v ------ MIKE RUBISH'S 1GOLF CSTY J DRIVING RANGE I -sir TWO MINIATURE COURSES I PRO SHOP , -X. P T TT A TJ A TVfTT. SAT.T7. ON ALL GOLF ITEMS! OPEN DAILY 10 A.M. TO 10 P.M. CHAPEL HILL BOULEVARD If hunger sets in while you wait for hours in the ticket line If starvation strikes while the half time display drags on . . . . FEAR NOT! ' WIN or LOSE the game, you will survive with HICKORY FARM'S Student Survival Kit! Containing v One 8 ounce Gouda Cheese !c y2 pound Tangy Beef Stick One whole LiF Smokey Cheese One Box Old Fashioned Crackers One Tin Delicious Smoked Oysters -V One Jar Mustard Plus a hand full of yummy candy snax. Utensils Included! All For Only $3.98 929-1398 Eastgate Shopping Center Coach WW Ml arriers Are Loaded With Talent Williams, Carolina Gr ad, Returns To iports O: ice By DRUMMOXD BELL DTH SportsTiter Joe Hilton begins another cross countrv season Saturday against the University of South Carolina at Columbia. This year he will celebrate h i s twentieth anniversary as a coach at UNC and it may well be his finest. Coach Joe, as his athletes call him, was himself an out standing performer in track and field during his under- graduate days at Chapel Hill. He was ? member of the Tar Heels shuttle hurdle team at the Penn Relays in 1937 and until 1949 he held the CAAU javelin record. Besides his talents in the hurdles and tta javelin, Hil ton was also a fine pole vaulter, broad jumper and high jumper. In 1963 he suceeded t h e late Dale Ranson as varsity track and field coach. During the past few years he has met with great success, especially in cross country. In 1963 Caro lina was undefeated as well as ACC and State champions. In '64 the Tar Heels were 8-1 in dual meets, State cham ' pidns and second in the ACC to Maryland. Last year the harriers finished third in the ACC and had an overall rec ord of 6-1. Coach Hilton has a fine team returning and . is opti mistic about the coming sea son. "I feel we have the ley should solve the problem. Saturday Hilton had his first good look at the team under semi-race conditions and was pleased with their per formance over the four mile course. "We looked very good on the whole, and the boys finished close together which is important in this sport. Also, none of the boys seemed over extended which was the reason for the controlled time trial." The first of October in Co lumbia marks the teams first encounter and if all goes well. Hilton's potential and material should outran the Gamecocks. Some guys get swung at! Some guys mP really swing! A UNIVERSAL PICTURE IN TECHNICOLOR SHORT, "PETE'S PLACE" 1:40, 3:30, 5:20, 7:10 & 9 Last Day To Register For "THE PAD" Contest. Drawing Tomorrow Night (Thursday) 9:00 P.M. At Rialto. STARTING FRIDAY "THIS PROPERTY IS CONDEMNED" RIALTO, Durham By OWEN DAVIS DTH Sports Writer Carolina - graduae Jack Williams returned to his alma mater when he succeeded Bob Quincy as university sports information director August -1.. Williams takes his new post after long service in the newspaper field in which he has served since 1947. Williams, a Durham native, has worked for four North Carolina newspapers and the Atlanta Constitituion since graduation from college. He has written for the Durham Morning Herald and became its sports director, has been sports editor of the Raleigh Times and the Chapel Hill Weekly, assistant sports edi tor of the Atlanta Constitution and most recently has writ ten for; the Raleigh News arid Observer. ' ' With this wealth of experi ence in the area of sports, greatest thrill in basketball Williams obviously has seen was the 1957 UNC CHAMPION many spectacular player per- SHIP TEAM OF Frank Mac- formances and experienced Guire. Lennie Rosenbluth was many thrills. e high scorer that year and "By far and away the most he was fabulous, exciting player I have seen "I covered the champion- is Charlie Justice when he played here in the late for ties," said Williams. When queried on spectacu lar players and contests he has seen, he was quick to re spond. "Without a doubt the most exciting football ame was the 1949 Duke - Carolina ship team that year but miss ed the final playoff and had to watch it on television." Carolina edged Wilt Chamber lain's Kansas Jayhawks 73-70 in a triple overtime to win the title. Commenting on basketball stars, Williams said, "The game. This was Justice's last greatest shooter I have seen earn and Carolina won 21-20. is Rosenbluth. All - around, The fans ran all over the field1"1 however, Oscar Robertson is before the game ended and the greatest player I have the field had to be cleared for witnessed beyond a shadow of Duke to try a field goal on a doubt." the last play. . With the Atlanta paper, Wil- "When Duke attempted the liams watched as the city kick "Art Winer blocked it boomed tremendously in his " I f rpW-- . lh(tm ?and the game ended. For sheer excitement, it was the greatest." While serving on the Con stitution, Williams covered six - year stay mere, ne was in the thick of the Chick Graning indident, - the law suits of Wally Butts and Paul Bryant, and he watched the greatest cross country team since I have been here. We have the material and the po tential. Now it's ud to us. We hve a new course thanks to Chuck Erickson and our maintenance man. Larry Smith, has done p fine job in getting it ready for the sea son." ' The new course is located along Finley and in contrast to the previous .one is relatively flat. Last season the harriers ran in the vicinity of Navy Field and Erhinghaus. How ever, traffic became a hind rance to the runners and Fin- The greatest military tattoo ever staged in Canada, nearly 2,000 troops, will be held dur ing Expo 67, the Montreal fair. The giant sperm whale eats the equivalent of about a ton of food a day in the form of microscopic plankton. Let me solve your transportation problems with a new Volkswagen or a 100 Guaranteed used car. Be Sure To Ask For . . . OE BAKER" (Your Little Short Fat Transportation Specialist.) The Round Man With The Square Deal" six Masters golf tournaments city grow until it, acquired in Augusta, Georgia. "From professional baseball and toot- Dau teams, tie aiso was in contact with Bobby Dodd, one of the greatest coaches football has seen. After many years of excit ing action, Williams returns to disseminate sports informa tion from Carolina. The school is certainly fortunate to get a man with his great breadth and experience. r; IT i$ fl A 88 (Hi i i jfy 1 "'I'm 'jaTj11 S Jack Williams the standpoint of color and prestige, the Masters is the most exciting thing I have ever seen. The Augusta Na tional course is so magnifi cent it almost overwhelms you," he said. "Arnold Palmer won every even year (1960, 1962, 1964). I admire Palmer quite a bit. He has a certain magic which no other athlete has. If I had to choose the most popular athlete in this country today I would pick Palmer. He has certainly a great popularity with the galleries." Basketball was also Wil-' liams' beat for awhile. He fondly remembers the pros perous basketball years for Carolina in the fifties. "My Top Ten For those who care about such things, th3 Associated Press's football poll for the first week of ths season is H TAMS "Untie Me" What Kind Of Fool" Plus ' Thursday night, September 22 at the American Legion Hut in Chapel Hill. 8:00-12:00 Don't Miss This . Great Show! A Jokers Three Production 1. Michigan Stat 2. UCLA 3. Alabama 4. Nebraska 5. Southern Cal Purdue Notre Dame Michigan i. 8. 9. 10. Baylor 1-0 1-0 0- 0 1- 0 1-0 1-0 0- 0 1- 0 1-0 L THIS WEEKS SPEGIAL oi Ifio Intimate Bookshop Study Aids it Translations Gotirso OutHno TilS U3Ti:.MTE Booirsno? 119 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill open every night ITntll 10:00 P.M. c aver a r 9 retaliate o, Sis )f vetyn )A)ooJ. mm 4J ti:.ies FASTER THAU HIS BEGIIINING SPEED VITH EQUAL or BETTER COMPREHENSION FALL CLASSES STAKT 0 P.M. at 4 P.M. and 73 CAROLINA INN CLUB ROOM (Please Arrive 30 Minutes Early For First Class Only.) To PRE REGISTER..... . . . Call Mrs. RUTH BLACK 942-7142 Chapel Hill or . . . READING DYNAMICS 2744273 or 274-3898 Greensboro 'B i I ( . a: i ( . v j ft

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