Page 2
Last year we moved the ball up
and down the field all right but
the trouble was stopping the
other guys.” He recalls teem,
quarter, down, and yardline for
every example of good or bad.
Tjja enqference Rules Commit
tee has made a change this year,
and the effected the change is
on Coach Hicks’s mind.
. . The new sinstitution rule.
In the interval before the sec
ond down and the interval be
fore the third down you can sub
stitute as much as you want if
the clock is stopped. In the in
terval before the fourth down
or whenever the ball changes
hands, you can substitute two
men whether the clock is stop
ped or not. I don’t know what
it’s going to be like. I’ve never
played a game under it. It means
we can’t wild card the way we us-
TUESDAY
Shows at 1:00 - 3:00
5:00 - 7:00 - 9:00
STARTS WEDNESDAY
SttST.PIEASE,a
Hill Hull
Mnthcwouo the most PROVOCATIVE
COMEDY OP THE YEARI
E. B. STANLEY T. L. TILLER
We Protect The Family
Now Paying 4% On AH Policy Proceeds Left With Company
jh Durham Life
INIUIAMCI COMPANY
fcy Hem* Office: Raleigh, North Carolina
Office Over Senter’s Drugs, Carrboro, N. C., or
Write Box 167, Chapel Hill, N. C.
■
A Talk With Coach Jim Hickey
(Continued from Page 1)
ed to . .
It also means that whenever
the ball changes hands only two
offensive or defensive special
ists. instead of the preferable
four, can get into the game im
mediately to cope with the re
versed tide of play.
“In the coaches’ meetings that’s
all you ever hear, substitution
rirle, substitution rule. Some peo
ple favor limited substitution.
They sav the three-team system
gives a boy more chance to play,
and more boys get interested.
But other Deonle sav a hov
should learn to nlav both wavs in
college, offensive and defensive.
I favor unlimited substitution
mvself.
“The three-team svsfem is dead.
We can’t use that anv more.
But there’s no more lining un
and getting checked off when
you go into the game, so it
should speed it UD. That’s one
thinp the Rules Committee was
thinking about— substituting a
whole team hurts the game,
slows it down. From the spec
tator's point of view it should be
better. But we’re iust going to
work on offense and defense and
let it go at that, except for
those specialists who can play
either wav ”
Coach Hickey doesn’t think
like a snectatnr. “After the game
starts I’m never aware of whe
ther there are five, people in
the stands or five thousand. Be
fore the game. yes. The team
always feels better io front of a
big crowd. But after the game
starts you’re aware of
anvhodv. unless it gets so you
can’t hear.' You’re aware of
that. And it makes a difference,
when the student hodv gets riled
up. it makes a difference to the
teem. After the game? That’s
hard to sav. Tt affects different
coaches different wavs. It takes
a long time to wear off. You
just don t so in and fake a show
er and walk away. I keen going
until about nine o’clock, and
then I just run out of gas. I’m
going home and go to bed. Some
coaches like to get out at a
partv. be among lots of people.
"It's an emotional thing, of
(course. And if you lose the emo
tion you’d better get out and
get into something else, because
then you’ll never be anv good,
I was talking to a guv who used
to play for the Washington Red
skins. He’s *oach ing now. I ask
ed him whv he left Washington,
and he said, ‘I just couldn’t get
up for the games any more.’ ”
“Getting up” for a game is
not getting out of bed in the
morning. “You have to get charg
ed Up about it. It has to be im
-jjortSnt. Mickey Mantle doesn’t
make home run records in bat
ting practice, right? He makes
them right out there in the ball
game. If you ever reach the point
when that Friday night or Satur
day night or Saturday afternoon,
or whenever you play, when
that’s just a day’s work, you’d
'®C
Story tji Ruth Brafcftoen *TiSS£?!£Z? (Voted ty JERRY BRESLER-Ondedly (WIWENOKOS
sun. - mon. rmmfm
better start looking for another
kind of work."
At the mention of Georgia
Coach Wally Butts and Alabama
Coach Bear Bryant, and Coach
Butts’ recent suit against the
Saturday Evening Post, Coach
Hickey goes off the record in
a flurry of hands-off.
When he went beck on record,
he said, “I don’t think that suit
hurt football. It might have hurt
football if it had gone the oth
er way, but the way it went
vou know yourself, there are a
lot of newspapermen now we
don’t have them around here, you
understand but around the
country there are newspaper
men well, thev go a little too
far. I think that three million
dollar judgment will make a lot
of them think twice now, I mean
the ones who ought to think
twice. Os course, the press has
been very kind tome, and I think
if a guy’s doing a lousy job some
body ought to come out and say
he’s doing a lousy job. If’ it’s
news, it ought to be printed.”
As far as betting itself is con
cerned, Coach Hickey’s position
Ls an understanding one. "We
don’t condone betting, for the
same reason we don’t condone
poker playing on the team. If
a guy gets in a game, maybe
he only loses five dollars, but
it’s always the guy who can
least afford to lose. There are
always guys in the game who
shouldn’t be in it, either because
they’re no good at it. or because
they’re too good. We don’t even
let our players bet among them
selves on two other teams. A
guy loses five dollars, he gets
mad at the guy who won it,
they’re playing on the same
team, they practice together,
you get this going back and
forth in the team ... Os course,
if a guy bets for his teem, that’s
not really bad though I don’t
condone it. It shows he's got
enough confidence in his team to
bet on it. But I’d quit tomorrow
if I found out that one of our
players had bet against us on
Duke, say. See?
“I don't know how they figure
those odds, anyway. And where
do the bookies get their informa
tion? That would be very inter
esting to know.”
The Coech has no messages. “I
don’t know what to think about
it right now, except that I think
we’re going to have a good sea
son. Last year those guys were
green as grass. But they’re not
so green any more. This may
sound like a stupid thing to say.
but I think we can really tell
whether we’re going to a
good season after we come back
from the Maryland game. Then
we'll have four games behind
us, and we can really tell. It's
not necessarily going to be a
turning point. It’s just that we
can tell better then what kind
of team we’re going to have.”
THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY
Carl Durham
Is Appointed
Consultant
Carl T. Durham, fomer Con
gressman and sponsor of lfe»ig+
Legislation that resulted in the
Durham-Humphrey Amendment
of 1951, has accepted an appoint
ment as special consultant to
APhA. Mr. Durham, a commun
ity practitioner of pharmacy
from 1912 to 1938, will advise
APhA on legislative matters.
Well-known for his
pharmacy and healths matters,
Mr. DurhapTforf elected to Hon
orary Mdfnberslijp in APhA in
1943, and was presented with an
APhA Citation for Distinguished
Service by the Association in
1960, the year he retired from
Congress.
Mr. Durham wes born Aug.
28, 1892, in Chapel Hill, his pres
ent home, and practiced pharm
acy here until 1938 when he was
elected to the U. S. House of
Representatives. He served in
the 76th through the 86th Con
gresses and was chairman of
the powerful Joint Committee on
Atomic Energy for an unprece
dented two terms.
Prior to his Congressional ser
vice, and while a community
pharmacist, he served on the
Chapel Hill School 'Board, Board
of County Commissioners and
Board of Aldermen.
He attended the University
and received an honorary doc
torate from UNC and from High
Point College. He was a trustee
of the University for several
years.
The 1960 APhA Citation, pre
sented by Dr. Howard C. Newton
as president, at the interim
meeting of the House of Dele
gates in Washington, made par
ticular reference to Mr. Dur
ham's leadership and “abiding
interest in the advancement of
science ... and pharmacy and
the position of pharmacists in''
government circles, both military
and civilian; your active promo
tion of legislation regulating
commerce in foods and drugs
for the prevention of fraud and
for the protection of the health
of the consumers.”
The Durham-H umph re y
Amendment, which bears Mr.
Durham’s name and that of his
long-time Washington colleague
and fellow pharmacist, Sen. Hu
bert H. Humphrey (D-Minn),
was passed in 1951 and became
effective in 1952 as part of the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cos
metic Act.
Grid Drills
(Continued from Page 1)
moves into the left half assign
ment, Eddie Kesler of Salisbury
appears to be the No. 1 fullback.
Here is a breakdown of letter
men for Carolina:
ENDS: John Hammett, Bob
Lacey, Frank Gallagher, Joe
Robinson; TACKLES: John Hill,
Vic Esposito, Gene Sigmon, Kole
Kortner; GUARDS: Richard Zar
ro, Loren Wells, Jerry Cabe, Jim
Alderman, Clint Eudy, Curtis
Ish; CENTER: Chris Hanburger,
Glenn Ogbum.
HALFBACKS: Hank Barden,
Ronnie Jackson, Roger Smith,
Tommy Ward, Ron Tuthill, Dave
Braine, Jimmy Eason; FULL
BACKS: Ken Willard, Barry
Westfall, Eddie Kesler; QUAR
TERBACKS: Junior Edge, Gary
Black, Sandy Kinney.
As for offensive punch, the
trio of Willard, Junior Edge and
Bob Lacey form an influential
group. Edge was ranked Bth
nationally as a passer last sea
son. Lacey, who rates All-Ameri
ca consideration, captured 44
aerials and placed 7th among the
country’s receivers.
“We will throw the ball often,"
said Hickey, “but our prime
purpose is to make our running
game more effective. I think
this will come about because of
our experienced hands. Last
year we were forced to play a
number of sophomores, men with
out any previous varsity experi
ence.”
Hickey offered these capsule
comments on his prospects:
Kicking: above average; run
ning: improved; passing: above
average; depth: good in most
positions; defense: improved;
schedule: rugged.
Carolina opens with Virginia
at Kenan Stadium on Septem
ber 21.
|Jew3P a P£t'
J)elivery
Phone Chapel Hill 942-4767 for the
Durham Morning Htrold
ond THK DURHAM SUN
Beet Daily Covorag* 0# UnfcoroHy,
ft Chapel Hill, and Orange County Nows
1— ~ aw nr
—Town & Gown—
(Continued from Page 1)
In speaking of a national mag
azine article about crip courses
in some colleges, retired Prof.
Otto Stuhtman remembered that
in Chapel Hill half a century
ago there was an astronomy
course to which students flocked
to get a good grade. The in
formal title us the course, said
Dr. Stuhlman, was “Sleep 6.”
• • «
One Fall evening in 1959 Dr.
Warner Wells got a phone call
from « friend he used to know
in Japan. The friend, whose name
is Earle Reynolds, was calling
_ from Morehead City. He had ar
rived on his ocean-going ketch
that the Reynolds family sails
around the world.
Dr. Wells drove to Morehead
City and brought the Reynoldses
to Chapel Mill. The Weekly had
a story about their travels and
the writings of the sea-going fam
ily.
It gets lonely sometimes sail
ing over the waves, and Earle
Reynolds talked then about how
he passes the time away when
he’s not navigating or perform
ing other chores aboard the
ketch.
In a recent issue of The Sat
urday Review is a “Trade
Winds” story about the same
people. It follows:
“Earle Reynolds and his fam
ily, along with the famous schoon
er 'Phoenix,’ are anchored near
Hiroshima, Japan. A recent
note from him gives a clue about
how they pass the time while
polishing the brightwork:
‘“We have a kind of a word
game.’ he writes, ‘which we
thought up although this
doesn’t mean others couldn’t
have done the same.
“ ‘Once you get started on
this kind of thing, you’re likely
to become as overbearing as a
rabbit, an inflamed as a moth,
as canny as a sardine, as testy
Right-Of-Way
x (Continued from Page 1)
he would not sign the right-of-way
release; and that if the road
crossed Elkin Realty’s property,
neither he nor his father would
sign a right-of-way release.
Neither Umstead wished to state
reasons for his refusal at this
time, but Mr. Umstead Sr. said
he would make a statement on his
position in the matter next week, i
Assistant State Highway Depart
ment Division engineer P. L.
Welch said Wednesday that he was
sure both the Town and the Um
steads had been contacted con
cerning the right-of-way.
Mayor McClamroch said that
he, representing the Town, had
been contacted by the right-of
way acquisitions officer Thursday,
and that this was the first time
the Town had been contacted at
aU regarding the right-of-way.
He said he had told the officer, a
Mr. McAdoo, that it would be
best not to take action in the
matter until Town Manager Rob
ert Peck returned from his vaca
tion Thursday. He said he and
Mr. Peck and Mr. McAdoo would
meet Friday, and that he fully
expected the Town to grant the
right-of-way.
Assistant Town Manager Donald
Archer also predicted that the
Town would grant the right-of
way. “The Town has already indi
cated a willingness to do it by the
Thoroughfare Plan, which it has
approved.” he said. The Chapel
Hill-Carrboro Thoroughfare Plan
shows a future road running
through the Town’s cemetery
property on the west.
Mr. Archer added that only the
Board of Aldermen can actually
grant the right-of-way, by official
ly dedicating the land for the road.
Labor Day
(Continued from Page 1)
tember 10. The University’s Fall
Semester classes begin Septem
ber 30.
During the holidays Louis R.
Wilson Library is following an
abbreviated schedule, but will be
closed Labor Day. Graham
Memorial Student Union closed
at the end of the summer session
and will re-open for orientation.
Ackland Art Center closed yes
terday and will re-open Septem
ber 10.
The Chapel Hill Post Office will
not deliver mail except to post
office boxes on Labor Day. Mail
deliveries will resume on Tues
day.
as a guinea pig. You may be
come as chaste as a fox or as
instinctive as a skunk. ... I
think you get the idea it’s
hardly necessary to be as de
tailed as a manx cat. But just for
the record, I should point out
that our family has decided that
pigs are hamstrung, blowfish
are swell, mollusces are shellfish,
adders are calculating, and ca
naries jaundiced. I hope, like the
fossil, you are impressed.’ ”
» • *
You may scoff at this sug
gestion, but it has a merit based
on authoritative information.
A good way to settle the riots
and other troubles in Saigon
might be to send over several
ship loads of zippers, according
to a Chapel Hill man. Apparent
ly there’s a serious shortage of
zippers in that region.
When Katherine Carmichael,
UNC Dean of Women, spent a
year in Saigon, her apartment
was searched by government of
ficials at times. And at other
times, thieves broke into her
apartment.
But, strangely, the only thing
they took were zippers. They
tore the zippers out of her cloth
ing, and made off with them.
The local man pointed out
that, in a land where there’s a
serious zipper shortage, why not
saturate the country with zip
pers, in exchange for a truce
and firm plans for a lasting
peace?
He may have something there,
but still it may take far more
than zipper diplomacy to main
tain order over there.
Flight Trainine
ZENITH AVIATION
announces complete Aeronautical Courses
leading to FAA Certificates.
• PRIVATE PILOT • MULTI-ENGINE RATING
• COMMERCIAL PILOT • INSTRUMENT RATING
Equipment
Aircraft— Ground School
CESSNA 172 SANDERSON AUDIO-VISUAL
Training Aids
For Enrollment and Further Information
DIAL 942-1740
Frigidaire Quality— Best Buys
f' IjjilijfL. Thriftiest
Modal FPDS-14T-1 Model PFPDS-14T-1 in
IMI eu. ft 4 colors or white! white Porcelain Enamel! Amy 0 Mljf
FRIGIDAIRE
...THE FAMILY REFRIGERATOR
KG on Frigidaire
!budget range!
I 23-Tnch wide oven holds a large
key-cooking capacity for a family
ace to spare on the cooking topi
•limited heat settings for all sur*
orage galore in foil-width storage
ijoy Frigidaire dependability)
Jl99 9 H
FRIGIDAIRE * \
PRODUCT OP OINRML MOTOPtS > >
>
BENNETT & BLOCKSIDGE
sac W FRIGIDAIRE sales a service
UNO’s Fluoridation Suit
(Continued from Page 1)
granted and Mr. Simons neither
appeals nor files a new suit, UNC
Chancellor William B. Aycock
said the University will immecti
ately order the equipment neces
sary for fluoridating the Univer
sity water supply.
Events leading up to Tues
day’s hearing ran this way:
In his motion for dismissal,
Mr. Bullock claims that on March
1 Mr. Edwards was granted un
til June 1 to submit his case on
appeal to the State Supreme
Court. Mr. Edwards failed to do
so by June 1.
On June 20, Mr. Edwards was
granted an extension of time in
which to file his appeal, until
August 15.
On August 15 Mr. Edwards tele
phoned Mr. Bullock and asked
for another extension, “until the
first of the following week, i.e,
August 19, 1983.” Mr. Edwards
again failed to file.
Mr. Bullock’s motion contends
that under State statute, “the
plaintiff has failed to serve the
case on appeal upon the defend
ants as agreed, and has not
. . attempted to do so . .
Thus, Mr. Bullock concludes, he
is requesting dismissal of the
case
Mr. Edwards on the other hand,
JUNIOR GOLFER
Miss Gail Basnight, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Basnight,
participated in the Carolina
Junior Girls Golf Tournament,
sub-junior division, held last
week at the Alamance Country
Club in Burlington.
Sunday, September 1,1963
said that the final deadline for
filing the appeal of Monday,
August 19, is the result of a
misunderstanding which develop
ed between him and Mr. Bullock
during their August 15 telephone
conversation. Mr. Edwards said
he had told Mr. Bullock then
that he would file his appeal
“sometime during the next week,”
but did not mention a specific
date. He said Mr. Bullock’s im
pression that the deadline would
be Monday. August 19, was mis
taken.
Mr. Edwards said he was served
Thursday with notice to appear
at next Tuesday’s hearing; that
he had had the appeal ready to
file at the time he was served
with notice to appear; and that
he would have filed the appeal
on Friday.
He said that when he appears
at Tuesday’s hearing he will be
ready to file the appeal at that
time.
Mr. Bullock declined to com
ment. “The best place for this
to come out is in court,” he said.
Feed The Wild Birds
They will repay you fey keeping
the insects down.
We have a big stock of feeders on.
display. Over 50 models to select
from. Especially formulated feed
—Any quantity. Sunflower Seed-
Suet Feed. Ask us about our
quantity prices.
See the Squirrel-Proof Feeder.
We will be closed Labor Day
QUALITY SEED
& GARDEN DENTER
15-501 Bypass at Eastgate
Phone 968-2911