Sunday, September 8, 1963 Chapel Hill Scores Late To Beat Hillsboro, 20-13 By JOE SPRANSY The Chapel Hill High Wild cats broke a 13-13 tie *in the last seconds of the fourth quarter to emerge victorious over rival Orange High 20-13 at the Orange Speedway Friday night. A two „ yard plunge from the one-foot Riggsbee spelled disaster for line into the end zone by Tim Coach Glen Auman’s eleven. The ’Cats began the skirmish with a booming 60-yard kickoff into the end zone by quarter back Danny Leigh. From this point on the Wildcats were in control of the game, never trail ing until being tied 13-13. Their - first scoring drive began in the second quarter after both teams - had been stalled in the initial period. The Wildcats took pos session on their own 37, with Donnie Clark returning a punt to the Orange 48. On the first play from scrimmage in this set of downs Riggsbee drove over ri£it tackle and sped to paydirt. The PAT attempt by Leigh was good. • Score, 7-0. In return, the Orange Pan thers drove into the Wildcats’ end zone on their next possession. : Their 60-yard drive was high lighted by a ten-yard race around right end and across the stripe by halfback Danny Davis. The attempted PAT run failed. The first half ended with the score at 7-6. After a half-time show by the Orange High Band the Wildcats took the kick at their own 30- yard line. Howard Oakes replac ed Danny Leigh at quarterback. On his first play from scrim mage Oakes handed off to Riggs- SUNDAY & MONDAY “THE TRAITORS” Patrick Allen Jacqueline Ellis TUESDAY “SHOWDOWN” Audie Murphy Kathleen Crowley Charles Drake NOW SHOWING “CAPE FEAR” starring CARY GRANT ROBERT MITCHUM Shows at 1:00—3:00 5:00—7:00—9:00 MONDAY SANBftA DEE • SUSAN KOHNER * ROBERT ALDPHsIB -JUANITA MOORE "HAHAUA lACKSON@L miwunomi new Shows at 1:00-3:17 5:34-7:51 TUESDAY THE BOOK THEY SAID . NEVER on tho Wind" | Oftm HUDSON MV ROBERT STACK Shows at I—3-5—7—9 bee, who raced 70 yards to the end zone for another score. The end run for the PAT failed. Score, 136. After a kick to the Orange 32 Wildcat defensive stalwarts Tim Farmer and David Gibson threw the Panthers for substantial losses, forcing them to punt in a fourth and 25 situation. The ’Cats took the ball deep in their own territory and worked it down field until a reverse pass by Riggsbee was intercepted. On the next play tackle BUI Blake ended up on the receiving end of an attempted Panther pass, but again the ’Cats were halted and lost the ball on downs. The Panthers, unable to pro duce a score, punted. But the Wildcats were in the same pre dicament and quick-kicked at third and ten. _ ir -, The Panthers then slipped in to gear, end their march to pay dirt from the 50 was capped by a ten-yard pass. PAT attempt was good. Score, 13-13. In the dying minutes of the fourth period the Wildcats went into the air and found them selves moving easily into Pan ther territory behind the arm of Danny Leigh. When a two-yard pass into the end zone was drop. Hearing Scheduled By Carrboro Board The Carrboro Commissioners will begin their monthly meeting half an hour early Tuesday, at 7 p.m., to hold two public hear ings on zoning change requests- Earl Eversole has requested that one lot on Carr Street be changed from residential to busi ness. The property is beside existing business property. Phillip Riggsbee 'and R. S. Lloyd have requested that prop erty in the triangle at the inter section of NC 54 and NC 54 By pass be rezoned suburban com mercial. The property's present zone is agricultural and RA-20. Mr. Riggsbee and Mr. Lloyd plan a shopping center on the property. The shopping center plan was first announced sever al months ago, and a rezoning to business was requested. This request was subsequently with drawn, and th£ current request made instead. —ln regular session the Board will: —Receive information on a new outfall sewer line, proposed to run from Carrboro’s Lincoln Park sewer line across the Jones Ferry Road to Fidelity Street. —Hear Mayor C. T. Ellington "til IT OMI MUIY- A Ma*terpl»e«"-M.rotd Tr/bun. "0m of tho best-deserves unstinted praist."-Da>vN«wt TH» VSAJTS ACAOCMV AWARD i - FOX MARLENE DIETRICH Plus Short, “INDIAN SUMMER, 1 ” Photographed by Julius Tannenbaum, Music composed and play ed by Pete and Michael Seeger. Complete showings at 1, 3:01, 5:02, 7:03 and 9:05. Rialto Theatre Durham fall flattery a-head^^Ht ... For those of you who refuse to look anything but lovely, any season! Smart girl, you . . . knowing why nice things seem to come your X \'\H way more often. It happens, you know . . . )■ right wave for your type a variety of La Marick Style Permanent Waves NtX - La Marick La Fan Creme Wave "§ AA J£m§W*mKJl comparable value, 12.50 | a yqp WyA Kw jCy TA La Marick Astre’ Creme Oil Wave „m fa fbfb , I ftßjjß comparable value, 25.00 Ilfatflf UMmL «L^’ shampoo • fashion • style set jML OPEN FRIDAY TIL 8:30 P.M. I t ' 'By. ’ BELK-LEGGETT- MlPn HORTON A. BEAUTY SALONS 2nd Floor fiBBL Phone 968-4467 La Niriei - fcijM tmm mi Urttag Biiiily Unto* ped by Glen Blackburn, Leigh again gave Riggsbee the duty of running the ball over. Riggs bee did it. Leigh kicked the ex tra point. Score, 20-13, with pack ed stands bowling. The game ended in a fruitless Panther effort to tie the score again. Despite the loss of 179 yards in penalties, the Wildcats showed themselves a team of great po tential in the performances of guards Phil Partin and Joe Di- Costanzo, tackle BUI ißlake and end Glen Blackburn on the line; and Leigh, Riggsbee, Donny Clark and David Gibson in the backfield. The Orange victory was the Wildcats’ first opening win in several years. Next week South ern of Durham. STATISTICS Chapel Hill Orange 8 First Downs 6 211 Rushing Yds 79 8-17 ....... Passes 2-7 117 Passing Yds 25 3 No. Punts 5 33.0 Punt Avg 31.6 1 Interceptions 1 1 Fumbles Lost 1 179 Yds. Penalized .... 65 describe the current status of the proposed extension of Pleas ant Drive to Umstead Drive in Carrboro. —Hear a recommendation from the Carrboro Planning Board that a 280-foot strip on either pide of NC 54 from Morgan Creek to Terrace View be zoned RA-20. Residents of NC 54 along that stretch had requested that it be included in the Carrboro planning area. The inclusion was and the Commissioners now will enabled by Legislative action, consider appropriate zoning for the area. —Graham— (Continued from Page 1) the Woman’s College of UNC from 1950 to 1956, and dean of the College of Liberal Arts and of the Graduate School of Denver. 2 Mr. Grahem is a member of the Mediaeval Academy of Am erica, the American Historical Association and the Association for Higher Education. The Chapel Hill Weekly, issued every Sunday and Wed nesday, and is entered as sec ond-class matter February 28, 1923, at the post office at Chap el Hill, North Carolina, publish ed by the Chapel Hill Publish ing Company, Inc., is under the act of March 3,1879. when Requested COLONIAL RUG GLEANERS Phone 942-2960 For results that please, use the classified ads. THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY •- BrJJ jPtTB |L j. ■r W A 4 SHRLmJ ' WBr Jjm ttj&sggßm M mm fflrsjßMMMmfflK'Jß M JEUm MWOBwHwr w jjgm ■'"w/ jib mm El j Chapel Hill Scores The Winning TD ~ Latin American Reform Is Cited By MARTHA ADAMS The mistakes of the Castro re gime in Cuba must not be al lowed tp discredit agrarian re form in the rest of Latin Amer ica, according to an economist who spoke Friday at the univer sity- , Dr. Robert J. Alexander of Rutgers University told a meet ing of toe Economic History As sociation that in at least three other Latin American countries, Mexico, Bolivia, and Venezuela, agrarian reform has been part of attempts to establish mixed economies and politically demo cratic regimes. “Agrarian reform is the order of the day in Latin America,” Dr. Alexander said. “It is the fundamental aspect of the revo lution which is sweeping the area. It is a basic need for rapid economic development, and for the achievement of feasible po litical democracy.” Most of the Latin American countries have made some move in the direction of land reform, he said, although in many cases the programs are too recent to judge Uieir effectiveness. “Agrarian reform represents the definitive destruction of the traditional oligarchy which has ruled Latin America since the Conquest of the area by Spain and Portugal. "It involvesdispas sessing the oligarchy of the land which for four and a half cen turies has been the basis of its dominant position, and the grant ing of this property to someone else.” He noted that in most of these countries a very small part of the population in some cases a fraction of one per cent—own ed and sometimes still owns most of the countries’ cultivated and arable land. “The traditional agrarian sys tem gives great political power to the landlords in the rural parts of a Latin American coun try. The peasants working on a landlord’s holding can be mobil ized and taken to the polls to vote for the candidates favored by the landlords. Furthermore, in his own area, the landlord is virtually exempt from many laws, including tax, labor, and social security legislation." The old system hinders eco nomic development. The masses of peasants live by subsistence farming with little or no money income to spend on the market and stimulate industry. Neither the landless peasant who has nothing nor the landlord who has plenty with little effort have an interest in improving the land and agricultural techniques. The wealthy landlord will keep land out of production rather than invest part of his income for improvement, Dr. Alexander said. He pointed to three major fac tors stimulating land reform to day in Latin America: the in creasing power of an economic and social middle class standing between the traditional landlord and the traditional landless peasant, the Kennedy Adminis tration’s Alliance for Progress, and the menace offered by Cas tro’s Cuba. The Alliance for Progress has made agrarian reform suddenly "respectable" and immeasurably increased the pressure to achieve it, he said. TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY FOR SALE USED KENMORE PORTABLE dish washer. Two years old. SSO. Kenmore electric stove. S2O. Phone 968-1483. HOUSE FOR SALE ~~ 3-BEDROOM, 2 BATHS, LIVING room, dining room, kitchen, dining area. In Parkwood. Convenient to Durham and Chapel Hill. Will sell or rent. Durham 596-7307. “"'GRKIID OPEHIIIC S On MILL FABRICS, Inc- EASTCATE SHOPPIH6 CEHTEB -Cottons For Sportswear- SAILCLOTH For Shorts, Bermudas. Any Type Sportswear. OXFORDS Large Selection of Colors. Right Weight for Blouses. COMBED COTTONS Whites and Colors—Fine Combed Broadcloth. *9 w yd. Remnants INDIA MADRAS Guaranteed to bleed—tones of bur- M M A J gundy, cranberry, olive, navy | lUm POPLINS 100% cotton poplin—navy, olive, AA» J gold, brown, slate blue JIQ VQ a MAJORETTE 65% dacron polyester, 35% cotton. $1 OQ yjl Olive, navy, burgundy, brown I iVv YU* FEATURING One of the Finest Names in Yarns A Generous Selection Os COUHM-WIEHA HUTTING PKMIBTS _ Bringing: new finesse and fresh styling to hand knit wear. Heavenly yarns in heavenly colors. Popular Priced Be sure to see this excellent line. MILL'FABRICS- BG on Fngidaire E budget range! Z 23-Inch wide oven holds a large ace to spare on the cooking top. ilimited heat settings for all sur oraga galore in full-width storage ijoy Frigidairo dependability!. $10095 I t I Jw Jr nun# «*F JULY term! FRIGIDAIRE PRODUCT or OINIRAL MOTORS r f* BENNETT & BLOCKSIDGE PRIGIDAIRE SALES & SERVICE 105 E. Franklin St. Phone 942-5141 Touch Football Starts This Week The Chapel Hill Recreation Department will begin its Touch Football League this week. Reg istration schedule is as follows: Carrboro School: Tuesday, 3:15 p.m., Carrboro Softball Field. Glenwood School: Wednesday, 3:15 p.m., Oakwood Drive Field. Estes Hills School: Thursday, tmm mwarntmmm Flight Training ZENITH AVIATION announces complete Aeronautical Courses f leading to FAA Certificates. V 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 Anytime Door Busters ALL PURPOSE COTTONS • Broadcloths • Sateens • Gabardines • Twills • Poplins • Chambreys • Drills • Pajama • Whites for ‘ • Dobbies Prints Linings 4 r SI.OO REMNANTS “MIX ’EM”-MATCH ’EM • Pima Cotton Prints from Wamsutta • Overall Denims Navy Blue. • Cotton Stripes • Colored Yarns • Cotton Dark Plaids • Seersuckers • Cotton Ginghams • Pin Striped Oxfords 5 9 V CUSTOM ft mm MADE m J t V DRAPERIES Lined or Unlined ■ I ■ I yd. Labor Charge Only W w 3:30 p.m., Umstead Park. West Franklin School: Friday, 3:30 p.m., Umstead Park. Any person wishing to help coach boys’ football should con tact the Recreation Department any afternoon between 2 and 5. Telephone 942-6-54. Page 3