Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Sept. 29, 1963, edition 1 / Page 1
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mimmmmmmsfmmmmmMmwmm Men agree that harping I doesn’t make a woman an il *riic. '*>■ . Volume 41, Number 78 A Talk With | I | Eric Salmon j By J. A. C. DUNN If you call the Dramatic Art Department at the Uni versity and ask for Eric Salmon, they tell you to call the Department of Radio, Television and Motion Pic tures. If you call RTVMP you may or may not find Mr. Salmon. When you do find him, he is quite candid about the difficulty of defining exactly what he does at the University. Mr. Salmon is an English dramatist-director-lecturer- ERIC SALMON ITOWN and GOWN **MBy PETE IVEY I You never think much about the University being a denom inational school. But people from all kinds of religions are here and they practice what they preach too. Chapel Hill church congregations are swarm ing with students. The former pastor of the Uni versity Methodist Church, Charles Hubbard, used to say that the large enrollment at Chapel Hill makes the Univer sity the biggest Methodist School in the State outnumbering all the Methodist students at all the other Methodist colleges in the state. UNC has more Methodists than there are Methodists at Duke, for instance, said the Rev. Mr. Hubbard. “We also have more Baptists than there are Baptists at Wake Forest,” he said. i The nearly 11,000 enrollment here this year probably means likewise that the University has more Presbyterians than there are Presbyterians at Davidson, more Catholics than any other college in the State, more Lu therans more Jews, more Epis copalians, more Hindus, more Buddhists, more Moslems, more Confucianists than any other (Continued on Page 2) SCENES ,** SPERO DORTON weighing his chances for the 1964 Guberna torial nomination, testing political winds in the Goody Shop. . . . Former District Scout Executive FRANK YANDELL, now station ed in Columbia, S. C., back in Town for the Fireball Camporee. . WUNC-FM faculty adviser ROBERT HILLIARD gradually taking root in his brand-new of fice in the new Swain annex after a year's leave of absence for educational television work Up Nawth. . . . UNC President WIL LIAM FRIDAY and Secretary FRED WEAVER, resplendent in evening dress, lending a little tone to the Carolina 1nn.... Sure sien of waning summer: JOHN LINDSAY MOREHEADs Rolls Ro.vce parked at the Inn. . . . Chapel Hill license plate buff crowing with glee after discov ering a North Dakota < extremely rare) at Eastgate. Out-of-state count now up to 38. . . . Befuddl ed coed huddling defenselessly in the middle of Franklin Street traffic. actor who is now more or less UNO's theatre man-in-residence. He is not directly responsible for teaching any classes, and his lectures will be irregular. He will appear at times in both Dramatic Art and RTVMP class es, and will do other things throughout the year all rough ly designed to bring DA and RTVMP into some kind of work ing coordination with one an other. “At the moment I lead a rath er leisurely life,’’ he says. This is because nobody has had time to talk to him yet. The Depart ments of DA and RTVMP are still in the process of getting their feet on the ground after the summer, and Mr. Salmon is pretty much of a supernumer ary right now. Mr. Salmon has delicate, hair less hands and an air of casual nattiness natty because he dresses well, casual because he does not wear his clothes as if he were about to pose for a collegiate clothing advertise ment. He tucks his tie into the top of his trousers because that seems to be the sensible way to make it behave itself; but there are no spots on the tie. “1 got started in the theatre after my university career,” he said. “I started in repertory companies, I went through the usual workings. That's one thing Americans may n*t under stand.” He scotched with great speed but equal tact the possi bility that a repertory company is aoything like a Pierrot troupe. "The Birmingham Rep is one of the really great ones. It was founded in 1909, and there are others all up and down the country. I was about 22 when I started. I got in as an assist ant stage manager. That's the usual way. They take somebody on to do walk-on parts, and also do some assistant stage manag ing you prompt, and mess about with props, make tea, gen eral dogsbody. All that mess. But almost as soon as 1 got into it I decided that I wasn't as much interested in acting as I was in directing. There is no standard way of switching from acting to directing, and I think perhaps that’s a good thing. There are so many who think (Continued on Page 2) JC’s To Collect Paper And Toys The Chapel Hill Jaycees will hold a paper drive today, begin ning at 1 p.m. Residents are asked to bundle paper they wish ed to have picked up and plac ed on curbs in front of their homes. Paper also may be de livered directly to the boxcar at the Carrboro depot. The Jaycees also will pick up toys that can be repaired and used books in readable condi tion. The toys will be refinish ed and distributed to needy fam ilies through the Junior Service League’s Christmas House. Profits from the paper drive will go to the Jaycees’ commun ity projects fund. And Suddenly, A Tent City One minute it was late after noon and the camp lots marked with string were a jumble of mounded equipment, and the next minute it was dusk and little tent cities had appeared. When William Muirhead first conceived of Glen Lennox, a Boy Scout camporee across the high way from the shopping center probably never entered his mind. But Mr. Muirhead’s heart would have warmed to see the broad field in front of Gienwood School Friday and Saturday. It was a perfect camping ground for Or ange County'S Fireball Camporee, efccept perhaps that the ground is a bit hard, and there are no trees. Over 200 Boy Scouts were ex pected. Not quite that many ac tually showed. By nightfall Fri The Chapel Hill Weekly 5 Cents a Copy 60,832 Watch Spartan Rout Michigan State Mauls UNC, 31-0 & I*? f 4.1 / , Jy * wr \ -m i . * Bob Lacey Hauls One in For Thirty Yards Definition Sought On Construction Town Manager Robert Peck will ask the Board of Adjustment to rule Tuesday whether the new structures in Rolling Hills are trailers or pre-fabricated houses. The Board meets Tuesday at 8 p.m. in the Town Halt. The structures have been erect ed ior moved) onto two five-acre tracts adjacent to the Rolling Hills subdivision off Pittsboro Highway by developer Jack Car lisle. Residents of the area have complained to the Board of Al dermen that Mr. Carlisle is op erating an unauthorized trailer park in violation of the zoning ordinance. Mr. Peck concurs that Mr. Car lisle has set up a trailer park in violation of the zoning ordin ance, but Mr. Carlisle contends that he has done nothing more than erect two five-unit apart ment buildings, plus a three-bed room house. Mr. Carlisle said yesterday that the structures are actually pre fabricated homes, transported by trailer. He cited two letters from the general manager of the Mag nolia Mobile Homes Corporation, of South Hill, Va., manufacturers of the units, in support of his argument. The letters stated that tfw; Fed eral Housing Authority and nu merous banks had accepted the structures as houses and had granted conventional home mort gages on them. The difference between the units and normal pre-fab houses is in the method (Continued on Page 2) day there were four Scout troops bivouacked and cooking, com prising something over 100 boys. More troops arrived later-. Chapel Hill Troop 39 declined to attend the Camporee. Other Scout leaders were somewhat dis appointed, though most seemed to accept the fact that the 39ers are more or less loners. Troop 39 went off to the woods to camp this weekend, well away from highway traffic and the tempting comforts of, (Hen Lerrnpx. But Troop 39 donated its hand : made tower to the clan - gathering (Troop 39 is tile Chapel Hill Troop that builds a monkey bridge of rope and lumber in the blink of an eye), and the tower, decorat ed with Troop 39's flag, was used in Saturday’s Camporee activi ties. Serving the Chapel Hill Area Since 1923 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1963 Cooper Is Elected As YDC President Chapel Hill attorney Robert Cooper was acclaimed president of the Orange County YDC for the coming year Friday. The YDC elected officers Fri day night at a meeting in Hills boro. Also chosen by acclama tion was Mrs. Helen Laws, from north of Hillsboro, as first vice president. Chapel Hill attorney Barry Winston defeated Mrs. De los O’Daniel of Carrboro for sec retary-treasurer, and Miss Ruth Privettc of Hillsboro was elected second vice president over Mrs. Willard Oakley. All officers assume their posi tions officially at an installation banquet January 1. The YDC endorsed U. S. Dis trict Attorney Wiliam H. Mur dock of Durham as successor to Federal Judge L. Richardson Preyer, who will resign to run for Governor. The YDC also commended Sena tor Sam J. Ervin “for his forth- MMMmwmiMii mm> mmem/m I Weather Report | Considerable cloudiness with mild temperatures today. High Low Wednesday ... 73 43 Thursday 80 51 Friday 83 40 Saturday 79 53 There is always a good deal of humidity this time of the year, what with losing coaches and old grads crying. Troop 827 from Cedar Grove got there early, tearing an old truck bed and a large supply ..Of pordwood, The zenith of Troop 827 s weekend was the barbecuing of a whole pig, over a coal fire built in the bottom of the truck bed. The coals were made in a barrel with a batch cut at the bottom for removing them. The pig - cooking took about 12 hours and began at about 3 a.m. Saturday. The pig .. was collected from Piedmont Packing Co. in Hillsboro shortly after 2 a.m. Water was supplied by the Chapel Hill Fire Department, which sent an engine and a small but dashing'crew of firemen to attach a length of heavy hoke to the Gienwood School fire hy (Continued OQ Page S) right stand against encroachment of the United States federal f|ov ernment in the field of govern ment reserved to the states.” Present YDC president Fred Cates Jr. of Hillsboro, criticized former State Democratic Party chairman Bert Bennett for his estimate of I. Beverly Lake’s and Judge Dan K. Moore's respective chances of winning the Demo cratic gubernatorial nomination. "The past chairman of the Democratic party in North Caro lina should be utterly condemned for his statements,” Mr. Cates said. Orange Rep. Edwin Hamlin asked for YDC members’ com ments on the special session of the Legislature, to be held in Oc tober on State Senate redistrict ing. Mr. Hamlin has already stated his support of Governor Terry Sanford’s redistricting pro posal. Orange County Democratic Party Chairman L. J. Phipps ur ged the YDC to get persons in the 19-23 age bracket active in poli tics. 'jfc rii-M' __ yAPEh /It -i-As ,*> . |ppl| sm:- DAVID CANSLER BIFF BREAM DICK GEARY ALLEN KOON O. W. Holmes Talks Start On Tuesday By PETE IVEY Three professors of law will pre side at the Oliver Wendell Holmes Lectures Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday in Carroll Hall audi-' torium at 8 p.m. each evening. Harvard Law School Professor Arthur E. Sutherland will be the speaker The public is invited. Chancellor William B. Ayeoek will preside Tuesday night when Professor Sutherland speaks in "Social Statistics and a Restless People.” Dean Henry P. Brandis Jr. of the University Law School will be chairman Wednesday. Prof. Sutherland will speak on "Educa tion in the Obvious.” Prof. Dan Pollitt, a member of the Law School faculty here and a former students Prof. Suther land, will preside Thursday eve ning when the speaker’s subject is "To Grow More Civilized." The University was selected as (Continued on Page 8) SUNDAY j L ISSUE 1 mmmmmmmmmsmmmmMzM Published Every Sunday and Wednesday Carolina Offense Fails To Threaten By BILLY CARMICHAEL 111 Carolina ran into an ‘L’’ of a Michigan State back field yesterday afternoon Roger Lopes, Sherman Lewis and Dewy Lincoln who, ably directed by sopho more quarterback Steve Juday, completely overpowered the visiting Tar Heels, 31-0, before 60,832 fans at East Lansing. Between them the “L” boys actually gained exact ly twice the yardage produced by the entire Tar Heel attack 228 yards to 114 while scoring two touchdowns plus setting up another and a field goal. For a little more than a half it was a close football game. The Spartans scored the first time (hey got their hands on the ball, driving 73 yards in 13 plays. But after that the Tar Heel defenses firmed up, allowing on ly three more points before the halftime. Twice in the first half the Tar Heels threatened to put themselves on the scoreboard, but neither time could they find the goal line in their script. The Carolina offense is closely at tuned to the throwing arm of quarterback Junior Edge. Yes terday afternoon, Edge, who was injured early in last week’s game with Virginia, was throw ing like a rookie southpaw on the first day of spring practice. As Edge went, so went the Ter Heels. Eariy in the second half, the Tar Heels suddenly dropped out of serious contention. Back to punt on fourth down at his own 20, Tar Heel Bill Edwards got a high pass from center and a strong Spartan rush. He decided it best to run for his life and a possible first down. He didn’t make it. Michigan Stale took over at the Carolina 26 and nine plays later the ”L" boys and Juday had punched the ball across to make the score, 17-0. The Tar Heels had passed the point of no return. The Spartans got two more touchdowns in the fourth period as the Tar Heels began to lose heart. The first of these was a pulsating run by fullback Lopes. The Hawaiian eye-popper from (Continued on Page 6) The Statistics MSU UNC 21 First Downs 7 332 Yards Rushing 30 77 Yards Passing 84 6-24 . Passes completed .. 10-26 3 Intercepted by 1 5.42.4 .. Punt Average .. 4-40 1 Fumbles lost 1 75 Yards penalized 15 MSU 7 3 7 14—31 UNC 0 0 0 o—o ir Too Many Mistakes,’ Says Hickey What can a coach say when he’s just lost a game by a 31-0 score that he came to win? ”We didn't play a very good game,” said Coach Jim Hickey in a voice husky I t orn a cold that had him reaching for Kleenex all afternoon. "We made too many mistakes that cost us dearly. Michigan State made the most of them. And that’s the sign of a good ball club." "Our passing game simply didn’t hit the mark,” he said literally. "The first half had us liopeiui. We hadn't played well, we were behind, but we were still where we could make a comeback.” Coach Hickey paused, thought back and then continued. "Then right at the start of the second half, we began a series of mis takes that ended up with us looking like Santa Claus. "The first of these was the turning point of the ball game from our point of view. Bill Ed wards was back to punt on fourth down. He got in trouble and decided to run. Michigan State took over deep in our ter ritory, ran the score to 17-0 and that was the ball game. “We came here expecting to win and for the first 30 minutes we weren’t changing our minds. Then the bottom fell out. Mich igan State is as good as last year,” Hickey concluded. Across the passage Michigan State Coach Duffy Daugherty was his jolly winning self. "We’ve got the start of what should be a representative Mich igan State team. Os course, next week we play Southern Cal, the. nation's No. 1 team, and that should tell us something more about ourselves. "North Carolina was tougher defensively than they were last year tougher up front. They contained our wide game much (Continued on Page 6)
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 29, 1963, edition 1
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