Page 4 Chapel Hill Mauls Southern By 33-6 By DOUG JOHNSTON The Chapel Hill Wildcats slosh ed their way to a 33-6 victory at Southern High of Durham Friday night. Both teams had to battle rot only each other, but also slip pery turf and several inches o i mud on the rain-soaked gridiron. This victory avenged an earlier loss to the Rebels and boosted the Wildcats’ league record to 4-1, while the Southern squad's mark dropped to 0-5. Overall the Cats are 6-3; Southern is 2-6-1. At the start the game promised to be a "mud the first half each team managed only one score. Joe DiCostanzo recovered a fumble on the Southern 32 for the ’Cats, from where, in three plays, they scored. Fullback Dav id Gibson slithered over from the five, and Danny Leigh’s kick was (Advertisement) BY ALICE STONE Ladies, if you think that pre occupation with beauty and gla mour comes with maturity—for get it. 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THIS WEEK’S HELPFUL HINT; Incidentally, ladies, nail polish remover is also fine for re moving residue left by cellophane tape. : : ; ' ' " ' :n for Vacations O o jZj Q iM ■ Ji \ , I ■ • \ .■ •t-- 1 H B * r \«k <# <‘ ,‘ / \ \ | » | «■ JF * ■ v}lK? *’ v Aj 'j -M >“>*/ *,. * * v * i So many vacations start at ■■■■ Central Carolina Bank. You can save for your vacation BjBI , / with a CCB savings account. If you need extra cash, get M| a CCB instalment loan. Who travels these days without travelers checks? And it’s wise to leave valuables in a CCB safe deposit box. Member Federol Depotil Iniuronce Corporation good. Southern, sparked- by full back Jimmy Collins, launched a 72-yard drive in the closing min utes of the second quarter and the halftime mark was 7-6. A roaring crowd of 25 Wildcat rooters witnessed the second half kick-off. As Coach Culton’s squad got in the swim of things, the rooters saw the ’Cats tally four more times while the defense swamped the Rebel attack. Stan Perry started the action with a 47-yard score from scrim mage Minutes later he made it 20-6 as he returned a punt 53 yards to score and Leigh added the PAT. Chapel Hill added two more touchdowns in the final quarter, one the climax of a 75- yard drive as Donnie Clarke wig gled away from two Rebels to reach paymud from 35 yards out. A subsequent drive was high lighted by a 30-yard run by Leigh to the Southern six. He then took it the additional six yards to score, adding the PAT on a quart erback sneak. Score: 33-6. Each team made three pass at tempts, none of which were good. Even under the game’s submarine conditions, the Wildcats failed to reach the line of scrimmage only once. Coach Culton commented that the entire backfield (Leigh, Clarke, Perry, Gibson) "looked like they were not to be stopped. Several times we felt they were stopped at the line of scrimmage, but they kept on digging and eventually broke away.” Why was the game played under such conditions? "Probably the reason the coach (Southern's Terry Swanger) want ed to play was that Southern is known as a ’power team.’ We like to run to the outside and throw the ball. It worked the op posite and we looked like a 'power team.’ “I was amazed that we didn’t fumble; that ball stayed slippery, muddy wet. Every time one of our backs went through he held the ball with both hands and tucked it under his arm.” The determination of the Wild cats on the field was matched by the Wildcats in the stands. While at one point Southern had only two fans in the stands, the Chap el Hill aggregation totaled 42 spectators at its peak, with a complete, but rain-soaked cheer lea-iing squad. Score by periods: Chapel Hill 7 0 13 13-33 Southern 6 0 0 6—7 tftL jiaiiMl A* m,jfr* • irf^nf 1 jubh*. .. * A w Jr , V Hal ■ iA; \Sm m •* m .JJ'i v * wMk 11 f H mw “ ■ v u _ ,Pi i m U Vtk, \ ~ —HHB—HR »- ■* HI vBHhL. Nik' \ v n M. \ > - V : hHb . \ If i ; ■ cj gt B Sl . I L „;JB & ■ Lincoln Coach William Peerman Shows One Os His Tigers How Lincoln Tigers: A Football Hurricane By J. A. C. DUNN People who mess with the Lin coln High football team lose. This is an established fact, as changeless as the prevalence of hurricanes in early autumn. The only difference between Lincoln and autumn is that the Tigers extend their hurricane season well into November. The Tigers, a double-A team, were Eastern District champions in 1959, and State champions in 1960 and ’6l. They lost the State championship game last year, but that is their only loss in the last 55 games, including nine games so far this season. This year they have been running up scores of 40, 28, and, week before last, a staggering 62, all follow ed by 0 for their opponents. They haven’t been scored on since the championship game last year. Their lowest score this year was 6, against Merrick-Moore. That was a tough game. It was rain ing hard. Thursday they squeaked narrowly past Nash High. Every body but the team had been a bit worried about the Nashville game. The team had been ready to play the game Monday after noon, but Coach William Peer man's approach to Nashville had been a bit more grave. “They're a tough team,”-he said last Mon day. “They have big, tall boys,” said Lincoln principal C. A. Mc- Dougle solemnly as classes were excused briefly Thursday morn ing so the students could bid the team goodbye. The Tigers preserved their record by a rela tive hairline: 36-0. Lincoln is a sort of Gordian Knot cf North Carolina high school football. There really isn't much point in anybody else play ing Lincoln. Everybody loses, like clockwork. Things have almost gotten to the point now where Lincoln’s opposition defines a per fect season as one in which every game but one is a victory. Some people on Lincoln’s circuit are just this side of considering the Lincoln game an automatic loss. The Tigers are not a big team in any sense of the word. Coach Peerman has 31 boys to work with, and regularly plays 19 of them. He throws in the other 12 for short spells now and then. The Tigers’ average age is 17. most of the starters are jun iors. The heaviest man on the squad weighs 196, and their op ponents’ lines often average over 200. The Tigers are built much like their namesake, long, lean, rangy, and fast. Two or three are quite short. One of the short boys’ legs are of different lengths, a congenital handicap. He limps, but he plays guard, and if you told him to tackle a cantering horse, he probably would bring it down. “He never flinches,” said Coach Peerman. The Coach put the boy on the football team to “keep him alive,” to make him see that an odd leg didn’t render him use less to the world. At the be ginning of the season the boy couldn’t do a “bicycle” during calisthenics. Now you can't tell the difference between his and any other players’ "bicycles.” "He’s a-good player,” said Coach Peerman, “and the boys love him. They love him." # The real reason the Lincoln Tigers can’t lose Is that they won’t. It’s as simple as that. “These boys love the game, and they believe nobody can beat them.” The team is as closely knit as a percale sheet. You can 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, Norm Carolina, publish ed by the Chapel Hill Publish ing Company, Inc., is under the act of March S. 1879. THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY tell from watching them scrim mage. They play football among themselves during the summer. From the middle of August until school opens Coach Peerman has them up at six in the morning and practicing until eight, with another two-hour practice in the a.temoon. After school starts they practice an hour and a half a day. Sartorially, the Tigers are not impressive during practices. Their practice pants and jerseys are venerably worn, some notably tattered and patched with tape. One or two boys seem to be trousered chiefly in tape. Their helmets are good ones, but battle scarred. But they don’t care. An odd, warlike glitter flashes from the eyes behind every face guard. They move as though spring-driv en; not one of them has that lumbering stride characteristic of the bulldozer linesman. The fast est man on the squad consistent ly outruns his interference when carrying the ball and has com plained to Coach Peerman about having to run over his blockers in order to get anywhere. Aside from his own coaching talent and the indestructible Tig er spirit, Coach Peerman has two chief assistants, Herbert Hargett and Big Mike. Herbert Hargett is a practice teacher at Lincoln and Cfeach Peerman’s assistant. He is built like a bison and his howitzer voice has a note of utter con tempt for foul-ups that stings boys into doing it right or suffer ing the ignominy of being sum marily sidelined. Big Mike is the Tigers’ charg ing dummy. Relays of Tiger lines practice daily hitting Big Mike like a truck slamming into an oak, sending it and Coach Har gett, who rides the frame, sailing up and down the Lincoln High field “like tissue paper,” as Coach Peerman put it. The Tigers sing during calis thenics. Thty sing “Davy Crock ett" while doing deep knee bends, and then they hum the tune, and then they whistle it, and then there’s a little spate of chatter and they start flinging themselves t( the ground and doing pushups, counting cadence. During scrimmage both lines leap from the snap like a man snatching at a teetering bottle. A wirey ball carrier made ap parently of pipecleaners leaps over the line, around the line, through holes made for mice, des perate for yardage. At one point he carried three tacklers for half a dozen steps before going down. NORA SOMNI tTWO WORDS THAT OFTEN APPEAR ON PRESCRIPTIONS . . . MEAN “AT BEDTIME” . . . Whe* yur doctor writes in clas sic words apoa your prescription, H is ap to your pharmacist to translate (Or you . . . gtv* ym, the exact directions. Trust Us knowledge! Glen Lennox Pharmacy FREE DELIVERY Ebon* 967-7014 Glen Lennox Shopping Center-Free Parking Coach Peerman is a strict dis ciplinarian. “When they get in that monkey suit and come out here on the field, they’re out here to work, not to play. This is no kidding, for keeps. There’s got to be one boss on the field. They've go to do what you tell ’em to, if they don’t I might as well go home.” They have, training rules no smoking, reasonable bed hours, etc. Coach Peerman knows that some of his boys stay out late, and that some sneak a quick cigarette on the back path from the school to Merritt Mill Road. But he doesn’t go around at night looking for them. “I tell ’em, I’m not going out to look for them. You don’t know where they are. It’s a waste of gas.” They keep or break their own rules. Coach Peerman has deeply hol lowed, rather sad eyes, the body of a veteran lumberjack, and a deep, slow, hoarse voice sugges tive of immense authority. His coaching technique is not the tact ful, persuasive kind. He lowers his head and glares with outrage at a player who makes a mis take. He thumps shoulders, digs ribs, bellows orders, calls his boys by their first names, and Mrs. Peerman complains that the Coach puts his team before his lamily. “She’s almost right,” he says. "She knows good and well I don’t put anything above her and the children. She’s just try ing to get at me. But she’s al most right.” He was brought up in western Pennsylvania. He loves football as a game (“and basketball just that much less, and baseball that much less than that”), but he al -so sees the game as a discipline. It keeps boys off the streets, away from the hangouts, out of trouble. He was not far from de linquency himself, so he knows. “I got to running around with this group of boys. I played hooky a lot—you go to school one day, stay out three. My cousin was playing football, catching passes and everything, and I wanted so much to be like him. The coach talked to me and talked to me, and he told my daddy about me staying out of school. I didn’t know he’d told my daddy. I came home one day, and my daddy said ‘Take off all my clothes.’ He had a coal miner’s belt, which is about this thick, and he whipped me—man. he whipped me. He set me straight. I began to think after that.” He blasted the pea nearly out of his whistle and roared, “Line it up,” in a voice that filled every nook and cranny of Lincoln High School. His boys, tattered but very proud and dangerously spring loaded, loped off down the field like a tribe of wildcats moving in to take over a city block. The boys come, and the boys graduate. The face of the team changes year by year. But the spirit remains. The Lincoln Tig ers believe they are unbeatable, and the belief is passed on from team to team like an heirloom, a talisman, the key to the lock. But it is not a rabbit’s foot in heritance. It is a weapon. Help the underprivileged through the Chapel Hill-Carrboro Community Chest. 1 MATCH THE NUMBER POSTED AT COLONIAL STORES WITH THE NUMBER ON BACK OF YOUR SURPRISE SAMPLER . . . AND YOU’RE A WINNER IN THE $2000,000.00 COLONIAL SWEEPSTAKES! FARM BRAND SAUSAGE | GOLOMiAI STORES | lb. g\ *■ ■ ROLL jmC ARMOUR STAR SLICED Prices Good Through Wednesday, Nov. 6, 1963 T T INOf q "“ 1 “ y "* IjUil\jll CS . PREMIUM QUALITY MEATS BOLOGNA • SPICED MEAT JAR PICKLE & PIMENTO ZZZIZIZZZZZZZIZII^Z LIVER CHEESE our Pride Sandwich Your ch,>l " BREAD 2 49 c A PEGS. .00 V Geneva Brand 1 * \CATSUP 2^33«| CRISP ICEBERG LETTUCE = 15c f" J* FAMILY FAVORITE! r CAMPBELL’S VEGETABLE , soup 2 25 CHASE & SANBORN INSTANT COFFEE I „,®cY 1 BIG I \ JAR * | 1 I C. S. Instant yZ oo \ cofFEi r 1.09 \ Box ** J 1 • • • plus Gold Bond stamps with your purchases Lincoln Brushes Off Nash 36-0 Lincoln High put the finishing touches to an unbeaten and un scored-on season Thursday by thrashing Nash County High, 36-0 in Nashville. Highlighting the game was a 100 - yard touchdown run by Thomas 'Bell with an intercepted Nash County pass in the final quarter. Bell also scored a seven yard touchdown in the first quar ter, Lincoln went ahead in the sec ond quarter when Warren Harris and Paul Farrington tackled a Nash ball carrier in the end zone. Fred Baldwin capped an 80- yard drive also in the second quarter by going over from four yards out. Grady Wright ran 25 yards for a Lincoln touchdown on a pass Business Faculty Teach Institute Instructors from the Univer sity School of Business Admin istration will serve again this yaar-Mthe faculty for the Hos pital Executive Development Institute. The four-day institute will be gin