Wednesday, Nov. 27, 1963 Before It Was Just A Drunk By RED SMITH In the New York Herald Tribune Between halves of the Army- Navy football game last year, cadets and midshipmen formed a double row across the field and John F. Kennedy walked PARTONT ® MmmML NEW YORK • LUGANO. SWITZERUNO pre-holiday Save 60$ Barton’s Miniature Fruit Cakes Hi Save 58* Barton’s Miniature Chocolates Luscious! Barton’s Minia ture rum-flavored Fruit Cakes with nuts and glazed fruit. 15 to a box. Reg. $2.79, now $2.19. Scrump tious! Barton’s assortment of Miniature Continental Chocolates. 1 lb. 5 oz. 106 pieces—23 different cen ters. Reg. $2.87, now $2.29. Double size—2 lb. 10 oz. reg. $5.74, now only $4.58. Specials on sale till December sth only. If you wish, we will also take your orderthrough December sth, and deliver on any day younamebeforeChristmas. ianztger’a Old World Gift Center 153 E. Franklin Hardwood. . soft spoken I, . „ a A Fitch Creations Kitchen of genuine hard wood is a life-long source of pride and en joyment. Drawers glide in and out smoothly ff§"||"|i and quietly; doors open and close easily. The natural beauty of individually patterned : ; nggra hardwoods tor decorator colors) is protected ‘ yW", w , and enhanced with almost indestructible soft-sheen finishes. Always pleasant to the ' ']■'•’ '■ touch, your hardwood kitchen is never cold or clammy. For professional planning serv. Phone 942-510' ioe. visit Fitch greaUons-the sbowplace of fine kitchens. FITCH CREATIONS, Inc. 203 N. Greensboro St, Carrboro Phone 942-5107 between the ranks from a flag draped box in the west stands to another in the east. I Hatless and without an over coat in the November cold, he went jauntily one football fan among 100,000. He was a Navy veteran but he was also Com mander-in-Chief of- the Army. In the first half he had seen Navy take a lead of 15-6. Halfway across, a drunk broke through the line and was almost within arm’s reach of the President when Secret Serv ice men grabbed him. Laughter started in the crowd but choked off. „ Suppose the drunk hadn’t been drunk? Suppose he had a gun? It could have happened there in Philadelphia, before 100,000 witnesses. No doubt the 64th Army-Navy game will come off as sched uled next Saturday, if anybody cares. It is difficult to conceive of anybody caring but life has to on, and work, and prob ably play, too. John Kennedy enjoyed games as e participant and spectator, and sports had his hearty offi cial support as President. There is no disposition here to condemn the few college au thorities who did not call off their games yesterday or the men in the National Football League who decided to go through with today’s schedule. A while back some promotion ' man on the Herald Tribune •lumped the paper’s book re viewers and drama and tele vision critics and a few others into a group he called. The Tastemakers but this peanut stand wasn’t included. What seems bad taste to one man is plain common sense to another. What one considers de cent respect is mawkish in other eyes. Maybe it’s important to de termine whether the St. Louis Cardinals can upset the Giants in Yankee Stadium today, whether the Bears can push on against the Steelers in Pitts burgh. There’s a race to be finished and there’s money in vested. Money. Maybe a lot of people will feel it perfectly proper to at tend. Like it or not, we newspa per stiffs will have to be there because that’s our job as much as A. Tittle’s job. If Yale and Harvard had played yesterday, we’d have had to be there, too. Thank heaven they didn’t. Work must go on, but there’ll be other days to shiver in that crepe-gray heap called Yale Bowl being lighthearted about a game for children. CULTON TO SPEAK Bob Culton, director of physic al education and athletics for Chapel Hill schools, will be the speaker at tonight’s meeting of the Chapel Hill Rotary Club. The dinner meeting begins at 6:30 at the Carolina Inn. Mr. Culton will be presented by program director Howard Thompson, sup erintendent of Chapel Hill schools. BILLY ARTHUR I thought my proposed hill billy lyrics were such that would end all hillbiHy tunes, but now I know nothing like that will ever happen. Could it be so, there would have been none since 1858, for in that year, according to The State Magazine, the Farmers and Planters Almanac rhymister rhymed: “When Peggy’s arms her dog imprison, I often wish my dog was hisen. How often would I stand and turn And take a pat from hands like hern.” * * • ~ Before the Duke-Carolina game was postponed, Dr. Mar vin Chapin said he was going deer hunting that Saturday. “The last time I went deer hunting, we beat Duke 50 to 0,” he said. “And I’m going again Saturday and taking the same transistor radio that I listened in on the last time.” When Jim Phipps heard that, he added, “Now, if we can get John Umstead to go dude hunt ing at Lake Mattamuskeet, we’re set. That’s where he was the last time.” I don’t know whether Dr. Chapin will have time off to get back on a deer stand, but there’s certainly plenty of time left to cart John down to Hyde County. * * * Fellow ordered six hundred beads from us and then wanted two pieces of piano wire. “Betcha want to know what I want with this,” he suggested. We did. “When I was over in Japan I —Looking Back— j From the Weekly’s files: IN 1923 Progress “The steel framework for the third story of the Carolina Inn at the west gate of the campus is almost all in place. The plan is still to finish and open the Inn in the spring.” Advertisement: We Cut Meat To Suit The Customer Prices Likewise LEIGH’S MARKET Phone 59 (Residence 56) IN 1933 - Headline: Woollen’s Run Launches Spirited Attack as Game Nears End, and Carolina Beats Virginia, 14 to 0 1 * With Oily about 8 Minutes to Play, Chapel Hill Youth Returns Punt THE CHAPEL HILL WEEKLY I learned to use an abacus. And now I’ve got a lot of calculat ing to do. So I’m going to make me one. This’ll cost about $5, and that’ll beat buying an SBOO calculator.’.’ " • * * —* Most accommodating fellow. I’ve heard of lately was Dr. George Baroff. When a little girl wanted to know in a local store if a moccasin kit had a sole big enough for her dad, Dr. Baroff promptly removed his shoe and let her take a measure. * * • Our Billy Jr. is not alto gether sold on ordering things by mail. “They told me,” he said, “that a boy in Glenwood School or dered something in the third grade and didn’t get it till he was in the fifth.” * * • Something I thought I’d never see occured at Aldersgate Methodist Church Sunday morn ing: They were short one collec tion plate and had to hold up the service while one was ob tained from another part of the church. * * * Speaking of churches, Archi tect Archie* Davis of Durham says the worst dispute he ever had with a client was about putting a play room in a church basement. “The board told me they were afraid a play area might lead to some sort of gambling,” Ar chie said. “And I told them that I had lost more money out ing odd and even numbers in a hymn book than I ever did play ing poker.” To Virginia’s 11-Yard Line, and Touchdown Follows: Barclay, Intercepting Pass, Makes Another Bicycling Rejuvenated “Mrs. Olsen and Mrs. A. W. Hobbs rode over to Durham and back on their bicycles the other day—2s miles. The round trip took them about three hours. They may go to Raleigh, but if they ride as far as that they will probably come back on the bus with their wheels checked as baggage, up on top. “Bicycling is winning new ad herents in Chapel Hill every day. Mrs. McClamroch hasn't got her wheel, yet but she has made a preparation nearly as important; that is, she has obtained a beau tiful divided skirt . . . "Other bicyclists are Mrs. Sum merlin and Mrs. Knight . . . “One of the most enthusiastic devotees of the rejuvenated sport, Mrs. Paul Green, came back from Hollywood this week and is riding with Mrs. Olsen and other friends.” IN 1943 From the issue of November 25: Edney. Army Pilot, Missing Over China "Mr. and Mrs. Fred E. Edney received a message from the War Department this week saying that their son, Captain James S. Edney, Army pilot, was missing in action somewhere over Chin ese territory. Captain Edney, who entered the Army about four years ago, is 24 years old. He has a wife and a three-weeks-old son in San Antonio. “The Edneys have two other sons in the service. Joseph Ed ney is a Marine at Cherry Point, N. C." Capt. Edney Is Safe “Mr. and Mrs. Fred Edney have learned that their son, Cap tain James S. Edney, Army pilot, who was reported missing over China last week, is safe. The news came through Captain Ed ney’s wife. His parents under stand, from the message they received, that , he is wounded, but not dangerously, and is back with his own men.” IN 1953 “Two Chapel Hillians, L. O. Kattsoff and Mrs. Sarah Watson Emery, will speak in Raleigh at the afternoon session of the fall meeting of the North Carolina Philosophical Society. Mr. Katts off will give a paper on ‘lntuition’ and Mrs. Emery on ‘Academic **reedom’ . . . ac>u,& PAINTING * PAPERING DutM HI Margaa at INal