Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Dec. 8, 1963, edition 1 / Page 8
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Page 8 —Chest Drive— ‘ (Continued from Page 1) grateful for the generosity of the community to this point.” Girl Scouts: ‘"lliere will have We Don’t Want To Be Known As ~ ' Name Droppers ■*- but . . . We Feature WARREN SEWELL SEBAGO-MOCS MOJUD SEDGEFIELD JEANIE BLOCK 420 COLLECTION ESQUIRE FAMOUS WRANGLER ITALO PEERLESS et. al. Campus Style W. Franklin St. Ph. 929-1556 Time to Save Savings Invested at HOME . by the 10 th | of the j month j Earn full | 4 % Dividends j I from the ! JSt 123 North & Columbia Street I in Chapel Hill f , to be some curtailment of serv ices. Most probably this cur tailment will be evidenced by a shortage in the supplies and services to the leaders in this area. No doubt the availability of training opportunities will lessen. And eventually, financial insecurity wiH definitely affect the Council’s ability to main tain an adequate professional staff ... We prefer not to en gage in a separate independent fund drive but may, from neces sity, be forced into this posi tion.” Chapel Hill Recreation Depart ment: “In essence, Community Chest rt|oney makes possible pro grams with total community participation. This is a service to the Chapel Hill residents as well as the non-residents . . . The Commission (knows) the great need for continued pro grams for underprivileged chil dren, regardless of their place of residence. So it was fitting and proper that the Commission ask the Community Chest for money to support such pro grams.” Holmes Day Nursery: A reduc tion in the original $5,000 Chest allotment might result in toe re lease of one of toe Nursery’s five assistants. This would result in ten working mothers having to give up their jobs in order to take care of (heir children; or that ten teenagers might drop out of school to take care of toe children so the mothers could continue working. Y-Teens: “A reduction in funds will mean that these young girls can no longer participate in na tional or regional conferences, which have brought so much recognition to our community in toe past.” Animal Protection Society: “A 15 per cent reduction in funds will simply mean that 15 out of every 100 unwanted, strayed, and hurt dogs and cats will starve to death, carry diseases, and probably menace the well being and health of the commun ity.” —Fund Bias— (Continued from Page 1) Commission director W. F. Bab cock in Raleigh, Higiway Dis trict Commissioner James Mac- Lamroc in Greensboro, and Gov ernor Terry Sanford might pro duce some action. Mr. Scroggs added afterwards that the County’s and Chapel Hill’s roads would be maintained as usual; that it was only new road construction money that was apparently being delayed. “You (citizens) can do much more by writing letters than we (the Planning Board) can ever do just talking about it,” said Mr. Scroggs. jSayservh!^ when Requested Phone 942-2960 COLONIAL RUG CLEANERS | CAROLINA SPECIAL I I THE GATOR BOWL I I Atlantic Coast Line II I r“"”” —————— Originates at $35 ROUND TRIP ROCKY MOUNT ■ Chair Car Pi k t II I GAME TICKET WILSON AND BUS SERVICE SELMA FAYETTEVILLE Depart Rocky Mount Friday, Dec. 27, 11 P.M., arrive I Jacksonville, 8:30 A.M., Saturday, Dec. 28. Chair Cars, Pullman aad Club Car included. Passes to exclusive Chateau and Ponte Vedre Clubs I courtesy ACL. Bus service to and from game provided. Leave I Jacksonville 11 p.m. after game. Arrive Fayetteville 8 a.m. I Sunday with stops Selma, Wilson and Rocky Mount. Representative of ACL A Patterson will be at Woollen Gym Tuesday. Dec. 10, » a.m. & 9 p.m., to sell tickets and answer questions. Also available seats on charter plane Ralelgh-Durham I Airport. Depart 8 A.M. arrive 9:18 AM. with breakfast. Re- I turn 7 P.M. arrive 8:18 with dinner. Game tickets and Bus I I Service Included with Air Travel. For InfotmaUon, call or write PATTERSON TRAVEL I I SERVICE. P. O. Box 1110 Raleigh, Telephone TE-48431. —A Talk With Dean Smith— (Continued from Page 1) down. He opened K again and it fell down. He opened It wide and resumed his seat. "That window doesn’t even work in the sum mer,” he said, and answered the telephone. “Hi, Oscar ...” The walls of the office are still Carolina blue, unchanged since last year. The framed photo graphs still hang in rows, still slightly crooked. He hung up and tried to get toe telephone calls held for a few minutes, but the secretary was out. Slightly different team . . . “We lost our veteran back court this year. Brown and Po teet are gone. They played with us three years, and you get to relying on an experienced back court These boys haven’t got quite as much savvy, but I think we’re going to be just as good as last year, only in a different way. Last year we were a small team and we had a lot of speed. This year we have size, and more power . . .” Telephone: “Hi Andy ...” . We have Cunningham, and we have Charlie Shaffer. I think he’s going to work out real well.” BiHy Galantai has an interest ing problem. His arthritic knee bothers him when it rains. “We’ll be all right as Mg as it doesn’t rate,” Coach Smith told some body named Roy on toe tele phone. Then the secretary came back and the flow of telephone calls was staunched for a few minutes. “They told Galantai he had the knees of a sixty-year-old man,” said the coach. “He’s twenty-one. It comes from playing ball on toe hard streets in New York, R damages your knees. York Larese had the same problem, and they operated on him. I don’t think they can operate on Galantai, though. It doesn’t bother him much. But we had a rainy day last week and I noticed it slowed him down a little.” Coach Smith spent the summer working up training films from clippings of movies of last year’s games sequences of good de fensive work, examples of good fast-breaking, etc. This fall he has been recruiting and making speeches. He went as far north as Boston, as far west as Chi cago. and as far south as St. Petersburg. “That’s an interesting thing, toough. Thirteen of the eighteen men on the squad are from North Carolina. The others are from Pennsylvania and New York. Just three states represented.” But there is no atmosphere of New Yorkness or Pennsylvanian ess among the team. “They’re University of North Carolina stu dents, they’re representing toe University, as far as we’re con cerned they’re just as much North Carolinian as anyone else. Like Coach Barclay once said, ‘They’re all from Chapel Hill,’ because they’re all here at the University.” Last year Coach Smith men tioned an interest in trying things nobody had ever done before. There may not be quite so much innovation this year. “So much of football, and basketball too, is just copying other people. But there has to be somebody to THE CHAPEL WIT T; WEEKLY copy.. I believe ip trying new things, but I don’t think we’H have too much of that this year.” He did not explain why, but he did explain his recruiting sys tem. "We hear toe name, and then we check out how toe boy is as a student, his character and everything, and then we see whether he can (day basketball. If you do it the other way around you waste a lot of time on people who may not be able to get into the University. These young men are here as students first. I be lieve in competition, in inter-col legiate sports. And intramurals are good too. But you know, for years Tennessee played single wing football, and they had to get a tailback. They bad to get guards who could pull. Even after Georgia went to the split- T, they were doing this. But we don’t run a Procrustean bed. We don't try to fit the boy to toe system.” “We” is a little Smith hall mark. Professionally, be has little “I” or “me” about him. “We’re very close. Os course, there’s a gap between the coach ing staff and the piayers, but they’re ave» close group, and we’re all cMR. We don't have any discipline problems or any thing like that. They’re serious minded about it. I don’t think we have a joker, a funny man, that you could classify as such. I know what you mean, every group has its funny man, and they may have one when they’re together that we don’t know any thing about. But they all have k good sense of humor. We have |a lot of fun on trips.” j Coach Smittuis a hard man to get next to. Either he is very conscious of the press, or very unconscious of himself, pos sibly both. In any case, you practically have to stand on his foot to get him to talk about himself as a basketball coach. He keeps slipping into sentences about players and staff and t . chocJ( j u n Q f won( le r . Store Hours— EASY BUGET FREE PARKING 462 W. Franklin St. ful gifts! Come see! Friday... 9 P.M. ARRANGED REAR OF STORE Chapel HiU tL*. (HIE TOM HOIE A I „ *77. BEAUTIFUL CHAIR (J{£(£. % F#R tMlsni#s • ■ ■ I o~ v U s w f I Select Your Christmas Gift from famous TOURS I General Electric I family room ... a style and color to y| A AUTOMATIC TStffil ro °”- no * I “ T BOM . 9-PositkioCoMrol | w I RHHHHHHBaNHBHRMHHHHMBHHMMRBHBBMRMBpHfcRMMHMMMBHHMHtI SPECIAL so >7 available. HOME 'Hr:I HBHH lamp. Here you can select from I "* * IRfICPRI WISHWI IMBRiM übie desk 1 samsonite m S-L b „ oston IllßllßlHlftlfJ AWVifillllil illllfllUlvl lanins Priced from lust i I KtR ÜbK [lLHymxjll ntl|iKLL| HIJSS||UM 1 „ „ I A wide selection to choose from. Give Santa a restful time next ■ $9.95 - $59-95 p § The right piece for her or him. year. _ wanting to win, and you have to drag him back and insist that he be ydftsh and think “me.” He'll do it, but not for tong: “I’ve been coaching ten years now. One year as player-coach ir the service, three years at the Air Force Academy, one year at Kansas, and here. I’m doing just what I want to do. That gives you a tremendous feeling of satisfaction, to know that, to find what’s just right for you. Os course, the University of North Carolina has a great bas ketball tradition. We want to to maintain it. And it’s the best basketball coaching position in the country. Os course, I’m pre judiced . . .” A height measure painted on a board hangs on the wall of the outer basketball office. The measure starts at five feet six and goes to almost seven feet. Prospective players stand up against it Rut Coach Smith jokes about his other, subtler height measure. "That door is six-eight. When a boy comes through that door and ducks, we’re interested.” Bull’s Head Bookshop John Knowles Writer in Residence and Author of A SEPARATE PEACE and MORNING IN ANTIBES will be in the Bookshop Thursday, December 12th from 4 until 5 o'clock. He will be glad to autograph copies of his books. University Library, Ground Floor 933.1333 UN STUDY GROUP The UN Study Group wiU meet at 10 a.m. Thursday to the com munity room of Orange Savings and Loan Association. Mrs. C. E. Mclntosh will discuss toe Declaration of Human Rights. The public is invited. Help the needy through toe Community Chest. IMPORTED CARS, LIMITED SCI E. Main St., Carrboro PHONE 9*2-7151 Episcopal Bishop Officiating Here The Rt. Rev. Thomas A. Fras er Jr., of Ratoigh, Bishop Co adjutor of this Episcopal Diocese, will officiate at both toe 9 am and u a.m. services at the Chap ei of toe Cross today, according I Gifts to I No wonder they love Santa! He’s calling all his helpers to surprise ■ their favorite boys and girls I wi%- wonderful gifts to wear, I from our BIG- collection. S I Starting Wednesday Open Every Night until Christmas to Help Santa I THE YOUTH CENTER I Next to Carolina Theatre Sunday, December 8, 1963 to toe Rev. Thomas R. Thrash er, rector. There will be communion ser vices at 9 a.m., followed by cof fee in the church parlor. A con firmation class will be presented at toe 11 a.m. services.
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Dec. 8, 1963, edition 1
8
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