Newspapers / University of North Carolina … / Oct. 23, 1969, edition 1 / Page 8
Part of University of North Carolina at Charlotte Student Newspaper / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
A SPORTS FOOTBALL STANDINGS Won Lost 1. Engineers 2. APO 3. Old Timers 4. Outhouse 5. Hockos 6. Pi Kappa Phi 7. Bootleggers 8. Balls 9. AKPsi 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 2 Vo Soccer team triumphs By Clay Owen Tlie scoccer team met the Ciiarlotte Scoccer Club last Sunday and came away with a resounding 2-1 victory. It was the first outing for the team this year. Most of the players were in excellent shape even though it was early in the season. Tire game was played at Myers Park at 3:00 p.m. The first goal was scored midway into the first quarter by team captain “Al” Al-llamdani on a pass from Steve Chandler. With five minutes left in the first quarter we scored again. This time center forward Jimmy Levendakis scored off an assist by Roberto Alkali. The team played a tougli defensive game, not allowing the Charlotte Scoccer Club to score until the fourth quarter. Team captain “Al” Al-Hamdani commented, “The team as a whole played unexpectedly well. Everyone played his best. It was great.” St Outhouse Blanks By Doug Whitley Hukos Anybody seen my contacts? PKP tromps AKP (Jut house met the Hockos Thursday in intramural football competition, with Outhouse racking up its first win. Outhouse opened the scoring midway through the first half, on a sustained drive which started with a 40 yard punt return by Dan Warren. Quarterback Clay Owens threw a first down pass to Brek Cunningham, then ran to the 5 yard line on the next play. Bill Hockos into the endzone for the second Outhouse score. PAT good, with Owen rolling arouniJ his left end. Halftime ended with the Outhouse holding a 14-0 lead. The second half was a stronge' defensive battle with manf interceptions. Gary Henry started with an interception for th« Hockos. Dan Dickinson pulled if his second of the day By Doug Whitley Shaver swept his right end and 'Outhouse, and Jerry Blevin caugh' Pi Kappa Phi tromped on Alpha strong; Don Swofford caught a Kappa Psi to gain their first intramural football victory of the season. Thurman Willis opened the scoring for PKP by catching a Danny Kersh pass and streaking 60 yards to the goal line. Don Swofford scored the PAT to give PKP an early 7-0 lead. Tony Basinger intercepted a pass on his own 18 yard line to stop PKP’s second good drive. Jerry Roberts intercepted for PKP to stop a scoring threat by the business men. PKP mounted another dangerous drive and advanced to the 25 yard line. John Mans came up with an interception near his goal line and ran back 75 yards before being downed. Deep in PKP territory Mike Johnson intercepted to stop AKP short. The first half ended with PKP aliead 7-0. Willis scored his second touchdown of the day, on another Kersh pass, which covered 20 yards. Kersh scored the PAT Iiimself. AKP was unable to muster any kind of a drive and PKP was going pass on the AKP 40 yard line and legged it to the endzone for the third PKP score. The PAT attempt was no good, and the game ended with PKP out front, 20-0. Ed. Note: Due to the incomplete schedule last week, no “Player of the Week” was chosen, nor will Scoring Leaders be listed. *★***«’«’******* beat three Hocko defenders into the endzone for the score. The first PAT attempt was good but nillified by an offsensive offsides penalty. On the second try, Owen found Rick Lee with a pass to give Outhouse a 7-0 lead. With a good defensive rush by the Outhouse front four, the Hockos were unable to muster a drive of any threat. One drive was cut off abruptly by an interception by Dan Dicldnson. Dickinson hauled it in at the 40 yard line, and beat the startled the second Hocko interception. Blevin’s interception set up th® first Hocko touchdown, and 6*“ Dickey scored it on a 9-yard rufli to cap the offensive drive. Th« PAT attempt was no good and th® score was 14-6, Outhouse ahead' Outhouse came right bacK though, and mounted a powerful drive that ended with Shaver agak* out-racking the defenders to th® goal line. The PAT was no goo®’ and the game ended wiu* Outhouse the victor, 20-6. Judy Swaker scores Hustlers Down TIGER By Doug Wliitley On Thursday the sixteenth, Hefner’s Hustlers met the T.I.G.E.R. in a powder puff football contest. It matched an inexperienced freshman team against one of the better veteran teams. Tlie Hustlers lost no time in proving their ability to the T.I.G.E.R. Koko Knight hauled in the opening kickoff for the Hustlers and raced sixty yards down the sideline for the score. Judy Swacker’s pass for the PAT was completed out of bounds and nullified. With this incentive, and fine defensive efforts by Karen Dormen, Bobbi Holzel, LaVera Farnsworth, and Melanie Wilson, the Hustlers held T.I.G.E.R. scoreless for the remainder of the half. The Hustlers took half-time breathers with a six to nothing lead. T.I.G.E.R. recieved the second half kickoff and moved the ball well with sweeping runs by Lynn Stavrakas. Penalties hurt the T.l.G E.R. and they were torccu to punt several times. The Hustlers again mounted a drive and moved to the twenty-one yard line on a pass from Swacker to Knight. Two plays later, Swacker rolled around her right end and into the endzone for the second Hustler score. The PAT attempt was no good, with Stavrakas rushing in to dump Swacker. Tire game ended with the young, aggressive Hustler team on top 12-0. r—*wtOTcmATTOrf f I PUTT STANDINGS 3 I Team Team Strokes lEngineers 992 :AP0 1,014 SHockos 1,044 |Pi Kappa Phi 1,066 ^\KPsi 1,093 ■•Balls 1,110 I INDIVIDUAL STANDINGS ^Tom Alsop 197 !Randy Goforth 201 JGeorge Lloyd 230 The first time you hear the KLH Model Twenty-One FM Radio you won’t believe your eyes. Hardly bigger than a shoe box, this astonishing FM radio fills a room with spacious, undistorted, thoroughly musical sound. Come in and turn one on. And step back a bit. We think you’ll look around for hidden speakers and electronic gadgetry. But there’s nothing deceitful about the Twenty-One. It simply has things that aren’t supposed to be built into a small radio. Including high-performance solid-state circuitry and a unique miniature speaker that covers the full range of musical sound. Plus output jacks for extension speakers and for makirig tape recordings off the air. All neatly hidden in its oiled walnut cabinetry. Come in and be astonished— and delighted. 11!' IIU ti TREND Stereo Center 900 SOUTH KINGS DRIVE CHARLOTTE, N. C. 28204
University of North Carolina at Charlotte Student Newspaper
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Oct. 23, 1969, edition 1
8
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75