Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 31, 1950, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE DAILY -TAP. HEEL PAGE THREE Tar Heels Row Ha el.77- ; Fms s, 65-61 TlTf.nAY. JANUARY 21, 10"0 C If cub Holy Cross s Top Team, Wolfpack9th Tourney Bound? THE BOX Th Citatlel Jeffrey f I-aufer Krau ZfJlnskl I Kennedy , bntt c Cobb Fabian c Young Symanskl g Totals North Carolina KarDler f Wells Cuves Tsantes t Ferraro Redding Nearmnfi c Bennett Deasy g Turk Terrell Patterson g White Godwin Totals FG FT PF TP 3 2 3 8 0 2 2 2 0 0 2 0 4 0 3 8 0 0 10 3 0 S C 10 2 2 3 2 3 8 0 0 10 2 115 H 7 23 39 FG FT PF TP 6 8 1 20 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 2 2 2 6 2 3 0 7 10 2 2 8 5 1 21 2 12 5 3 0 4 6 0 0 0 0 10 12 2 2 2 6 10 0 2 0 0 0 0 28 21 16 77 The Citndel 18. Free Throws Missed: North Caro. lina Ferraro 2. Nearman 3. Bennett The Citadel Jeffrev 3. l.aufer, 7.e- iinsKi. Bntt 3, CQbb 2. Fabian. Sy manski 2. Choo Holds Party For Grid Finale NF.V YORK, Jan. 30 (A) For the third straight week, unbeaten f,,ly Cro?s tops the Associated Pre;.; basketball poll with al rr.ir. :t CO por rrnt of the first place Although the Crusaders were idle last week, they drew 92 of a possible 157 first place ballots from the nation's basketball writers and sportscasters. Holy Cross and Duquesne, the only unbeaten major powers in the country, have identical 14-0 season records but the Crusaders piled up a point edge in the pol, 1,446 to 1,040. Points are figured on the basis of 10 for a first place vote and so on down to one for tenth place. Duquesne made Youngstown Charlie Justice had his final its 14th victim, 69-49, to pick up football roundup last night 10 firsts. The Iron Dukes now Carolina's All-America tail- head into a rugged week that back pitched a barbecue party includes games with both Cin- for his teammates, friends, and cinnati and Louisville. press and radio in this area as Solid victories over Tulsa and an appreciative farewell to col St. Louis enabled Bradley (17-3) lege football. to vault from sixth to third More than 100 guests gathered place with four firsts. Close be- at the Chapel Hill Country Club hind came Long Island Univer- and heard the captain of the sity (14-2) which ran over Law- 1949 Tar Heels act as master of rence Tech, 84-54, in its only ceremonies. start. Seven writers ranked LIU Acting President of the Great No. 1. er University William D. Car- St. John's (16-2), Kentucky michael, Jr., made the only talk, (13-4), Ohio State (11-3) and speaking lightly of the work of La Salle (12-2) were tightly Justice, who has accepted a post bunched in that order from fifth with the North Carolina Medical through eighth positions. Foundation after completing his St. John's returned to action football career at Carolina, with a G5-46 win over St. Fran- Chancellor R. B. House was cis. The Redmen, early AP poll among the many distinguished Nemo, Hugo Lead Mates To Loop Win By Joe Cherry Carolina's varsity basketballers moved a notch closer to a berth In the Southern Conference tour nament last night by blasting an outclassed Citadel quint, 77-39, before 3500 well pleased spec tators in Woollen Gym. With Captain Nemo Nearman and Hugo Kappler displaying some classy shooting, the Tar Ba bies rapidly pulled away after five minutes of nip-and-tuck ball to easily rack up their third Con ference victory in four days. . Nearman, who topped the loc als' point-making with 21 points, moved into the Southern Con ference scaring lead with a 177 points total in Conference tilts. Tex Tilson of Virginia Tech, who was the top man in the loop until tonight, is in the runnerup posi tion with 157. Kappler was close behind Near man with 20 points to show for his night's work. Carolina Coach Tom Scott played his second stringers almost half the contest, and before the game was over he had emptied the bench of all reserves, with a total of 14 Tar Heel cagers taking part in the fray. The entire starting lineup for the Tar Heels played good ball, with forward John Tsantes and guards Howard Deasy and Dick Patterson tossing in six points apiece. Forward Dick Zelinski broke the ice after only eight seconds had elapsed with a tap-in shot to give the Cadets a 2-0 lead, but f .;!$':' M, m "fm, SMJ .Hl-.il HI IIJ f i is 1' , , i ;-)" A j " , Vi l if u iff i - tfei I imt 'm J flit 1 r x&v 1 I I V " I Locals Drop State Again In Woollen . J I r Jr. u 4. i j , Tsantes and Kappler connected place votes. a program of songs that included , , . . . After an upset loss to Notre selections by former Metropoli- Damn. Kenturkv hnnnrpH harV tan Ooera star Norman Cordon . a . - :- a c;n ru; c the Citaael ahead again, on U lllllliu iVdVlCl tlllU UCUI Kid. B"u uiguiu JCAici. good enough to attract six firsts. on foul tosses to even the count at 2-2. Zelinski came back to put Six men rated Ohio State tops in the nation after the Buckeyes 63-53 triumph over Minnesota. La Salle subdued Temple, 67-51 for an important win. They drew five firsts. North Carolina State (15-3) Mural News RIFLE ORIENTATION Rifle marksmanships will earned six first place votes by held tonight at 7:30 for men who whizzing past Louisville and have not had orientation firing, Virginia Tech, moving up from The regular firing in competition tenth to ninth place. will be held in the armory on The top Mms: (First place votes Wednesday night at 7:30 TUESDAY'S BASKETBALL SCHEDULE Pninfe l. i- Alex 2 VS. UOrm 1; Z- 1.446 in parentheses and records including Jan. ZH games witn points on 10-9-8-7 6-5-4-3-2-1 basis). Team Records 1. Holv Cross (92) 2. Duquesne (10) II Hradlev (4) 4. Long Island (7) 5. St. John's (4) H. Kentucky (6) 7. Ohio State (.6) 8. La Salle (5) ! iN. C. State (6) H). C. C. N. Y. 14-0 14-0 17-3 14- 2 16-2 13-4 11- 3 12- 2 15- 3 10-2 jump shot, with Nearman tying the score at 4-4-all after three minutes of play on a push shot from close in. Center Terry Britt moved the visitors but in front for. the third time with a tap-in basket but , Tsantes made good on a foul toss . IT , 1 1 ana rtearman same a nice iiuuk. after driving all the way to put Carolina in the lead, 7-6. After a Citadel free throw had tied the count again, this time at 7-7, the Tar Heels when ahead to stay 9-7, on Kappler's hook at the five-minute mark. Nearman and Kappler, aided by Deasy's lay-up shot and some HUGO KAPPLER . . .back In stride ' C Dorm vs. Grimes; 3- Town vs. 1 mil t- wwis i. vs. d uurm z: o r ,o UnKIn o. n a 1, o iki Manley 1. 542 1: 2- YMCA vs. Everett 2; 3- Pharm nice floor work by the other Tar 534 'Vc"?- VS- a Heels, combined to run up a in uorm t; a- miner vs. v uorm j: j- I ' 1 1 I x w i a ... At 1 tn rr 3 L . 41g iviaiurjr . vs. nicx i. aavamage m iiitr xiuuvvtiv v:oo: L.t. l- aiu z vs. Lamp tiu , . c . Jo ... ... . marlf nf tho first naif o; x- vs. wu in t , o- ivappa rsi " vs. iii r-ni t- r.iippa sig i vs. tn : i Sig Chi 2; 5- Sir Eps 3 vs. DKE 2: 6- penuu. ui f.evcn iiixxililco tep i vs. zeta l; 7- ka i vs. cm the Cadets were unable to con Pel V I ...... I . . . -At n jj 8:00: ct. l- Phi Deit Chi vs. Beta nect irom tne noor, witn jsrui 3l aep' vPSrKhiEprir4-KThPetaigchi Anally scoring from beneath the 1 vs. Pi Lamb 1: 5- Delt Sit? 1 vs. SiK hnclrpt nftpr 1 1 3fi nf thp first mis meeting win ae- tm ?-,liam V' f ;s- ols FENCING PRACTICE All varsity and freshmen fen cers are urged to attend the prac tice this afternoon at 4:15 in the rrv r xm wn. in . ."im8 win uc j pg i vs. Pi ka i?" 6 "' period. For the remainder of T!L half, the visiting five was ; . . . " . 1 siir Nu l. and Beta l vs. Kap Sig l. unable to crack the Tar Heels Military Academy, ine teams will leave this Friday Six? Nu 1. and Beta 1 vs. Kap Sie 1. vs. Si? Chi 3. and DKE l vs. phi defense, and they managed only Delt 1. Nemo Adds To Scoring Lead With Play Against SC Foes four more field goals before in termission, all set shots. With two 'minutes remaining in the first stanza, Benton Ben nett swished a jump shot to give the Tar Heels a 20 point margin, with the score standing at 36-16. At intermission, Carolina held a very comfortable, 37-18 advantage. A six-point spurt by the Ca dets early in the second half was the nearest thing to a rally the losers could put on. At the 7:30 mark the locals had run up a 49-24 margin, and after ten minutes of play they were ahead 54-28. At this point Coach Scott pulled all his regu lars except Kappler, and the Tar Heel forward closed out his scoring for the evening by sinking five straight foul tosses. With five reserve s Simon Terrell, Hal Ferraro, Darius Wells, Bill White, and Bennett in the game for Carolina, the home team still more than held its, own against the quint, from Charleston. Ferraro paced the Tar Heels in the final minutes, scoring seven points. .Leonard Guyes, Frank Red ding, Irving Turk, and Marion Godwin followed the second five into the fray, and Redding made the score 71-34 in favor of Caro lina at the 18 minute mark when he flipped in a nice hook shot. Ferraro closed out the Tar Heel scoring by dropping in the next six points, while Charley Fabian cut the Carolina margin to 28 points on a crip shot with only five seconds left in the game. Sports Meeting There will be an important meeting of the Daily Tar Heel sports staff this afternoon at 2 o'clock in the DTH office in Graham Memorial. By Larry Fox Proving to the home folks that their victory last week over highly-rated State College was no fluke, the Tar Baby cagers came from behind last night to take a thrilling victory from the Wolf cubs, 65-61. In a game that saw the score deadlocked- 13 times, the local frosh erased a four-point lead held by the visitors with five minutes to go and tied things upH at 61-61 with 1:20 remaining in the game. A layup by Forward Ernie Schwarz put the Tar Ba bies ahead for good at 18:58 and just before the final gun sounded Schwarz caged another one from close in to clinch the -victory for the. Carolina. The halftime score was. 31-31. ' Last night's defeat for the Wolfcubs marked only the second time they have been defeated this season and both jobs were done by the Carolina yearlings in Woollen Gym. It was the 10th victory "for the locals as against three defeats. Carolina's Vince Grimaldi was by far the . oustanding man on the ; floor and lead both teams in scoring department with a total of 20 points. A fine ball-handler, Grimaldi was equally valuable on defense and Schwarz' tie-break ing- goal in the final minutes of play was scored after Grimaldi had stolen the ball from State's Kent Mosely. Forward Jack : Wallace was next high man with 17 points while Bill Kukoy bucketted 16 to lead the Wolfcubs. Schwarz tal lied 14 for Carolina Although the Tar Babies jump ed to a 4-0 lead on a pair of quick baskets by Wallace, they were unable to open up any kind of lead and State soon tied it up at 4-4 and went ahead on a jump shot by Bill Crull. Wayne Har pold put the Tar Babies back in the lead on a set shot and a lay up and 4hat was the way it went until 10:45 when Bob Speight drove in to make it 18-16, State. That started a Wolf pack surge that netted them a five-point lead in less than a minute, but the Anderson To HC WORCESTER. M&5&, Jan. 30 ; (JP) Dr. Eddie Anderson is returning to Holy Cross whose rooters hope the skillful physician-football coach can re turn the Crusaders to the foot ball glory they enjoyed under him nearly a decade ago. . Anderson and the college got together today on a five year contract for an tinnounc In Iowa City, Ia Anderson ed salary. . said "I'm very happy to return and I'm looking forward to it with a great deal of pleasure." His selection wasn't too much of a surprise after his sudden resignation Saturday from the University of Iowa. At Holy Cross, he succeeds Dr. Bill Osmanski, who cap tained -the college football forces under Anderson. Lacrosse Drills Start Approximately 20 men re ported to Navy Field yester day afternoon for the first workout of the Carolina la cross team. - Coach Bill Darden has issued a call for more boys interested in playing the sport and an nounced that practice will be held from 4 to 6 every after noon and 10-12 on Saturday mornings. Tar Babies settled down and worked for a three-point spread of their own before State tied it up once again at the half. Both teams came out into the second half with a rush; and the five-minute mark the local year lings started to inch ahead of the Wolfcubs. With the score dead locked at 37-37 Bud Maddie and Schwarz caged a pair of quick ones and field goals by Wallace, Schwarz, Maddie, and Grimaldi gained the home team what proved to be their widest margin of the contest, 50-44, : with : 10 minutes to go. But field goals by Mosely, Er nie Yurin, and Buck Seif tied things up again and two more field goals put the Wolfcubs in the lead. Grimaldi took over at this point and in rapid succession dropped in a long set, followed up a long shot that missed, and racked up a jump shot to bring Carolina within three points of State. ' The lineups: State Frosh (61) Carolina Frosh (G5) Crull (4) Schwartz (14) Kukoy (16) f Wallace (17) Lovington (4) c Maddie (4) Morris (8) g Grimaldi (20) Yurine (7) e Harpold (4) Halftime score: State 31, Carolina 31. Substitutes State: Seif (5). Soeieht (4), Mosely (8). Carolina: Phillips (1). carter (&). MONOGRAM MEETING There will be an important meeting of the Monogram Club tonight at 7:30 at . the club's building." This meeting will ac complish the election of officers. Captain Nemo Nearman had J little trouble finding the scoring range against four Southern Con ference foes during the last two weeks and with the greatest of ease came up with a total of 70 points for the four games' work. With 20 points in both the South Carolina and VPI game and 16 against State's Paul Horvath, Nearman hit the hoop for an average of 17.5 per game, some thing heretofore credited only to one Sam Ranzino. As usual Nearman's deadly free throws helped considerably toward his high scoring. With 10 coming against the Wolf pack, Nearman made 20 points from the foul line. He had his best night from the floor against South Carolina when he hit for 9 field goals. Forward Hugo Kappler, who, until his well known sickness forced him out of two games and slowed him down in another, had pushed Nearman for scor ing, fell way behind the tall fenter. Kappler scored 11 against Davidson on Saturday night af ter seeing limited action against VPI. Dick Patterson who replaced Kippler at forward against South Carolina and State ranked behind Nearman for points scor tallies against VPI, Patterson ended up with 87. Kappler's lay off cost him the runner-up position as jonn Tsantes, who ranked behind Nearman early in the season, re gained the spot by scoring 75 markers against the Southern Conference teams. Tsantes now has 169 points for the season as compared to Kappler's 151. Nearman's outburst in the last four games brought his season total of points scored to 248 and increased his game average to 13 for the 19 encounters of the year. He still holds the lead in the free throw department with 78. The big man is also the top fouler with 69 personal fouls called against him so far The team, supposedly a low scoring one, has hit for an aver age of 54 points per game. In the last four games, however, it has gone well over that average. The season's scoring including the Davidson game: Player Nearman C Tsantes I Kappler t Deasv 9. . Patterson f 43 Knntt c 31 White g - 28 Thome g ?9 Ferraro Wells f Turk g Terrell g Guves c Redding c Vitasek K ?vv1 -m i inn in m i -nn r n i'n 1 n r r trrrfri "" -mMiy . Robert and Raymond Hakim's U AT FG FT PF TP I ,". 85 78 69 248 I " 7 38 50 169 1 57 - 42 39 151 I 1 1 47 29 58 120 I 1 18 26 104 I I V 20 27 82 L f W. 33 31 65 - mmi j 16 13 64 '" 1 MHMMIInirWH.II.I 1.1 1(1 X. WJ I 5 2 3 12 mnn v 112 3 XW 1 1 0 6 2 w - " 'i ZZZZZZ.' o o i o r A nfirfcv f -AGNES MOOREHEAD BRUCE BENNETT ttKlri b IRVING PICHEL Orkiil scrttnotey by JAMES POE Music bj MAX STEIflU ROBERT RAYMOND HAKIM, Rdnsed torn UNITED ARTISTS ALSO , MARCH OF TIME MCARTHUR IN JAPAN COLOR CARTOON " Even 1 look good in an Arrow Shirt L 1 : PERFECT FITTING " ARROW COLLARS j MITOGA-SHAPED j TO FIT BETTER J FINE, LONG WEARING FABRICS : BUTTONS THAT . STAY PUT! ! SANFORIZED WONT SHRINK OVER 1 j $3.65 up 1 ARROWshirts & TIES SPORTS SHIRTS UNDERWEAR HANDKERCHIEFS You'll Feel Good, too, in an ARROW WHITE SHIRT from VMeks Shop Larger Loans on Anything of Value Durham's Newest and Best Pawn Shop MAIN LOAN OFFICE Located: 400 W. Main St. at Five Points F-2941 F-2941 Deliveries lo Fraternities and Dormtiories ' of FRIED CHICKEN WESTERN STEAKS All Kinds of Sandwiches . GRILL and SANDWICH SHOP F-2941 F-2941 Are your brakes safe? 4 . i it: f V x llll II .wOv sw m i rflT.ifm .ii7 W ii Vm i- i J w . 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 31, 1950, edition 1
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