THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE THREE low Hdl. E""""3 3- FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, 1953 .4: : - t 5 1 r M I DICK TYLER IV. C. State forward Wolf pack Is Heavy Favorite Over Carolina Cage Squad By Tom Peacock Carolina's basketball team meets its arch rival and the toughest team on the Tar Heel schedule tomorrow night when it takes the floor against North Carolina State's Wolf pack in the William Neal Reynolds coliseum in Raleigh. State is favored to knock Carolina out of its first place spot in the Southern Conference standings. The Tar Heels unseated Wake Forest from the top spot Tuesday night with a 72-68 victory and pushed their Confernece record to 10-1. The Wolf pack is second with 8-1, and a win over Carolina will put it in undisputed first place for the first time this season. Coach Frank McGuire's Tar Heels, who out-fought and out hustled Wake Forest Tuesday to steal the game, will be led by co captain Vince Grimaldi, the Con- Carolina students who hope to see the game against N. C. State at Raleigh tomorrow night will have to purchase their tick ets at the Reynolds Coliseum. The ticket office there reported that some 1,500 tickets remain ed early yesterday afternoon. f erence's fourth leading scorer. Grimaldi has paced Carolina all season, and came off the bench with an injured shbulder against Wake Forest to add the extra spark that the Tar Heels needed. Carolina hasn't beaten the Wolf pack in six years, and State, ranked eight nationally, is expected to keep the string going. The Tar Heels are given their best chance to upset State this year, but the Wolfpack is usually invincible in Reynolds coliseum. Wake Forest is the only Conference team with a win over N. C. State. Same Team Coach McGuire will probably de pend tomorrow night on the same team that was so effective in killing the Deacons. In addition to Grimal di, sophomore Al Lifson will start at the other quard, Bud Maddie and freshman Jerry Vayda at for wards ,and sophomore Paul Likins at center. Likins and Maddie com bined to keep Wake Forest star Dick Hemric nine points below his scoring average, and Vayda was high scorer for the Tar Heels in Tuesday's contest. State coach Everett Case was looking ahead when he made his 1953 schedule, and the Wolfpack have had a full week to prepare for Carolina. The engineers haven't played since they defeated George Washington in the Coliseum a week ago. Speight, Kukoy Lead Leading the Wolfpack are co captain forwards Bobby Speight and Bill Kukoy. Speight is the third leading scorer in th Conference and was honorable mention All America last year. Kukoy and Dave Gotkin, an outstanding guard, were sick last week, but will Jae in top shape for Carolina. Bernie Yurin will start at the other guard, and Mel Thompson is slated for center. State is the second Big Four game that Carolina has played this season, the first being the win over Wake Forest. Tickets for the game will not be sold in Chapel Hill, but can be obtained in Raleigh. r VPI In IT! ITS J Worn Loop h 1 fa m By John Hussey More records are due to fall when Ralph Casey's swimming team takes on VPI tomorrow after noon at 4 o'clock in the first South ern Conference dual meet in Bowman-Gray Pool this year. If the Carolina swimming team merely duplicates its last week's performance against Ga. Tech, they will establish two new marks. The present mark for the medley relay in Southern Conference dual meet competition stands at two minutes, 54.4 seconds. Last week the Tar Heel relay team consisting of Buddy Baarcke, Barry Wall, and Jack Edwards turned in; a time of Maryland Defends SC Indoor Track Crovn Here Next Month Exchange Set For Tickets To Duke, NYU Holders of passbooks ending in even numbers will have first chance to get reserve seat tickets to both the Duke and NYU basketball games on Friday and Saturday, Feb. 6 and 7. Even-numbered passbooks must be exchanged at the Woollen Gym ticket window on Monday Tuesday, or Wednesday of next week, however. Holders of passbooks with odd numbers will have a chance to get tickets on Thursday, Friday, and Saturday. No passbooks will be valid at the games. The ticket office is open from 9 to 4:30 on weekdays and from 9 to 12:30 on Saturdays. TENNIS MEETING Coach John Kenfield has called a meeting of all varsity and fresh man tennis candidates for room 301 of Woollen Gym this afternoon at 3:00. Plans for practice and qualifica tions will be made at the meeting. Maryland's Terps will defend its Southern Conference Indoor Games championship here on Feb. 28. The games, one of the more spectacular affairs of the season, will be held in Woollen Gym. As in past years, the event will be divided into three main divi sions. Besides the Southern Con ference bracket, there will be sev eral independents and Southeast ern Conference schools competing for the non-conference title. Sev eral of the outstanding high school squads from North Carolina and its neighboring states will be included in the scholastic division. Won Last Year , Maryland won its Southern Con ference title ihere last year, while Duke University finished second. Carolina and Virginia Military In stitute wound up in third and fourth place, respectively, in the conference division. All of these clubs will be on hand again this year. Included in the schedule of in the two-mile run, and Sam Jor dan will be in the pole vault event. Jordan won the pole vault division last year, while Barden finished third in his section. Jayvees Play Prelim Game Coach Buck Freeman's jayvee basketball team goes up against what will probably be its strongest opposition of the year tomorrow night when it meets tthe N. C. State Freshman squad in Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh at 6:15. Carolina has run into trouble in its recent games, losing the last three played. At the present time, the Tar Babies hold a 3-5 record in over all piay. Three of the defeats are at the hands of little Big Four opponents . On the other hand, State's fresh man sauad is remited to be one of events for the conference division the best ever assembled at the Ra 2:52.2 which established a new pool mark but could not be counted in SC competition because they were opposing Tech. a member of the Southeastern Conference. . The same thing holds true in the 400 yard freestyle relay, as last week's time of 3:30.0 bettered the standing Southern Conference rec ord by 5.9 seconds. Baarcke, Ed wards, Buddy Heins, and Donny Evans, wUl represent the Tar Heels in this event. The other Tar Heel entries will remain practically the same with Warren Heeman and Bob Linker in the backstroke, Barry Wall in the breaststroke, Stan Tinkham in the 100, Tommy Gill and Charlie Wolf in the 440, and Donny Evans in the 150 indivdiual medley. Joe Kelso will be diving on the low board this time. He is not ex pected to have much trouble in winning his second home meet of the season. Larry Shannon will be helped by Smith Jewell in the 220. Jewell was unable to swim last week because of illness. resent Carolina in the 50 yard free Heins and Duke Widof f will rep style event. Heins' time of 23.4 sec onds against the Engineers was on ly two-tenths of a second away from the existing Southern Con ference standard. In meeting the Gobblers from Virginia, the Tar Heels will be seeking their thirty-first consecu tive dual meet victory. UNC's Freshman Swimmers Meet Greensboro Tomorrow By Benny Stewart Coach Dick Jamerson's freshman swimming team goes after its sec ond win of the season here tomor row when it takes on Greensboro High, coached by Pat Eary. The meet is slated to get under way at 2.30 p.m. in Bowman Gray pool. The Tar Babies more than ful filled their expectations in their opening last Saturday as they swept by High Point High 59-11. Several changes in the line-up will be made to give all the can didates experience in various events, Coach Jamerson said. The probable line-up for the meet tomorrow is as follows: 50 freestyle Eldridge and Vea zey. 100 backstroke Diffenbach and Woltz. 200 freestyle Parks and Owen. . 100 breaststroke McAllister and Harden. 100 freestyle Baker and Holmes. Diving Hussey. 150 individual medley Boyd and Tice. Badminton Anyone interested in playing badminton is invited to Women's Gym at 7 p.m. Monday evening. Instruction will be provided for those who wish to learn the game. HEMRIC NINTH NEW YORK (Special) Wake Forest's Dickie Hemric was ranked ninth among the nation's major colleges today. Hemric has scored 360 toints in 15 games for an aver age 24 points in games played o throueh Jan. 17. Walt Dukes of Seton Hall moved into the top position with an aver age of 27.8 points per game, re niacins Ernie Beck of Pennsylvan ia. Beck slipped to second with a 27.6 mark, while Seattle's Johnny O'Brien is third with 26.8. RECEIVED JUST A Hew Shipment of Spins Sport Jackets Styled fay English' Sports wear 100 All Wool Drop fay Today (or Best Selections are the shot put, high jump, one mile run, 440-yard run, 70-yard hurdles, one-mile relay, broad jump, pole vault, 60-yard dash, 70 yard high hurdles, and the 880 yard run. Alabama, winner of the 1952 non conference division, is a top con tender for honors in that bracket again this season. Georgia Tech, also of. the Southeastern Confer ence, and Virginia, astrong inde pendent, are expected to be the chief contenders for Alabama's crown. 'Events Seated The events slated for the non-con ference meet are, the shot put, pole vault, 70-yard high hurdles, 880-yard run, one-mile relay, broad jump, high jump, 60-yard dash, 70 yard low hurdles, and the one-mile run. Craddock High School, from Vir ginia, is expected to be back to defend its high school champion ship. Other leading contenders that are expected to compete include Woodbury Forest and Mount St. Joseph. Events for the scholastic division are the high jump, 70-yard high hurdles, one-mile relay, 60-yard dash, and the 1000-yard run. Carolina will have several boys who finished high in their respec tive brackets last year returning to the games for another try. Tom Higgins, second place winner in 1952, will be back in the shot-put division,, while Bobby Bell will at tempt to better his second place finish in the high jump. Bobby Barden will go for the Tar Heels leigh school. Under the eyes of Vic Bubas, a former varsity great, the Wolflets have been made into a hard-playing unit. State is expected to start Ronnie Shavlik, Whitey Bell, Vic Molodet, Lou Dickman, and Dave Kelly. Carolina will probably send Gerry McCabe and Glen Stephenson to the starting forward posts, Hal Bowden at center, and Jack Woods and Tom my Shores at the guards. HIGGINS CHOSEN NEW YORK, Jan. 22 (Special) Tom Higgins, star tackle for the University of North Carolina, was drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles here this afternoon and then trad ed to the Chicago Cardinals as the National Professional Football League held its annual selection of college football players. Higgins, who was kept from peak efficiency by a broken hand and a sprained ankle for most of the sea son, was chosen by the Eagles on the sixth draft and then shifted to the Cardinals. Pro Tennis Tickets for the professional tennis matches, featuring Jack Kramer, Pancho Segura, Frank Sedgman, and Ken McGregor, to be staged here on Monday night, Feb. 23 have gone on sale at the Woollen Gym ticket office. Student tickets may be pur chased for $1.50 while general admission seats will go for $1.75. There will be only 1,500 of these tickets offered for sale, however. Reserved seats will cost $2.50. 150 medley relay Cook, Hunt ingdon, Dannenbaum. 200 relay Davis, Hester, Smith, Williams. Burk, Armfield, Smith and Har den will be swimming for the first time in this meet, as they did not compete in last week's meet. Carolina Press Club The Carolina Press Club will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in 106 B y n u m . Students interested in newspaper work are asked ot at tend. The Club is always open to new memberships. LOVING... FIGHTING... OR FORTUNE HUNTING... South of Barrancas there's no law but the law nf the ty jungle! In Durham AltVEY'S CAFETERIA AND BANQUET SERVICE Breakfast 6:30-9:15 Lunch 11-2.30 Supper 5 8:05 Special Facilities For All Fraternity & Sorority Functions 103 E. MAIN STREET, DURHAM fi fliB M .jSSpwwSilw "'U'- 'um-'n'W minimi nun i i "wn "'' ""nr'"" r '- t-- " i COLISEUM IN RALEiCH WJJAM NEAJ. MYMOLM IAUNH.KC M.M-OI MCOUMMI KMm llM.ai aM IMM WtilM.M.a "i", " w ta i, iliWl wrt AM- M. a " mum m.z-a icnn hi p mmiimiiw mmm"'!S!S HSiSm 3 AUTHENTIC TUXEDOS l FULL DRESS JACKETS I J 1 J u -tjm stirring with NOAH BEERY GRANT WITHERS .Js. Wrlttw Dm Scratn n4 OkteUd bj K LEWIS R. FOSTER y FroOuctrfbyWiUiifflH. Pin. m) Willi C. Thom A Prmount Picture ALSO SPORTLIGHT NEWS TODAY AND SATURDAY DINNER ACCESSORIES N. COLUMBIA ST. LATE SHOW SATURDAY SUNDAY MONDAY LAUGHS! SONGS! BALI-BALI GIRLS! b J- i 7 a- v 3 J, X II WITS &t Co mipy ATTENTION NIGHT OWLS Now you can forget about who's going to have that awful task of going out to get the midnight snacks. All you have to do is find out what everybody wants and take a quick hop out to Bill's Drive-in. Or better yet, just get a $5 order or more, and i will be delivered right to your door at no extra charge. Full dinners or just sandwiches, we've got'em all. OPEN 6 A.M. TO 1 A. M. ill's Drive Inn GREENSBORO HIGHWAY AT CARRBORO B 3C THIRD AIHIUAL EIID-OF-THE IIOIITI OLD Hundreds of old books that are going out of stock, ; regardless of cost. Novels, poetry, non-fiction and back-edition texts at blood-curdling deduc tions. If there are any jeAvels among them, it's our oversight, but they're mighty cheap! MONDAY TUESDAY Thursday SATURDAY January 26th Your Choice 29c January 27 th Anything left 19c January 29th Anything left 9c January 31st Anything left FREE THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 E. FRANKLIN ST. OPEN EVENINGS ZD

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