Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 18, 1955, edition 1 / Page 3
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TUESDAY, JANUARY 18, 195S THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAG 2 THSrf A ding Tar Heels No Pack n mgm i & McGuire Looks f For State To Use Press Strategy Tilt at 8:15; Frosh Battle in Prelim Carolina's Tar Heels will take a lour-game winning streak and the lead in the At lantic Coast Conference to the Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh .tonight where they do br .tle with the X. C. State Wolfpack, the nation s Xo. 2 team. Gametime will be 8:i5 o' clock, following a preliminary between the Tar Babies and the Wolfpack frosh. The prelim is to begin at 6:15. With successive wins over Wake Forest, Virginia, South Carolina and .Clemson, Carolina gained the top position, in the ACC over the past week-end after building up a 6-1 conference record. State, hav ing a 5-1 mark, ranks second . The Tack is heavily favored to night. Rumors yesterday said the team is better by anywhere from 15-30 points, but the margin will not be that large. UNC coach F rank McGuire said he expects the Wolfpack to- employ a full-court press from.the very start, in which case he will play a possession game, similar to the type used by Carolina in last season's ACC tour nament and the recent Dixie Clas sic. McGuire said, "The possession game is our only chance against State. To run with them is snr? defeat, because they are much bet ter, man for man. I expect him (State mentor Everett Case) to press all the way." Last year in the ACC tourna ment this just missed paying off for the Tar Heels when the highly regarded State five captured a 52 51 thriller. The same thing was repeated in' the Dixie Classic when the 'Pads struggled for a 47-44 win. The game is liable to be as much of a strategy battle as an actual physical contest. Case and Mc Guire, though not always in accord with each other, carry reciprocal respect. Tonight they may be handling ' their ballplayers as pawns on a chessboard, each try ing to figure his opponent's move and block it before it can do any damage. ' Carolina has won only one game of 22 from State since 1947, and has dropped the last six. The Tar Heel's only victory was a 70-69 decision early in 1953. The Carolina scoring burden will be shouldered by Lennie Rosen bluth, key man in the attack and Drime tareet for Case. Rosenhluth t,,, o c-; i4 points for the victory. The home than 26 points, which places him , team got 13 points through wins among the country's top 10. Start ing with 'Bluth at forward will be Jerry Vayda. Bob Young will han dle the center post, while Co-captain Al Lifson and Tony Radovich will be at guards. State, much taller than Carolina, will use 6'-8" Ronnie Shavlik and 6 -10" Cliff Dwyer under the buc ket, as it has all year. The double pivot will be supplemented by 6'-4" Phil DiNardo at forward, and Capt. Dave Gotkin and Vic Molodet at guards. '-.' ' ' i J "... ? rsmm s TACKLE THE WOLFPACK IX COLISEUM TONIGHT: Left to Right: (Standing) Hilliard Greene, (kneeling) Bob Young, (behind Young) Frank Goodwin, Paul Likins, Al Lifson, Len Rosen- bluth, Jerry Vayda and Coach Frank McGuire. Matmen Tackle State; Seek First Victory By AL KORSCHUN A winless Carolina wrestling team will be seeking its first vic tory in five starts when it tackles a fairly strong North Caxolina State team over in Raleigh on Wednesday. The State match will be the last one the Tar Heels Tar Heel State In Tracksters Dominate Practice Indoor M By RAY LINKER Carolina's freshman and varsity indoor tracksters donr inated every event in a prac tice meet with X. C. State here Saturday. Xo official score was kept, with the frosh and varsity often running togeth er, .but both Tar Heel teams came out ahead of their re spective counterparts in all will wrestle until after final exams' )Ui two events, each. when they will take the mat ag ainst Virginia here in Chapel Hill on February 5. In last Saturday's match at Charleston, a relatively inexper ienced but nevertheless aggress ive Citadel team surprised the visiting Tar Heels and defeated them 28-8. Citadel capitalized on five pins and one decision which gave them more than enough Terps In Hot Water? ANNAPOLIS, Md., Jan. 17 UP An evaluating team in its study of the University, of Maryland said the school "has violated the rules of the Atlantic Coast Conference and the National Collegiate Ath letic Assn., with respect to recruit ment of athletes." The report of the Middle States Assn. of Colleges and Secondary Schools said it also found evidenc es of flexible academic regulations, soft, part time job opportunities for athletes and an unbalance of finan' cial aid. The report said the study was based primarily on the Mary land football team of 1953, voted No. 1 in the nation. in the first three matches and then rolled up 15 more to offset the 147 and 157 lb. classes. Carolina did have one -moment of hope midway through the mat ch when Pete McGhee racked up his fourth consecutive victory in as many starts by pinning Jim Shea of the Citadel, and then Art hur Gregory followed this up by decisioning Bill Adams to bring the score to 13-8. But consecutive pins in the last three weight classes by Ernie Janssen, Ed Dz anis, and Bill Shiffert. gave the Citadel the meet going away. The Summary: 123 lb. - Schenkel (C) decisioned Gray (UNC) 8-2 130 lb. - Corley (C) pinned Cow an (UNC) 5:35 137 lb. - Abeyounis (C) pinned Thornton (UNC) 8:40 147 lb. - McGhee (UNC) pinned Shea (C) 6:40 157 lb. - Gregory (UNC) decis ioned Adams (C) 7-4 167 lb. - Janssen (C) pinned Boy- ' ette (UNC) 2:40 177 lb. - Dzanis (C) pinned Hut chins (UNC) 6:30 HW. - Shiffert (C) pinned Dalehite (UNC) 2:30 Wright, led the varsity 440-yard dash, finishing in 53.4 and 53.5, respectively, while State's Bob Bethune garnered the best time in th 60-yard dash ahead of Tar Heels Don Mitchell and Jay Zim merman. The best varsity performancer in the mile run was Carolina's Jim Beatty, who notched a 4:25.7. Carolina track mentors had praise for several of their fine freshmen, especially doubler win ners Gene Drury and Ronnie Aus tell. Drury captured both the high and low hurdles for the frosh, while Austell was out front in the 60-yard dash and his 52.5 was best in the 440 run. John Upchurch high jumped 5'2" to give the Tar Babies a tie for first with Wolflet John Allen, but Upchurch fell six inches shy of another tie when he failed to come up to State's Marion Chris ty's 11'6" pole vault. ' Kentucky Still Tops In AP Poll; State Clings To Second Place, Maryland Moves Up To Sixth THE ASSOCIATEP PRESS Kentucky maintained a long lead in the sixth weekly Associ ated Press poll of the nation's top college basketball teams yes terday which saw a few jugglings of position and the invasion of a newcomer-Maryland. ' Coach Adolph Rupp's Wildcats, who defeated Tulane Saturday to make the Kentucky, rcord 9-1, romped far ahead of the field in the balloting. With 115 votes cast by the nation's sports writers and sportscasters, Kentucky received 55 for first place? On the basis of 10 points for first, ine for second, etc., Kentucky rolled up 926 points. The poll is based on rec ords of teams through games of Saturday, Jan. 15. North Carolina State held on to second place despite its defeat last week at the hands of Coach H. A. Milliman's surprising Mary land club, N. C. State, which had to go into overtime to beat Wake Forest Saturday night, had 590 points and is threatened by San Francisco, in third place with 520 points. The Dons moved up from fifth place after winning three games during the week. Maryland, in the thick of the fight for the Atlantic Coast Con ference lead with North Carolina, N. C. State and Duke, was 11th in last week's poll. The Terrapins jumped all the way to .the No. 6 spot. LaSalle held on to the No. 4 spot, while Duquesne upset by St. Francis of Pennsylvania drop ped from third to fifth. Duquesne got back on the vic tory road Saturday, however, by beating Fordham. Illinois ,tied for first place in the Big 10 race, held on to No. 7 ranking. Missouri, unbeaten along with Colorado in the Big Seven of week-end engagements with Conference race, is No. 8, drop-j Southern California. defending ping from last week's sixth place. George Washington slipped a notch t0 No. 9, while there was a lie for 10th place between Utah and UCLA, ninth and 10th, res pectively, last week. Illinois defeated Ohio State Sat urday, while Missiouri downed Kansas State. Utah defeated Utah State and Montana " Friday and Saturday, while UCLA took a pair Dick Levins Combo-Orchestra 16 FLEMING RD. 8-0268 champions of the Pacific Coast Conference. The second 10 is led by Ala bama, which is tied for first place in the Southeastern Conference. Alabama handed Auburn its first defeat of the season Saturday. Au burn had won seven straight, and was the last major college team in the unbeaten ranks until Ala bama's convincing 99 78 victory. pi V X x -rr " X. X rrr f X I ft fi i - iiiiii ! CIGARETTES MODERN SIZE K i ixN fx X FILTER TIP TAREYTON True Tobacco Taste . . . Real Filtration Famous Tareyton Quality PRODUCT OP 'S&ifnu Both teams got a small indica tion as to how they will do against each other and the rest of thej conference teams in the league I championships in the Indoor j Games in February. The outstanding varsity perfor mers for the day were the UNC co-captains, Bob Barden and Rog er Morris. Morris put the shot an even 50 feet, a feat surpassed by 1 only two of the 25 winners of the , conference ' indoor shot crown. 1 Barden's 9:43.5 time in the two mile run is better than all but four of the Indoor Games' winning times in that event. The State varsity got one of its two firsts in the 880-yard run when Bob Jones with a 1:58.9 edged Tar Heel Boyd Newman, who was clocked at 1:59.4. Ben Williams of Carolina led the fresh men in this event, turning in a 1:59.5. In the varsity hurdles, both the high and lows saw Tar Heels Claude Rhule and Richard Waters across in one-two fashion before State's Sam Green finished. Duke's star trackman, five-eventer Joei Shankle, was in. the Tin Can for the practice meet, and performed in the high hurdles, his specialty, in which his time of 8.7 was the best recorded during the after noon. Waters' pole vault of 12 feet tied him for first place with team mate Charlie Yarborough, who also copped top honors ' in the broad jump with a leap of 21 feet. Tar Heel Bob Wilson was sec ond to Yarborough in the broad jump with a 19'9" performance, but he tied with Carolina's Ken Bryant in' the high jump when both cleared 5' 10". In the dashes, two Tar Heels, Richard MacFaddin and Don Though Gymnastc Team Bowed To Navy, 5912-3612f Coach Meade Pleased The Tar Heel gymnastic team bowed to a highly talented Navy squad, 59V2-36V2, at Annapolis, Md., on Saturday. It was the best showing the Carolinians have made against the Middies in the live years that the two teams have been meeting, and Carolina Coach Bill Meade was well pleased with vhat he termed the best perform ance since he has been coaching the sport here. Tar Heel co-captains Biff How ard and Pete Brum ley were the individual high scorers of the day, garnering . 264 out of a possible 300 points together- They account ed for both of Carolina's two first places, Brumley doing his best tumbling in his three years here to cop that event, and Howard performing exceptionally well for the first in the righ bars. Howard also captured second place in the parallel bars to contribute 10 points to the team score, while Brumley turned in two fifths- one in the side horse and the other in the flying rings, for eight points for the team. Gooby Hudson added nine points to the team score with three third places, in the side horse, the par allel bars, and the flying rings. Carolina's two firsts in Six events and their losing by some 20 points is a vast improvement over their' performances against Navy in previous years. Last year the Midshipmen won by 40 points. 5- 1 ( j if A Vi I v ;, X -1 r f s - r f ' I li j v 1 , ' : ---- If.-, pi I , 1 XX: ' -X. ,; 2:. - . i.ef?v I '; ;'ivv:-: v I ; if-.' mm 5 A at Robbins Advanced Showing Of Spring Fashions. Come See Our New Collection Of DRESSES, SUITS, COATS, And Separates To See You Well Into The Spring , L a ' l ' of Chapel Hill
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 18, 1955, edition 1
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