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'DAY, MARCH 4, ?SS THE DAILY TAR HEEL PACE THRE3 ir o n DDDITDfi N. C. State-Wake, Duke-Virginia! Play In Semi-Rnals Tonight, 7:30 " " By BERNIE WEISS , Y.Xl f,)S COLISEUM. Raleigh - Wake Rorest s Low ell "Lefty" Davis and Dickie Henuic, scoring 32 and 33 points,' respectively, paved the way for a snappy and aggres sive peacon attack' here last night to defeat North Carolina, 05:32, .thus eliminating the Tar Heels in the Atlantic Coast Cp.f?i;encc Tournament. The Deacons will go on to the semi-finals, playing State tonight al 7:30." In the other semi-final game, 'Duke will meet Virginia at 9;3b. In the first game last night State defeated1 Clemson, 101-76. The af ternoon opening round contests saw Duke defeat South Carolina, 83 67, an Virginia upset Maryland, 68-67, in over-time. It was a losing cause from early in the Jfirst half for Carolina last night. The Deacons had a 10-point margin at intermission and built it up quickly in the opening min utes of.the second half. Although Carolina had defeated the Baptists twice during regular season play, the Tar Heels didn't have to contend with Davis. Very ineffective, though always a threat, in those games, Davis came through in surprising fashion in Wake's win last night. He scored 20 points in the first half and was the big difference which gave Wake the half-time lead and the game. The game marked the last time Caro lina would have to contend with Hemric, out Davis, a junior, will be back to plague the Tar Hels next season. Another big factor in the Caro lina loss was the fouling out of Lennie Rosenbluth. He had tallied 29 before coming up with his fifth foul at 7:04 in the second half. ' In last night's first game, State's runaway from Clemson was mark ed by the setting of four new rec ords. CLEMSON'S BILL Yarborough, in scoring 34 points, set a new field goal mark of 15. breaking Vir ginia's Buzz Wilkinson's standard of 13. State's 101 points broke Duke's old mark of 96, and the combined total points of both teamsr"177, broke the Duke-Virginia record of 164. The Carolina Wake Forest game last night was also a" total of 177 points. State's number of field goals, 68, set a new mark which the Tack had set against Wake For est, 62. All of the old records were the first ones set up in last year's in itial ACC Tournament. State, after the opening minutes, brushed off the Tigers very easily until after half-time. Then the South Carolinians came back to narrow . the lead to 12 points at 13:20 left in the game. By 11:00 the margin was down to eight, but the Wolf pack decided it had play ed around long enough and got down to business. The lead stretch ed to 20, then 30, but came down shortly before the end of the game when Barry Ryan got hot tempor arily. WAKE FOREST took the early lead, "but not by more than four points, until Carolina tied it after three minutes at 8-8. Then Vayda hit on a pair of fouls and Young dropped in a lay-up to put UNC in" front momentarily. Wake took a one-point margin at 14:48, but UNC came back and held the lead until Jackie Murdock hit on a push to give the Deacons the advantage, 25-24. They held it from there on, the score at half-time being 48-41. Frosh Tank Tourney Sat. Aprpoximalely 40 college fresh man swimmers are expected to be entered in the first annual Fresh man Invitational Swimming Meet l scheduled in Bowman Gray Poo here tomorrow afternoon and even- in w University of North Carolina swimming v.vj received a full team entry of 14 from I! Duke, three entries from Clemson and two from VPI to date in addition to the Tar Heel fresh men. N. C. State will send its freshman sensation Dick Fadgen to the event. Other entries arc ex pected 9 be received for the day long meet before the closing tima today. . Prefirninary events will be run off tomorrow afternoon with the finals at night. The meet will be run on a dual meet schedule of events, but no team title will be awarded. " Invitations were sent to colleges Ihrough'out the South for the first " event of its kind here. U.Va. Upsets Terps, 68-67 Reynolds Coliseum, Raleigh Virginia's Buzz Wilkinson demon strated his All-Americart ability here this afternoon as he tossed in 30 points to lead his Cavaliers to a 68-67 upset victory over nationally-ranked Maryland's Terra pins in over-time. The game was a close one throughout, but it was Virginia's superiority from the foul line which gave the team a surprise victory. The Cavaliers scored on 18 free throws, Maryland only 13, and the Terps were out front on the field goal score, 27-25. The score at alftime was Vir ginia 35-33. At the end of the reg ulation game it was 59-all. Three players scored in double figures for the stunned Terps, who certainly missed the services of Frank Fuqua. . Bob Dilworth and Bob O'Brien each scored 18, while Bob Everett tallied 16 points. Bob Kessler, expected to be a big scorer in the Maryland tournament ef forts, was able only to get seven. Swedes Make Big Hit Here Wednesday night Woollen Gym was the scene of one of the great est exhibitions of strength, balance and grace ever seen on this cam pus. A near capacity crowd was on hand to watch the performance of the Swedish gymnastics team. The key note underlying the acts of the woman members of the 1 team was grace and beauty. Their' ball routine and synchronized exer cises were so well coordinated that it seemed like one continuous fluid notion. Tumbling, by both men and wo men, was one of the features of the show. Using the Norwegian spring board, the men would per form some amazing tumbling feats such as doing a forward flip over the high table which is 6'.2 high ery "recep- The audience was v tive to the acts which displayed the tremendous strength of the Swedes. One of these was the dif ficult feat of doing a finger stand starting from the prone position. Bradley, Oklahoma City Enter NCAA Tournament NEW YORK, March 3 un Brad ley and Oklahoma City University vere added to the National Col legiate basketball championship field today and immediately join- j ed half a dozen other teams in looking around for a used Cin derella outfit to wear in the tour nament. The two "independents" from the midlands area, whose compos ite record this season shows 16 victories and 36 defeats, were cho sen for "at large" berths by Reaves Peters, chairman of the Western selection committee, who pointed out that they're not as bad as they look. Oklahoma City 9-16 and Brad ley 7-19 probably have as good a chance to don the Cinderella garb Bradley wore last year as WiU liams, Villanova, Miami, Ohio, Penn State, Memphis State or Ida ho State, all of whom are in !the ScCAA tournament. CLASSIFIEDS WANT YOUR PIANO TO SOUND like new? Then let me tune it. j uick service, reasonable rates, ac curate estimate .Call Ed Potter, 34 Old West. Phone 98066. LOST PENS AND STAFF. TWO pens and a staff are missing 1 from Mrs. E. A. Abernethy's home on Columbia Street. They were given to the late Mr. Aber nethy by the Rotary Club of Chapel Hill and are valued bv Mrs. Abernethy for that reason. Please return these pens to Mrs, Abernethy. Small reward. LOST: CLASS RING WITH BLUE stone. Initials inside PET. Re ward,. Call Eddie Crutchl'ield at 9-7091 or 'notify DTII. TAR HEEL veteran distance runner Bobby Barden, heads a list of returning lettermen from last year's team which was second in the conference behind Maryland's Terps. Barden captured third in the two-mile conference race last spring and will be a mainstay for the Tar Heels in the same event this season. ACC Meet Here In May Heads Tar Heel Outdoor! rack Card By RAY LINKER The Atlantic Coast Conference outdoor track meet here at the end of the season highlights a 10 meet schedule for Carolina which also includes the Florida Relays, Pcnn Relays, and seven dual meets. Tar Heel thinclads have start ed working out for the opening meet on March 26, right on the heels of their Indoor Games' con ference win over Maryland, 36 35 'z . Although not too many have shown up for practice yet, Coach Dale Rartson is anticipatng a large turnout, which will include 14 of j last year's 20 lettermen. Six of the ten meets this year are carded for Chapel Hill's Fet- zer Field. The schedule is similar Beatty, Claude Rhule, Richard Wa to last season's with the addition I ters, and Ken Bryant. of Wake Forest being the only ! difference. This is the first time in many years that the Deacons have fielded a team. THREE TEAMS which UXC lost to last year, Princeton, Duke, and Maryland, will again furnish top competition. South Carolina, ' Virinia and N- c- state wil1 be steKing revenge ior losses 10 me Heels last season. Ranson will enter a moderate number of men in the Florida Re lays March 26, as in the past. Last year eight men paced the . Tar Heels to third place. If any bays in the season's ear ly, meets display particularly out- ! standing ability, Ranson will enter them in the Penn Relays in Phil adelphia April 29 and 30. Caro lina has entered very few in the meet in the past, but those that Femme Cagers Lose To Duke Lassies The UNC women's basketball club went down to defeat at the hands of a powerful Duke team, 62-34, in a game played here Tuesday. The Carolina coeds led the Duke team in the first quarter of the game, but then the lassies from Durham caught fire, and were never headed from then on. Sara Cashwell, playing her best game of the year, was high scor er with 21 points, seven of them coming on free throws. The Devils of Loudun By Aldous Huxley A convent of nuns possessed by devils, a priest accused -of witch craft, churchly politics and su perstition combine to make live ly reading of this fine work. Published at $4.00. OUR SPECIAL $1.39 The Intimate Bookshop 205 E. FRANKLIN ST. Open Evenings - 9 1 4 4 K 1 have performed have scored high ly. The conference meet here on May 13 and 14 will give the Tar Heels a chance to avenge last year's one and one-half point loss to Maryland in College Park. RETURNING LETTERMEN are Bobby Barden, Bill Booth, Steve Marcinko, Larry Maslow, Don Mitchell, Roger Morris, Vince Murray, Glenn Nanney, Boyd New nam, Roland Perdue, Charlie Scott, Bob Wilson, Don Wright, and Charlie Yarborough. Several fine performers for last year's once-beaten frosh team are expected to aid this year's varsity squad considerably, including Jim The schedule (meet is at Chapel Hill unless otherwise indicated): March 26 Florida Relays, Gainesville, Fla. April 2 N. C. State; April 6 Princeton; April 16 Maryland at College Park; April 19 Wake For est; April 23 South Carolina; Ap ril 29 and 30 Penn Relays, Phil adelphia; April 30 Virginia at Charlottesville. May 7 Duke, May 13 -and 14 j a 1 ' ' 4. ! MILE AFTER TREACHEROUS MILE OF CHURNING RIVER DANA ANDREWS PIPER LAURIE REX REASON WILLIAM TALMAN TODAY SATURDAY - & JT - if 1 .'mm, Pitching Big Question; Only One Hurler Back Pitching is the big question mark on the North Carolina baseball squad as the Tar Heels continue daily workouts in preparation for their March 24 dpener against Georgia Tech in Winter Parle, Fla. - Only one letterman moundsman is back in the North Carolina fold and Coaches Bunn Hearn and Wal- ter Rabb are searching high and low for throwing talent. Righthander Tom Maultsby is the one returning vet and any help h3 gets will have to come from a crop of sophomores. Maultsby saw ser vice in only five games last year and finished with a 2-2 mark. Brightest spark beyond Maultsby is sophomore Jim Raugh. He had an outstanding season with the freshmen last year and was impres sive for a semi-pro team in Nova Scotia during the summer. Rabb says the hard-throwing righthand er may develop into the squad's number one hurler. Also rated as possible starters at this point are sophs Arthur Stone, Don Hill and ' Morris Hall. Hall is the only lefty in the group. Billy Joe Johnson and Bob Johnson, non-letterman returnees from last season's club, are also putting in bids for starting assignments. The only other spot giving Hearn and Rabb any serious trouble is second base where veteran Harry Lee Lloyd has pulled up with a serious injury to the cartilage in his right knee. He'll be out indef initely and Tar Heel coaches are looking for a replacement for the season opener. Sophomore Buddy Strausse of Charlotte, who had a good year (with last season's frosh, and Camp bell College transfer Tom Breake are the top candidates for the double play sack job, with Breake given the edge on his hitting. "But anything can happen at second base, just like on the pitching staff, before that first game," Rabb said. . Sophomore catcher Jimmy Love and veteran Jack Maultsby are bat tling for the starting nod behind I the plate. Love played fine ball for 1 the freshmen last year while Maultsby saw limited action for the varsity. All the passions and potions of the great best-seller come to the screen! CliEMAScoPi: STECOFHONIC SOtHKH K1CHAR0 MAGGIE IW1 Burton AVNamara- Derek RAYMOND CTAM.ES RJIAKT1I Massey-Bickford Sellajk hEya LeGallienne 'PK1UPDUNME r" " MOSS HAH NOW PLAYING lEgnsSBiEil I At least two players are in ser ious consideration for each of the other starting positions. Veteran Will Frye, soph Pvussell Perry and Tom Zachary are all in line for the first base assignment. Zachary subbed at the bag last year behind Frye, who is currently missing baseball drills due to spring football practice. Frye also saw some starting duty behind , the plate. At the other infield positions, Jack Woods and Albert Long are fighting for the job at shortstop anrf sonhs Chuck Wartman T,,-, Lee Hill the third base assignment. Woods subbed behind hard-hitting Fred Dale last season. Hill is just out of service where he was im pressive with the Randolph Field team. Lettermen Connie Gravitte, Bob by Paller, Malcolm Harding and Ken Keller and soph Dick Hudson are in the running for outfield berths, as is Long, who saw service there last year. Deacs End Drills With Game Saturday It's football time at Wake For est and an array of former Deacon stars will take on the varsity in an exhibition game tomorrow af ternoon in Groves Stadium. The preview of the 1955 Wake Forest eleven will get under way at 2:30. The public is invited to at tend. Admision will be $1. Coach Tom Rogers has been rea dying his crew for the past three weeks in spring training drills and the Deacons will get a strong test against some of the biggest names ever to come from the Baptist Hol low gridiron. John (Red) Cochran will serve .s player-coach for the alumni team vhich will include some profession" al stars , as Harry Dowda, Red O'Quinn, Jim Staton, Bob Gaona, Joe Koch, Bill George and Ed Kis sell. .... COMING . . . RON LEVIN'S REBELLION a castle in the air costs bSRS5" : X- : yC-TCg?- . 'I . L m" lm laf iiiijrfMi 'Mil "' nil Make your dream house come true! It's easy through Payroll Gavlnrjs! If you think you can't own the home of your dream because the down payment's too tteep, ckancei are you've never tried the 'Payroll Saving Plan the easy, automatic way to meet any down payment! Just do this: Sign a Payroll Savings applica tion at your pay office, naming a certain sum to be kept aside from your pay before you get k each week. After that, you're saving auto matttatiy nothing to worn' about or do And, I. Mike Sandusky Heads' Top Tefp Mat Combination Maryland's defending champs will be heavy favorites to cop their second Atlantic Coast Conference title here tomorrow and Saturday in the first loop wrestling tourna ment. The Terps, unbeaten in the con ference this year, were declared 1954 champions on the basis of their regular season record. No tournament was held because the conference had only recently been organized. Maryland has a 5-0 record this year, compared to a i-i record for Virginia's Cavaliers, expected to furnish the heaviest opposition to the TerPs' Virginia bowed to Mary- nQ. uurmg uit itguMi !L , I; ' iillll! C I C AR ETTE S FILTER TIP brings you the true taste of Tareyton's famous quality tobacco PRODUCT OF crfL iJm.liin (JciCCC-Ctryxa'n but you can't live in it! best of all, the money saved out of your pay each week is automatically invested for you in U,S. Series E Savings Bonds. Because Savings Bonds earn solid interest 3 cumulative semiannually when held to maturity your savings soon grow into bi? amounts. For instance, if you sign for $12. SO a week, in just five years you'll have $3,.48.95. In 9 years, 8 months, you'll have $7, 217 20! So don't let down payments get you down. Join the Payroll Savings Plan today. Or, if you're self-employed, invest in Bonds regu larly where you bank Stan now to make youi dreams come true! fh V. S. Government does not pay lor this advertising. The Treasury Deptment thank, for their patriotic donation, the Advertising Council and THE DAILY TAR HEEL son but has improved considerably and has two men who haven't been beaten this year. Mike Sandusky, unbeaten Mary land heavyweight, will be favored to take the title in that weight. Other teams entered are North Qarolina, North Carolina State, Wake Forest, Duke, South Caro lina and Clemson. SOCCER PRACTICE Soccer practice will start Mon day on the intramural field at 4 o'clock. All aspirants, with or with out experience, are invited to report. ODERN SIZE j TAREYT0N nothing
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 4, 1955, edition 1
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