YEDNESDAY, DECEfASER 5, THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE FOUR rvH n. n fin 0 J t rr Mrs n nJft !n mm 3 GflFBOflSlOD uu u n (O fjji ! j 1 1 Rosey Breaks Scorinjg Mark Held By Glamack The Orange Bowl: Who Should Go? The most representative team from the Atlantic Coast Conference will not be playing in the Orange Bowl come New Year's Day. Instead they will be sitting back by the fireside, watching Clcmson and Col orado battle via the medium of TV. In case you haven't guessed, the team we're talking about is Duke, far and away the best club in the ACC. Because of a cou ple of bad Saturdays, the Blue Devils were knocked out of the New Year's Day scrap. And yet at the end of the season no one questioned the fatt that Duke had a better team than did Clem son. That is no one but Tiger fans. The question is this: Does the- ACC want to send their best team or the conference champion? "VVe for one would like to see the mat ter cleared up one way or another. This "representative team" busi ness leads only to confusion. The Baseball Beat Carolina has a new head baseball coach, or at least that's what the official release stated. Actually the ncv coach, Walter Rabb,, has been in charge of the Tar Heel baseballers since 1947 when he took over as field manager for oldtimcr Bunn Hearn, victim of a severe stroke. Hearn officially retired only last spring, however. The 'new' Tar Heel coach is a personable, energetic fellow who has a finger in a little bit of everything. In addition- to his coach ing duties, Rabb has served as director of the extensive Intra mural program here at UNC, and has been a member of the NCAA District Baseball Committee. This could be the year for Coach Rabb. The affable head mentor will have a veteran rich squad at his command this spring when horse hide season rolls around, and with several outstanding pitchers from former years returning from the inactive list, the Tar Heels could go' a long way. One of the squad's brightest young hurlers will be missing this spring. He's Les Gilliland, stringbean righthander from Pinehurst who was killed in a tragic auto accident last Saturday night. Gilli land proved last year in his sophomore season that he was a real comer, and had been counted on for extensive service in the up coming campaign. Hurlers returning to Tar Heel livery after a leave of absence in clude lefty Joe Morgan and Charley Aycrck from service and Tom Maultsby who has just finished a' year's ineligibility. Another former Tar Heel baseballer has been making quite a " name for himself since graduation. Bruce Holt, regular third base- ' man on the '54 team, performed with the U. S. Olympic baseball ' team in an exhibition game in' Melbourne. The Olympic team is composed of Army, Navy, Marine and Air, Force men in the1 Far East command. 'Airmail' Ho'lti ?is 'stationed ti! Johnson Air Base in Japan. " ' -e- A Litff Bit Of Everything ' " rA Quartet of athletes' licr'ejLre having their 'troubles with the school botfksrl'They are' frosh 'halfback Cornell Johnson;1 swimming All"-Ameri cah Charlie Krepp and varsity basketballers Bill Hathaway 5ahf Stan Grtill. And over at Duke, "iVrayCarltoh,' sophomore halfback- who' Was a leading Blue Devil ground ; gainer Mn; the season's closing staes Is finding the scholastic going much rougher: Jack Nelson, formerly a student here at Carolina, grabbed off fourth place honors in the 200 meter butterfly event in the Olym pics. Teammate Bill Yorcyxk won the event. And speaking of the Olympics, wrho are you picking to win the unofficial team championship? Well, we don't want to be branded red', but we're mighty afraid the Russians will pull it out by monop olizing such sports as women's gymnastics and Greco-Roman wrestling. Anyone interested in attending the Carolina NYU game in Madison Square Garden Dee. 20 should contact Lou Rosenstock at the ZBT fraternity. If enough students are interested. Coach Mc Guire will reserve an end zone section for Tar Heel supporters. Carolina's Tar Heels turned tig er in- the second half last night be hind the record breaking sharp shooting of Ail-American Lennie Ilosenbluth, and romped to a 94 66 victory over stubborn Furman in a wild contest played before a capacity crowd of 5,500 fans in Woollen Gym. The homestanding Tar Heels led by only seven points, 37-30, at half, but sparked by the shooting of Rosenbluth and Joe Quigg, man- Frosh Hit W0 Mark In Debut Carolina's freshmen hoopsters began their season with a flying start last night when they whipped the outclassed High Point College JV's 101 to 61. After letting the High Pointers have ait 8 to 4 lead in the first two minutes of the game. Coach Buck Freeman's quintet gathered mo mentum and preceded to run away with the ball game. The Tar Babies leading 49 to 25 at the half came back with new vigor and did not let the High Point team score from the floor for the first 13 minutes of the sec ond half. Leaping Lee Shaffer was the high scorer for the Tar Babies, with 18 points. Shaffer controlled the backboards with his rebound mgs and tap ins. The Tar Babies played a team victory with 5 men hitting in the double digits. The only time the Tar Babies looked loose was in the final .. minutes when ,they began eyeing the. century mark. It was in the last 45. seconds when Wally Graham sank a long push shot for the 99th and 100th points. . The summary: Carolina ; ;. . , FG FT PF TP Shaffer, f 9 0. 3 18 aged to pull away and turn the game into a rout. But the big news of the night was the performance turned in by Rosenbluth, considered by many to be the greatest basketball player in Carolina's history. Lanky Len nie, widely known for his sensa tional scoring splurges, broke a iecord that had stood for 15 years last night as he poured in 20 field goals and 7 free throws for a total of 47 points, a new University record. The previous record of 45 was set by the great George Glamack in 1941 against Clemson and was tied by Rosenbluth himself last year. The Tar Heel captain had only 17 at half, but a 30 point total in the' second stanza put him over the top. He scored the record breaking basket with 54 seconds left and was immediately taken out of the game by Coach Frank McGuire. Although Rosenbluth took high scoring honors with his 47 points, it. was big Joe Quigg who provided the-spark that set the' locals off in the opening minutes of the sec ond half. Quigg a bench warmer for most of the first half, started the . second period at center u placte of Billy Hathaway and buck eted 10 points in 3 minutes and I 46 seconds. When the tall center ! left the game with 13:02 to go, the Tar Heels had stretched their mar gin to 13 points and were never headed. Carolina jumped off to a quick advantage in the initial moments of the game, but couldn't hold it as lie Paladins came roaring from behind 'to go ahead, 15-12 with 11: 50 remaining in the first half. The Tar Heels came back to take the lead, 16-15 on a Hathaway tap in shortly after, and continued to Sooners Win Crown Over Grid NEW YORK W Displaced only twice during the season, the Oklahoma Sooners finished on top in the final Associated Press poll to be rated the No. 1 college football team of 1956 for the sec ond straight year. The high-geared Oklahomans, winners of 40 consecutive games, also were rated the No. 1 team in 1950, so their third such designa tion retires the Rev. J. Hugh O'Donnell, C.S.C., Memorial Tro- V stretch that lead til the halfway point. Then when the second hal rolled around, it was all Quigg and Rosenbluth. The Tar Heels made 38 of 91 shots from the floor for a percent age of 41.8, while Furman hit 26 out of 84 for a poor 31 mark. National I enn essee Vols phy, placed in competition by 15 first-place votes, Miami 12, a Notre Dame in honor of the for mer president of that institution. The Sooners piled up a total of 1,715 points in the vote of the 187 sports writers and broadcasters participating in the final poll. Un beaten Tennessee was a good sec ond with 1,618 points, with the Rose Bowl-bound Iowa Hawkeyes third with 1,270 points, based on the system of 10 points for first, 9 for second, and on down to one point for a lOth-place ranking. Georgia Tech took fourth place with 1,211 points, and Texas Ag-! gies, Miami, Michigan, Syracuse, Michigan State and Oregon State i in that order made up the remain der of the top 10. Oklahoma, although pressed by Tennessee in the point totals, had Quigg led the Carolina shooters in ! a wide margin in first-place votes, accuracy with 8 for 11, 137c. Rosen- being chosen for that spot in 104 the remainder were among five other teams. nd scattered I 1 I'll f i I 1 sT J M bluth had 20 for 37. s. Guard Dick Wright paced Fur man's fast break attack and wound up with 21 points to take top scoring honors for the Paladins. ballots as the Vols were the top choice of 43 critics. Iowa received Larese, f : Kepley, c Crotty, g Steppe, g Graham, g Wilson, g Griffin-, g Crutchfield, f Ainslie, f 4 4 7 3 5 2 4 2 O Poole, g 2 5 5 2 3 2 1 2 0 O 2 4 3 4 2 4 0 2 5 5 8 13 16 9 12 5 10 4 0 6 State Stages Comeback To Top Deacons, 73-63 Paced by the shooting and re bounding of 6-11 center Bob Seitz, the underdog State Wolf pack rose up to smack down- Wake Forest's Demon Deacons, 73-63 in a Big Four battle played in Win-slon-Salem last night. The Pack trailed 27-22 at the halfway point but came roaring from behind in the second stanza to wrap up the win. Coach Everett Case's crew had 51 points while holding their opponents to only 36 in the second half. Seitz used his height to best ad- Totals 42 17 29 101 H. P. JV'S Wilson, f Fussell, f Parrish, c Sellecs, g FG FT PFTP .2 2 5 6 Furman Bob Gaines; f FG FT PF TP I - 21' 1 And the Intimate Bookshop Gift-Wraps Books Free! The Dollar Table at The Intimate Bookshop Solves More Christmas Problems Than Santa Clause! ConradJ I '.' Salver, f .1 i'- 0 1 '4 5 1 Herring, f Itoss, C LL Hanks, c . Cooper, g 1 Bill Gaines, g 4 Wrgiht, g 8 Pinson, g 1 McKinney, g O a 0 3 '2 0 O 0 5 2 O 0 3 3 1 O 4 3 2 O 4 0 2 11 12 2 2 8 21 4 0 COCOM fry OS LUXI mm M ...r t j m ;.T3 V1I"'.'I Totals .28 14 18 66 TODAY ONLY 4 E7T.Gcctr& 1 i Swiggett, g Jolly, f Hornung Wins Heisman NEW YORK-Jfl Paul Wm-n ' CeCil S ung, Notre Dame quarterback, ' SiUey'f 77 -vp5fPrrfav . , Fromydoyal, f - man Trophy given by the DOWN TOWN Athletic CluD as the out standing college football player of 1956. ' Hornung becomes the 22nd win ner of the trophy, established in 1935 in honor of John W. Heisman, famed coach. Jay Berwanger of the University of Chicago was the first winner, and Howard "Hop- 1 1 1 5 2 0 0 1 4 6 0 12 0 8 1 2 2 5 3 1 3 5 0 0 6 8 2 22 4 8 1 3 Totals 1 13 35 24 61 Carolina . FG FT PF TP Rosenbluth, f 20 7 2 47 Brennan, f 6 3 1 15 Lotz, f 10 12! Hathaway, c 110 3 Quigg, c . 8 3 5 19 Kearns, g 0 2 3 2 Cunningham, g 10 3 2 Radovich, g . 0 2 12 Grol, g 10 2 2 0 0 0 0 Rosemond, g Totals 38 18 18 94 vantage as he rippled the nets for ! along" Cassady, Ohio State half- 22 points- Guard John Maglio fol lowed with 16 while Cliff Hafer had 13. The Wake scoring was back, was chosen for the .1955 trophy. The Notre Dame star received evenly divided with Jim Gilley, ; a total of 1,006 points in the poll Wendell Carr, and Ernie Wiggins all hitting double figures. Co-Rec Volleyball Play Gets Under Way Tonight The intramural department has made final preparations for the annual co-recreation volleyball tournament. The tournament, the first of several co-recreational sports planned for men's and wo men's organizations, will be un derway tomorrow nigtu In Wool len Gym at ,7:00. This years tournament will be by far the largest ever with 42 learns entering 24 men's and 24 women's. The teams are divid ed into six four-team leagues Each league will play a round robing tournament to determine the league champion. The six league champions will ' then go into a single elimanation tourna ment for the final championship. A trophy will be given to the championship learn. conducted among 1,318 registered electors over the nation. Johnny Majors, fine Tennessee back,' was second in the balloting with 994 points, making it the closest finish in years. Twelve players were listed in the voting, with two Oklahomans, Tommy McDonald and Gerry Fubbs, ranking third and fourth. MAKE YOUR NEXT MOVE-A FRIENDLY BUSI NESS CHAT WITH THE MAN. YOU'LL FIND THAT; THE NEW YORK LIFE AGENT ON YOUR CAMPUS 15 A GOOD MAN TO KNOW George L Coxhead UNC '42 CAMPUS REPRESENTATIVE PO BOX 1065 PHONE 82331 "IHOUOH RAW SIX TO - ELEVATE EVERY EYEBROW!" -D..r A4,w If r "A SUPERIOR MOVH ...SO BRIILIAMT THAT IIOV11 FAMS Wilt CI TALKING ABOUT IT FOR SOME TIMI!" HroU Tribv ,4 t Record Attempt A former Tarheel swimmer will attempt to set new Amcr can swimming record Friday night. Buddy Baarcke, Carolina star in 1951-52-53, will attempt to set a new standard in the 50 yard breaststroke. The AAU sanctioned event will take place in conjunction with the UNC-South Carolina dual meet at 8 p.m. 1 Officials for the special event will be Ralph Casey, Dick Jam erson, 89b Colbert, Pete Grods ky, George Coxhead, and John Wienants. Lodge For Rent 40' x 100' Comfortable Tables Piano Furnished REASONABLY PRICED Special Price For Week-Day Frat And Club Parties CONTACT ROCK PILE - "CARLTONS" PHONE 9-9672 PC3S3 13 ALMOST LTJ- BIARABLE Daily Nw V- f i t . '( ' 'A "ft -.,. i 4 A Sensational New Motion Picture IFIFI ... means Trouble! Directed by JULES DASSIN No One Seated Once Feature Has Started. SPECIAL LATE SHOW FRIDAY NIGHT REGULAR SHOWING STARTS SUNDAY 1 iir r BOB and MONK of TOWN fk CAMPUS SALUTE Athlete Of The Week r V' VTr' L1i;D-.ft lev, & 4 ferx it mm 1 iJLitf' '; ill ST) fn. .J mm irekkah wm mm. DOLORES MORAfi HOAQY CARMICKAEl if-' NOV PLAYING ; - . f i I! 1 V 1 ."A LENNIE ROSENBLUTH Lanky Lennie Rosenbluth, Carolina's high scoring cage ace, has been named Athlete of the Week for his performance in last week's opening game against the McCrary Eagles. Rosenbluth, a popular candidate for All-American honors, poured in 25 points and sparked a late Tar Heel surge that sewed up the decision. We want htm to drop by TOWN & CAMPUS and pick out a shirt to his liking compli ments of the house. VVe want the old and young Hike of Chapel Hill to make TOWN & CAMPUS their head quarters for the finest in men's clothing. Drop in today. 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