THE DAILY TAR HEEL SUNDAY, DECEMBER 16, 195S '.GE FOUR n n f! it It II n I unoearen uar E3 S) ecisooini From COLUMBIA (AP Undefeat ed and nationaly - ranked North Carolina was pushed to the limit here last night beore beating the University of South Carolina, 90 86, in. an overtime Atlantic Coast Conference basketball game. Two guards, Tommy Kearns and Tony Radovich, scored a field goal and a free throw each in the last minute of the overtime stanza to wrap up the game for North Car olina. The game had been tied 76 76 at the end of regulation play. Kearns, with 29 points, led the scoring for North Carolina. For ward Gradv Wallace was high scorer for the South Carolina Gamecocks with 35 points, of which 24 were tossed in after halftime. With seven seconds to go in reg ulation time, guard Ray Pericola drove in and laid up a field goal to tie the score at 76-76. North Carolina's star forward A 1 u.o. vvnips In Davis Cup Play By WILL GR.IM5LEY ran lit, Ausirau , Australia L Sam Giammalva, a Dowieggea texau who hit. a tennis ball as if it were ? hated demon, won his place on the United States Davis Cup team yesterday when he teamed briLi antly with veteran Vic Seixas to clinch the Davis Cup inter-zone fin al against India. , rr, ' Told before he took the court,.. that his performance would de cide whether he would compete against Australia in the challenge ! round later this month, the 21-yea.'-old University of Texas student from Houston put on a powerful snow wun aeixas xo crusm uiui s Ramanathan Krishnan and Naresh Kumar in doubles. 6-2, 3-6, 6-4, 1 6-4. " After Bill Talbert, U.S. captain, said "Until further notice this is my doubles team against Australia. Vic and Sammy didn't prove they are the last answer in a doubles team but they teamed well togeth cr and right now they look like the best we have." Talbert acknowledged that be fore the match he had gone into private conference with Giam malva and told him his position on the team would depend on to day's match. "If Sam had indicated he might not fill the bill, I was ready to experiment with Siexas and Herbie Wrestlers Top Citadel, 75-70, In Friday Match The Tar Heel grappiers contin ued to stay on the undefeated list by out tusseling the Citedal Bull dogs, 17-10 Friday night at Char lestown, S. C. This was the third win for the Carolina matmen in four matches. The only blemish, on their record is an opening season tie with Washington and ,Lee: The strong Tar. Heels revenged last years' 27-7 licking received from the Citadel by only given the Bulldogs only two matches and a tie. Carolina lost the 127-pound and the heavyweight matches and the 137-pound match was the tie. Tar Heel Captain Bob Wagner brought home his third win of the season Friday to stay unde feated. Other Tar Heel grappiers with the same record are sopho mores Don Childs and David At kinson. Charles Boyette had the tie in this match to give him a season record of three - wins and a tie. Perrin Henderson and Dave Ken Hoke are the remaining Tar Heel victors. Henderson and Hoke both j have a 2-1 season record. J The matmen will be out of competition until after the holi- UNC-NYU Tickets All those who haven't pur chased tickets to the Carolina NYU basketball game in New York City Thursday night may obtain them the night of the game at the 50th Street ticket window. The price will be, 75 cents, and any student with an ID card may get as many as two tkktts. Lennie Rosenbluth, who had aver aged 33.3 points a game up till last night, scored 18 points. With about a minute to go in the overtime period. Kearns was fouled as he moved in to make a shot. Kearns was . awarded the basket and also a free throw which he made. The three points put North Carolina ahead 87-86. Moments later Radovich was also Cagers Meet Terps Coach Frsnk MeGuire' power ful cagers make their final Home apparanc before the' Christmas holidays tomorrow night when they tangle with the pesky Mary land Terp at 8 p.m. in Woollen Gym. Following the Terp clash, the Tar Heels wil leave on a three game road trip to New York City and Boston where they will meet NYU, Dartmouth and Holy Cross. j Flam as a team," Talbert added. I Both Talbert and Harry Hop- man, Australian Davis Cup cap- tain, must nominate their four man squads for the challenge round today. The lineups appear cut and dried on both counts. The American team which will be named to face the Aussies at Adelaide Dec. 26-28 will consist of Seixas: a PhiladelDhian making , h n,vL(, Criry camoai!,n. Flam of Beverly.. Hills, CaliT.. Giammalva and .19-year-old Mike Green of Miami. , , .The Australian team will bs made up of tennis twins Ken Rose wall Hoad, plus Neale Vraepr anA a-Mav rnpr jia and Hoad are likely to r1f Talbert insists . 5us singles as signments against the heavily fav ored. Aussies are still , undecided and. will depend on workouts in Ihe next 10 days. There is still a chance he will go with his young sters Giammalva and Green on the. theory that the oldsters have prov ed they can't beat Hoad and Rose wall and the experience would pav future dividends for his so-called kids." The doubles victory today gave the United States a 3-0 lead over India in the best-of-five series and ielegated Sunday's final singles matches to the category of exhibi tions. days. Their next match will be against Virginia January 4. The summary: 123 lb., Greco, C, pinned Wall; 130 lb.. Wagner, UNC, decisioned Pirone, 4-0; 137 lb., Henderson, UNC, decisioned Rudick, 7-4; 147 lb.. Boyette, UNC, tied Taylor, 4-4; 157 lb., Hoke, UNC, decision ed Pinaichik, 5-4; 167 lb., Atkin son, UNC, decisioned Childress, 4- 0; 177 lb., Childs, UNC. decis ioned Childress, 4-0; 177 lb., Childs, UNC, decisioned Huntley, 5- 1; Heavyweight, Eisenberg, C. decisioned Corkey, 4-0. Beatty Sets New Mark In Quarter-Mile Trial Jim Beatty shattered th un official University three-quarter mile record here yesterday as he toured the indoor track in 3:03.4, nearly 3 seconds better than the old mark of 3:06 held by Jim Davis. Finishing behind Beatty in the time trial were Ben Williams, Everett Whatley, .Dave Scurloclc, Wayno Bishop, Howard Kahn and John Reaves in that order. CLASSIFIEDS FOR SALE: CHRISTMAS TREES, holly, running cedar", mistletoe, ppen every day except Christ mas day. Blackbird's Market, W. Franklin St. RIDER WANTED TO NEW YORK Monday if possible. Will leave at anytime. If interested, please call Mrs. W. C. Hudson at 9-8792. India mi n (SCSI s vertime fl n fir j fouled making a shot. He too was awarded the field goal and made his free throw. The Box UNC G F P T Rosenbluth f 8 2-6 4 13 Brennan f 8 6-8 5 22 Hathaway c 0 0-110 Quigg c 24-538 Kearns g 10 9-13 3 29 Groll g ,0 0-0 0 0 Cunningham g 4 2-4 5 10 Kadovich g 11-13 3 Totals 33 24-38 24 SO USC G F P T Wallace f 12 11-14 5 35 Hoffman f 10-2 4? Smejkal f 4 4-4 2 12 Lentz c 10-0 4 2 Goodroc c 2 5-5 2 9 Pericola g 4 7-9 4 13 McCoy g 4 3-6 3 11 Totals ; 28 30-40 24 86 North Carolina 36 40 1490 South Carolina 30 46 1085 N. G. State Tops GW,76-62 RALEIGH (AP) North Caro lina State continued its mastery oyer George Washington 'with a 76-62 victory before 4,500 fans here last night. The Wolfpack's big men, center Bob Seitz and forward John Rich- ter, teamed up to put N. C. State back into the win column after a two-game losing streak. Seitz bucketed 20 points, while Richter had 19. Richter also bagged 19 rebounds as N. C. State racked up its ! 17th straight win! ovec the Colonials, who have not beaten the Wolfpack since 1946. It was the fourth straight loss this season for George Washington. They have yet to win one. The Wolfpack, playing slow and deliberate, ' led all the way and was out front, 42-31, at the half. Their biggest margin was a 15 point spread midway the second half. M is GHJHi W9 2P 'p"-S ' " AKtitfS NOW PLAYING DAILY ACROSS 1. Somersaults (colloq.) 6. Faultily 11. Writer of fables 12. Of tone IX Moisten 15. Capital . (Nor.) 16. Half em 17. African, worm 19. Shoshonean Indian 20. Spherical 22. Sunk fence 25. Prickly i plant 28. Ascend 30. Cornered 31. Draft regulator 33. Roman date 3i. Not awake 36. Hole-plerc-. ing tool 38. Unhappy 3d. Dancer's . cymbals 42. Wander 44. Optical . illusion 46. Trifled 4$. Centers 49. Kind of rock 50. Waits upon DOWN 1. Diminish, as color 2. Thin 3. Doctrines 4. Father 5. An . incantation 6. Close to r 7. Cry of a cow 1 imn mum ii.. i I ii u imtm-vm i.i'M w KStossffinM CROSSWORD 8. Offended 29. Lam- 9. Seasoning 10. Astringent fruit 14. Midday 18. Incite 20. Pants 21. Awelgh 22. Owned 23. Macaw 24. Asiatic mountain chain 26. Confederate - general 27. Man's nickname (poss.) IN WOOLLEN GYM: Rebounding Tar Babies Take On Duke Tomorrow Carolina's once beaten freshmen basketballers meet their second Big Four opponent of the season tomorow night in Woollen Gym when they play host to the Duke Blue Imps in a 6 p.m. preliminary to the varsity clash with Maryland.. The Tar Babies will be hoping for better luck on their second stop around the Big Four baby circuit. In their first outing against a local rival, .they lost to State's highly toutered, frosh, 91-39, in i Kinston before 2,000. fans. ' j Before that loss to State, the Tar Babies had whipped to a pair of one-siaed wins over the Hijih Point Jayvees and Wilmington Jun ior College. N Lee Shaffer and Dick Kepley, a pair of jack rabit skyscrapers with a soft scoring touch, have paced the Carolinians in games to date. Kepley poured in 26 points against the Wolflets while Shaffer follow ed close behind with 24. York Larese, a 6-4 forward fron: New York City, has also been a Frosh Matmen Overpower, Pfeiffer, 19-13 The Freshman Wrestling team won their first match of the sea son last night by defeating Pfeiffer Junior College, 19 to 13, in.Wool- t len Gym before a good sized i crowd. The summary: 123 lb. Champlin (C) pinned Plott (P) 3 min. 35 sec. 130 lb.-Cuthbertson (P) pin ned Charles Whitfield (C) 3 min. 45 sec.' 137 lb. Perrini (C) pfnned Wells (P) 2 min. 55 sec. 147 lb. Bill Gautier (C) decis-i ioned Sides (P) 13 to 9. 157 lb. Ron Purdy (C) decis ioned Spoon (P) 13 to 3. 167 lb. Whitesides (P) pinned Jim Hudson' (C) 2 min. 177 lb. Beno Sack (C) decis ioned Griffith (P) 4 to 3. . Heavyweight Thomas (P) fecis ioned Mike Pittman (C) 15 to 10. another, innovation in cood taste by It't fun la Isntiol ifv thi trim nw tx i wih mi-pok lopt. natural tKouldr, flap pockets. nen-plitd j trousr. Jet tlack ! K 9 . J on-ieoion worsmj, I j tilk satin fati..g. T ;r name of rareit Is I retainer or frut format drs chart, writ. Y' Mill ClH. 101 W. 21 Ni Y. 1 preys 32. Quan tity of paper 35. Public 36. Branch of learn ing 37. sheep hair 39. mountain, pool 40. Matured 41. Minus Sfttsrdsy's Atiwtr 43. Encount ered 45. Spawn . of fish 47. From (prefix) " fey fti.W'. j . o dsfT ? T s!"n ote epfo Jim uk 6lelNlsLI5l?fflf5rn-J HIl "ZZlZIl ir 11ZJZZ1II1 ZZZZftlZUZ consistent scorer in games to dale &nd is highly regarded by the Tar Heel brain trust. Holding down tlie starting guard slots will be dim inutive John Crotty and sharp shooting Mike Steppe. Gray Pooie' Wally Graham and Sandy Ainslea are front line reserves. The Blue Imps are somewhat of an unknown quantity, but off thoir performances in early games must be rated a strong threat. Carroll Youngkin, a burly 6-6 center from North Davidson, and Jack Boyd, a pepperpot guard, are the ringleaJ ers for Coach Whit Cobb's club. Tomorrow night's game is the last one for the Tar Babies before the Chrtstmas holidays. They re turn to action on Jan. 4 when they meet Edwards Military Institute. THE ANTKSEX LEAGUE turn t. ism m caax TODAY AND MONDAY CHi Krrt. k- T y-i aEIZ ' EzdBIEII If?, t mWk: -J . -CONGRATULATIONS. fifl E K! CKIKELC l: ' j 'M. ..... n' f ' "- mil-" w m i . ' . IH.HHMM HM.I..I ian- ;M.H'U-.v w j iwi-w - ' l . - Vv f A. - v.,, .mZ f - f t'l V:v i- ; ' V Ii' N- V nl .-. -Vtv I : I... i. - . .... .. ji . . .---y . ...... . . ... . . . .. BmjimujwIju.: JMiSM-ti: i"Mi'fr'iiiii i i mw f( 'Miif i urn nrv ,r-n - i - T Giants Scuffle Eagles To Win Eastern Crown PHILADELPHIA ( AP) The New York Giants won their first National Football League East ern Division championship in 10 years yesterday, crushing thei Philadelphia Eagles, 21-7, with a bruising ground attack and a rug ged defense. As a result the Giants headed home for a few days rest and then 10 days of extensive practice for the NFL championship game Dec. 30 at Yankee Stadium against the Western Division winner,, either the Detroit Lions or the Chicago Bears who meet head on for the honor tomorrow. - After a scoreless first period there was little doubt that the last place Eagles were merely a stepping stone to the Giants first Eastern crown since 1946. WILL DE WATCHING YOU - r era vm b, ism kzzx MOC I it f - ' -A if . ; - mmmmmm, m, mmm w. i u,,..,,!, w, mw,mmmCm Ham Richardson Named Top Netter By USLTA NEW YORK ( AP) Twenty-three-year-old Hamilton Richard son, who plays tennis only when he can take time off from his stud ies at Oxford, yesterday was named as the No. 1 American ten nis player for 1956. Richardson, a native of Baton Rouge, La.,, heads the mens sing les rankings drawn up by the U. S. Lawn Tennis Assn. And with Vic Seixas of Philadelphia as his part ner, Richardson also is listed as No. 1 in men's doubles. Herb Flam of Beverly Hills, Calif., was ranked second. Vic Seixas, rated as the top Ameri- AT IT AGAIN! Kemp's Annual PRE-CHRISTMAS 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Everything On Sale . . . MONDAY TUESDAY - WEDNESDAY WE DON'T WANT ANY INVENTORY LEFT GET GOOD MERCHANDISE NOW ... AND NOT LEFTOVERS AFTER CHRISTMAS! 207 E. Franklin St. can amateur after Tony Trabcrt turned pro, was dropped to third place. 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