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THE DAILY TAR HEEL
Friday, January G, 1CG1
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By Rip Slusser
While most students were in their respective hometowns
enjoying themselves exceedingly on the night of December
31 of the past year, the Tar Heel basketball team was spread
ing a little joy of its own in the finals of the Dixie Classics.
Before the night was over the mighty McGuiremen had
defeated the previously unbeaten Duke Blue Devils, 76-71,
for the crown. The victory climaxed the occasion and the
year with the traditional net-cutting ceremonies.
It was a fitting conclusion to a successful athletic year
for the North Carolina teams. And with that 1960 closing, a
spark was struck which ignited many hopes and wishes for
the New Year:
May Moe, Larese, Kepley, Hudock
and Walsh continue on their current
path and on to the national
championship. Here's hoping that
Coach McGuire will soon be able
to vacate that' dentist's chair
to which he has been confined
for the past week. May Sam Barnes
get more time off jrom his English
classes so that he might spend more
time with his wrestling team.
Continued success to grapplers
Shuford and Kortner. May fortune
continue to shine upon Pat Earey
and his swimmers. Here's wishing
continued success to mermen Bloom,
King, Bilbro and Simonton as they
seek the ACC crown. May the
performances of Jimmy Brown and
Barrie Tiedemann keep that smile
on track Coach Dale Ranson's face.
May his men have the speed of
panthers and the strength of
Hercules, that they may recapture
the conference trophy. Here's
a toast to Walt Rabb's magnificent
baseballers and continued success
in '61. Here's hoping, also, that
the coach's arm has healed, that
he might instruct his charges
while on his feet and not on a
stretcher. May he find men with
the prowess of Griffin and Burgwyn
and may .he discover ten pitchers
with speed and control, that he
may go back to Omaha for a second
shot at the prize he missed last
summer. Best wishes to Don Skakle
and his championship tennis squad.
May Sylvia be greater than ever
this spring, and may ten more players
of his ability dot the court. Best
wishes to Ed Kenny and his golf team
as they prepare to take to the greens.
May another Green Pete continue
in fine fashion, with 70 as his
scor ecard ceiling. And finally
best wishes are extended to Head
Football Coach Jim Hickey and his
staff, in the hopes that they will
experience a few more moments of
joy than they did last year.
May backs Farris, Marslender,
Elliott, Davies, Addison and . Carson
be faster tlian sound, and may
linemen Craver, Gallagher and
Hegarty be stronger than steel in
the coming campaign. And to all
the members of the Athletic Department,
the administration and the student
body, a belated HAPPY NEW YEAR!
LITTLE MAN ON CAMPUS
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A5 SEEN BY:
'THg &TUDBHT6 -
Grim, but determined, the
Tar Heel swimming. team takes
off today on a two-day tour of
the Old Dominion state, Vir
ginia. Tonight the Carolina tankmen
stop in Lexington to meet the
traditionally strong Keydets of
Virginia Military Institute. The
Heels are attempting to bounce
back from their December 17
loss to Navy, their first.
Saturday, Earey's boys will
attempt to gain their second
straight conference Victory of
the campaign when they meet
Virginia's Cavaliers in Char
lottesville. The first ACC tri
umph was against Duke in De
cember. After returning to Chapel
Hill on Sunday, the Tar Heels
will have one day of rest before
tackling Wake Forest here on
Tuesday.
Matters. To Face
A
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Standing atop the .500 fence
as far as their season record is
concerned, Carolina's wrestling
team will attempt to bounce
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Swimming Co-Captains Hambrick and Simonton
back from two straight defeats
tomorrow night when they en
counter Appalachian College in
Woollen Gym.
The Apps, a North State Con
ference school, has developed
into a principal power in the
past few years and will present
quite a challenge to the Tar
Heels. Last year Carolina could
muster only one win in their
match, while being trounced,
23-5.
However, the Heels are much
improved this year, thus pre
senting the possibility of a very
exciting match which will be
gin at 8 o'clock.
Gn Dark
Winter
Days,
, Prints
Bring the
Sunny.
World
Indoors.
THE INTIMATE
BOOKSHOP
119 E. Franklin St.
OPEN TILL 10 P.M.
Irish Have Big Team
But Slim Win Mar Jc
BY HARRY W. LLOYD
Tomorrow night the Notre
Dame basketballers will try to
make a more successful inva
sion of North Carolina than did
the 196b Irish football team. But
if past records offer any basis
for prediction, Coach John Jor
dan's cagers have an even slim
mer chance for a win against
the Tar Heels.
Carolina Coach Frarik Mc
Guire expresses a high respect
of the South Bend boys, even
though their won-loss record is
not quite up to par. After win
ning three of their first four
starts, the Irish have dropped
five more contests.
McGuire realizes that the
poor record held by the Green
does not show their potential.
"They're really a big, strong
team," he said, "but they're
young."
So far this season, the Irish
have boasted a four-barrel led
attack, centered around the let-
termen from last yearfs team,
which finished with a strong 17
9 record. Center John Tully,
who saw a lot of action in last
year's game when the. Tar Heels
won by 75-65, has been averag
ing around the 15-point mark.
Guard Eddie Schnurr, an accu
rate bomber from the outside,
is ' another" definite scoring
threat.
Also hovering in the double
figures are the two forwards,
Armand Reo and John Dearie.
Reo topped the scoring in the
first Notre Dame win, hitting 23
against W. Illinois.
Rounding out the starting five
is Bill Crosby, a guard who got
a lot of experience last season.
He is the 'captain of the Irish
quint.
North Carolina and Notre
Dame have met four times in
basketball, and .the Tar Heels
have won three times. Besides
last year's - contest, Carolina
wins came in the '58-'59 season
by 69-54, and 81-77. The Irish
upset the Tar Heels by 89-70 in
1958.
Last year's UNC-ND contest
was also played in the Char
lotte Coliseum, where tomorrow
night's game will be run off.
Harvey Salz led the scoring in
that one with 21 points, and
also-departed Lee Shaffer had
19.
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Now Playing
The HILARIOUS
inside story of those
wild spring vacations!
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Where
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TICKETS
Students may now exchange
Iheir athletic pass cards for
Jickets to the Wake Forest
game to be played here
Tuesday night, January 10.
Tickets will be distributed
on a first come, first serve
basis All students wishing io
attend the contest are urged
to get their tickets now.
IPflPULARi-0
PRICES
FORTHI
TIME!
HOURS OF SHOWS:
1:30 r 3:4S- 6:18 - 8:42
Now Playing
mmmt
BETTER HURRY!
EVERYONE IS GOING TO
RECORDS
ON ONE GROUP
OF ALBUMS
At Least 30 Discount on All Stock
TODAY and SATURDAY ONLY
Milton's
January Colossal
SEMI-ANNUAL GIVE-A-WAY ON THE CHOICEST
TRADITIONAL APPAKEL IN THE COUNTRY,
k -. Mi 1 1
Entire stock of our finer fitting traditional suits, so
classic they remain in vogue for the life of the
garment, your least expensive investment in good
grooming .
All $85.00 suits now $65.00; $79.50 range reduced
to $60.00; $67.50 and $69.50 to $50.00; $59.95 to
$15.00
192 sports jackets, formerly to $51.50, lake your. pick
at below cost give-a-way of $19.99.
Our own designed distinctive sports jackets, so dif
ferent and smart looking, at enticing January
Colossal reductions $60.00 to $45.00; $48.75 to
$34.99; $45.00, $42.50 or $39.95 to $29.99
Extra special give-a-way on long sleeve sport shirts
in regular neck sizes and sleeve lengths (for in
stance, 1636), in our own four button pullover
button-down model, regularly to $9.95, including
paisleys, small geometric prints, Danish oxford
miniature plaids, other exotic cottons now one
for $4.00 or 3 for $10.00
475 leather belts, formerly lo $6.00, at $1.99
Many Other Fabulous Buys
SttICt INC
All Sales Final Alterations Extra
tltOttlS
Clothing Cupboard
Downtown Chapel Hill
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4r laves of Dobie GiUis", etc.)
1961: YEAR OF DECISION
Well sir, here we are in 1961, which shows every sign of being
quite a distinguished year. First off, it is the only year since
1951 which begins and ends with the Figure 1. Of course, when
it comes to Figure l's, 1961, though distinguished, can hardly
compare with 1911, which, most people agree, had not just two,
but three Figure l's ! This, I'll wager, is a record that will stand
for at least two hundred years!
1911 was, incidentally, notable for many other things. It
was, for example, the year in which the New York Giants played
the Philadelphia Athletics in the World Series. As we all know,
the New York Giants have since moved to San Francisco and
the Philadelphia Athletics to Kansas City. There is a movement
afoot at present to move Chicago to Phoenix the city, not the
baseball team. Phoenix, in turn, would of course move to
Chicago.- It is felt that the change would be broadening for
residents of both cities. Many Chicago folks, for example, have
never seen an iguana. Many Phoenix folks, on the other hand,
have never seen a frostbite.
There are; of course, certain difficulties attending a municipal
shift of this size. For instance, to move Chicago you also have
to move Lake Michigan. This, in itself, presents no great prob
lem, what with m6dera scientific advances like electronics and
the French cuff. But if you will look at your map, you will find
that Lake Michigan is connected to all the other Great Lakes,
which in turn are connected to the St. Lawrence Seaway, which
in turn is connected to the Atlantic Ocean. You start drawing,
Lake Michigan to Phoenix and, willy-nilly, you'll be dragging
all that other stuff too. This would make our British allies
terribly cross, and I can't say as I blame them. I mean, put
yourself in their place. What if, for example, you were a British
workingman who had been saving and scrimping all year for a
summer holiday at Brighton Beach, and then when you got to
Brighton Beach there wasn't any ocean? There you'd be with your
inner tube and snorkel and nothing to do all day but dance the
Lambeth Walk. This, you may be sure, would not make you
NATO-minded!
I appeal most earnestly to the residents of Chicago and
Phoenix to reconsider. I know it's no bowl of cherries going
through life without ever seeing an iguana or a frostbite, but I
ask you Chicagoans, Phoenicians is it too big a price to pay
for preserving the unity of the free world? I am sure that if
you search your hearts you will make the right decision, for
all of us whether we live in frostbitten Chicago, iguana-ridden
Phoenix, or narrow-lapcllcd New Haven are first and foremost
Americans !
But I digress. We were speaking of 19(31, our new year. And
new it is! There is, for one thing, new pleasure in Marlboro
Cigarettes. How can there be new pleasure in Marlboros when
that fine, flavorful blend, that clean easy draw filter, have not
been altered? The answer is simple: each time 3011 light a
Marlboro, it is like the first time. The flavor is such that aire
cannot wither nor custom stalG. Marlboro never palls, never
jades, never dwindles into dull routine. , Each' pack, each
cigarette, each puff, makes you glad all over again that you arc
a Marlboro smoker !
So, Marlboros in hand, let us march confidently into 1061.
May good fortune attend our ventures! May happiness reign !
May Chicago and Phoenix soon recover from their disappoint
ment and join our bright cavalcade into a brave tomorrow!
' 1961 Max SShulmaa
The makers of Marlboro and of the new unfiltercd king-size
Philip Morris Commander join Old Max in adding their good
uithes for a happy and peaceful 1S31
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