Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 1, 1966, edition 1 / Page 5
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Wednesday, February 1, 1957 THE DAILY. TAR HEEL Page 5 UPl AP Rank UNC No. 2 - For the second consecutive week, the University of North Carolina Tar Heels were rank ed as the second best team in the nation by both national vire services. Both United Press Interna tional and the Associated Press moved the Tar Heels into the number two slot while the team was idle during examina tions. . Louisville which had held the second best position for a number of weeks moved down one ranking after losing its se cond game. UCLA remained tlje unani mous choice for first place, being the only large-college team with no losses. The North Carolina Tar Heels have suf fered only one loss, at the hands of Princeton, currently ranked sixth, early in Janu ary. The Tar Heels defeat of the unranked Virginia Cavliers 103 to 76 Saturday gave the team a 13-1 record. Both polls included only games played through Satur day, January 28. .As had been the case in pre vious weeks, voting was close for most positions, and again there were cases where a few Points made the difference of one or two rankings. No team with more than three losses managed to get in to the top ten. t?Ue U?Tiversity. which gave the Tar Heels some of their toughest competition to date, ranked in 20th place on the UPI poll with only 8 points. TO T ctssI FOR SALE: 8'x45' house trail er. Air-conditioned, furnished, washing machine, two bed rooms, good condition. $1800. Call 929-2317 after 5:30. 1960 CHEVROLET IMPALA 2 dr., hardtop. Solid black, Red & white interior. Standard transmission w-348 cu. in. High performance engine. Call 942 1545 after 4:00. 1966 CORVETTE, excellent. Joe Warner, GI2-8982, Rocky Mount, N. C. FOR SALE: TWO three-ton air-conditioning units: Varsity " Men's Wear. FOR SALE: .HONDA 160 SCRAMBLER, silver gray, only 1200 miles, in excellent condition. Call Jack Bennett, 968-9304. FOR SALE: 1964 VOLKSW AG ON 1500S Sunroof Sedan. 66 hp., dual carbs. Excellent con dition. Call 929-3686 after 5 p.m. INTERESTED IN A NEW CHEVROLET or good used car? See Bruce Beaton in 301 Joyner or call 968-9185. PARKING SPACES! 3 avail able in Kemp's old lot-$8.00 per month. Phone 942-6360. THIS COULD BE YOU! Pic ture yourself in a '55 British racing green Plymouth. In top condition (4 new tires). I need $300. David Benbow, 968-9304. 1961 ALFA-ROMEO, Spyder, 1300 cc. A bright red roadster in excellent condition. $675. Call Ken Rabin, 203 Bingham Hall, days 933-1249, leave mes sage. 1962 VESPA G. S. Italian mo tor scooter, 175 cc. Over 80 mpg. Cruises 55-60 mph. 4 gears. Excellent condition. Rides well, looks good. Pete Range, 942-2379. 1954 OLDSMOBILE. Good heater, snowtires, over - all good condition. A steal at $150. Must sell, leaving country. Pete Range, 942-2379. AP Poll Team 1. UCLA (381 2. North Carolina 3. Louisville . 4. Texas Western 5. Princeton 7. Kansas 8. Western Kentucky 9. Vanderbilt . 10. Providence Points ..... 380 298 .- 284 221 214 117 113 107 41 UPI Poll Team Points 1. UCLA (35) 15-0 350 2. North Carolina 13-1 285 3. Louisville 16-2 252 4. Texas Western 15-2 199 5. Houston 14-1 178 6. Princeton 14-1 .; 160 7. Kansas 12-3 113 8. Vanderbilt 14-2 ... 98 , 9. Western Kentucky 14-1 60 10. Providence 12-3 39 There will be a tennis meet ing for all freshman and var sity candidates at 2:30 in Wollen Gym's room 304 today. All varsity baseball candi dates will meet in room 304 at 7:30 tonight. .'' m m m Hi M M 1 AT TRIANGL "YOUR RELIABLE DEALER I ID la rrr The Sale ' of 67 UQLKSVJAGEfi Has Been m 1 1 I m ftp SPECTACULAR! Our Lot Is Loaded With Clean Used Cars o The Selection Is Good o The Prices Are Right 64 TAUNSUS 2 Dr. Sedan Two-tone blue and white finish, matching trim, V-4, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Extra clean. . $895. ,63 KARMANN GHIA Cpe. , , 'Light green finish, beige trim. Radio, heater, vrtiitewall tires. " . .'. $1395. 65 M.G.B. ROADSTER Baby blue finish, black top, black interior. This is a local one-owner, low mileage car. .... $1995. 65 KARMANN GHIA Coupe Red finish, black trim, radio, heater, white wall tires, a beauty for only $1695. 64 SUNBEAM "IMP" , 2-door sedan. Light blue finish, blue vinyl in- terior. Priced to sell at only $695. 63 VOLKSWAGEN 1500 SEDAN White finish, beige Interior. Extra clean. $1195. 66 CHEVY II Nova 2-Doer Hardtop Burgundy finish, red trim, V-8, 4-speed, 7,000 actual miles - $2095. ij m JO IVY im WAMMAMTY! 1 fm 1 vVriTfH ffl MALE HELP WANTED: Full and part - time salesmen to work during going-out-of-busi-ness sale. Previous experience preferred: Varsity Men's Wear. FEMALE HELP WANTED: Full or part-time cashier. Pre vious experience required. Phone 942-6610 for appoint ment. FEMALE HELP WANTED: Competent, adaptable woman with incentive, independent, business ability for full - time typing, mimeographing, recep tionist job in Chapel Hill. Must have good references. Phone 942-4157. f - 1 m fm i w j V7 LEARN TO FLY in the Tar heel Flying Club in a new Cessna 150 or a Cherokee for less than 10c per mile. Phone 929-6179. 65 CHEVROLET Impala Super Sport Conv.' Metallic green finish, white trim, V-8, auto matic transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires only $1995. 62 FORD Galaxie 500 2 Dr. Hardtop Black finish, red interior. V-8, Cruise-O-Matic, radio, heater, whitewall tires. Sharp. . . $995. 62 CHEVROLET Impala 2 Dr. Hardtop Black finish, red interior. 327 V-8, power glide, power steering and brakes. Radio, heat er, whitewall tires. Low mileage. $1395. 64 PONTIAC Bonneville Convertible White finish, blue vinyl trim, white top. Auto matic transmission, power steering and brakes. Only $1895. 64 FORD COUNTRY SQUIRE White finish, beige trim, V-8, Cruise-O-Matic transmission, power steering power brakes, factory air conditioned, radio, heater, white wall tires, luggage rack. One owner, low mileage $1895. 63 FORD Fastback White finish, blue trim, 390 V-8, Cruise-O-Matic, extra sharp. $1395. 63 CHEVY II NOVA 2 dr. hardtop. White finish, blue interior, auto matic transmission, radio, whitewall tires. Ex tra clean. $1195. 61 MERCURY COMET 2 dr. sedan. White finish, aqua trim. Automa tic transmission, radio, heater, whitewall tires. One owner. $695. LOOK FOR THE DISPLAY ON USED CARS WARRANTED Fred Perry Larry Williams Bob Jones m Tia RaWr Ed "Sam" Young Lee Pittman Mr Champ cooper lyj I Triangle Volkswagen, Inc. OPEN EVENINGS TIL 8:00 3823 Chapel Hill Blvd. Ph. 489-2371 N.C. Dealer No. 1343 mi 5 5 I SaT Sandy Treadwell Last Saturday evening in Carmichael Auditorium the opinion of the students in Chapel Hill was voiced on the subject of two men. A football coach was cheered and an athletic director was booed. Both re actions were virtuallyVunanimous. When Bill Dooley approached the-microphone the capacity crowd greeted him with a standing ova tion. It was pleasantly obvious that the crowd sup ported the man who is now their head football coach. It was right that Dooley was cheered. He is clean ing and rebuilding a football program that all but col lasped this fall. He has hired good, young assistants to help him. He has removed all of Hickey's staff with the one exception of Fred Mueller, the freshman coach. : ;v . Sf'1 But perhaps even more important, the athletes who will play for him both like and respect their new coach. But Chuck Erickson was booed when he intro duced Dooley. When the; coach" mentioned Erickson ; in his speech there were more boos. - , v . . " ' The reaction to the head of " Carolina's " athletic program was not only incredibly rude to him person ally, it also shockingly displayed the ignorance of the student body. In sports, as in most everything else, memories are short. Once Jim Hickey was carried on the should ers of football players after sixty minutes of football in the Gator Bowl. Once Hickey and Erickson were the most popular men in Chapel Hill. Now Hickey is gone, and now Erickson is booed by people who came to Carmichael to watch the na tion' s number, two basketball team . There'll be another half time ceremony in the Au ditorium this Saturday. The Carmichael Cup will be presented by the ACC to the University of North Caro lina. v The Cup means that Carolina last year had the outstanding athletic program in the conference. Soc cer, cross country, tennis, track, and baseball teams are all wrapped up in that piece of silver. All placed high in Conference standings, and one was ranked fourth in the nation. The Cup is a tribute to, more than anyone, Charles P. Erickson. He built the program and he is respond sible for it. "But people ignore the cup and what it means. All they think about is seven losses suffered on football v fields this fall. v Someday Dooley will build a fine football team. When that happens the boos will stop. . ' ml 1 H Announcing A CHANGE OF ADDRESS for your convenience Dr. William E. Beel OPTOMETRIST to 151 E. Rosemary St. Vision Analysis Glasses Fitted Contact Lenses Phone 942-5280 WEDNESDAY NIGHT IS STUDENT NIGHT mm III BE nn T.M. fag. by BSVBLT OSBOtNE In our Dining Room, Cosmpoliton Room, or "Cany Out" Orders. Continuous Serving From 5 P.M- 9 P.M. Regular Order iVi Chicken) $1.35 S1.09 THE IVY ROOM 1C84 W. Main 688-6841 682-9771 Tar Babies In First Defeat With Poor Shooting, Errors By OWEN DAVIS DTH Sports Writer The Tar Babies' ten-game winning streak came to a halt Mcnday night in Raleigh when the State f rosh won in an upset 87-68. The normal ly sure-shooting UNC fresh men could not find the range from the field and also were guilty of repeated floor mis takes. UNC's record now stands at 10-1. Carolina, which had hit over 50 per cent of its field goal attempts in all but two pre vious contests, managed a weak 38.7 makr from the out side. In contrast, State was ac curate on 53 per cent of its shots and in a big second-half surge connected at a 60 per cent clip. Both teams were ragged in their floor play. UNC made 28 floor miscues to State's 25. State, however, turned the Tar Babies' errors into points while Carolina did not capital ize on its breaks. A second-period scoring on slaught by State spelled the difference. Carolina trailed on ly 35-32 at halftime but the Wolflets poured in 52 in the second half while UNC put in only 36. Tom Smith led the late surge with 23 points, 21 of which came in the last half. Dale Abernethy followed close behind for the Raleigh crew with 22 points and Nelson Is ley fired in 15 from long range. Abernethy carried the Wolf let scoring load in the open ing half as he scored 14 in the first-half and also hauled in 10 rebounds for the game. For the Tar Babies, Jim Delaney scored 21 points fol lowed by Charlie Scott with 17 and 11 rebounds. Coach Larry Brown best ex plained the loss by s a y i n g , "The ball just wouldn't go in the basket." Carolina had numerous op portunities to forge ahead but poor shooting and sloppy ball handling always prevented, a hot streak. State took the lead from the outset and the Tar Babies only led briefly. UNC managed to get a 16-10 advantage but be hind Abernethy's hot shooting, the Wolflets quickly bounced back to go on top, 20-18. Caro lina never held the lead again. With 2:17 left in the first half. State extended the mar gin to 33-24. Delaney and Ed die Fogler, UNC's quick, ball hawking guards, then went to work. Several steals later, the Tar Babies trailed by only three points anl the half end ed at 35-32. Taking advantage of defen sive lapses, State broke Smith into the clear on numerous oc casions and the big center also picked up many loose balls and converted them to points. The Wolflets whittled out a 56-46 lead with 10:24 remain ing and then Carolina made its last gasp before slowly de flating. With Delaney and Scott doing most of the scor ing, the Tar Babies rang up eight straight points to close within two points at 56-54. Vann Williford then made the big play of the game for State as he made a layup and then converted a foul shot on xa three - point play to pull the Wolflets ahead,.59-54, with 8:24 left. THE NEW YOKK LIFE agent on your campus la a rood man to know. Write . . . Phone . . . Visit GEORGE L. COXIIEAD. C.L.U. 2034 East Franklin (Over Dairy Bar) Ph. 942-4338 i.h. mil. ...ma z .. . r - n NEW YORK LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY Asadl sa jj'sasG 2e We'd like to clear up what appears to be a misunderstanding. It is somewhat popular on campus to decry a business career on the grounds that you stop learning once you start working for Qichi Nuts & Bolts. That idea is groundless. We can't speak for Cliche, but we can for ourselves Western Electric, the man ufacturing and supply unit of the Bell Sys tem. 6 out of 1 0 college graduates who have joined us over the past 10 years, for exam ple, have continued their higher education. Ho w're these for openers : W.E.'s Tuition Refund Plan lets em ployees pursue degrees while work ing for us. Over 6 thousand have at tended schools in 41 states under . this plan. We refund more than $1 million in tuition costs to employees a year. To name another program: advanced engineering study, under the direc tion of Lehigh University, is con ducted at our Engineering Research Center in Princeton, N. J. Selected employees are sent there from all over the country for a year's concen trated study leading to a master's degree. You get the idea. We're for more learn ing in our business. After all, Western Electric doesn't make buggy whips. We make advanced communications equip ment And the Bell telephone network will need even more sophisticated devices by the time your fifth reunion rolls around. The state of the art, never static, is where the action is. At Western Electric, what's happening is the excitement and satisfaction of con tinued doing and learning. If this happens to appeal to you, no matter what degree you're aiming for, check us out. And grab a piece of the action. Western Electric MANUFACTURES & SUPPLY OF THE BLL SYSTEM
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 1, 1966, edition 1
5
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