Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 8, 1966, edition 1 / Page 4
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Page 4 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Saturday, October 8, 1966 Frosh Footballers Edge By Cavaliers By OVVEN DAVIS DTII Sports Writer Doug David redeemed him self after dropping two open passes and scored one touch down and set up another in the second half as" the UNC Tar Babies downed Virginia in an unimpressive 13-0 vic tory. Both freshman squads were very sloppy on the field and committed numerous mis takes. Carolina played with out six starters. The two teams combined had five passes intercepted, lost three fumbles and were penalized 186 yards in the comedy of errors. Frequent penalties nipped many drives in the bud and the 18 punts in the game were indicative of the lacklustre performance. Carolina scored its two touchdowns in the second half on drives of 60 and 63 yards. David sparked the initial march with a 33-yard pass re ception which put the Tar Babies at the Virginia 5-yard line and then culminated the latter advance with a 9-yard reception in the end zone. The tirst naif consisted of a constant exchange of punts and 11 boots were recorded. Carolina made the only seri ous threat in the closing min utes of the half after recover ing a bobble at the enemy 19. From there, the Tar Babies moved to the 6 before a miss ed field goal ended the threat. Carolina scored the second time it got possession in the second half but only a fluke permitted the score. Starting from its 40, UNC gained only V n Un Pr,??e.?.f S2 Srad wmwhuh uuus me extra wear oower 65"0ACR0N POLYESTER. 35 rnyl. r ' H ACROSS I. Tonkin native 4. Soft mass 7. Baby's bd LlnciU 10. Poodflih II. Under ground railway 11, Finished cooking, as a roast 1$. Behave 11. Goddess of Ju tlce 16. Si -pw as ccrrect 17. Exclama tion 18. Secret . agent 19. Decline to accept 21. Doom 22. Excavated rock for assaying 23. Wander about Idly 24. Scorch or scald Jeft, heavy, etc 29. An append as SO. Girl's name 31. Confeder als general 12. Arabic consonant. 23. Burst open, as apod 34. Wither 35. Den 37. Desert In, - Asia 38. Warbled 39. Genus of the lily 40. Enclosure: Scot. 41. Arch DOWN 1. To change 2. Along walk 3. VMnd. . sorcery 4. Time-piece 6. Touch end to end 6. Society gal, for short 7. Strangle 9. Entice 12. June-bug 13. Grow old 23. 24. 25. 26. 27. 28. '1. pl pill W f wM mA Vm. ssven yards in three before being forced to kick. Bur Vir ginia was charged with rough ing the kicker and the Tar Babies got the ball at the ene my 38 instead of losing pos session. From the 38, Garry floated a 33-yard bomb to David who fell out of bounds at the five. After one down, Garry pro ceeded to sweep left end and ran into the end zone un touched. Jimmy Sandlin add ed the extra point with 3:25 remaining in the third period and UNC led 7-0. Quarterback Garry then found David open on passes of 21, 16, and 6 yards and with four short running plays UNC was camped on the Vir ginia 9. At the 9, Garry scram bled out of the pocket on a pass attempt and spotted Da vid open over the middle. He fired a perfect strike and the Tar Babies extended its advantage with 3:49 left in the game. The PAT was wide and the margin increased to 13-0. Carolina staged a final threat late but an interception thwarted the effort at the 10 yard line. V.ViMV.V.-iV.V STATISTICS UNC Va. First Downs 14 14 Rushing yds 96 92 Passing yds 235 134 Passes 16-43 10-23 Had intercepted ..2 3 Fumbles lost ..... 1 2 Punts 10-31.4 8-36.8 Penalties 8-100 10-86 S OR IN 5CWOOI - OUK CLOTHES j WILL MAk VOU 6LOW COOL. A)) Shirts and Slacks H I 4 I ex fa n i 1 15. Affirmative vote 17. Employ 18. Front of riding perch 20. Footed vase 21. Cooling DAILY CROSS WORD device Merry Shore recess Mountains U.S.S.R. Chance Weird English river 30. Smithy' place 33. Evergreen tree 34. Perform by oneself 38. Bern river 37. Talk :! I I ' Till' p Wmmm iiiwdniiiin-n n "lift" - , 4 - - fc( .,,-.,- - -... r - 3.. . - - 1 f;: - ; v ;,-s, - . v v. . t ; , I1""' J 1 C VVi' 5 '--v m; - j r- v. I f.'fi. - - EST r . fAJL:Jt - S? r- L i,:J - 1(1 ' f Uc X L The Carolina freshman defeated Virginia mm by the final score of 13-0, The Tar Babies found the going rough in the first half, out in the second half quarterback Ken Garry started connecting with end Doug David to lead the team to victory. KEY, RALET SKIj k r'M NOtTELLIN1 VER "mEREMT AGAIN OF US 'AS TP 'AVE I'IFT A BIT OF WILL-POWER.' A OURaVE DOWN v, gi- T' THE PUB,EH? r OT irlrWWERE IS IT? SndPaliirw. Ldon'M" jj IN THE $1.00 a pair w iiiTlJ 5 CORDUROY LOOK OF WIDE-WALE BY esquioe Socks Another fine product of $ Kayser-Roth in a poorly played same ST ill Harriers Are Victorious By BOB ORR DTH Asst. Sports Editor Carolina's highly touted cross country team swept to an impressive victory over N. C. State, Virginia, and East Carolina, Friday at Ra leigh. The Tar Heel distance run ners took seven of the first ten places. Leading the way was UNC junior Mike Wil liams who placed first over the 4-mile State course in the time of 20:37.5. Second was East Carolina's Don Jayro. Williams and Jayro stage'd a head-on battle for the first three miles but the Carolina thinclad ran a sub-5 minute last mile to win easily. Paced by four outstanding sophomores UNC took third through seventh place to com pletely' dominate the meet.s SAT. AND SUN. .sMSmmm1mmm'-''' mmmmXmmmtl-- - mm IWMMMMagw, ALBERT R. BROCCOLI HARRY SALTZMAN W'i COMY'-JAMES BOND iTECKacatwrk. mm artists mH4 PR.CE5 . tell m mi ( PANTR TOP HELF. VCOCQATIN br Truett Goodwin place third, followed by Joe Lasich, Steve Williams, and Jim Hotelling. Senior co-captain Trip Mc Pherson was seventh. Coach Joe Hilton's harriers face their toughest competion of the season next Saturday when they run defending ACC champion Maryland at Chap el Hill. Yesterday's victory was UNC's second. They beat USC last Saturday. Carolina's unbeaten fresh man distance runners also ran, picking up their second win of the season. Tar Heel Robert Frederick was the in dividual winner with a time of 13:17.8. VARSITY FINISHERS: 1. Williams, M. (UNC); 2. Jayro (ECO 3. Goodwin, (UNC); 4. Lasich, (UNC); 5. Williams, if she doesn't give Cologne, 6 or., $4.50 After Shave, 6 oz., $3.50 Deodorant Stick, $1.75 Buddha Cologne Gift Package, 12 spray cologne, $3.50 Buddha Soap Gift Set, $4.00 Cologne, 4 oz., $3.00 After Shave, 4 oz., $2.50 SEE YOUR KEEPSAKE DIAMONDS AT Henderson Jewelry 402 W. Franklin St. First Choice Of The Engageables And, for good reasons . . . like smart styling to enhance the center diamond . . . guaranteed perfect (or replacement assured) ... a brilliant gem of fine color and precise modern cut. The name, Keepsake, in your ring assures lifetime sat isfaction. Select your very personal Keepsake at your Keepsake Jeweler's store. Find him in the yellow pages under "Jewelers." mmmmmmmm I.. C-tfarTs vf FRO- 00. TO ,5000. R.N6S tLpSEB T SH0W ru-B lU.rAUT, mc. ESTABLISHED U2. Please send new 20-paae bootleK "Wv., ri. w I SEE YOUR KEEPSAKE DIAMONDS AT" T. L. Kemp Jewelry 135 E. Frank., q S., (UNC); 6. Hotelling, (UNC); 7. MacPherson, (UNC); 8. Taylor, (ECC); 9. Bailley, (VA.); 10. Bassett, (UNC); 11. Autry, (UNC) FRESHMAN FINISHERS: 1. Frederick, (UNO; 2. Lee (NCS); 3. Helms, (UNC); 4. Jordon, (NCS); 5. Kachergis, (UNC), 6. Markman, (UNO, 7. Evans, (UNC); 8. Carson, (NCS) 9. Katz, (VA); 10. Jones (VA.) A LEADER GREEN BAY, Wis (UPI) Don Hutson of the Green Bay Packers led the National Foot ball League in pass receiving for eight seasons and is tied with Elroy Hirsch of Los An geles for the league record of 17 touchdown catches in one season. it to you ... get it yourself! 02., $8.50 SWank. new york - sole d.str.butor REGISTERED Keepsake DIAMOND R I NO S ' ' ante ,::-.sJVf . . . 1.,- yyA s
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 8, 1966, edition 1
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