February 26, 196'5
THE FULL MOON
Page 5
Mat Tourney
Being Held
At Pfeiffer
ASHS’s grapplers are taking
part in the South Piedmont Con
ference Tournament which is being
held a;t Pfeiffer College today.
The team has'engaged in sixteen
matdies this season, and has par
ticipated in two tournaments, one
having been held at Wadesboro.
Scores of the matches were as
follows (incomplete): East Rowan
37-17; Kannapolis 32-14; Denton 5-
48; Thomasville 33-11; Asheboro
25-16; Troutman 26-21, with Den
ton being the one match won by
the home team.
The Albemarle boys have won a
total of 48 individual matches this
season and have lost 38 (incom
plete). The individual record for
each member of the squad is as
follows: Russell Simms, 5-2; Ben
ny Bowers, 7-1; Mike Waller, 3-6;
Roger Crisco, 4-3; Dane Perry, 2-
6; Rip Furr, 4-4; Tony Wolfe, 4-
4; Wayne Harkey, 3-5; Jim Biv
ens, M; Wade Hatley, 5-3; Frank
Reeves, 4-3; Steve Brown, 1-0.
An invitational tournament, to
which the Albemarle squad was
invited, was held at Wadesboro on
Friday and Saturday, February 5,
6. Kinston came in first and Al
bemarle came in third out of the
five schools that participated.
Greyhounds
Take Two
Statesville’s Greyhounds re-
niained undefeated by squeezing
past Albemarle’s Bulldog 62-55 in
the Statesville gym F&ruary 4.
In the initial contest, the States
ville girls downed the Bulldog-
ettes, 30-26.
The Bulldogettes hit 31 per cent
of their shots from the floor and
49 percent from the foul line. Lin
da Hatley was the leading scorer
for Albemarle with nine points.
She also led in rebounds with eight
as the Bulldogettes led in 'this de
partment 26-M.
Boys’ Battle
Although the Bulldogs lost to
Statesville, they hit 51 per cent
w their floor iwots as compared
to the Greyhounds’ 48 per cent.
Kelly Jones and Tommy Smith
each tallied 17 points for Albe-
Jiarle. Smith also got 11 re-
i>ounds.
J. W. Lisk added 11 points for
^e Bulldogs on flve-of-ten floor
?hots and one-for-one at the char
ity stripe.
&»re by quarters:
Bulldogettes 7 6 5 8—26
StatesvUle 10 4 11 5-30
®“lld(^ 17 12 15 11-55
Greyhounds 14 18 14 15—62
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'Hounds Nip
Bulldogs, 64-55
Albemarle’s Bulldogettes cap
tured a 39-28 revenge victory over
Statesville’s ^rls, but the Grey
hounds remained undefeat^ by
clipping the Bulldogs 64-55 in the
local gym, February 9.
The Bulldogettes hit only 18 per
cent of their shots from the floor.
However, they hit on 27-of-40 from
the foul line!
Micbal Medling tallied 12 points
to lead the winners. She hit 10-
of-10 free throws. Beth Eddins
added ten points for Albemarle.
Tough defense held high-scoring
Lin&. Hatley to only six points.
Led by J. W. Lisk, Albemarle
led at halftime of the boys’ game,
28-27. However, Statesville out-
scor^ the Bulldogs 37-27 in the
second half.
Tommy Smith was the leading
rebounder for Albemarle with 12.
Overall, Statesville led, 33-28.
Radical Roommate
(Continued from Page 3)
We’ll have to fatten you up
next year! I will bring a batch
of Ma’s home baked biscuits and
some home churned butter. I
will also bring a few of my bees
so we can have fresh honey every
morning.
Our school is rather large. We
have 43 students. We will have
six graduating this year. Our
class has the highest drop-out
record in the history of the
school. We’re pretty proud of
that.
I take the following subjects
in school: Gym VIII, Study
Hour II, Elementary Science IV,
English I, and Typing XII. Be
cause I’m making such good
grades, I have a D— average,
Mother is letting me work after
school at the grocery store bag
ging groceries.
Do you have fads going
around your school like we do?
Everybody here seems to be
wearing black leather ja^ets,
black boots, and long side bums,
even the girls! j u *
You may have read about our
YMCA Club basketball team in
the New York Times. All the
eirls are divided into clubs and
the clubs play each other. We
have 4 on our team (our s is the
smallest team). We have a 6-2
won-lost record. We lost two
games at the first of the season
because all of our girls except
one were gathering cotton, bhe
almost won those two games,
except she fouled out m the
fourth quarter both times. The
scores were 84-87 and 13-^
V^n our teams play togetnen
we are really great. We ®end
copies of our plays to 8 of the
Brenda Peeler Is Homecoming Queen
NEHI
Beverage
Co.
Fresher
Refresher’'
Nickname Anonymous
Nickname
Hangout
Pastime
Ambition
1. Fat Daddy
Green Fly
sleeping in
U. S. History
to make 100
on a history
test.
2. Bumey
behind a bass
making love to
to protect his
fiddle
Bernice
Little Brown
3. Joe-Mac
Building
Nancy’s house
shooting holes
in tops of cars
to repair the
hole in the top
of his car
4. Jay
basketball
dribbling
to avoid freak
court
expertly
accidents
5. Bcave
“he just
singing with
singing with
hangs”
The Coachmen
The Winstons
6. Cluff
anjrwhere
being intellec
tual
to present his
own symphony
7. Fran
at home
thinking about
Clyde
to get hubby
home
8. R
Fraley’s
trading cars
to get another
9. Doby
T-Bird
Hardee’s
looking sexy
to keep Rusty
10. Lassie
his Corvair
being cute
to become a
greater Snow
man than
someone else
in this school.
Boyer Named
'Mr. Kneecaps'
Brenda Peeler was crowned 1965
Basketball Homecoming Queen
during impressive halftime cere
monies in the ASHS gym January
29; David Boyer was crowned Mr.
Kneecaps.
Since Valentine’s Day was the
theme, 17 girls walked through
a big red heart, as they were pre
sented at halftime. All of the
girls were dressed in red, white,
or pink. The queen was crowned
by Kelly Jones, team captain. Cin
dy Johnson and Jackie White, Sen
ior Class mascots, carried the flow
ers and crown respectively.
A week’s voting and a heated
contest were climaxed with the
crowning of Mr. Kneecaps, David
Boyer. He was crowned by Gayle
Byrd, chief cheerleader, and was
presented with a trophy after the
crowning of the queen during half-
time ceremonies.
Homecoming sponsors were
Brenda Peeler, Bobby Overcash;
Inez Furr, Tommy Smith; Nancy
Almond, David Smith; Pam Low-
der, J. W. Lisk; Beth Eddins, Tom
Webb; Joanne Lisk, Johnny Bur
leson; Nancy Walker, Kelly Jones;
Beth Moose, David Boyer; Gwen
Sasser, Johnny Morris; Cynthia
Freeman, David Miller; Susan
Hopkins, Eugene Coley; Linda Lu
cas, Joe Rabon; Lin Little, Leon
Helms; Penny Furr, Bob Town
send; Ellen Reeves, Mark Cain;
Dianne Morton, Randy Burton;
and Teresa Yow, Vemell Town
send.
Answers
1. Ronnie Swanner; 2. Bill Burney; 3. Joe McManus; 4. J. W.
Lisk; 5. Jerry Beaver; 6. Peter Cluff; 7. Frances Way; 8. Lionel
Rushing: 9. Alberta Doby; 10. David Miller.
The in-between-age is when one
is too old for marbles and too
young for martinis.
No matter how high or great
the throne.
What sits on it is always the
same as your own.
10 top basketball teams in the
nation.
Well, it’s time to milk the
cows, now. Write me soon and
I’ll be seein’ y’all.
Your wheat picken’ friend,
Nancy
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