- . ; , . . . fc. ,. '"'"""' ' . - - - r- "- . - - ' .uaMKl MWgeeft,:-, .feJ,', "L, i1mI,JJ,mlj1iU,.,UL inL- MJr-rT-j.-T-.wim. , TUESDAY, JANUARY 23,-1951 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAG2 Tim Frankly Speaking By Frank Allsion. Jr. Winning Basketball - scctTon of ETBALL should ring State College and this section of he country great prestige, but when the-visiting team VIZ ?t 1 nCv atrCiOUS fficiatinS as was.LaSalle of Phil the price. odiuroay night, we wonder if it's worth hndUfor tt PPlG Chapel Hil1 nd. Carolina were on f hn t HSamC SatUFday night and the almost universal opinion f I( it w h"1 we spokft.was that the visitors had been robbed, -o put. ;t. bluntly In fact there were probably very few people in the Coliseum Saturaay night, with the exception of State support ers whp dinotfeel that the wrong team had come out oV? the ! long end of the 76-74 score. And what did LaSalle Coach Ken Loeffier have to say about the contest? An Associated Press dispatch from Philadelphia Sun day quoted the veteran mentor as terming the contest "the biggest steal -since the Louisiana Purchase." v ' Loeffier went on to say that it was "the worst thing that has happened to me in the 25 years of coaching. I guess everybody will get the idea that I'm sore. They're absolutely right" In our opinion, Coach Loeffier had every right to be sore. Officials Not Above Reproach WHEN COACHES AND NEWSPAPERMEN take to criticizing officials for calls in which it js purely a matter involving the official's judgment, then they are assuming a position which they really have no right to assume. But when it is a matter of interpretation of the rules, the officials are not above reproach. This is not to say that' we were in complete agreement with the rulings of Referees Dolan Hedrick and Ab Young in which there was only a question of judgment. We weren't, but we don't feel that the officials should be criticized for this. After all, they are paid to go on the floor to officiate and SHOULD be in a much better position to see the action than those of us in the stands or the press box. - ... On the question of rules interpretation, however, we violently disagree with the officials, the State College "cheering section" and Coach Ev Case. But four technical fouls were called on LaSalle during, the second half as the superior (in our opinion) Explorers saw a lead, which at one . point had reached 14- points, vanish under' a hail of boos from the State f ans and hail of fouls called by the officials. Action of the State Fans THE ACTION OF THE STATE STUDENTS who were in attend ance at the contest also added to LaSalle's troubles. Not only did the State fans cheer loudly every time Sammy Ranzino and his cohorts moved the all legally, but booed, hissed and waved their fists at the officials when they called the Agriculture School boys for attempting to move it illegally. Every time traveling, double dribbling or a like offense was charged up against State, the reaction was something akin to that of the average American after he heard what had happened at Pearl Harbor.. Fouls charged against LaSalle, of course, brought approval of the State assemblage. . . To top it off, every time , LaSalle stepped up to the free throw line, the State crowd would unleash" the boos and catcalls. The off i , ciajs, however, refused to call technical fouls on State although the rule book clearly allows for such a call against the home team when the officials deem the action of the hometowners an impediment to the progress of the game. On Technical Fouls ITS NOT HARD TO OVERCOME a big lead when there is a parade to the foul line for free throws followed by possession of the ball at mid-court. Twice technicals were called on LaSalle players who raised their arms on personal fouls, but not quite high enough to suit Officials Hedrick and Young. On one occasion Case jumped off the bench, STEPPED ON THE COURT and shook his fist at Hedrick. He was promptly waved back to his seat. Yet, a few moments later Loeffier walked down the side lines, NEVER STEPPING ON THE COURT, and spoke to Young who was talking at the scorer's table. A technical foul was called on Loef fier. While we realize the official had the right to call such a technical oh Loeffier, why did he not call one on Case? Or is the exalted Mr. Case, keeper of the Big Barn, immune to such arbitrary de cisions by a mere referee. The fourth and final technical was called on LaSalle Guard Jimmy Phelan, who after making a driving lay-up shot, slapped at the ball in the hands of a State player bringing it in bounds and knocked it from his hands. The officials called a technical foul on Phelan, presumably, to the fans and press box contingent, because the ball was in possession of a man who was out of bounds. Saturday night didn't mark the first time that a visiting team has left the State campus with a sour taste in its mouth. The same thing happened to the Eastern Kentucky team here in December. Neither LaSalle nor Eastern plans to return. And it probably wton't be the last time. Carolina fans can expect to get a taste of the same medicine when the Tar Heels move into Raleigh Saturday night. You can't beat a seven-man team. Tar Heel Five Ranks 11th In Conference Stan ings By Ken Barton The northern swing this past weekend of the Carolina basket ball team ended in near disaster as the Tar Heels lost two straight o George Washington and Mary land. George Washington defeated the Tar Heels, 76-71, while the Terrapins edged by the slumping visitors 56-55 in an overtime on Saturday night at College Park. The two defeats left the Tar Heels with a 4-4 record in the conference and dropped, them to 11th in the conference standings. The overall record for the season for Carolina is seven wins and 11 losses. N. C. State leads the Southern Conference with eight wins and no losses and a 17 and 2 overall record. Maryland with 5-1 and Virginia Tech, 4-1, hold down the second and third slots. The other clubs in the loop ahead of the Tar Heels in order are: West Virginia, Duke. William and Mary, Clemson, South Caro-j lina, George Washington, and Univ. of Richmond. The lone shining star in the pic ture over the weekend was the scoring of Jack Wallace, Howard Deasy, and Vince Grimaldi. All three pushed over the 200 mark for the season and placed among the top eight places in the Big Four scoring. Wallace leads the team and placed 5th in the scor ing with 220. Deasy, right behind Wallace in 6th with 208,' and Grimaldi (8th) with 200 are push ing Wallace. Carolina has nine games left in season play all of which are con ference games. They will have to and George Washington. Tough luck plagued the Tar - ' ' " - f - - ' - - imuiM... - '"jm vrrrwr j- , t 1 'J yj 1 1 Af iMniiminwn mi u nn.u jm mwin ' , 4' W" f i X h;"- V?Y, MiWJA'"'Hir" mirrr "" ...... - ... ...r,.,.ar,v..v,..a COACHES TOM SCOTT AND PETE MULLIS ... discuss strategy forr State gajne ... . win five of these games in order to place in the post season tourney. .. . Chances seem somewhat slim with two games against N. C. State and' two against the Duke Blue Devils. Other remaining games will be with: Wake Forest, South Carolina Citadel, Furman, Heels over the weekend with both games going the wrong way in the last few minutes. Both Grimaldi and Bud Maddie fouled out in the crucial stage of the GW game and at the time Grimaldi was hitting consistently. Against " Maryland, Carolina outscored the Terps . 19-15 from the .'floor, but missed 14 of 31 foul shots. To top matters off, in the dying minutes and in the overtime the " team committed enough faux paus to rank with President Truman's letter writing. The team took the day off yes terday and will resume practices today for the encounter at the Coliseum, Saturday night. Middlecoff Wins LakewoodOpen LONG BEACH, Calif. Jan. 22 (JP) Former U. S. Open King Cary Middlecoff, firing a 13 under par total of 271 for the 72 hole distance, captured the $10,000 Lakewood Park. Open Golf Tournament today. The former dentist from Mem phis, extracting his fourth straight sub par round from the easy Lakewood Country Club course, wound up his four day stint with a sparkling 68, three strokes und er par 35-36 71 for the 6,235 yard lake-dotted layout. His prev ious tours had brought scores of 70-6469. Middlecoff, winning his first tourney in California in four years of trying out here, broke a three way deadlock with an other ex-National Champidn Lloyd Mangrum of Chicago and dark horse Julius Boros of Mid Pines, N. C. Soon after play be gan today. From then on the personable Southerner was never headed and the ultimate surprise actually came in the collapse of such a Intramural Scoreboard Today's basketball schedule: 4:00 Court 1 SAE 3 vs. PiKA 2; 2 Kap Sig 3 vs. SAE 1; 4 Zeta Psi 4 vs. Phi Gam 2; 5 ATO 2 vs. Sig Chi 1; 6 SAE 2 vs. Phi Gam 3. 5:00 Court 1 YMCA vs. Med School 3; 2 "A" Dorm 4 vs Med School 1; 4 PiKA 1 vs. Phi Delt Theta 1;'5 Chi Psi 4 vs. Chi Phi 1; 6 Theta Chi vs. Chi Psi 2. 7:00 Court 1 TEP 3 vs. Phi Dclt Chi 1; 2 Sig Nu 2 vs. Phi Delt Thcta3; 3 Kap Alpha 2 vs. Phi Kap Sig 1; 4 Alpha Kap Psi vs. Phi Kap Sig 2; 5 Zeta Psi 3 vs. Chi Psi 3; 6 Beta Theta Pi 2 vs. Phi Delt Chi 2; 7 TEP 1 vs. Sig Chi 2. 8:00 Court 1 Everett 1 vs. Lewis 1; 2 Sig Chi 3 vs. Zeta Psi 2; 3 Stacy 2 vs. Graham 1;,4 Aycock 1 vs. Ruff in 3; 5 Alexan der 1 vs. "A" Dorm 5; 6 Mangum 1 vs. Whitehead; 7 Old West vs. Victory Village; ' ' I ii i i m .1 ..i TUESDAY TABLE TENNIS 4:00 Table 1 Phi Gam 1 vs. TEP i; 2 Kappa Sig 1 vs. ATO 3; 3 ATO 2 Vs. Sig Nu 2; 4 Phi Delt 1 vs. Zetes 2; 5 Phi Gam 3 vs. Chi Phi 2. 5:00 Table 1 Chi Psi 1 vs. Sig Cli 2: 2 Chi Psi 2 vs. Phi Kap Sig 1: 3 PiKA 4 vs. Sig Nu 3; 4 DKE 3 vs.' Zetes 3: 5 Phi Delt 2 vs. SAE 1. ,, , LOOKING FOR BETTER VALUES? Check These! O Excellent Food (Homemade Pies, Cakes, Rolls O Fast Service O Reasonable Prices UNIVERSITY CAFETERIA Chapel Hill's Newest B.F.Goodrich CAR BATTERIES $10.95 Installed and fully guaranteed HOM & AUTO SUPPLY Across from Bus Station powerful challenger as Mangrum and the decline of the previously stubborn Boros. Mangrum slipped to a 75 for a 278 total, and Boros took a 73 for 276. They started out with Middle coff at 203. The surprise runner up to Middlecoff and his $2,000 victory proved to be Manuel de la Torre of Milwaukee, whose 70-67-70-67 rounds gave him a total of 274 and $1,400 second place money. ' Tied at 275 were Henry Ran som with a 67; Jimmy Thomason, the blond belter from New York and California, with a 66, young Dick Mayer of St. Petersburg, Fla., 69, and Jimmy Clark, La guna Beach, Calif., whose 64 was low for the day. . Frosh Wrestle f The Carolina freshmen wrest ling squad-faces WCTC in its third match of the year at Cul lowhee'th's ereningr as it goes after' its Vlhird straight win. Previously the Tar Baby grapplers have downed the Ral eigh Blind Schooi and the VPI freshmen. Remaining on the schedule are matches on Jan. 31 with the'N. C. State freshmen and February 7 with the David son frosh.' The Duke freshmen play host on FebJ 28 in the final match of the season. On Feb. 24 a return engagement with WCTC in Chapel Hill is on the slate. Gage Tickets To Be Issued During Week A procedure for exchanging student pass books for tickets to the Duke basketball game to be played here on Feb. 2 has been released by Vernon Crook, Man ager of the Athletic Ticket Office. Persons holding passbooks and desiring to see the game should present their book and student ID card at the ticket window in Woollen Gym anytime this week, where it will be exchanged for a special ticket, The persons holding books bearing odd numbers as. the last digit of the serial number (such as 25363, or 78497) should present their passbooks on the days of 22, 23, or 24. Even serial numbers present theirs on the 25, 26, or 27. Students wishing, to sit to gether must present their cards at the same time. A student can't pick up anyone else's ticket other than his own. A married student may pick up his wife's ticket. The .exchange must, be made by Jan. 27 or the student will have to buy a ticket that is placed on sale to the general public. Football Meeting Scheduled Today A football meeting' wil be held in Room 304 of Woollen Gym to day. Coach Carl Snavely urged all boys who played on last year's team and all those interested in trying' out for the team, to attend this important meeting. Winter grid workouts will - be held on Navy Field beginning Monday. Managers Needed Coach Dale Ranson has issued a call for additional managers for the track squad. Ranson said that he needed another varsity and another freshman manager. Anyone interested in the pos ition is requested to see Coach Ranson in the Tin Can any after noon between 3 o'clock and 5:30. Th pictw from Franc that all th world tailed 9 about! WEDNESDAY VILLAGE ELUES harmonize with Easter A- Easter (March 25th) calls for your best appearance. And that calls for a blue suit. Take your choice here from our large stock of double- and single breasted models. You'll be proud to wear one! .iSr Si H. COLUMBIA ST. CuyaU MM. 71. C. Relay Team Takes First Place In Philadelphia Inquirer Meef Carolina's indoor track team, defending Southern Conference champions, made a creditable showing for itself in the Inquirer Charities Meet in Convention Hall, Philadelphia, on Friday night. . . The mile relay team, composed of Jack Bennett, Jim Hamrick, Gordon Hamrick, and Clarence McLain, won first place in Section "C." 'The relay was run in ten sections. Carolina competed against Catholic University, Baldwin-Wallace, and C. C. N. Y. Jack Moody tied fifth place in the high jump with a leap of 6 ft. 2 in.' Garrett Fitzgibbons took fourth place in his heat of the 50 yd. high hurdles. The hurdles, like the relays, were run in heats. The ' next meet is a 12-event program with State on Feb. 10. Both meets will be held in the Tin, Can. On Feb. 17 the team goes to ' College Park, Md., for the Maryland Indoor Games. The Southern . Conference Indoor Championship Meet will be held in Woollen Gym on Feb. 24. 8 Conference Schools Favor Frosh Ruling CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va., Jan. 22 P) Athletic officials at eight of the .Southern Conference's 17 schools are in favor of making freshmen eligible for varsity competition as early as this spring. : , This came ta light here today at vthe annual schedule-making conference of Virginia's "Big Six" institutions. Also present were; representatives from George Washington, Maryland and West Virginia University. All eight conference schools at the session went on record in an unofficial poll as bing in favor of freshman participation in spring sports. Official sanction would have; to come from the Southern Conference aj' a whois. The Uni versity of Virginia, not a confer ence member,' also voted in favor of the chrne. Wrestlers Lose, 23-8, To Techmen The Carolina Wrestling team lost its second straight match of the season to Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Va., last Saturday, It was the second conference loss for Coach Sam Barnes' boys. Previously, the Tar Heels lost tc Virginia Military Institute. Tom Cox scored three of eight points and took a decision in the 167 lb. class for the best Tar Heel performance of the day. The freshman team, coached by Oscar Gupton, had better luck than their varsity mates, and de feated the VPI freshmen 21-12. Harold Butts and Clyde Watson pinned their men in the heavy weight and 130 lb. classes respec tively. Andy Holt upset an ex perienced and favored Jack Griz zard in the 177 lb. class. Winners for the varsity grap plers were: Ken Stucky in the 123 lb. class, and Cox. Carolina's other two points came when Bill Schwartz tied his opponent, Paul Parsons, in the 130 lb. class.' Deadline Extended The deadline for The Daily Tar Heel's campus-wide poll to choose nominees for the foot ball Hall of Fame will be ex tended to March 1 instead of the originjllv announced dead-' o.: Jn. 3D. All those voting should list three players who played at f"'5i ie-i y ar: ro for each i posiiicn. Address all entries to Zane Robbins, sports editor. The ! Daily Tar Heel. Chapel Hill. Good Food. Reasonable Prices CAMPUS CAFE Open 7 A.M. to 2 A.M. 171 E. franklin St. Phone F-345S Rent Buy Browse at the BULL'S HEAD BOOKSHOP U.N.C. Library Brigadier Desmond Young: ROMMEL THE DESERT FOX :?;2S$gggg3$ "j ;.Tie :; J WV0 i I Famous C- -X'L.. I French ' d ji (. ' Picture d VL, that made j- I FRANCE ( Wr , : I BLUSH! bf4.v ' X M ' vx?-; ii -A w f. Distribute Throu9l. & 0IST1NGUISHC0 FILMS. INC. f I WEDNESDAY I I VI LLAGE : . ! i 1 rust CRAI-''yrA VALENTINES NOW ON DISPLAY We Have Hundreds To Choose From February 14th Is The Day LEDBETTER- PICKARD RUST CRAFT 111 0 ill ul n- "VI 11