Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 5, 1952, edition 1 / Page 3
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SATURDAY, JANUARY 5, lfi52 t'U U T ATTV T A TV TJf PAGE THREE li Tigers Could Spoil Perfect Loop Recor by Bill Peacock The Carolina basketball team, which finds itself in a first place tie in the conference race with State and South Carolina will t attempt to hold that unfamiliar position tonight when it plays Clemson at 8 o'clock in Woollen Gym. The Tar Heels who now have a 4-0 record could become the top team in the conference should they beat the Tigers and should Duke whip State tonight. The Blue Devils play the Wolfpack in Durham in this important con ference game. A Duke victory would leave Carolina and South Carolina as the only teams un defeated in conference play, but the Gamecocks have played one game in the conference that being an easy win ovr?r The Citadel. This will be the first con ference game for Clemson, which , JU , . t finished third m the Gator Bowl i Tournament over the holidays. Carolina has a 7-4 overall record. Tigers Have Improved Clemson, counted out of the conference struggle before the ; season, has come aiong very wen - this year and should make thelace,s 128 points vince Grimaldi,! game close, lhe lar weeis piayea j well.m the Dixie Classic during J the holidays, Dut were unimpres-, sive in a rough-and-tumble gam with Maryland Thursday. Carolina will have to use its height to the best advantage ; against Clemson, because me . Tigers have two players stand ing 6'6" Ron Richardson and John McGraw, and the entire i squad averages better than 61". ; Center Richardson, who played . , t. -.;. season, was the star of Clemson's 05-60 victory over Georgia in the f "' ""-a" 'i i Pulitzer Prize JSiSA.M applauded "J by . record nuer of 'J, Td X1l Warner Bros. Picture. It star. V,v'e" Brando. An Elia Kazan Production, produced by Feldman. Open Tuesday Referee Heft Might Have Averted Basketball Fight The consensus of most observ ers of the Carolina Maryland basketball game Thursday night was that referee Arnold Heft of "Washington, D. C. could have averted the scuffle between players which ensued near the end of the game. The first blows were thrown by Tar Heel center Howard Deasv and Maryland reserve guard Ralph Greco on a scram ble for the ball after a jump. Both players seemed more in tent on punching than retriev ing the balk Immediately after, an unidentified Maryland play er and forward Al Lifson began swinging. The coaches of both teams and the officials, Heft and Cur ly White, brought and end to the tussle before any of the ca pacity crowd of 5,000 left the stands for the floor. Many observers felt that the consolation game of the Gator Bowl tournament. He was the game high scorer with 19 points fo . . . f and led in rebounds with 19. Lifson Second High Scorer The good work of forward Al Lifson, whose progress has paced c u , S, took over second place in the Caroiina scoring race -th 130 Doints to top Jack Wal- who was held to one field goal by Maryland, still leads with 171 nints . x ; Jippy Carter, the former school j bov star at Charlotte, played most j of the game at center against Maryiand, relieving starter Paul Likins in the first period. Carter made only two field goals, but he tossed in four more free throws to give a totaj of eight points, jje may start at center tonight. Carolina Fs. Clemson WaUace F McCullough Lifson Likins Robinson C Richardson i Deasy G Moorer G Snee Grimaldi 7i -f y J. 1- ) Tt J winner w - Wednesday Varsity. - trouble could have been avoid ed if Heft had penalized Mary land coach Bud Millikan a tech nical foul when he walked on the floor earlier to protest Caro lina guard Vince Grimaldi's play, saying he was guilty of a back-court violation. Heft later charged the Terps with two technical fouls. Carolina assistant coach Pete Mullis was a victim of the con fusion, when Heft ordered him out of the building and charged Carolina with a technical foul. Mullis had walked to the scor ers table where Heft was stand ing and asked if the repeated Maryland fouls were not inten tional and therefore entitling Carolina to two foul shots as the new rules provide. Heft later said that he thought that Mullis had used abusive language. Mullis emphatically denied it. 'Tve been on the bench for 20 years and I've never been chased. I keep up a line of chatter with the Carolina players, but I never abuse the other players or the officials." JVs PSay Raleigh The iunior varsity basketball team will clay Raleigh High here tonight at 6:15 in a preliminary to the Carolina Clemson game. The Jayvees, coached by Earl Ruth, have had two games this year, defeating Elon and losing to Wake Forest. mil. , ,, L , '., .,.,,..,.,,... ..,.,, A New Years Wish To the Bulls Head, and Book Ex and all our Competitors, To Tarheel and Yack, and to each of their editors, To Junior Instructors, Professors and President, And lecturers (visiting Fellows , or resident) To each of the buddies in Carr and Mclver Along with the guy with a yen to deceive her, To the sirens of Alderman, Spen cer "and Smith, And the chaps whose mad dreams are entangled therewith To the cuties of Kenan, and all the nice dames Whose sororities have such unrhymable names To each of you mn you're the pride of the nation And the principal prop to co-ed education Here's a wish may your New Year bring wisdom and plenty And all that you long for and, Deo Volente, May we of the Intimate add to your cheer And contribute our bit to your HAPPY NEW YEAR! The RfiRiaf'e Bookshop 2C5 E. FRANKLIN STREET Duke-State Play Tonight Durham, Jan. 4 That annual basketball classic for fans in this section comes up in Duke's Indoor stadium tonight when Duke and State clash in the first of their two regular season engagements. A capacity crowd is expected to watch the game which starts at 8:15 following a junior varsity prelim at 6:30 o'clock. There are still tickets available and they will be on sale at the gates to night. State brings its newly won Dixie Classic championship into the affair which has provided the most thrilling basketball of this section for the past five years while Duke enters the contest with red faces after having lost two of their three starts in the event at Raleigh. , The Blue Devils in mid- December were being given a, good .chance of dethroning N. C. State but from their performances in the past four games, most of the experts state that the Duke outfit was overrated. The local crew got its high rating one of the ton teams in the nation chiefly by running rough-shod over Temple and Bradley but with losses to "West Tans Blacks Grains Cordovans lilll meaiy lises yoiar ( r i S. h. , .'J-'iaj--, . - Virginia, Columbia and Southern California .and only a vciry over Wake Forest in their' rt four outings, they hae dropped completely out of the picture. He always makes such a pro duction of putting in the Angostura." cm AROMATIC BITTERS MAKES BETTER DRINKS p.g. Nothings quite so wonderful as a Manhattan made with Angostura-' unless possibly iVs the magic things Angostura does for soups and sauces. from wHjcb. io select style '. l OP
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 5, 1952, edition 1
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