jTHURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 195$ - THI DAILY TAR HEEL PAG1 TMREB N n 2) tffl S K TO Hi s r s- C F rosh Campbe M rsn If UNC Coaches Hopeful Of Getting 17th Win By RAY LINKER When the 26th annual Indoor Games roll around on February 26, the university of North Carolina will be seeking its seventeenth indoor track crown. The Tar Heels have not won the conference title since Maryland broke a six-year winning streak in 1952, but Carolina has been rebuilding, coming up with some fine material in the last two years, until it now appears that this year's meet will be the closest in many seasons. Last year Maryland's Terps took the championship by some 20 points, over Carolina and Duke, who were in a tight battle for sec ond place which saw the Tar Heels over the Devils by less than two points. y Carolina Coaches Dale Ranson and Joe Hilton feel that their club is considerably stronger than teams of the past few seasons, and can point to almost every event to prove their point. Therefore, they contend that the Tar Heels should finish ahead of the field, even if by only three or four pointr, Ranson considers sophomore Richard Waters to be the best pole vaulter Carolina has -ever had, and when he teams with Charlie Yar borough, UNC can rightly claim two of the best vaulters in the con ference. Hilton maintains that Carolina has the best distance men in the league in Jimmy Beatty, Bobby Barden, and Boyd Newnam. Beatty, another sophomore who is the conference individual cross country champ, will carry the Tar Heel colors in the mile run, expected to be the most tightly contested event of the meet and the fastest in a number of years. '! ' Barden, who finished in second place in the mile last year and copped 4bird in the two-mile, will stick to the longer race this time. Barden has improved greatly since a year ago, and he has been knocking out near-record runs with considerable ease recently. I Newnam is the conference outdoor 880-yard run champion, and has hopes of bettering his last year's third place indoors. Duke's Durham Lawshe had to set a new record in the shot put last year to beat Tar Heel Roger Morris, who will be out for re , venge victory this year with assistance from Larry Maslow. With Morris and Maslow on their roster, the UNC coaches can easily claim the best weight men" in the league. Although Duke's Joel Shankle won both hurdle events a year ago and will attempt to repeat that feat this season, he may well find himself in a battle royal, especially in the low hurdles where UNC's Claude Rhule and Waters are expected to make it rough going .for Shankle. The Blue Devil appears to have a slight edge over the same two Carolinians in the high hurdles, but he may well find himself pushed to a new record, before the Tar Heels have admitted defeat. , The loss of Jeff Newton and Harry Brown makes the dashes appear to be a weak spot for the team, although there is still a good opportunity that the Tar Heel team will make a good showing in these events. Jay Zimmerman, Jim Bynum and Don Mitchell will give UNC some strength in the 60-yard dash. Richard MacFaddin and Don Wright are the Tar Heels' best 440-yard dash men. De- fending champ Maryland, incidentally, took all four places m the 440 last year, and the top three runners are back again for a try at a repeat performance. Tommy Woodlee, South Carolina's out door champion in the 100-and 220-yard dashes, who didn't run in doors last February, is the likely winner in the 60 -yard event. Versatile Shankle is the co-defender of the high jump crown also. This is another good event to watch, mainly because of the fact. that Maryland's Hogan won the freshman division jump last year with a height that equalled Shankle's varsity performance d'l". Ray Qui lien, of Virginia, who tied Shankle last year, and Tar Heel Ken Bryant, a sophomore who jumped 5'llVi for the freshman outdoor squad, are expected to be leading contenders. It's Shankle again in the broad jump. Although the Blue Devil f ace topped UNC's Yarborough last year, the Tar Heel has to his credit a win over Shankle in this event that came later, in the spring season. This, too, should be one of the many interesting bat tles of the evening. With an array of trackman such as these, plus strong team ; depth in such men as Glenn Nanney in the two-mile, Bill Boolh in the 880, and utility man Bob Wilson (high and broad jump, hurdles, and relay), the Tar Heels are planning on coming away from the Indoor Game with the conference championship trophy in their possession. And even if the Carolina team is unable to finish first, the spectators still will have seen the meet labeled "The Indoor IracV Classic of the South'' and one of the greatest unrehearsed shows anywhere. Frosh Swimmers Seek Fifth Win Against Greensboro High Today Coach Dick Jamerson's unde feated ' freshman swimmers will meet Greensboro High School this afternoon at 5:15 in Bowman Gray indoor pool. The freshmen are sporting a 4-0 record, having beaten High Point High School twice, Rich mond YMCA, and this same I Greensboro team. However, since ' their last meeting with UNC, f Greensboro has won the South "'4 Eastern scholastic championships. In the previous meet with Gre ensboro, . the Tar Heels won se v ven out of the nine events, win - rs DID ni SAM j Kill Raleigh Memorial Auditorium Mon. Feb. 14 Mail orders and ticket sale THI EM'S RECORD SHOP Reserved seats $3.00, S2.50, $2.00, $1.50 ning by a score of 48-26. Probable swimmers this after noon are Bill Roth, Jim Goad, Walt Rose and Kelly Maness in the sprints; Mac Mahaffey and Tom' Maury in the breaststroke; Parker Ward and Bill Zickgraff in the backstroke; Ned Meekins and Glenn Pickard, diving; Jake Smith and Bob Lynch in the dis tance events; Rose and. Ed Shaw ley in the individual medley; Zickgraff, Mahaffey and Holm wood in the medley relay; and Shelf, Goad, West and Roth in the freestyle relay. ANDSTARS'55 1 Kearns And Brennan Set Pace For Win Victory Is Number 15 For Freeman's Squad By RAY LINKER Carolina's freshman basketball- ; ers easily chalked up their fif teenth win of the season by drub bing the Campbell College J.V.'s, 8S-73, in Woollen gym last night Sharp - shooting UNC guard Tommy Kearns and center Pete Brennan set a fast pace for the Tlt Babies with 24 and 21 points, respectively. Kearns made 11 of 20 floor shots, a nice 55 for the night, and grabbed 11 rebounds. Brennan pulled down 23 rebounds and. tossed in nine field goals. Guard Bob Vernon, who collect ed 22 points, nd Bozo Yountz with 20 were the high scorers for the visiting jayvees. The Babies have lost only once, while this was the Buies Creek: boys' third setback. They had previously lost to the Carolina squad, 105-79, and to the Wake Forest frosh. It took the Campbell team four minutes to hit the scoring col umn, as the Tar Babies ran up a 10-0 lead. The lead stretched to 18 points midway the first hah before the Campbellites were able to regroup their forces and cut the lead to 44-34 by halftime. Vernon's jump shot from the center of the foul circle with 12 minutes to go in the game brought Campbell within nine points, but if was never less as the Babies built up another 18-point margin v.ithin six minutes. Tar Baby Coach Buck Freeman sent in his reserves with four minutes to go, and they carried it from there. Except for some rebounding by Vernon, the Babies almost com-I-letely dominated the boards, col lecting 63 for the game. The box: Carolina Searcy, c Patton, g FG . 5 . 1 FT 4 1 2 0 3 0 2 0 0 0 p 4 0 2 1 1 0 3 0 1 1 TP 14 4 10 0 21 0 24 4 12 0 Cunningham, f 4 Mills, c 0 Brennan, c 9 Patterson, f 0 Kearns, g 11 Shay, f 2 Adams, g Eriggs, f ... 6 0 Totals 38 12 13 83 Campbell FG FT P Adams, f 3 2 0 Ellen, f 10 1 Hargrove, f 2 4 5 8 ..,--2 8 2i 22 o 9 ! Kittrell, f 0 2 2 Yountz, c 9 2 3 Vernon, g 10 2 2 Dcughtry, g 10 2 Roberts, g 4 11 Totals 30 13 17 73 Gymnastics Team vs. Tech Here Saturday The North Carolina gymnas tics team, after evening its sea son record at the 4.500 level with a win over the Navy Pier Branch of the University of Illinois last week, swings back into action Sa turday with a match here with Georgia Tech. It will be the first meeting of J the season between the two teams. The Tar Heels, under the coa ching of Bill Made, have now claimed wins over the Jersey Ci ty, N. J., Recreation Department' and the Navy Pier Branch, while suffering losses at the hands of Army and Navy. . hi ii i mWiJ IS it i iiTi 1 1 iiiHW iu ill J n I Just one brushing destroys most Atmi. nnA nrlnr-f niKinn Knrtprinl SUTTON'S STARTING UNC GUARD TOMORROW. NIGHT Cagers Resume Action, Tackle Virginia, Terps In Succession A prolonged mid-year lay-off, interrupted only by a crushing defeat at the hands of Duke last Friday night, abruptly -comes to a halt this weekend for the Caro lina Tar Heels. Coach Frank McGuire and his men travel to Greensboro tomor row night where they take on the Virginia Cavaliers. Saturday morning they will fly to College Park, Md. to meet the Terrapins that night. Both games are ACC contests. The Tar Heels will be seeking to get back on the road which carried them to a brief stay atop the Conference before the Duke loss dropped them into a second- f place tie. The long lull in the N. C. schedule came after an 84-80 upset of N. C. State and lasted until the Duke defeat. Thus tomorrow's encounter with the Blue Devils will be the Tar Heel's second game in three weeks. The four-way race for first in the ACC is due for at least a sli ght shake-up by the end of the week and a couple of upsets cou ld throw the entire loop into con fusion. Maryland's 8-2 mark is currently tops in the loop, with! TPthe Tar Heels, Duke and State all tied at 7-2. Duke and State were Mural Basketball Cobb-4, 35; Old East, 27 . SPE-1, 42; TEP-1, 41 (overtime) Pi KA-1, 45; Beta-1, 40 " Sigma Chi-1, 54; ATO-2, 16 Lewis ,46; Law Sch-4, 16 Law Sch-3, 44; Grimes-2, 30 Pi Kap-1, 54; Zeta-1, 31 Phi Gam-1, 25; Zeta-3, 20 Pi Kap-2, 38; Theta Chi-2, 34 Everett-1 over Winston-3 (for feit) Ruffin-2 over BVP-1 (forfeit) Med Sch-1 over Cobb-3 (for feit) Rosemary Automatic Laundry Invites youto try their com plete and inexpensive (less than 24-hour service) Shirts Hand Ironed 15c 329 West Rosemary St. Rear of University Bank It' CONTAINS OL-70... NEW CLEANER AND DECAY FIGHTER yj l ; ECONOMY size 63t DRUG STORE Yg t" " i - 4 M 18 n both favored in games earlier this week", and if they win and the Tar Heels take 1 Virginia, the game Saturday night will see four teams tied for first place, as the Terps are idle until Saturday. When North Carolina and Mary land hit, something will have to give in the four-way deadlock. State takes on South Carolina Sa turday night. The game will pit North Caro lina's scoring star Lennie Rosen bluth against Virginia's deadeye Buzz Wilkinson. Wilkinson was third in the nation with a 31.6 average and Rosenbluth four teenth at 25.8 at the last official report. TAR HEEL CAB 8464 To One And All We Appreciate Every Call 1 ; u 4 M 11 ir 0) GERMANS COMES BUT THRICE A YEAR, AND: TWICE YOU NEED A WINTER FOR MAL! GET YOURS NOW . . . YOU'LL NEED IT FOR PLEDGE AFFAIRS TOO. AND DON'T FORGET ACCESSORIES. CAS UAL THOUGH YOU BE, YOU'LL STILL NEED SOCKS, TIE, STUDS, DRESS SHIRT, CUFF LINKS! NOW AT 2 jr jf . jit.- 4 mr iiiJnjnliWIWlWWMll"WII''Wli,WllV I t '.? --j3. 'a ft. - .l :,n I , - ,L -4 They7 re Sleek They're Modern They're Rakish They're Gay They'll Steal The Lady's Heart Away. Give Valentines From The Intimate Bookshop 205 E. FRANKLIN ST. Open Evenings . jt . & Mt fUDOFKIt I o) W Coeds Open Season Today With Wake Forest Five The UNC women's basketball . Sara Cashwell, Linda Clement, club will open their season this afternoon at 4 o'clock in the wo men's gymnasium when they take on the Wake Forest "Deaconet tes". The Carolina Girls have been practicing since December, and have been improving steadily since then. Members of the club who will ' probably see action today are: THE TREEHOUSE OF THE AUGUST MOON Spring is just around the corner, and with spring, as always, will come tree-sitting contests. This I applaud. Tree-sitting is healthful and jolly and as American as apple pie. Also it keeps you off the streets. Tree-sitting is not, however, without its hazards, as you will presently see when I fell you the dread and chilling tale of Manuel Sigafoos and Ed Pancreas. Manuel and Ed, friends and roonvmates, were walking one day past the folk music room in the School of Dentistry and Fine Arts. Suddenly they stopped, for coming through the door of the folk music room was a clear and thrilling alto voice singing the lovely folk tune, Strangled My True-Love with Her Own Yellow Braids, and I'll Never Eat Her Sorghum Any More. When the last shimmering notes of the ballad had died away, Manuel and Ed rushed into the room, and there they thought their swelling hearts must burst asunder. Foi the singer was as beautiful as the song! Fair as the morn she was, doe-eyed and curvilinear. "My name is Manuel Sigafoos," cried Manuel Sigafoos, "and I love you madly, wildly, tempestuously!" "My name is Ed Pancreas," cried Ed Pancreas, "and I love you more than Manuel Sigafoos." "My name is Ursula Thing," cried the girl, "and I've got a jim-dandy idea. Why don't you two have a contest, and I will go steady with the winner?" "What kind of contest?" cried Manuel and Ed. "A tree-sitting contest," cried Ursula Thing. "Natch!" "Done and done," cried Manuel and Ed, and they clambered up adjoining aspens, taking with them the following necessaries : food, water, clothing, medicaments, bedding, reading matter, and most essential of all plenty of Philip Morris cigarettes. We who live on the ground, with all the attendant advan tages, know how important Philip Morris cigarettes are. Think, then, how much more important they must be to the lonely tree dweller how much more welcome their vintage tobaccos, how much more soothing their mild pure flavor, how much more comforting to know as one sits in leafy solitude that come wind or weather, come light or dark, Philip Morris will always remain the same dependable, reliable, flavorful friend. Well supplied with Philip Morris, our heroes began their contest Manuel with good heart, Ed with evil cunning. The shocking fact is that Ed intended to win the contest with a Machiavellian ruse. It seems that Ed, quite unbeknownst to Manuel, was one of three identical triplets. Each night while Manuel dozed on his bough, one of Ed's brothers Fred or Jed would sneak up the tree and replace him. Thus Ed was spending only one-third as much time in the tree as Manuel. "How can I lose?" said Ed with a crafty giggle to his brother Fred or Jed. But Ed had a surprise coming. For Manuel, though he did not know it himself, was a druid! He had been abandoned as an infant at the hut of a poor and humble woodcutter named Winthrop Mayhew Sigafoos, who had raised the child as his own. So when Manuel got into the tree, he found to his surprise that he'd never felt so at home and happy in his life, and he had absolutely no intention of ever leaving. After four or five yeai's Ed and his brothers wearied of the contest and conceded. Ursula Thing came to Manuel's tree and called him to come down and pin her. He declined. Instead he asked her to join him in the tree. This she could not do, being subject to acromegaly (a morbid allergjr to woodpeckers) so she ended up with Ed after all. Only she made a mistake a very natural mistake. It was Jed she ended up with, not Ed. Ed, heartbroken at being tricked by his own brother, took up metallurgy to forget. Crime does not pay. km Hhuwn. is-,? This column is brought to yon by the maker of PHILIP MORRIS cigarette, usho suggest that if you are ever up a tree tvhen try ing to find a gift, give PHILIP MORRIS. They'' re sure to please. DAILY CROSSWORD ACROSS Ocean vessel , Crystalline mineral , Plaguy , Peels A relative . Muse of .lyric poetry , Similar Blazed Distres9 DOWN 1. Elder 2. Cutting tools 3. Little island 4. Letter of th alphabet 5. A charm .CPromenad ing T. Sandarac tree-S- To tell again .City (Okla. 11. A sod house WesL U.S.) 15. Obese 1. 5. $ 10 . 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 21. 23. 24. 25. 27. SO. 81. signal Destitute of hair Lord (abhr.) Biblical mount Lazily Route Miscellany Price One who erects scaffolding Indefinite article God of thunder Scand.) African antelope Pulverized of sorrow Heaps The little girl in Wonderland Smells Desires Projecting end of a church Units X 54 36 27 ' 38. 39 40 41. I i 42 Charlotte Clement. Mary Jane Clement, Pat Corbett, Lou Jones, Jackie McCarthy, Loretta John son, Kathryn 'Jones, Rosemary Lemmond, Trudy Lefler, Sara Allison, Janie Pipes, Amy Morse, Nancy Nussear, Betty Stacy, An ne Miser, Geri York, Ann Teague and Sara White. Mrs. Frances Ho gan is coach of the team. 17. A shore recess 20. Snakes 22. Drag gin g through mud .? 24. Breeze ?5. Open area in town Yitery't Amntr 32. A state in W. Germany (It.) 26. A tribe of the Iroquois confederacy 27. Pole 28. Perform 29. Tricks 35. In a lopsided state 36. Winglike 38. Solemn wonder "!PLA.rnHjfcjpto; ; HC AkP' P i IC TS A F Apt! vCf-- PEr'T Yt -4E.jp pp AlalErTAR NtS T q, wiE A pl2,N aECUjT!HSjMllf AG AT TIP PL 6 SJLSECi sW Ail jl jNlelAtri.tnr&L. mi i lZ.ZZ.ZW- n 1? wwlzzwzzzM r- -77 54 5S 5b " H 1 1 Wr I 1 b

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