t DECEMBER 11, 1555 THE-DAILY TAR HEEL CI I'll Give YOU Tha Benefit' Ta r Babies Win 8 7-74 Behind Salz And Groll Of A Year-End Sal ii u G y B ST" c '7 rn r3 . n . 0 ) n U - , , . C" 'TIMnrWlMWIIlilt HI IBIIIIBIBI IIIIMIIIWIII III 1111111 Will Ml BTII 1 TtlWl " " 1 BISHOP'S BUNK! senbli 1 1 1 n w j in way uyjy y la Hits 16, Kearns 11, nan 10 In ACC Victory VAYNE BISHOP u-rican forward Lennie i returned to his old form pumping in 31 points, to North Carolina team heir fourth consecutive young season by trounc- Carolina 92-75 in an oat Conference battle, jth led the Tar Heel d rebounding for the his top performance of s. Captain Jerry Vayda rybody i i&tmas Sealt are eyery : 1 1 gift a gift to the : ;nity to defeat tuber 1 1 i Your tuberculosis as U!oa fights TB through i: ion, case finding, reha : , kn. and medical re- . u Support your TB at : m. BUY AND USE iillSTMAS SEALS V ay no Bishop Chancellor House is expected to come out with the news any time now which will tell the fate of Tar Heel Football Coach George Barclay. Many Tar Heel fans, on-campus and off-campus, have been eagerly awaiting the final decision, and it should not be much longer before they hear the word. : ' Played his usual steady ball for the Tar Heels, dropping 16 points through the hoops, including his 1,000th Doint as a Tnr Wool vj. I is one of three Tar Heels ever to the Tar He?1 mentor and points toward the strong finish at the end oi me season. Most, of the people fall m one oi tne two groups wnu very few followerswho have no opinion, on the matter. Opinion among different Carolina supporters varies sharply. .Many people do not think Coach Barclay has a chance, simply because he did not win enough games. Another faction strongly, stands beside score 1,000 points Lead All Way The Tar Heels led all the way, taking a 12-4 lead in the early mo ments of the game. At halftime the Tar Heels had pulled into a 48 36 advantage. After, the intermiss ion they gradually added onto the score and built up their margin. Their biggest margin was 22 points when Carolina led 82-60. Coach Frank McOni starting line-up . for the first his fit 'cad For These .ION HOTELS ' and f AL STUDENT RATES in NEW YORK ilNGTON BOSTON . FALO HARTFORD 1L NEW YORKER j NEW YORK 1 in a room $5.50 2 in a room $4.50 3 in a room $3.50 4 in a room $3.00 my ume tnis season, inserting Pete Brennaa as a starter and removing sophomore guard Tommy Kearns. Bn.'nnan had his slowest scoring effort of the season with ten points. He and Kearns, who wound up with 11, rounded out the Tar Heel scoring in the double figures. Center Joe Quigg, the 6-9 sharp- j shooter was held to only nine points, the first time h,e has not .hit the double figures this season. Forward Grady Wallace pumped in 20 points to pace the Gamecocks. Two Wins, Two Nights For Carolina, it was the second win in as many nights. Friday j night the talented Tar' Heelers J dumped Georgia Tech 83-76 in Charlotte. v Carolina tried 73 shots from the floor, hitting on 32 for 44 per cent accuracy. South Carolina could only hit 28 per cent of their shots. The next game for Carolina is Wednesday night in Woollen Gym nasium, when the Tar Heels run into Alabama, ranked number six in the nation. . . .The Box: South Carolina fg ft pf p Wallace, f 6 8 4 20 Smejkal, f 0 3 4 3 Peikins, f "o 2 3 2 Granger, f ' 2 2 1 6 Collins, c 6 O 5 12 Neilson, c 5 3 4 13 McCoy, g ' x 3 10 2 16 Grain, g 0 11 1 Fannin, g 10 12 Potter, g 0 0 0 0 During the question of renewal of Barclay's contractthe athletic ,program has taken a beating from quite ajew, along with Barclays coaching method. We believe, however, that .neither can be duly criti cized. Any close follower of the 1935 Tarheels could see that the pro; gram is now on full beam. True, at the first of the seaso, the Tar Heels were not winning; but the way they closed the season was enough evidence to us that the Tar Heels have arrived. Coach Barclay's team closed the 1955 season with just as gooda team as there was in tn? half wh Atlantic Coast Conference, with the possible exception . of Maryland. It took time to bring the right combination. with the winning spirit, but Barclay brought it to Carolina. By ALBERT GOLDSMITH Paced by guards Stan Groll and Harvey Salz the University of North Carolina freshman basket ball team dropped a fighting Wake Forest freshman squad 87 to 74 here last night to remain unde feated. The two Carolina hotshots, both from Brooklyn, N. Y., kept the Baby Deaclet defense on its toes throughout the game by their spectacular shooting Salz tallied 28 points and Groll 25 tokeep the nets sizzling for Carolina: f S Last night marked the fourth consecutive time that Salz has scored over 25 points in a game. He now boasts a 27.8 shooting HELT and STATLER i NEW YORK 'LOWER and STATLER H!NGTON, D. C. IJLER HOTELS IN FALO, BOSTON, HARTFORD 1 i o room $6.50 J j" a room $5.50 3( n a room $4.50 4 'no room $4.00 1 RF-ASTORIA and NEW YORK Jjn a room $8.00 2 ' a room $6.50 ;!naroom $5.50 .'"a room $5.00 ;0,lno4inaroomaccom , " hotel rooms with bath. , RESERVATIONS 1 the htl of your choice! ;tionon facu ' "J the ahn.. k..,. r? ucr, rxew York City. rr,.. :.t "vyc noieis, write K Ea'c, an' Suid"t Relations visio Hilton ; rta.i v .... M t fit TOTALS North Carolina Rosenbluth, f Brennan, f Searcy, f Young, f McCabc, g Quigg, c Greene, c s Vayda, g, f Kearns, g Rosemond, g Cunningham, g Radovich, g, f TOTALS, 23 29 25 75 1956 PROGRAM PROMISING: With the bulk of the 1955 , team returning next year, the Tar Heels are looking forward to the 1956 season. The sophomores that Barclay strung along with this season will be experienced and "eteran players. The, juniors will bejsteady ball players and the boys upfrom the freshman team will prove valuable reserves. The 1956 squad points toward the.'strongest of the Barclay regime, which is the patterh that a coach has to follow. When Barclay took over, he had mostly sing wing players. He finally has gathered the kind of team which he has won with in the past. His program is improving every year, and with in two or three years the Tar Heels followers1 should have no room to complain at all. . j ,, However, if Barclay goes, some one else will probably take over and try to bring in his kind of team. It will take; any human being which includes the ever-popular Jim tatum, at least three years to mold that team. Although the Tar Heel schedule is still just a little ahead of the program, we do belive that behind Barclay, the Tar Heels have, definitely passed the big rebuilding stage and are now on the brink of football success. . ' Chancellor House has an important decision, and . he is bound to draw much criticism on either choice -we just hope he is guided in the way best for the University. ' r T'r."-iM ' -f " FRYE GOES TO BOWLS: !' Will Frje, Carolina's twd-jear All-Conference end, haV accepted invitations . to extend his, h oliday . football playing. The. , Jlickory, N.C? senior had been invited previously to participate, in the, East-West game at San Francises on' January 2; Now he has addedj; the Hula Bowl at Honolulu on Janl 8 to his excursion. The IIulaBowf annually pits natives against a. picked team from the United States, numbering several of the East-West players....1..' - ; .; Three other North Carolina seniors will play in Holiday Bowls. Halfback Ken Keller, tackle Jack Maultsby, and guard Bill Koman will participate in the Blue-Gray game at Montgomery, Alabama .... . fg 13 3 0 0 0 3 0 6 4 0 1 2 ft 5 4 2 1 0 3 0 4 3 0 2 4 Pf 3 4 0 1 1 4 0 4 3 0 4 3 Bobby Barden, Carolina senior track and cross-country .star, has returned from Newark, N J., his home, where he went for the funeral . of his father, who died at his home last week . .. ... . 31 1 Pete Cothran, soccer ace, competed in the first of the Olympic 10 soccer tryouts at New York this weekend. Games were played Friday 2 and Saturday in which the first of the eliminations, leading to the .1 i selection of a 15-man squad to go to Australia, will take place. n ! ' - i " " ' , . average. ' The-Jrfishiiienlrom Wake Forest made a. close game of it only in the opening minutes of the first en the lead exchanged hands as often as the ball. Midway in the second half the Deaclets at tempted a rally and succeeded in narrowing Carolina's broad lead but " failed to catch up with the rolling Tar Babies. Coach Buck Freeman's Tar Babies, after their fight for the lead in the first 3 minutes pulled out ahead with Salz leading the way. Midway in the first half they led 29 to 17 over the Deaclets with Groll and Salz hitting with amaz ing accuracy and forward Danny Lotz putting in an outstanding per formance in getting needed re- Cramming bounds. The Tar Babies pushed on to lead 44 to 25 at halftime with Salz accounting for 18 of Carolina's points. Carolina's second half perform ance didn't equal their romping first half play but they held on despite Wake Forest's attempt to overtake the Tar Babies. Snarked by Olin Broadway and Joe Ladd, I the Deaclets narrowed the Caro lina lead to 9 points but never got any closer. High scorers for Wake Forest were Broadway with 19 points and-Ladd with 20 points. Forward Dickie Odom was. third for the Deaclets with 14. For Carolina Danny Lotz and Gehrmann Holland turned in per haps th'eir finest all-round per formances of the season. Lotz was F' O R Christmas ; x Starts Monday 207 East Franklin St. Chapel. Kill, North Carolina Filit "Bock Fatigue" Safely lour doctor will tell you a NoDoz'Awakener is safe as an Average cup of hot, black cof . fee.. Take a NoDoz Awakener when you'eram for that exam ... or when mid-a f ternoon brings on those 3 o'clock cob webs." You'll findlVoDoz givet you a lift without a letdown ; ; . helps you snap back to normal and fight fatigue safely I r iUlfcttt -35 torg conmy (far Crk Row and Dorms) 60 tablets 98 L. SAFE AS COFFEE 7 J now, Get those Christmas books Pal. There won't be a big. friendly well-stocked Intimate Bookshop in your home town! 9 0 16 11 0 4 a 32 28 27 92 Halftime Score: North Carolina 48, South Carolina 36. 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