4y JANUARY 7, 1956 jy v tk ' FTX3 ft am r 1 LGJ vsJ D sports scons VAYNE BISHOP rt-happy Wake Forest cons have already .pull r Four upset this week heir eyes set on higher as North Carolina's j Tar Heels invade lasium for their tradi- e. , rest reached into their upsets Wednesday night Dt Duke by an 34-71 he Decon home court. )Cy have the fami!iar f their own floor with hey set their sights on beaten Tar Heels, probably has" different ,evert as Coach Frank club aims for its fourth e Atlantic Coast Con ictory. The Tar Heels ACC's leading scorer, )senbluth, and a well earn scoring punch as f weapons against the AreU psef-Ct 'gzv Club IS TALLER -man the Tar Heels will light advantage on Mur on's club. Jim Gilley, a ad from Winston-Salem, !v really big boy in the ne-up. Jack Williams at Lefty Davis at 6-2, the wards, do not compare Una's 6-5 Lennie Rosen-6-7 Pete Brennan as far goes. 5-10 Jackie Mur-6-0 Ernie Wiggins are Mn the Tar Heel guards, Jerry Vayda and Bob Cunning ham, who stretch 6-4 each. Wrake Forest probably will em ploy a zone defense against Car olina in an attempt to shift the Tar Heel height, away from the goal. Although Coach McGuire has not said so,' he will probably use a box zone against Wake For est with one man specially de signed to guard Davis man-for-man. ' WIDE OPEN GAME The game probably will run up nign scores as both teams are more noted for their offense than defense. The Tar Heels will hav another chance against a crackeqjack foul shooting team. As a team the Deacs are hitting 71 per cent of their four shots, into quite a bit more than the Tar Heels. State was sharp on their foul shots in the finals of the Dixie Classic and that had much to do with the 'way the final score went. Wake Forest carries a 7-5 over all record and a 2-2. conference mark into this loop game. Caro lina is 8-1 (excluding the practice game with McCrary) overall, and 3-0 in the conference. .Carolina will probably start Rosenbluth - and Brennan at for wards, Joe Quigg at center, Vayda and Cunningham or Tommy Kearns at guards. Wake Forest will have Williams and Davis at forwards, Gilley at center, Murdock guards. and Wiggins at . . t- jeaf en Tar lies Engage icon Frosh - Two Of ACC's Best Lennie Vs. Individual WAKE FOREST, N. C. Jan. 7 Two of the top four scorers in the Atlantic Coast Conference basket ball race will come face to face in Gore Gymnasium Saturday night when Capt. Lowell (Lefty) Davis leads his Wake Forest Deac ons against Lennie Rosenbluth and the North Carolina Tar Heels. According to the latest ACC in dividual scoring averages, Rosen bluth is the No. 1 point-getter with a 23.5 average for eight games while Davis ranks fourth with a 20.6 mark for 12 games. Since re lease of the averages both Davis and Rosenbluth have played one i. a rws .. . . as noisnoi lar isaDies game each with the former net- Laying a seven-game win ting 26 points against Duke and a the line tonight when lie Gore Gym for a re- ;agement with tne wake f 3aby Deacons. Tipoff is 3:00. In the first meeting the two clubs, the Tar' ame out on the long end 4 count. arolina frosh will be led jig three? who have spark t all season long: Harvey n Croll, and .Danny Lotz. VI guard, is the Tar Baby leader in seven games .o date with an average of points per contest. Groll, nning mate at guard, and S5 forward from Long Is ve been steady point pro all year long. In the Tar 75-60 win over Maryland's s, these two poured in a 51 points between them, ther two starters for Caro I be Big Bill Hathaway, a 3 pounder, at center, and nn Holland, a native North )n, at the other forward 0 far Babies will have to do the services of their coach Coach Buck Freeman, the and of Frank McGuire, is srial Hospital with a virus 'ii and so will miss tonight's former Tar Heel cage star srimaldi has been placedTin of the Tar Heel yearlings Coach Freeman's absence. Sr cet Notice Wake. State e Contests h Sute game here on Jan. wtj will be reserved. Stu ini University employees ,!t names start with the A trough U have priori ! my pick up tickets on . Tuesday and Wednesday, '-10-11. ticlH remaining on Thurs "n'ng, January 11 , will be ' o everyone on a first iir served basis. NUr procedure will be ol 9rthe Carolina-Duke game ,brw,py 24, but names be- w'th the letters M through t wt a priority. , 9m with Wake Forest J'nr 15, reserved seat i w'! be issued to every- n first -COm f irtt-crsrl Lefty In Sidelight the latter 18 against Louisiana State. Rosenbluth took individual scor ing honors in the Dixie Classic with 73 points while Davis finished in a tie for runner-up honors with 68 markers. No. 2 man in the Wake Forest scoring Is guard Jackie Murock with a 16.5 average. Although he hit on only 44 field goal attempts, the Deacon guard has canned 110 of 128 free throw attampts for a' total of 193 points. Pete Brennan. sophomore for ward, is the runner-up' in the Tar Heel scoring chase with a 13.5 aver age. - ' - ...I I--.':1..:. Tony Radovich, Valuable Reserve Tony Radovich, sharp-shooting guard, has proved a valuable re serve for Carolina's high-scoring club. Radovich, a senior letterman who was a starter on last season's quintet, has been looking increas ingly better with each game. INTRAMURALS: i I .. ' ? : J' ,Z ' I : . ' -' ' 44 i ' - ' ( f - . - t: ' . r f - I ;i : Xi" v-x.,r:,:vv::;;. ..-.;.;.;.;.-.;..-,,.;..;.:.; . .. c..-;x-.;.;. y ;; . ,:r :-; jf., j ' - ' ' ' 'i! Tommy Kearns, Ten Points Plus Tommy Kearns, sophomore guard, is another one of the Tar Heel high scorers averaging in the double fgures. Kearns, .who hit for over 20 points per game as a frosh last season, has been an alternate start er with Bob Cunningham a guard for the Tar Heels. He is averaging 10.2 points per game. , Ifpad Blue Devils-Wo Clash Head-On Tonight Gymnastics Team Opens Play Today Coach Bill Meade takes his North Carolina gymnastics team to An napolis Saturday to oppose Navy in the Tar Heels' opening meet of the season. Two Southern Intercollegiate champions will be missing from the Carolina line-up which won five of seven meets last year. Rope climber Bill Rivera and sidehorse performer Gordon Hudson both graduated last June. Despite the lose of Hudson and Rivera, Coach Meade expects to better last season's record with' the aid of veteran Biff Howard and newcomers Bill Waddill, Al Dodoe and Dan Hilliard. Last year Navy defeated the Tar Heels, 59 V2 to 36 V2. Tar Heel Swimmers- . A. ft i ner- t By BbB COLBERT The Tar Heel swimmers will, be out to register their fourth vic tory of the season today when they swim Virginia at 4 p.m.- in Bowman Gray indoor pool. Coach Ralph Casey- is shifting his lineup around for today's! meet in order to find the right combination to beat arch-rival N. C. State in their meet' here on January 17th. His medley relay will probably consist of Bill Zickgraf, Lee Hol mes and Dick Baker. Pete Higgins and Walt Rose will draw the dis tance assignments. Baker, Bill Roth and Kelly Maness will be the sprinters. Dave Mclnnis, still nursing an injured knee, Ned Meekins and Tom Parker will share the low board diving chores. Junior sensation Charlie Kreep I -3 i 1 will be swimming the individual medlay, as will John Beanian. Krepp will be out to better his national college and American re cords set against Duke before the Christmas Holidays. The meet will start at 4 p.m. Admission is free and everyone is invited to attend. USED RELIGIOUS FROM 10c EACH UP AND UP THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 E. Franklin St., Open Till 10 p. m. ATTENTION STUDENTS! 29.9 , Esso Gas 29.9 AT Bill Albans Olympic Esso West Franklin Street WE NEED YOUR BUSINESS TO KEEP PRICES DOWN. YOU ASKED FOR LOWER PRICES. WE GIVE THEM TO YOU. OPERATED FOR STUDENTS BY U. N. C. ALUMNI. Many Unbeaten Teams In Basketball Play The intramural ' basketball pro-' ens to repeat as intramural cham "ram is now under full swing in pion. TMA won the championship t divisions. There will be three . last year by defeating the DKE's nf cnmDetition Deiore , in an an - campus pjou more days the program momentarily ceases on January 12th. It will continue with the Spring Semester. The results of the Thursday ma are a follows: 4:00 p.m. Zeta-3 beat Phi Gam-2; SAE-1 beat Pi Kap Phi-1; EeP-1 beat Phi Kap . Sig-3; Everett-2 beat Stacy-2; Grah-. K0,t Manum: ZBT beat Sig dill WW - G ' Chi-3. At present, 12 teams in the dorm and fraternity division remain un- defated. Prominent among mese , undefeated squads are: SAE, TMA, "esDr;u- iii.x.--i 7.ot.i TMA once again . . VJ aiDnaDei cai , i cr n ?0r book serial numbers. 'has a strong squad which tnreai- SAE threatens also with a promising team which defeated Pi Kap Phi-1 by the score of 66-8. DURHAM, N. C. Jan.' 7 The real, honest-to-goodness, big one comes up for Duke's Blue Devils in Duke Iudoor Stadiuin tonight. They will get their chance to beat the team they have always liked to defeat and have, in the past, been fairly successful in so doing. Duke and N. C. State come to gether in the big Blue Devil field house at 8:15 o'clock and while a near-capacity crowd is expected there will be tickets available at the athletic office. ; . ' As has been said, Duke has been State's toughest rival for years now but no victory could be sweet er than a win tonight would be for the men of Harold Bradley. State is No. 2 in the nation. State is riding a 23-game winning streak over the past two years. State has four in a row. over the Blue Devils since Duke's 90-89 win at Raleigh in 1954. The Blue Devils have everything to gain in the contest. A win would move them up from their very fine 11th spot in the national rat tings. A win would make them the most feared team in the ACC. A win would atone for that Dixie Classic loss to North Carolina. , It is a big game and a big task. State showed in the finals of the Classic against North Carolina that it is one of the finest teams ever to perform in this section. That performance is being tabbed as one of the greatest ever put- on by a team anywhere. But Duke has the guns. In Joe Belmont, playing the best ball of his Duke career, and Ronnie May er, the Blue Devils have what is probably the best 1-2 punch in bas ketball today. The varsity game comes on af ter the frosh of the two schools play at 6:30. V4 A JmP.-Ou J, JlSS t3 i (OR . . . JOHN'S MISTAKE) John was growing up. (He shaved. He drove a Car. He wanted to impress girls.) But John was impatient. He wanted to be more grown-up. He wanted a grown-up reputation. . In short, he wanted to make a name for himself. .That's natural. Most young men , his age feel the same way. v Eut John made a mistake. He expressed his impatience end his ambition behind the wheel of a car. He became another "highway cowboy." He purposely drove fast . . . didn't use chains on snow or ice . . . skidded . . . took chances 1 ... raced on crowded streets. He thought this would make him seem more grown-up. But the gang could see through his antics. They gave him a name all right "Captain Kid Stuff." They were smart enough to know that , Careless Driving is Kid Stuff. r ' (j 7 .mm i 'r ) ) r.-r - IT , .1,1'. Iti flit MftTi ii Mn-f- ""J' Tickets M By I hr Mail fWV Now - - January 10, 8:30 FORMER STARS OF HARLEM GLOBETROTTERS own world-famou SEE FABULOUS MARVELOUS ClOWN f R1NCE OF IAS KET BALI WORLD'S GREATEST DRItkLER Prices: $2.00 $2.S0 $3.00 N. C. STATE COLLEGE COLISEUM -E . r. T 1 I ' u . i i . -vx UK AH A . -.. - jr- sf A 7... W .Jcr J : ,i . .:.tyr' ... ...... " ... r , . A k 1 THE SIX RULES OF WINTER DRIVING 1. ACCEPT YOUR RESPONSIBILITY. to do all in your power to drive without accident. Don't blame the weatherman for an accident. .. , " 2. GET THE "FEEL" OF THE ROAD. Try brakes occasionally while driving slowly and away from traffic. Find out just how slippeiy the road is and adjust your . speed to road and weather conditions. 3. KEEP THE WINDSHIELD CLEAR of snow. ice. fog and frost. Be sure head lights and defrosters are in top condition and windshield wipers don't streak. 4. USE TIRE CHAINS', AND GOOD TIRES. Don't rely on worn smooth tires. Use tire chains on snow and ice. They cut stopping distances about half, give 4 to 7 times more starting and climbing traction ability. ... But even with the help of chains, slower than normal speeds are a "must" on snow and ice. .'- 5. PUMP YOUR BRAKES to slow down or stop. Jamming them on can lock the wheels and throw you into a dangerous skid. A little skidding can carry you a long way. ; 6. FOLLOW AT A SAFE DISTANCE. Keep well back of the vehicle ahead ive yourself room to step. Remember, without tire chains, it takes 3 to 12 -times cs far to stop on snow and ice as on dry concrete. An official pwWie rvic mitioat prepared by Th Advertising Council in ceopratio with th Notional Sof ty Cowncii. y I T i n i ir if

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