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TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 157 Page four THE DAILY TAR HEEL In New York's Madison Square Garden n n crn n n f?r? 3 I '1 G1S(M)M ss r j r n n 11 rrnn?ncr; ;n ( U I I 1 s M M LJ s Li Li U k- i if I - I r c BOB CUNNINGHAM LEN ROSENBLUTH UNC CAGERS SUCCEED SAN FRANCISCO 'N J JOE QUIGG i.VtdftT.Itf Pete brennan 1 4 v ACC And Ivy League Champs Play At 9:45 TOMMY KEARNS T o r s Finish First In Poll By BEN OLAN The Associated Press inthe final Associated Press col lege basketball poll of the 1956-57 campaign. me rtWiu luiii.- The T Heels., winners of the unbeaten in gam , iouy u.u- j Atlantic Coast conference tourna the two-year hold of th San Fran-jment given Cisco Dons by finishing in first j j distinction b 55 of the 76 place by an overwhelming margin ; and broadcasters who participated in the final vote. On the usual basis of 10 points Seniors Advance Information On Career Opportunities At Procter & Gamble Advance information on Marketing Management opportunities in the i Procter & Gamble Advertising De , partment is now available. Write! H.H. Wilson, Jr., Supervisor of Personnel, Advertising Depart ment, Procter & Gamble, Cincin nati, Ohio. Campus interviews in Placement Service March 28. STOP HERE'S WHAT YOU HAVE BEEN LOOKING FORI Let us exchange your pleats for our "out-of-this-world" IVY LEAGUE styling. FAST SERVICE bring 'em in one morning, get 'em back the following evening OUR PRICES ARE RIGHTI We give the very best work manship and service that money can possibly buy, at a price that everyone can af ford. Pete the Tailor Jn Specializing 'IVY LEAGUEIZING" COME AND GET IT! IVe Still (Got ESSO EXTRA at Downtown Prices For Regular Gas and My Regular 3$ Under That pi US Bring This Ad and Get 1 Cent Off Per Gal. Gas, 5 Cents Per Qt. Oil Credit Cards Honored Again At The Students' Friend WHIPPLE'S ESSO SERVICE L17Eao ELvgs ITIae Soa f . k . & tor (, i v ' . t vi i j I y. UiQTUGfX Opportunity awaits Qualified Marin Draftsmen In year.1 round climate ef comfort and easy living on the Gulf Coast. The Iw3axsSHiTBUiU3niG Corporation, operating the largest ship- . yard on the Gulf Coast, offers a promising future to qualified drafta , men who join this progressive organization long term contract pleasant working conditions, liberal benefits, valuable training. Addrtss inquiries to Chief Engineer, Room'lOO THI INCALLS SHIPBUILDING CORPORATION " - Paacagoula, Miaaiasippi J for first place, 9 for second place, 8 for third etc., North Carolina received 725 points. Kansas was second with 602 points followed by Kentucky with 473, Southern Methcdist 437 and Seattle 302. San Francisco was the top club in 1955 and 1956. Since the poll's inception in 1949, Kentucky wound up in first place four times and Bradley and Indiana once each. North Carolina was in 13th place in the final balloting last season. This year, the Tar Heels were sixth in the first poll on Dec. 10, moved up to third the following week and remained in the runner-up spot behind Kansas . y- from Dec. 25 to Jan. 21. When the Jayhawks lost their first game to Iowa State, North Carolina moved into the No. 1 position and held it for the last eight weeks. In the final voting. West Virgin ia and St. Louis moved into the to.p 10, replacing Michigan State and UCLA. The top 10 teams with first place votes and won-lost records through Saturday, March 9 in in parentheses points on a 10-9-8 etc. basis: 1. North Carolina 55 (27-0) 725 2. Kansas 9 (21-2) 602 3. Kentucky 2 (22-4) 479 4. Sou. Methodist 1 (21-3) 437 5. Seattle (22-2) 302 6. Louisville 1 (21-5) 236 7. West Virginia 1 (25-4) 184 8. Vanderbilt (17-5) 164 9. Oklahoma City 1 (17-8) 126 10. St." Louis 1 (19-7) 117 SECOND 10 11. Michigan State (U-8) 98" 12. Memphis State 4 (21-5) 97 13. California (20-4) 92 14. UCLA (22-4) 85 15. Mississippi State (17-8) 67 16. Idaho State (24-2) - 62 17. Notre Dame (18-7) 45 18. Wake Forest (19-9) . 44 19. Bradley (19-7) 35 20. tie Canisius (20-5) 27 Oklahoma A&M (17-9) 27 St. Peter's NJ received one first place vote. In The Dressing Room, A Meaningful Sil By Larry Cheek North Carolina's Tar Heels, who meet Yale tonight in the first round of the NCAA playoffs, won the Atlantic Coast Conference championship last Friday night when they edged Wake Forest, 61 59 in the semii-fnals. Wake Forest, a three time loser to the Tar Heels, wanted this one very badly, and when Jim Gilley gave them a one point lead with 55 seconds to go, it looked like they had it But they forgot about Lennie Rosenbluth, the greatest basketball player in Carolina his tory. With 46 seconds showing on the clock, Lennie drove for the basket and dropped a game winning hook shot. Referee Jim MilL called Dea con Wendell Carr for blocking Ro senbluth, and the Tar Heel cap tain converted the free toss. There were many in Reynolds Coliseum who thought Rosenbluth should have been, called for charg ing. But referee Mills stuck by his guns, and all of the other officials working the tournament backed "him up. ' The scene in the Wake Forest dressing room following the game was one of tragedy; stark mute (tragedy. The reporters gathered a I round for the usual post, game comments, but they were greeted with stricken silence. The usually voluble Bones Mc- Kinney had nothing to say. Murray Greason had nothing to say. Wake Forest's four-co-captains had no thing to say. The silence was graphically ex pressive. One look at the tear streaked facej told the whole story. The Wake Forest players had tri&I with all their hearts' and souls to beat Carolina, and they had come within a whisker of doing just that. But that didn't change the final score. After nearly 10 minutes". Bones came to life. "I've nothing to sayf boys, but I'll answer your ques tions." - The subdued reporters quietly began to quiz the Wake assistant coach. The , usual questions, the whispered answers. Then Bones, as if talking to himself, summed up the game with one terse com ment. "You can't decision the champion. You have to knock him out." For Wake Forest, the sea-on was over. For Bones and his four sen iors, there was no fifth chance at Coach Frank McGuire's unbeaten Tar Heels. McGuire To Tutor East In Kansas City March 25 KANSAS CITY (AP) Coach Frank McGuire,, whose North Carolina Tar Heels finished the regular season as the nation's No. 1 college basketball team, will tutor the East All-Star squad in sixth annual Ararat Shrine East West game here March 25. mm "3 JENNIFER JONES BII1TRAVERS VIRGESTA McKEN.NA THE BARRETTS ffA f - V a NOW PLAYING McGuire Says Deacs Should Play In NIT NEW YORK (AP) Frank Mc Guire, coach of the undefeated University of North Carolina bas ketball team, put in a pitch today for a change in the rules that would permit a second Atlantic Coast Conference team to play in a postseason tournament. Speaking at the luncheon of the Metropolitan Basketball Writers Assn., prior to the start of the NCAA tournament. McGuire said it was "a shame" that Wake For est couldn't represent the ACC in the National Invitation tourna ment which starts here Saturday. "The intensity of the competi tion in our conference is terrific," McGuire said. "We defeated Wake Forest four times each time on the bounce of the ball. PATROUIZg YOUR . ADVERTISERS By LARRY CHEEK North Carolina's Atianttc Coast Conference champion Tar Heels, working on a win streak they hope will carry them to the national collegiate crown, swing into NCAA playoff action tonight when they gi against Yale's Ivy League titleholders in New York's Madi son Square Garden. The two teams will play the last game in a triple-header that finds Syracuse meeting Connecti cut in the opener and West Vir ginia tangling with Canisius in the second attraction. - The triple header is set to start at 6 p.m., and the Carolina-Yale game should get under way at about 9:45 p.m., although it, may be closer to 10. If the Tar .Heels win tonight, they will move on to Philadelphia for the Eastern regionals Friday and Saturday. At Philadelphia, they will meet the winner of the West Virginia-Canisius game. If successful at Philadelphia, they go into the national finals at Kansas City. Mo., March 22 and 23. The Tar Heels left Raleigh-Durham Airport Sunday for the big city, and were scheduled to run through - a brief workout yester day at the 69th Regiment Armory in New York. Coach Frank McGuire's unbeat en warriors, hands down winners in all the major polls, after post ing a 27-0 regular season record, are top heavy favorites to sweep by the Yale quint and move into the regional finals. The Bulldogs, a comparative weak sister among major college basketball teams, .posted an 11-2 record in winning the Ivy League championship. Among their losses was a one " sided . beating handed them bv Dartmouth, a team Caro- i lina had little or no trouble con- ! quering, 89-61, earlier in the sea j son. ' - Despite his team's majestic ' record and lofty ranking, Mc Guire refused to go out on a limb with a prediction. ."I "don't know how we'll do against Yale," he said. "I figure they could be tough." Yale will be led by their high ' scoring junior phenomenon John ny Lee, a Brooklyn youth who once was ticketed for the UNC campus at Chapel Hill. Lee estab lished a new Ivy League scoring record last year, and has been tabbed by many as Yale's great est in history. The Tar Heels, one of 'the na tion's tallest teams, will go into t the game with a decided height advantage that should give them almost complete control of the backboards. The Bulldog's tallest men are Lanny Baird and Sterling Har well, each 6-5, and Lee, 6-4. In op position to these comparative midgets, Coach McGuire will throw his towering front line of Joe Quigg, 6-9, Pete Brennan, 6-7, and Lennie Rcsenbluth, 6-5. QUIGG IS NAMED . Joe Quigg has been namd t the NYU All-Opponent tesm by the Violet players. Religious Books By " J. B. PHILLIPS i The Intimate Bookshop i05 East Franklin Street . L Howard Johnson Restaurant BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER SNACKS "Landmark For Hunqry Tarheels" "GAY AND S AU CY GALLIC FRAN UN ESS ABOUT LEGIITEIEARTED SEX ... tht brazes? deHcnce of movie morels will stir pretests but they will have to be hvi ones to drawn out the laughter I " N. WoWd-f.Brom DEFINITELY MOT' FOR JUNIOR Uir.UIV SKITrOTAIMIKIftl N. V. Journal American is- TTT? mi! d 1 CAWN MARTIHE VITT0RIO TODD ADOAMS CAROL DeSiCA A Gtz-Kingaly Ktltaf STARTS TODAY vts i . 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 12, 1957, edition 1
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