pace four
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 3, US
P
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Put 6-2 Record On
Line At Nashville
I
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I night
fty ELLIOTT COOPER
The Tar Babies tangle with the N.
C. State frosh for the second time
this year tonight in Nashville, N. C.
jmd Coach Dean Smith's cagers will
! out to avenge the 74-63 decision
that the Wolflets hung on them in
Haleigh.
For the Carolina frosh. who cur
ifntly pport a 6-2 record, tonight's
engagement will mark their third ap
pearance in five days. The frosh
a ill continue their busy schedule
tgain tomorrow evening when they
take on Wilmington College in Wool
Yn Gym prior to the varsity game
.i.iinst Maryland.
Win Tournamrnt
Last weekend the Tar Babies
ir.neled to Washington, D. C. and
r.nie home with a trophy repre
m nting f i rst place in the Tri-State
H,iktrxi!l Tournament held at
CeorgttoAn University. Coach Joe
tyuigg who directed the team on thi.s
trip felt that the team played very
well during the two-night stand.
Fri!.iy night's contest was the
jiff.iir th.it the Carolina
I rash h.ne been in to date. It took
the Tar Babies a 75-73 win over the
Georgetown frosh and send them
into the finals against Bullis Prep.
The Tar Babies trailed by as much
as eight points during the first half
of the Geirgetown game but came
on strong in the closing minutes to
nail down a 33-33 halftime lead.
Walsh had 20 points to lead the frosh
offense and was followed by Yogi
Poteet with 18 and Jim Hudock who
had 16.
Bullis Loses, 63-55
Against Bullis in the final game,
Walsh was again the leading scorer
for the Tar Babies, this time he
had 21. The final score of 63-55 does
not tell the entire story of how the
Carolina freshmen dominated play.
The first string built up a large
margin in the second half before
Quigg substituted another unit in
to play.
The main problem for the Tar
Babies tonight will be keeping Wolf
let center John Key under control.
In their last meeting Key dumped
in 21 points in addition to hauling
down numerous rebounds. With Key,
forward Russ Marvel and guard
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a jump shot by Don Walsh in the George Finnegan form most of the
hell Mionds of tho game to give State scoring potential.
Heels Hold Second
In Poll; Ky. First
r College basketball's leading . comfortable margin over North Car
tt.mis ended their mid-season lull' olina with the order of the leaders
ard resumed the full time business ! unchanged until seventh place was
reached. St. John's of Brooklyn
dropped out of that spot after losing
two games on a road trip. Michigan
o! heating one another's ears off
L'st week. The results brought only
i nr change in the top 10 rankings,
hut led the experts to scatter their
votes a bit more than usual.
It was Kentucky on top again by a
E
You're Out Of
Your Mind,
Charlie Brown
Th new Ptanuts book
waiting for you at
is
The Intimate
Bookshop
205 East Franklin Street
Open Till 10 P.M.
MILTON'S
LAST
, CALL
. TO
WINTER
Emblem Day
I rrint
a v va j a a a j
Free $2.50 Carolina
cmbbm (blazer or jack
ct patch) with every
purchase of $15.95 Lon
don Fog windbrcakcr
or with every purchase
today of $25.00 and
over. Supply is limited
to the first three hun
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please hurry.
Hilton's
"lothlng Cupboard
State and Bradley moved up to
e'ese the gap and St. Louis, winner
over St. John's, took over ninth
place.
Kentucky's Wildcats rolled over
three Southeastern Conference op
ponents last week to build their
season record of 17 victories in 18
games. Kentucky scored a total of
29G points against Georgia Tech,
Georgia and Florida to 171 for the
combined opposition.
Those performances impressed the
101 sports writers and broadcasters
casting ballots in the weekly Asso
ciated Press poll to the extent that
42 listed Kentucky first. But oth
ers scattered their votes so widely
that the Wildcats point total drop
ped to 890, considerably below last
week's figure.
The same thing happened to sec
ond place North Carolina, which
drew 22 first place votes and 802
points. Kentucky's 58-point margin
of a week ago stretched to 83 points.
Kansas State, in third place, bare
ly nosed out undefeated Auburn,
f.19 to 610.
With two easy weekend ACC victories under its belt, Carolina
gets down to serious business this week with two big games on tap
Maryland here Wednesday and at Dui:e Friday.
While the Tar Heels didn't look especially sharp against
either CI em son or South Carolina, they managed to win without
much trouble. The long lay-off from exams showed markedly in
their play, however, and they must get back into trim soon or
risk a possible defeat.
Currently the Carolinians sit at the pinnacle of the heap in the
two-team ACC flag chase, and unless the unforeseen happens the up
coming Carolina-State rematch in Chapel Ilill will decide who gets
top seeding in the conference tournament.
Perhaps the brightest spot in the Charlotte round-robin was ;
soph Doug Moe, who was high man both nights. Moe hit 22
against Clemson and poured in 17 against South Carolina.
Films were taken of the two coliseum games and the team will
doubtlessly spend many engrossing hours going over mistakes and
good plays.
Those two games, pyed almost 200 miles away from Chapel
Hill, actually belonged to the students. The corresponding number
of contests should be played here each year, but we have Woollen
Gym, thus the team plays where more people can see them.
The main purpose this weekend served was to get the subs intd
the game and get a little experience tinder their belts. Ray Stanley
Danny Lotz, Lou Brown, and Hugh Donahue all saw plenty of action
and can be called on for help whenever and wherever its needed.
Donahue, the 6-8 soph who was held out the first semester,
saw his first action in the double bill. He may come on as the
Tar Heels' sixth man; he has the ability.
With State reserve stars Stan Niewerowski and Mark Reiner
mysteriously dropping out of school for no apparent reason, the Pack
has been considerably weakened on the bench. Reiner had seen plenty
of action, he even started a few games. Now State has a solid first
five, but after that the pickings are a little slim.
Duke's phenomenal sophs are kicking up dust all over the
place over in Durham. The Devils in their last two outings have
bested Maryland and Pitt. Lanky Blue Devil Carrol Youngkin
even outscored Pitfs ail-American Don Hennon Saturday by 35-31
as Duke won it going away. Come tournamemnt time, and some
body better watch out. The Dukes are now 8-8 overall.
Maryland, the defending ACC champion, has third place to itself
right now. The Terps have a 4-3 league record, but overall they
w '. .1-.
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Mural Basketball
At 4:00 Chi Psi vs Chi Phi
Phi Gam vs Kap Sig 2 (W), Zeta
Psi 2 vs Beta 1 (W), ATO 1 vs
Zeta Psi 1 (W).
At 5:00 SAE vs ZBT, Phi Kap
Sig vs Sig Nu, SAE 1 vs SPE
(W), PiKA vs Pi Lamb (W),
Lamb Chi vs Kap Sig 1 (W).
At 7:15 Med Sch 1 vs City
Planning, Peacock vs Law Sch
1, PiKA vs Kap Psi (W), Dent
Sch 3 vs Law Sch 2, Alexander
1 vs Manly.
At 8:15 Dent Sch 2 vs Mini
Sch 4, Winston 2 vs Old Eat,
Vic Vil vs Mangum, Joyner 1 vs
Cobb D, KA 1 vs TEP (W).
Duke Tickets
Tickets to the Duke-Carolina bas
ketball game Friday night are now
available at the UNC ticket office
for $2.50. i
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Woman's A. A. ISfews
TENNIS
Sally McCrory and Prissy Wyrick
post only a disappointing 6-7 mark. It would seem that the Terra-'won the intramural doubles tennis
pins missed Nick Davis and Co. more than anyone figured when the I tournament sponsored by the Wo-
champs graduated last spring. Maryland's best effort of the season
came against number 1 ranked Kentucky when the Terps pushed them
to the limit before booting the affair in the closing seconds.
The Tar Babies, looking tougher every game, ran through
the Tri-State Invitational Tournament in Washington over the
weekend like they owned the district. In the finals they whipped
Bullis Prep, a squad that entered the game with a 9-0 record.
Don Walsh, our nomination as the ACC's next Lou Pucillo, click
ed for 20 and 21 points and gained the tournament's Most Valuable
Player award.
Everything gets back into gear in the field of athletics this
week after a two-week break for exams. The basketball, wrestling,
and swimming teams will all be back in action sometime this
week.
AP POLL
1. Kentucky (42) 17-1 890
Z. .North Carolina (22) 12-1 ... 802
3. Kansas State (10) 15-1 ..... 619
4. Auburn (7) 14-0 610
5. Cincinnati (2) 13-2 579
v. ii. v,. oiaic I- Zi J
7. Michigan State (3) 11-2 .... 263
8. Bradley 14-2 251
P. St. Louis (3) 13-2 211
l'J. West Virginia (1) 16-3 174
The second 10: Mississippi State
4) 150; Marquette (3) 148; Okla
homa City 97; Seattle (4) 83; St.
John's N.Y. 57; Utah (1) 33; Texas
Christian 36; St. Bonaventure (2) 25;
California 21; St. Joseph's Pa. 17.
Three Years Needed To Match Russians
Space Chief T. Keith Glennan said
today it may be three years or
more before the United States can
match Russia in rocket engine
power.
But Glennan and Secretary of
Defense Neil McElroy defended
President Eisenhower's budget
against Democratic charges of penny-pinching.
Glennan and McElroy testified
just about simultaneously at sepa
rate house inquiries into how the
United States is faring in space
and defense.
CLASSIFIEDS
WE WRITE PAPERS, REPORTS,
speeches, edit, rewrite articles,
books, do research. Library of
Congress. U. S. Agencies, Low
Cost. Capital Writers Bureau, Box
1739, Washington, D. C.
: it
I
UNC, '42
A Mutual Company
THE NEW YORK LIFE AGENT
ON YOUR CAMPUS
IS A GOOD MAN TO KNOW
George L Coxhead
Phone 9-2052
Campus Representative
Founded 1845
iPJSURATJGn 'COtifl&ANY
!
men's Athletic Association. Sally and
Prissy, representing Spencer Dormi
tory, defeated Carolyn Vaught and
Corrine Spears in the finals 9-7; 7-5.
Carolyn and Corrine represented Pi
Phi Sorority.' There were 18 entries
in ' the doubles tournament. In the
singles'-tournament Prissy Wyrick
defeated Sally McCrory in the finals
by.' 6-1;' 6-2 to become a two-time
winner. There were 63 entries in the
singles tournament.
TABLE TENNIS
All matches in the table tennis
tournament will be played at the
Women's Gym Tuesday, February 3,
at 7 o'clock. All participants in the
tournament must be there to com
plete the matches in one night.
BASKETBALL
W.A.A. basketball intramurals be
gin February 10. All girls playing in
the tournament must have at least
two practices and an "A" medi
cal rating. Spectators are invited
to attend the W.A.A. intramural
games which are usually held on
Tuesday and Thursday nights at 7
o'clock: The W.A.A. Basketball Club
meets every Tuesday afternoon at
4 o'clock. Any girl who is interested
in playing competitive basketball
with near-by colleges is invited to
join the club.
Tennis Meeting
There will be a meeting of all
those persons interested in play
ing freshman or varsity tennis
Thursday afternoon at 2 in room
302 Woollen Gym.
WANTED: APARTMENT -MATE
for modern, furnished apartment
centrally located to campus. Call
9-51G0.
JUST ONE LOOK AT LIFE INSUR-
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