Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 2, 1962, edition 1 / Page 4
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Paige 4 THE DAILY TAR HEEE ipener Over Build. eels Win 0 O0 ogs-9 ... im" """ ' v" ' ' ' ft"'" " Poteet And Shaffer Lead UNC Scorers By HARRY W. LLOYD North Carolina turned to its most experienced hands here last night in its long awaited basketball op ener to crush the Georgia Bull dogs by 89-65. It was the returning corps of veterans, and not the highly rat ed sophomores, that supplied the power for coach Smith's Tar Heels. Senior guard Yogi Poteet, re turning after a year's absence, started the season off with a boom by scoring 21 points. Charlie Shaf fer stuffed in 20 and Larry Brown tallied 17. After a near runaway in the first half by the Tar Heels, the game turned into a more wide open affair in the second period, with North Carolina unable to increase its lead by any substance and the Georgians unable to hack any of km Phone 942-2138 it away. The 4,800 persons who packed into Woollen Gym saw the Tar Heels turn to a running game in rolling up an early margin against the Bulldogs. They pressed hard in the man-to-man defense, often made away with valuable steals, and paried them into easy layups. The fast breaking Tar Heels roll ed in six points before the Bulldogs were able to get off a shot, and were never in trouble as they built a 50-36 first half lead. Larry Brown hit first with a pair of free shots after 19 seconds, Billy Cunningham scored from close in, Poteet threaaefl1-' ' tnt; WANTED: THIRD GRADE TEA- cher Mebane School, Must have Primary or grammar grade cer tificate. We have three teachers commuting from Chapel Hill each day. Call or write E. M. Yoder, Mebane School No. 563-3222, home phone No. 563-6411. ARE YOU INTERESTED IN A French Tutor? Call Mrs. Raymond Baggs at 968-6226. Dec. 5 and Yogi needle with a long jumper before the visitors were able to get their bearings. Billv Rado, a transistor-sized package at guard, was all that kept the Bulldogs in the game din ing the opening period. Rado, a sophomore from Connecticut, hit from both outside and inside with consistency in scoring 13 during the half. Billy Cunningham, the highly rated spohomore for Carolina, was the victim of tight guarding, ex cessive fouling, and the usual first game litters. Cunningham was jerked from the game in the first half after getting three fouls, and only scored six points for the night. But the Brooklyn boy proved his worth in another way by pulling down 15 rebounds, high for the game. Ccoring: UNC (89) Brown 17, Respess 8, Cunningham 6, Poteet 21, Shaffer, 20, Krause 1, Cooke 12, Galanti 2, Taylor 2, Callahan, Katz, Brown, Burns, Bowers, Vinroot. Georgia (65) Rado 24, Bagby 4, Adamek 11, Gill 10, Morris 3, Pitts 2, Matthews 5, Crenshaw 6, Stith, Cheek. Ackerman. EG-31SS r ' i v 1 F - Ss 1 t'"' ? i -6 1-. i ' j l A rv"-xiV III ACr- ! -'TV ) If'JI . i in M i i im i ' Aj ...w.ja -v..1aiMjaatinaiirirtiilll Photo by Jim Wallace Cnnk Gnfis Un For Score Tankers Top VMI By 70-25 By JOEL BULKLEY wmwp CLOSING OUT ALL RECORDS PHONOGRAPHS, RADIOS TAPE RECORDERS GIFT OBJECTS At EASTGATE SHOPPING GEITE ALL RECORDS AT COST AND" BELOW MUST CLEAR THE FLOOR No 3Iore Reslock Shop Early For Best Buys THIS SALE AT EASTGATE STORE ONLY CHEZ KEMP,, Ltd. CHAPEL HILL Carolina's Blue Dolphins set two school freestyle marks yesterday as they recorded nine first places in a 70-25 win over VMI in the Bowman Gray Pool. Sophomore whiz Harrison Mer rill smashed the 220-yard freestyle record with a time of 1:52.7. The old record for both UNC and the ACC of 1:53.6 was set by Harry Bloom in February of 1961. Dick Woodrow knocked one-tenth of a second off the school record for the 50-yard freestyle event with a time of 22.7 seconds. Bill Roth held the old one, which was set in 1957. The Tar Heel swimmers wheeled off firsts in the day's first six events before finishing second in the 100-yard freestyle. They then won the 200-yard backstroke, 500 freestyle and 400 freestyle relay Carolina wheeled off firsts in the day's first six events. The team of Thompson Mann, Tate Kemper, Harry Schiffman and Thad Adams copped the 400-yard medley relay. Merrill took the 200-yard freestyle and Woodrow the 50-yard event, with Howard Cone of UNC finish ing third. Barry King and Jack Anker were first and second in the 200-yard individual medley while Ernie Oare and Bob Birken stock were one-two in the diving competition. Captain Willie Bloom won the butterfly event while Dave Roberts finished second. VMI's Bill Rimm and Bernie Vincent took the visitors' only first places with wins in the 100- yard freestyle and 200-yard breast-stroke. Russell Redding and Jim Huff man were first and second in the backstroke contest, while Frank Lea and Mike Bissell finished the same way in the 20-lap (500-yard) freestyle race. The 400-yard freestyle relay team, whose win in last year's meet gave Carolina a narrow vic tory over VMI, won the last event of the afternoon. Team members were -Scott Smiley, Joseph Mum maw, Woodrow and Aevlia. Coach Earey's 21-man squad leaves Monday afternoon for 6:30 p.m. meet in Greenville with East Carolina. They return home for ACC meets Friday and Satur day with Clemson and South Caro lina, respectively. Cavaliers Blank Rutgers By 41-0 NEW BRUNSWICK, N. J. (UPI) Virgina unleashed a devastating ground attack Saturday to bury Rutgers 41-0 and snap the Scarlet's consecutive-game scoring streak at 53 games. A crowd of 16,500, sitting in warm sunshine at the late-morn ing game in Rutgers Stadium, saw the home team absorb its worst loss since a 48-6 defeat at the hands of Colgate in 1956. It was Rutgers' first shutout defeat since the Scarlet bowed, 7-0, to Princeton in the first game of the 1957 season. Virginia, on the other hand, scor ed its first shutout since an 18-0 victory over VMI in the 1956 op ener and tallied its most points since a 49-8 rout of Richmond in 1952. Frosh Get Win By 74-52 By CURRY KIRKPATRICK Coach Ken Rosemond took the wraps off his fine freshman bas ketball team last night and the Tar Babies responded with a con vincing -74-52 rout of Wilmington College. Bob Bennett and Mark Mirken, the two big boys in Rosemond's lineup, were the chief cogs in North Carolina's offensive attack. Mirken, a 6-6 210-pounder from Brooklyn, N. Y., led the frosh scoring with 18 points and, with the 6-8 Bennett, completely dom inated both backboards. Mark got 17 rebounds. Bennett also scored well, adding 14 to the Carolina to tal. He contributed eight rebounds. Both Mirken and Bennett scored heavily on tap-ins and short, jum pers against the surprisingly-weak Sea Hawks from Wilmington. Wilmington, completely outclass ed from the beginning, was down 35-24 at the half and was all but run off the court at the outset of the second period. At that time, the Tar Babies ran off 16 points interrupted only by two hook, shots from Wilmington's Gene Bogash. ' : - . - : Bennett contributed two tap-his and a lay-up and Mirken added two close-iri jumpers to the UNC streak. With Carolina up by 51-28, Mar toshall Hamilton and Bogash put in back-to-back jumpers but Mirk en came right back with four straight points, two free throws sandwiched around a spectacular twisting lay-up. This made the margin 23 points and Wilmington never recovered First Half Close The first half was fairly close up until the 9:40 mark when again Mirken got UNC rolling. With the Tar Babies leading it, 23-19, the Big Bear hit a 15-foot jumper, Earl Johnson put in an other one-hander, and Bennett re bounded a Ray Hassell shot. This finished the Sea Hawks for good. Swift guard Johnny Yokley just missed double figures for the frosh, hitting four field goals and one free throw for nine points. Mirken was eight for 16 from the field and Bennett, six for nine. Wilmington's Bogash was the game's high man with 19. He also corralled 13 rebounds. 'fe' in i ..:.:::-:::::::::?:.-.::: . . sif :.:-::::-::.::::-:::;:,:.;.;:.;::.:'; -iu.-S .' 9 ii 1 1 3S9(sM).:f'.i,, 4N UNC's Shaffer Moves Into Position Staubach Is Star Back As Na Ai j rmy For Fourth Straight Year Wallops ( 34-11 PHILADELPHIA (UPI) Navy's Roger (Starback) Staubach took the play away from PT boat skip per John F. Kennedy when he scor ed two touchdowns and passed for two more to torpedo Army, 34-14. Dominating the service classic completely in the bright sunshine which flooded sprawling, ampack- ed Philadelphia Stadium, the sen sational sophomore almost single-j handedly sank the outclassed ca dets in a game which had been rated a tossup. There were plenty of Annapolis honors to go around before a crowd of 102,000 awed fans 98, 453 of them paid who included President Kennedy, General Max well D. Taylor, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and a happy admiral, Chief of Naval Operations George W. Anderson. For the white-hatted naval bri gade roared lusty praise of Stau bach's two pin-pointed receivers, Neil Henderson and Nick Markoff, as well as a Ron Klemichto-Jim Campbell touchdown combo; Vern Von Sydow's extra point-placements : the? outstanding defensive work of Pat Donnelly and the wj out-of-the end zone center snap by Army which gave Navy their first two points for a safety.. There was little for the corps of crushed cadets to whoop about as Navv's Wavne Hardin became I the first Middie coach to defeat a the Army four straight years and j consolation as his passing set up it was a victory which may have one touchdown, which was buffet saved his job as well after being j cd over from the one by Don Par in hot water all season because of I cells, and acounted for the sec ond loquacity. j with a two-yard heave to John Cammy Lewis was Army's chief Seymour. SE&T COVER SHOP OHG'S 411 E. Main St. Phone 912-4928 Specialising in O Convertible Tops O Seat Covers O Floor Mats O Headlining 66 All Work Custom Tailored" 5? m to. Op ASCHERT EASETBALL & OFfXCIiL GOAL I BASKETBALL SH02S JT j"" mt. (J J I t sires' t . W -'vF JF . ' 4 t SKI - S flMl r 1 - 1 kH M I m A W ' . '- 1 1 v ft I , .,'-V-L I N ( V i M 1 ' If l K) J r U I iff? UJi k lry- -fh'. AS. t 'Vr ilj iV",wf U e it y if Mi I 1 GOLF CADDY CST GOLF CLUBS and EZAD C0VSBS it 9 W 3f 1 CATCHER'S MITT, TRAFPES'S HIT? & nziDza's Hia TnOilS EACOJJiT, BALLS & SHOES n . -rz?Jt Peg Play" DO'S IS 151 E. Franklin St. caaja kill, h. c. Phone 942-4064 3 ' f-t '' v ft. O'yCDDDD See dDnnn IFnim
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 2, 1962, edition 1
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