Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 25, 1965, edition 1 / Page 4
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
i Page 4 the daily tar heel Saturday. September 25. 1965 Fauntleroy Don't stake your life on Angels' wings, Just place your bets on these sure things. Don't worry, football fans, I will never be soft-hearted again. But I simply can't stand to see a grown man cry. You see, I don't really predict games, I control them. Over the years, coaches have begun to realize this and they become just a little disturbed if I say their team will lose. Anyway, I wrote my column for the Tar Heel last Saturday and you wouldn't believe the num ber of phone calls I received. Coaches were calling from coast to coast ask ing me to "please reconsider and let their teams win." Well, I just couldn't stand it any longer. I switched a few controls and turned a few dials and some teams won that, in my article, I said would lose. So there. That's the reason for Duke beating Virginia, Wake Forest losing to Virginia Tech, and Georgia defeating Alabama. But the honeymoon is over, fans. I have switched my phone number and I formally declare that I will listen to no more frantic pleas. So, just as the little poem, says, place your bets on these sure things : UPSET SPECIAL: Lenoir Hall over My dead body. VIRGINIA OVER CLEMSON: The tigers get rolling by beating State, but the Cavaliers want revenge for the DOOK loss. DUKE OVER SOUTH CAROLINA: The Blue Devils should be a little stronger than the Citadel, the Gamecocks' opponent last Saturday. N. C. STATE OVER WAKE FOREST: The Wolfpack likes Deacs better than Tigers. Pick the Wolf pack MARYLAND OVER OHIO UNIVERSITY: There will be nothing slow about these Terps. Maryland should breeze by two touchdowns. Frosh Hit State By RON SHINN DTH Sports Writer Freshman Coach George Barclay sends an untried but determined band cf Tar Ba bies into action tonight in the opener of the 1965 season. Both squads are sprinkled liberally with outstanding high school stars. Starting at quar terback for the Tar Babies will be Gayle Bomar, from Peru, Ind. He made All-Conference two of his three years in high school. Billy Dobson and Dick We solowski are scheduled to start at the halfback spots. Dobson comes from Alexan dria, Va., and Wesolowski is a Canadian import. Tommy Dempsey 5-11,215, will start at fullback. Demp sey played at Fayetteville un der ex-UNC lineman Pete Carr. He also made an ap pearance in the Boys Home Bowl. Chip Bradley, 6-0,210, will start at center. Bradley play ed at Lee Edwards High in Asheville and earned a Shrine Bowl bid. Mike Hollifield from Lin colnton and Mike Smith from Wheeling, W. Va., are the guards. Hollifield is 6-0,225 and Smith is 6-1,235. Don Hartig 6-1,230 from Greensboro will start at left tackle, Co-captain Mike Rich ey, a big 6-5, 240 pounder will start at right tackle. Starting at left end will be Peter Davis, from Clarksville, Va. Billy Warren, from Rocky Mount, will start at the other end. Warren was All - State KING WILLIAM RESTAURANT 1 Miles from Campus on 15-501 South SPECIALIZING IN: STEAKS CHICKEN SEAFOOD "Choice Selection of Imported and Domestic Beverages" All New and Modem, featuring O Seating capacity of 300 O Spacious parking facilities O Four private dining room s O Tasteful background music O Catering facilities Open from 8:00 a.m. 'til Midnight SEVEN DAYS A WEEK and honorable mention All America. The defensive line averages 224 pounds end to end. Tackle Tommy Gardner is the biggest at 262. The big lineman is from Plymouth. The other tac kle is Tom Renedo, 6-0,230 from Coral Gables, Fla. Doug Thomas 6-1,230 from Asheboro will start at guard. Thomas was an All - Stater and a Shrine Bowler. Battle Wall from Wadesboro will start at the other guard posi tion. Dave Ringwalt, b-1, 206 is one of the smaller defensive starters. He signed into camp as a fullback but will start at defensive center. Tom Buskey and Niel Rog ers will be at the ends. Rog ers is 6-3 220 and has played both tackle and end. Landy Blank, Clint Frank, Ronnie Lowry, and co - cap tain John Harris are the line backers. Frank is the small est starter at 172 and is play ing without a scholarship. Two starters have been side lined with injuries for the first game. Frank Coble was scheduled to start at the left guard but injured his knee. Wayne Busick was to start at a defensive tackle position but is out for the opener with an elbow injury. Tar Baby co - captains John Harris and Mike Richey are both optomistic about tonight's game. "It should be a good hard game. We'll win, because I think we sie in better shape," says Harris. - " Of : - i . . - . - ' - , : '.. ' - , " !- s ' : ' , - - .-J,' ' - ... V - - . x . 1 f.-. . i h V ) V i.v . O ' Vr i - AS $ r-''V 'y-fats -.f'Kf 5 Scribe By BILL HASS DTH Sports Writer You may have seen this guy around campus. He has a pe culiar walk wobbly, stiff and very, very slow. It's me and it's the result of running the 4.3 mile cross country course. It was the sports editor's brilliant idea and he is gifted with a silver tongue because he talked me into it. Cross country Coach Joe Hilton team was acceptable to the idea and I was decked out in track equipment, including a brand-new jersey. I came on to the track looking rather snazzy, if I do say so myself. The uniform, if nothing else, gave me confidence. Where was Peter Snell, anyway? My guide was Drummond Bell, a cross country letterman who has a slipped disc and will not run this year. After a few encouraging words by the silver - tongued sports editor, I was ready to roll. Bear in mind that yours truly had no previous track experience of any kind. Abso lutely none. So I had no idea what I was in for. We started on the regular track and took almost one lap around. Shucks, I wasn't -even breathing hard after 440 yards Then we turned into Navy Field where the football team was practicing and jogged around there. Breathing became a little more difficult about half-way around. We ran up a dirt road, went down by Ehringhaus and passed between Parker and Avery. I was ready to walk by then, but Drummond insisted on go ing a little further. So we fol lowed a path into the woods towards Kenan Stadium. Right near Morrison College there is a hill that leads to the stadium and here we began to walk. By this time I was beginning to think that the sports editor speaks with a forked tongue. I staggered up the hill and we began to jog again around one side and down the big hill past the gate where students enter. We walked, naturally, up the other side picking our way nimbly over the steps that r 3 If you can't make it to today's game, the Intimate Bookshop brings it to you on WCHL Radio. The Intimate Bookshop 119 E. FRANKLIN ST. OPEN TILL 10 P.M. Learns Hard Way tried to break my toes. The journey continued as we finished looping Kenan and came out by Avery again. "Are we about through?" I asked between gulps of air. "We've been about a mile and a half," my guide an swered. Almost three miles to go. What the hell was I doing here, anyway? We charged through a field of weeds, which didn't sur prise me at this point, and scrambled up a slope which threatened to give way be neath our feet. While walking (yes, again) past Ehringhaus I asked Drummond what to do about the stitch in my right side. "You'll run it out," he as sured me. I thought about feigning ap pendicitis. I thought about a nice comfortable hospital bed with a gorgeous nurse holding my hand. We ran on. We were jogging (I was stumbling, actually) by the road which leads to the Insti tute of Government and my head felt ready to depart from my body. I wondered about hitching a ride, but decided it probably wouldn't be fair. Taking a left at the stop light, we trotted a few hun dred yards to where a path entered the woods. This, nat urally, was part of the fool course. I asked Drummond what a runner thinks about while run ning and he said they just con centrate on catching someone. My own thoughts centered aroud ice water, cold beer and wings on my feet. We turned suddenly onto a narrow path that a surveyor would have difficulty finding. We crossed a bridge and jog ged by a creek. Sort of "Over -the river and through the .woods to grandmother's house to go." The only reason I kept on was that I feared passing out and disappearing beneath the Teaves never to be found again. A couple more bridges were jcrpssed and went undeca University of Toronto Chorus Graham Memorial and the Department of Music will present the University of Toronto Mixed Chorus on Wednesday, September 29, at 8 00 p.m in Hill Hall. The concert will be free to UNC students and the general public. ThP TTniversitv of Toronto Chorus will repre sent CaadTaf the International Choral Festival If uSSta Cekir tor the Performing Arts this fall peared on the campus i University's Mixed Chorus' an adjunct the Uff1 symphony orchestra Srjide an formed at the request 01 AlTt, i"ulties to share opportunity for membrsrf 1U(S IXSfanT tor witn the entire campus. Tt, iQftt under the present conductor, Walter In 1962, under Uiep of South- Barne the Chorus madeixs acclaimed em ftario It has eeryw musicianship, in for the .ftSred, until now it is whl9J iLhw ToseadS? critics to be one JSSTJffSunM in the city and province. Especially noted for its PJ tivity jn the JiterpretaUon gg a capella w0the group fge Con feSoMenSry to contemporary Canadian literature. sewage pipe. Man, we were really out in the boondocks similar to place where frater nity men drop new members and let them find their way out. We came upon Dead Man's Hill, which threatened to add my name to its obituary list. We paused momentarily to let some members of the team thunder by. I leaned on a tree for support. I became very at tached to that tree, and left it reluctantly. After what seemed like an hour of climbing Dead Man's Hill, we burst into the open and went by some tennis courts. Then back across the road, down a trail and we were back at Navy Field. Some how I kept going. With the end in sight I didn't want to stop now, I told myself . The heck I didn't. We went around Navy Field again, came back out onto the track and sprinted home. I i had enough gas left to do the last 100 yards in about 120 seconds with a blinding burst of speed. My new jersey was plaster ed to my back and my legs felt like a Mack truck had run over them. I glanced over at Drummond and he wasn't even sweating. The ultimate insult! My friend, the shower never felt so good. Not to mention the bed that night. Next day I awoke, sprang out of bed, and collapsed in a heap on the floor. The mus cles from my thighs to my ankles sort of locked into po sition and refused to move. Finally, they did, but they got even by protesting every time I took a step. The next day was not as bad. It was worse. My move ments were so slow I must have resembled the Old Man of the Sea. You'll see me, no doubt, with that peculiar walk on campus. One thing I'll say for sure. It takes guts and stamina to run that course which winds through Pohick County. Or it takes a sports editor with a silver tongue and a gullible sports writer. Today's Round-Up Of College Games By JACK HAND Associated Press Sports Writer Notre Dame risks its No. 1 rating in the national against sixth - ranked Purdue to day in one of the big games on a college football program that will see all of the top 10 teams in action. The Ivy League schools, idle last week, will join the fun and the Big Ten even has a league game on schedule with Northwestern at Indiana. Navy visits Stanford, Army, shocked by Tennessee in its road opener, expects softer pickings in Virginia Military and the Air Force Academy heads into rough weather at home against Nebraska, No. 2 in the Associated Press poll and No. 1 in the pre-season. The clash of Notre Dame and Purdue before 61,000 fans at Lafayette, Ind., is the only meeting of teams in the top ratings. The Irish are coming off a resounding 48-6 victory at California where Bill Floch proved Ara Parseghian still has a quarterback to guide backs Nick Eddy and Bill Wol ski. Purdue, impressive in a 38-0 romp over Miami of Ohio, banks heavily on the pass-catch combination of Bob Hadrick in their dreams of a Big Ten title. Nebraska's powerful le gions are not expected to have too much trouble with the Air Force, riddled by the cheating scandal last spring, and beat en by Wyoming in its opener. Texas, the No. 3 club, is a two-touchdown favorite over Texas Tech in a Saturday night game at Austin but Dar rell Royal's boys won't take it lightly with Donny Anderson on the premises. California, battered by No tre Dame, faces the uninvit ing task of playing at Michi gan, against the fourth-ranked Wolverines who beat North Carolina 31-24. "We're in again up to our necks," said California Coach Ray Willsey. Bump Elliott plans to give the home folks a look at both of his quarterbacks, Dick Vid mer and Wally Gabler. Arkansas will be at home to Tulsa, a team it shaded last year 31-22. Coach Frank Broyles found himself a quart erback in Jon Brittemun in last week's 28-14 victory over Oklahoma State but must con tend with Tulsa's pro - type passing game run by Bill An derson. Louisiana State continues on a Saturday night program, risking a No. 7 ranking against Rice at Baton Rouge. LSU barely squeezed past Rice last year 3-0. Florida's dreams of a South eastern Conference title will be on the line in a toughie with Mississippi State at Gainesville, Fla. It figures to be Steve Spurrier's passing for Florida against the long ball threat of Mississippi State's speedy Marcus Rhoden. Syracuse, No. 9 in the AP poll after an opening win over Navy, hopes to get halfback Floyd Little rolling against a pass-mined Miami team led by quarterback Bob Biletni koff. Kentucky, moved into the No. 10 spot by upsetting Mis souri last week, now must face the threat of Mississippi in a Saturday night game at Lex ington; Why should a traditional Shetland tie have a medallion on the back? Because it looks better from the front. The edges never roll, the point stays centered, always neat. Our Bradford Shetlands are Scotch as a burr, and woven ot the softest woolens by Hebrides weavers. Subtle in blend and exqui sitely soft textured, for the most discerning traditionalist. Resilio Ties at knowledgeable retail ers. Or write Resilio, Empire State Building, New York City, for name of retailers nearest you. p.S. All Resilio Traditional ties have a merfallioa on the back. . Woody Hayes' Ohio State Buckeyes open a week late against North Carolina at Co lumbus. Alabama, upset by Georgia, hopes to make Tulane pay Saturday night at Mobile. Southern California, dropped out of the top ten after a 20 20 tie with Minnesota, takes on another Big Ten foe in Wis consin at Madison, Wis. Illinois is at home to South ern Methodist, Minnesota hosts Washington State, Michi gan State invades Perm State, Oklahoma visits Pittsburgh and Iowa plays a Saturday night game against Oregon State at Portland, Ore., in im portant intersectional tests. Washington will be at Baylor for another Saturday night game. 'Cross Country Blues' Time trials will be held for the team on Monday and the freshman will run with the varsity over a three - mile course. Coach Joe Hilton says he is singing the blues and doesn't know if the freshman will be ready to run. Injuries have already struck the squad. Drummond Bell, a letterman last year, has a slipped disc and is out for the cross country season. Bell was among the top five runners last fall. Tom Greer, the number one freshman runner, has an in jury to the calf of his leg and may not be ready to run by Monday's trials. Academic averages on the squad are remarkably high. Jim Meade carries a 3.8 and is a Phi Beta Kappa. Charlie Lefler hands around a 3.6, 'Trip MacPherson around 3.5, and Fred McCall, 3.4. Several other members have averages of 3.0 or better. Practice differs each day for the team. Coach Hilton works on endurance one day and .speed the next. A good drill is to run a 440, walk for two -and a half minutes, then run another. This is done for 16 ;to 10 laps. Among the highly - touted .freshman are the injured Tom Greer, Joe Lasich, the Mary land two mile champion; and Truett Goodwin, the Virginia mile champion. Assistant coach Boyd New man is schedule to hear wed ding bells next summer. Coach Hilton says he has tried to get him married for years. SADDLE & FOX (STEAK HOUSE) 3311 Hillsboro Rd. (2 blk. east of Holiday Inn (West). Featuring the un usual Oyster Bar and Salad Bar; also a variety of fresh seafood and charcoaled steaks. Supper club atmosphere, music for dining and dancing. Good for private parties. Recommended by Hilton Carte Blanche and American Express (cards honored). Open 5 pjn.-midnight daily. 266-1138 Take 15-501 Durham. By-Pass Turn Righl al Holiday Inzv Continue East on Hillsboro Rd. DURHAM, Y. C. ST ' i ZL' :' - I. ';-r Jeff, 'Kid' Meet Billy Cunningham and Jeff Mullins renew their basketball rivalry after a one-year layoff when the St. Louis Hawks and the Philadelphia '76s tangle October 6-7 in Reynolds Coli seum, Raleigh. Mullins, a former Duke Uni versity All American, is in his second year with the Hawks while Cunningham is playing his first season with the '76's. These two clubs join the World Champion Boston Celt ics and the Baltimore Bullets in the two night, four-game tournament. UNC Hits 10,000 The 24 points scored by the Tar Heels against Michigan Saturday placed them in the 10,000 point club a feat few teams can match. Going into Saturday's gace, the Tar Heels had scored 9, 976 points in a football history which dated back to 1888. The Michigan output hit the 10,000 mark on the nose. Max Chapman scored the final touchdown to tie the mark. r T TODAY ONLY CARROLL' BAKER in ner . r- nswett f: hit!... n RELEASED BV ALLIED AOTiSTS BBS i 1 vLJ' 'LM
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 25, 1965, edition 1
4
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75