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.Navy Stuns Army
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PIHLADELPII1A (UPI)
Inspired Navy built up a ISM)
lead over favored Army and
then held on for dear life
against a blistering Cadet com
eback in the fourth quarter to
pull out a 1M4 thriller in the
CCth renewal of their storied
classic Saturday before 102,000
chilled fans.
Intramural
Westling
Continues
By BOB COLEMAN
of Th Daily Tar HI Staff
No postponements or
rescheduling of any wrestling
matches will be considered by
the Intramural Office in order
to finish scheduled activity
before the Christmas
holidays.
Tomorrow, Tuesday and
SSfil TSLS? " Ja
'grapplers fighting each other
in bouts beginning at 6 pjm.
Many of the wrestlers must
weigh in again as they reach
the semifinals.
Matches consist of three one
minute periods with no points
awarded for riding time. Ties
are decided in two extra one
minute periods.
Bog Tracy for DU meets Jay
Stirewalt of Delta Sig in the
123-pound semifinals tomorrow.
KA's Bill Harris vies with Glen
Tucker from Sig Ep.
Dave Perry of Beta has
reached the finals in the 130-
pound division and will be pit-
semifinals. Bill Boles Zete)
will wrestle the winner of Gary
Witter Pi Kappa Phi) and Bill
Broadfoot (St. A).
Semi finalists in the 137
poumd category meet each
other tomorrow as Alex Hunter
(KA) tackles Bill Hi g don
Beta), and Doug Wilson
(PiKA) opposes Phi Delt's Bob
Ferguson.
In the 145-pound fraternity
quarterfinals tomorrow, Pete
Rainey (Lambda Chi) meets
n tik. r: nu:
against Jim Crane (St. A),
Fred Buis (Phi Kap Sig)
a.inct t; rv,no rot a
tackles Lonnie Soloman (Pi
Lamb), and Phi Delt's Bill
Purdy wrestles Jim Parrott of
Zete.
In the 192-pound
quarterfinals, Larry Salmony
(Sigma Chi) meets Phi Kap
Sig's Jim Hawkins tomorrow.
Roger Mann (TEP) tackles
Jay Lacklan (Chi Psi), and
PiKA's Chuck Talton tries
Mark Ryan of Lambda Chi.
Monday quarterfinals in the
lGOJpound class find Chi Psi's
Nick Allen against DU's
George Iserwood, ATO's
.George Tennille tackles KA's
Lee Johnson, Sigma Nu's Dick
Driver dickers with SAE's
Drew Sanders, and Phi Kap
Sig's Richard Fisher wrestles
David Faucette of Sig Ep.
Four matches in the 167
pound semifinals are slated for
Tuesday, while Thursday will
witness the four semifinal tilts
in each of ,the lTTound and
the unlimited weights.
Hardball competition in the
alkcampus event continues
tomorrow, Tuesday and Thurs
day at 6 o'clock. No
postponements or rescheduling
will be made. Many of the win
ners will play more than once
this week in the single elimina
tion tournament.
A busy volleyball schedule
finds action from 4-9 Monday,
Tuesday and Thursday.
To Our DEEREST Friends
More rapid than eagles his coursers they came
And he whistled and shouted and called them by name:
"Now Dasher! Now, Dancer! Now, Jannie and Vixen!
On, Comet; on Cupid! on Margie and Blitzen!
To the top of the porch, to the top of the wall!
Now dash away, dash away, dash away all!"
Clement Clarke Moore
I I
J i
A delicious steak, bked potato with sour cream,
garlic bread, green salad and coffee, tea, or other
non-carbonated beverage all for only
MONDAY FRIDAY NIGHTS 5-7
Army, trailing by just five
points, was driving again when
Navy linebacker Ray TeCario
recovered a fumble on the
Navy 20 with 4:32 to go. Navy
succeeded in running out the
clock after that for the first
win over Army in football
since 1963 and its first winning
season since that year.
Until Army suddenly came
alive in the third period it was
all Navy as poised quarterback
John Cartwright repeatedly
picked apart the Army secon
dary with his precision passes
and an alert Middie defense
kept the normally high-geared
Army offense bottled in its own
territory.
Touchdowns by Jeri Balsly
and Dan Pike, N a v y s
alternating left halfbacks, a 29
yard field goal by John Church
and a safety apparently had
Navy home free, but with nine
minutes to go Army exploded
with two quick touchdowns
behind sub quarterback Jim
O'Toole. O'Toole also hit Hank
Andrzejczak for a two-point
conversion ana it was
a"3-biys game t that point
Army scorea us tirs
touchdown on a two-yard run
by Lynn Moore with 1:03 left.
Two minutes later O'Toole hit
end Gary Steele on a 52-yard
pass play for a touchdown.
Army got nowhere during
the first half as Cartwright
consistently hit ends Rob
Taylor and Mike Clark and
flanker Terry Murray for key
chunks of yardage which set
up Navy's early scoring.
Navy opened the scoring on
Church's field goal for a 3-0
lead. Rick Bayer, Middies,
J . P 1 AM
A
tercepted a Steve Lindell pass
oeiensive oacx. men m-
on Aicny's 45 and the Middies
needed just nine plays to score
with sophomore Pike ramming
in from the one.
A 15-yard pass from
Cartwright to Murray and a 12
yard dash by Balsly were the
key plays.
Navy made it 17-0 on a 92
yard drive in the second
quarter with Balsly, a member
of the junior varsity at the
beginning of the season,
sprinting in from the 13 with
8:05 left in the period.
Pys had Army's
celenders befuddled as he hit
Taylor for 13, Clark for nine
and 11 and Murray for nine to
set up the touchdown run. The
Middies' top veteran, defensive
end and team Capt. Bill Dow,
collected the final Navy points
when he tackled Army kicker
Nick Kurilko in the end zone in
the fourth quarter.
Football Scores
Navy 19, Army 14
Ala. 7, Auburn 3
Tenn. 41, Vandy 14
Miss. 10, Miss. St. 3
Oklahoma 38, Okla. St. 14
Swimmers
By JOE SANDERS
of Thm Daily Tar Eet Staff
The UNC Blue Dolphins split
into two sauqds Friday and
came home with two victories,
one over Clemson 6044 and the
other over South Carolina 59
54. Both squads found
themselves dangerously close
to defeat before they managed
to pull out the victories.
The team at Clemson was
seven points behind after the
first relay and it spent the rest
of the meet making up the dif
ference. At South Carolina, the
Dolphins trailed the
AT LENOIR HALL
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DTH Staff Photo by STEVE ADAMS
Freshman Don Eggleston drives in for layup
That Is The
By DALE GIBSON
of Th Daily Tar Hcl Staff
"-Phi Delt Gold Overwhelms Botany 34-
i
On Nov. 29, this headline appeared in
The Daily Tar Heel and Frank
McCormick of the UNC Botany Depart
ment was plenty upset--and . rightfully
so.
Sure, the team has been blasted. It
scored but a single point. But this team
was made up of second stringers. The
first unit was in Puerto Rico. of all
places taking on two baksetball squads
and beating them.
They sneaked by a Rio Grande team 48
42 and slugged the Puerto Rico Boys'
School 66-44.
It all started innocently enough.
McCormick teaches Botany 55, a course
designed to make a student aware of his
environment and how he should adapt to
it.
So, the elasscnade up of (graduate
students and some undergraduates '
journeyed to Puerto Rico to study the lit
tle island's environment.
.Well, some of the natives discovered
they had been , invaded by a group of
Yankee Imperialists and just had to
challenge them one way or another. The
easiest way was basketball.
After tucking the two victories under
their belt, the young botanists returned to
Chapel Hill only to read that the rest of
Split Up,
Gamecocks by two points
going into the last event. .
While each UNC squad was
swimming a t half-strength,
both of then opponents used
their freshman as well as their
fullstrength varsity squads.
The UNC freshmen remained
in Chapel Hill, preparing for
their first meet Dec. 9.
After dropping the f i r s t
event and falling behind
Clemson seven points, UNC
took several first-and-second
place combinations in making
up the deficit.
Bill Dunn and Ken Rafferty
downed a Clemson duo in the
luoo-yard freestyle. Dunn went
on to win the 500-yard freestyle
yith a 5:35.2 time.
MILK CAN LAMPS
for Christmas
Handpatnted - finished or
kits 35 below retail
Call
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34-1
Score, This Is
their squad had geen slaughtered in an
intramural game.
The Botany Department is one of the
few on campus besides law and medicine
which are totaly graduate that competes
in the intramural program. . -
"We do it mostly for fun," said
McCormick one of the team's , leading
scorers. "But it also works up a good
relationship between the students and
myself."
McCormick, an Assistant Professor,
graduated from Butler University in In
dianapolis, Indiana, '"where they play
plenty of basketball." He came to UNC
four years ago.
McCormick started shooting baskets in
Woollen Gym daily and some of his
students found out and wanted to form a
team. , .
The nucleus, was formed from these
students graduate and undergraduate'
who were interested," McCormick
said. Ariel Lugo and Gary Miller are the
teams' top grad players.
Fred James, Tom McGinnis and Pat
Warren carry the honors for the un
dergrads. It's that simple. The Varsity Tar Heels
may travel all over the nation and win
games. . . but the Botany Department
carries the honors abroad.
"Besides," McCormick said, "it keeps
the weight down and I can still drink
beer." v
tar Wim
A triple winner at Clemson
was Bill Lindley, who captured
the 100 and 50-yard freestyles
and swam a leg of the winning
400-yara freestyle and swam a
leg of the winning 400-yard
freestyle relay.
Meanwhile, in Columbia,
three Dolphins were stealing
the show. Ail-American Jim
Edwards won two events and
anchored the winning 400-yard
freestyle relay an event
which was needed to capture
the meet.
Frank McElroy showed
himself to be the hottest
sophomore this year with a
'iast 5:09.7 m the 500-vard
freestyle.
Captain Phil Riker won the
200-yard butterfly with . a
1:58.9, a time he could not
produce last year until the last
month of competition.
While the Dolphins could
congratulate themselves that
two victories came from half
strength squads, the closeness
r
T l 4
I
The 50 Voice St Mary's Glee Club will perform on Sunday, December 10, at
8:00 in G.M. Main Lounge. Immediately following the performance, a recep
tion will be held in the Graham Memorial Lounge. (These ARE the real St
Mary's Girls)
Balance, Good
Pay Off For
m By RICK BREWER
of .Tin Daily Tar HmI SXcff
With all five starters scoring
in double figures, North Caro
lina's f reshman basketball
learn opened its season last
night with a 84-55 victory over
ge at Carmi-
Chadwick and Dale
and 20 points
respectively to lead the Tar
Babies, but it was the balan
ced attack of UNC and the
-complete domination of the
boards that doomed the Hur
ricanes. Lee Dedmon, a 6-10, 195
pounder, pulled down 13 re
bounds and 6-9 Don Eggleston
captured 12 to pace Carolina
in that department. Trailing
Gipple and Chadwick in the
scoring were Eggleston with
The Story
Two
JIM EDWARDS '
of the scores indicafes that
there will be trouble in the
conference this year.
Both Clemson and South
Carolina used their freshmen,
a policy UNC shimming coach
Pat Earey refuses to effect un
til the NCAA rules on its
legality in January.
' U !
;.:
f 1 4
r
Reboxindiiis
Tar Babies
14 and Richard Tuttle
and
Dedmon with 12 each.
Joe Penland, a 6-0 guard,
led all scorers, putting 24 in
for Louisburg. Roy Welhing
ton was the only other Hurri
cane hitting in double figures,
scoring 12 points. -
Louisburg led only once in
the game taking a 1-0 lead on
a free throw by Roger Taylor.
However, with Eggleston con
trolling the boards in the early
going, the Heels quickly mov
ed into a 13 point lead, 20-7.
The Tar Babies continually
were able to hit the open man
under the basket Tuttle fed
teammates inside with beau
tiful passes on several occa
sions. Tuttle, a 6-0 guard, also
came up with several steals
which resulted in easy buckets
for the home forces.
Carolina built up a 37-24 half
time lead and was never head
ed in the second period. With
Gipple getting free easily on
fast breaks, UNC at one time
ran its lead to 30 points at 81
51. Scoring:
UNC: Dedmon (12). Chad
wick (21). Eggleston (14),
Tuttle (12), Gipple (20), Trot
man (2), Skeels (2). Ruddell
(1), Skinner, Estes, Whitworth,
Garrett Ariail.
Louisburg: Penland (24),
Walker (5), Taylor (4), McLe
more (10), Welhington (12),
Lewis, Horton, Massey, Home,
Driver, Arledge.
UNC
Louisburg
37
24
47
31
84
55
Personal Fouls:
Louisburg (17).
UNC (14),
Clemson's Gore Voted
ACC Player Of Year
RALEIGH . (UPI) Fnank
Howard makes Buddy Gore
run, run, run, and the Clemson
junior did it so well this fall he
was selected Atlantic Coast
Conference football player of
the year.
Gore, a 6-1, 19 0-pound
'tailback, carried the ball 230
times this season and picked
up 1,045 yards to set a con
ference rushing record. Wake
Forest fullback Brian Piccolo
had one less yard for the 1964
season.
The Atlantic Coast
S p o r t s w riters Association
thought this effort was good
enough to rank Gore tops in
the closest race for the honor '
in conference history. Gore got
28 of the 91 votes cast to edge
North Carolina State tackle
Dennis Byrd by two for the
award.
Clemson fans could count on
seeing the Conway, S. C. flash
Nairaki Sugiura of UNC and
Hiroshima University will
speak on "Unbiasedness of
some test criteria in
multivariate analysis" at the
Statistics Colloquium Mon
day at 4 p.m... in 285
Philips.
A Service of Holy Communion
for the first Sunday in Ad
vent is to be celebrated at
the Wesley Foundation at
11:00 AM, with excerpts
from W.H. Auden's For the
Time Being: A Christmas
Oratorio .
The Gallery Coffee Shop, open
from 8-12, features folk
music at 9 song by Arden
Stevens & Eric Deal Fren
ch, Spanish and English
song.
5-
7
DAVID BARNES
Varsity, Frosh
Earn Mat Wins
Both' UNC wrestling teams
freshmen and varsity ig-
nited their 1967-63 season this
week-end and soared to three
victories.
The varsity grapplers
started the action at Guilford
College Friday night with an
impressive 23-14 win over the
Quakers.
The UNC squad started the
match poorly with two losses
in the 123-pound division. Bob
Blue of Guilford captured a 3-0
decision over Carolina's Bill
Horn. Quaker Julian Cooper
followed with an 8-0 decision
over Craig Miller.
But the Tar Heels came back
strong in the 130-pound
division. Tommy Guthrie hand
ed Guilford's Perry Benbow a
7-3 decision.
run during the Tigers' games.
His 230 carries made him the
busiest offensive player in the
ACC and the 189 yards he gain-
ed in 31 tries against arch-rival
South Carolina in the season's
finale gave him the rushing
record. -
This gave him the rushing ti-
tie for the second straight
year, the first time an ACC
player achieved the distinction.
As a sophomore, Gore ground
out 750 yards to win the ti
tle. Third in the balloting was
North Carolina State kicker
Gerald Warren with 13 votes.
Frank Quayle, Virginia
halfback, received ten and
Clemson guardHarry
Olszewski got nine.
Others receiving votes were
Fred Combs, N. C. State safe
ty; Jim Donnan, State
quarterback; Warren Muir,
South Carolina fullgack; and
Freddie Summers, Wake
Forest quarterback.
ANDREWS
DUPLICATING
SERVICE
41 9A W. Franklin St
(Behind Leo's Rastaurant)
Quick, Quality Duplicat
ing Service.
One day thesis printing
service.
Phone 929-3302
AflONG
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TABLE SERVICE
featuring all-time student -favorites
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CAKE SUNDAES
OPEN SUNDAY thru FRIDAY
CLOSED SATURDAYS
Kentucky Rips
Into Michigan
ANN ARBOR, Mich.
(UPI) Coach Baren
Rupp unveiled two
sophomore nuggets Satur
day as his Kentucky
Wildcats earned an easy
96-79 triumph over
Michigan-
Rapp, started guard
Mike Casey and center
Dan I s s a I , both
sophomores, and thev
responded with 23 and is
points respectively, highs
for the game.
Pat Reighard pinned
Guilford's Billy Harmon to win
in the 137-pound division. Tom-
my Kumley of UNC pinned
Mike Stillwell in the 145-pound
class.
Although the Tar Heels have
no heavyweights listed on
their roster, Fred Preister
wrestled in this class against
Guilford. He pinned Mickey
Andrews to end the match.
The frosh grapplers fought
the VMI freshman squad
Saturday afternoon as a
preliminary to the varsity
match. The Tar Babies won
handily 27-14.
Then followed one of the
traditionally toughest matches
for the varsity grapplers. The
VMI keydets always offer stiff
competition to the UNC squad
and Saturday's match was no
different.
The match was action pack
ed all the way with the Tar
Heels having to wait until the
last bout to wrap it up.
The Keydets took a quick 5-0
lead on a pin by Tom Reynolds
over UNCs Craig Miller. But
Guthrie came back with a 7-0
decision over Joe Levine. This
narrowed the margin to 5-3.
The Tar Heel matmen then
went 6-5 ahead on a 4-3
decision by John Stacv over
VMTs Steve Vaughn. The most
exciting bout of the match was
David Barnes' 5-4 decision over
Brant Collins. The winning
point came in riding time.
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