Louisburg Grushei In 19- 14 Tfari Ffcd .Navy Stuns Army ller elk Win Op emeu 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 AMPU .s? "v.,"" -. r L .Yt - -Vk 7 ' - ... If Tt- CvJV . irrxvv 'ijfi: .. f Yiy - V fJ- hael Auditorium mi l L (7 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 929-1 S03 STEA rfVWK ;;t-71 David j k.-V- ' . -f; ? If Gipple scored 21 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 ( eraras . . . Catering to Students TABLE SERVICE featuring all-time student -favorites ... ; BURGER GRAMS and 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. MGM presents A Carlo Ponti Production Stamng MStsfgerVirnaUsi What happens when the rotes of man and woman are reversed? V 7 ' 1 1 Jft is what happens! NOW PLAYING v s A I . " GRAM

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