.Page 5 TTTP DAILY XAR HEEL & Friday, November 8. 1968 r Coo Chat r Quay I ( Heels Defense At Ke nian lemge if' 3a Cx,' i. ' ' Virginia Fullback . . . Part Of ACCs Best Backfield Davis To Return Split end Peter Davis, who was felled by an injury at the Air Force Academy last week, 7. L. KEMP tl; 'i Finest Selection o? Diamond in : Chapel; Hill ' " i LOCATiaNS , 135 E. Frsnklin University Square L " Chpl Hill: 203 W. Franklin St. Join the Inn Crowd mtwlai. Famous 0 1 7 7 A Carry Out or Eat in Open Mon.-Tbur. 11 A.M. 'til 12 P.M. .Friday and Saturday M A.M. 'til. 1 A.M. Sunday 4 P.M. 'til 11 P.M. .- Order by Phone for Fatter Service Durham 2854837 Chapel Hffl M2-514 ' Allow Approximately 20 Minutes SAVE! SAVE! ! SAVE!!! ON DRY CLEANING Monday, Tuesday & Wednesday Only SKIRTS, or SWEATERS (or Combination of 4) ALSO 5 SHIRTS FOR $1.00 Accompanied by Dry Cleaning Order Satisfaction WBTIBSIBS. 403 Weaver St, Carrboro THE MOST 4 9 i THE C Jeff Anderson comes back as North Carolina game captain for Saturday's clash with Virginia in Kenan Stadium. Davis and linebacker Mark Mazza were selected this week to lead the Tar Heels in the renewal of the old rivalry with the Cavaliers. Game time is 1:30. Earlier this week, there was some doubt whether Davis would be ready to play in this contest. He suffered a lacerated tongue in the opening minute of the game at Air Force and did not return to action. But Davis has shown outstanding improvement throughout this week. The Clarksville, Va., senior has caught 16 passes this season, averaging 12.7 yards a catch. He has one touchdown. Only Don McCauley, with 19, has caught more passes on the Tar Heel squad. The game with Virginia will be Homecoming Day and also Band Day. It should be a colorful show. PANTS, ft r 99 Guarameen One hour 929-1455 IN DRY CLEANING f" ' presents TONITE THE L' J 5 SATURDAY NITE FABULOUS AFFAIRS By OWEN DAVIS DTH Sports Editor Virginia brings the best backfield in the Atlantic Coast Conference to Chapel Hill Saturday. The Cavaliers, who are 4-3 overall, have the ACCs leading rusher at tailback and its third best passer at quarterback. The W a ho os' fullback, Jeff Anderson, is no patsy either. He has scored five touchdowns and is fifth among ACC ground gainers. . The Virginia tailback is of course Frank Quayle, the most UVa-UNC Series By ART CHANSKY DTH Asst. Sports Editor When the Carolina Tar Heels battle Virginia in Saturday's Homecoming game, one of the nation's oldest and most pupular football rivalries will be renewed. It will be the 73rd meeting between UNC and the Cavaliers from Charlottesville, by far the longest extension of a Dixie grudge fight that dates back to 1892. The Southern schools have clashed in every year but 1899 and 1909. Carolina leads the series with 38 victories to 31 for th Cavs. Three have ended in a draw.' The Tar Heels have been losers in their last four games with UVa but have still won six of the last ten meetings. Virginia's 40-17 trouncing of UNC at Charlottesville last season was its fourth consecutive win over Carolina since 1964. But, ironically, the Heels had won the six previous contests, from 1958-1963. The first two victories of that streak were by the monstrorous shutout scores of 41-0 and 42-0. However, these are still far short of the most lopsided game in the rivalry's Tar Carolina's freshman football team will be after its third win of the season this afternoon when the Tar Babies travel to Williamsburg, Va. to play the William and Mary frosh. Game time is 2 o'clock. Coach Ron DeMelfi's yearlings have won two of their three contests to date, and have shown a tough defense. Carolina opponents have Minpd onlv 223 vards on the ground, averaging just 1.8 yards a rush. Tar Babv defenders, led bv linebacker John Bunting, have not allowed more than one touchdown in a game. In its last outing Carolina blanked Duke 7-0 and Bunting, 6-1, 190 from Silver Spring, Md., made over a dozen individual tackles. The Tar Babies offensively rely mainly on their running attack, which features tailback Geof Hamlin, fullback Burt Culver and quarterback Paul Miller. Hamlin, another one of Carolina's Canadians from Ottawa, Ontario, is the workhorse of the backfield. He has carried 81 times for 285 net yards. Hamlin gained 150 yards and scored the only 4 B dangerous runner in the East His backfield partner at quarterback is Gene Amette. Quayle, Anderson and Arnette have combined to give UVa. the conference's best running offense, more than 30 yards a game better than their closest rival. The Cavs are second in ACC total offense, and tops in scoring. Since Carolina is seventh among eight teams in rushing defense, Virginia could assault the Tar Heels in the greatest infantry movement since Sherman marched through Georgia. history a titanic 66-0 Virginia conquest of UNC in 1912. Carolina came close to that once before, in 1935, when the Cavs fell by the wayside, 61-0. But those three games all have to take a back seat to the wildest scoring affair in the UNC-UV record books. In 1936, the Tar Heels outslugged the Cavaliers by the sandlot score of 59-15 in a real pier-sixer. Carolina's six straight victories of this decade is not the longest winning streak of the series, however. UNC whipped Virginia eight co nsecutive times, from 1933-1940. But, wouldn't you know it, the Cavs also reigned supreme eight years in a row, from 1908 to 1915. When Kenan Stadium was dedicated back in 1927, the University of Virginia was the competition that day. On Saturday "when Kenan celebrates one-fifth of its 41st birthday, the same Cavaliers will be tearing up the same gridiron. The most humorous event to ever happen in this long series took place in 1941. UVa's All-America running back Bill touchdown against Duke. Culver has the top yardage average. The 210-pound fullback from Delmar, Del. has picked up 4.7 yards a rush for 128 yards totally. . Miller averages four yards a carry in his raw totals but has been thrown for 51 yards in losses while trying to pass. The Ayden, N.C. quarterback has thrown sparingly, and has completed nine of 17 passes for 152 yards, He has not been intercepted. Palmer Lauehridge, a 5-11, 185 scatback, is his top receiver . . m m 9 T 1 with three catches for 55 yards and one touchdown. The Tar Babies are Drimarilv a ball-control team, sticking to Hie &uic giuuiiu game, iucj have gained three times more yards running than passing, and have thrown less than 10 times a game. William and Mary has a 2-2 record, having won their last two encounters against Bullis Prep and Frederick Military Academy. DeMelfi said the Indians have a "couple of good quarterbacks and a real good tailback. They have come on strong lately, he said. Ifoney's Restaurant PANCAKE SPECIAL Vi PRICE after 9:00 At Night Regular Price Tender Buttermilk Pancakes . . . .$.50 Yeasty Old Fashioned Buckweat Pancakes . . .55 Blueberry Buttermilk Pancakes .90 Date-Nut Pancakes .90 Hawaiian Pancakes . . .85 Plus Many More M r Quayle, a senior from Garden City, N.Y., is one of the most explosive runners in conference history. He has already gained 731 yards and scored six touchdowns in seven games. And he is always a threat to break the long gainer, averaging seven yards a carry. Quayle is also Virginia's best pass receiver and fifth in the ACC. He has 20 catches for 320 yards, including a 67 yarder. Anderson, 6-2, 215, is the Cavs? inside runner. Despite being used mostly between the tackles, he has averaged over A P amc Dudley proved his worth on that day, by scoring 28 points and rolling up 333-yards in front of the awed Carolina crowd. It was Dudley's last game of his college career, and at the final gun he was rewarded with a victory ride off the playing field by the hysterical Tar Heel fans. The Cavaliers invade Chapel Hill riding the crest of their first winning season since 1952, when they finished 8-2. UVa is still on the winning side of the ledger with a 4-3 record, despite its 49-28 drubbing at the hands of South Carolina last week. The last time Carolina beat Virginia was in 1963 while the Tar Heels were on their way to an 8-2 season of their own and a 35-0 Gator Bowl victory over Air Force. If s safe to say that the only bowl the Heels "will be visiting this year will be the post-season punch bowl at the football banquet, but, as you can see from the unpredictable 72-year old series, that's no indication of what might happen on Saturday afternoon. W&M Frosh ' - l t-ik :': I ' t No J- ( ..Lvitfl Mh t' . jf a A u " r-0 It Cwr A'nmt?id iv v j r. - Viv m k im shw rL .it JEiiw. C ii V f Why Not YSm r5"Sw" a vi Send d V 2&$M&Jl Linebacker John Bunting . . . Leads Frosh Defense Today MIDNIGHT -v. --- - ' - - - - four yards a rush. Anderson has gained 532 yards, better than anyone for Carolina. Arnette is not a highly-touted quarterback, but has thrown for 878 yards so far. He is not big at 6-0,180, and has some trouble against an effective defensive rush. Although Arnette is third in ACC passing, he is second in throwing the most interceptions, having 12 tosses picked off. Flanker Jeff Calamos, the other backfield starter, is only the fourth best receiver on his own team. He is quick at 5-10, 175, but hasn't been fast enough to catch more than 11 passes. Backup runner Dave Wyncoop can "start for most any team in the country" according to UNC Coach Bill Dooley. Wyncoop averages 4.4 ayrds a carry for 182 ayrds. In a word, Virginia's offense is massive. If s forte is rushing by which the Cavs have gained 256 yards a game. The Arnette-to-Quayle hookup is also dangerous through the air. WINSTON-SALEM (UPI) -The Wake Forest University defense worked on stopping South Carolina's top passer, Tommy Suggs, during practice Thursday for Saturday's game here. "We worked a lot on South Carolina's action passes," defensive coach Joe Popp said. "We know we've got our work cut out for us if we are to stop their passing from Tommy Suggs to Fred Zeigler. ''They've also got some good running backs in Bennie Galloway and Warren Muir," he said. The Wake Forest offensive worked on goalline plays. CLEMSON, S.C. -Quarterback Billy Ammons guided the Clemson Tigers through a one-hour workout Thursday in preparation for Saturday's game with Maryland. PAUL r -"inula m r ACC Top Rusher Frank Quayle . . Will Run Against Second Poorest ACC Line But U Va. has lost three of seven games. It's not because Virginia has a totally porous defense either, because the Cavaliers lead the ACC in rushing defense and are second in total defense. But pass defense is a different matter. Last week U Va. gave up five scoring passes by South Carolina's Tommy Suggs, and the Cavs are seventh in the conference in defending against the pass. Virginia has been thrown against more than any other ACC team, facing over 30 passes a game. The Cavs are tops in interceptions, however, and also have the lowest completion average against them. Cornerback Pete Schmidt leads conference interceptors. .tMftMMiiiiwi 4 run awt mm TV RENTALS! LONG TERM OR SHORT TERM CALL US AT 942-2920 For Details mean Gift? kzy TONIGHT AT THE RENDEZVOUS (Formerly The Balon Lounge) (Under New Management) FRIDAY and SATURDAY PEEK AND COMBO (Columbia Recording Artist) it AH your favorite beer it Ronnie McCrea at the organ ir Welcome UNC Students & Grads On the By-Pass opposite Holiday Inn But opposing teams still think the best way to move the ball on the Cavaliers is through the air, and they have allowed 205 passing yards a game. All new '69 510 Sedan $2079 4 speed TffffiPAS Holiday Imports Durham-C.H. Blvd. 489-2306 Dir. 551 CKitTE V re 1404 E. Franklin 929-3768 isHcstes ''

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