Sunday, November 10, 1968 Page 4 Clark, Fogler, Delany Also Shine THE DAILY TAB HEEL - "r .. MiMWitli"r''- - ii Tfiij.f i irl lytJ-f!- jtjW M I III ' -""r" srssi 1 ...zr grrcJL,a - Tv :JUi""lliyi1" . I i 1 . " 5 1 , 4 ' .... m . ,TSaSa . 4 A XJtrr -J v , f'.s' vrmrx, ii'iiiiiimnirtf w f -f5? jiiiirtaaaB . 'v-r (Ir -t'.'O Vr . .... . ) R 1 m .-,x. . .V-.' . ' . ' p 1 . . . IT ; , ''.'.;'- . ' z, ' i y c - VT . ..,:;-' .'7f t' " - ' v J. 1 cott Stars In Blne-WMte By CHRIS COBBS DTH Sports Writer Olympian Charlie Scott dazzled his Carolina teammates and a capacity Carmichael Auditorium audience of 8800 by scoring 34 points to lead the Whites to an 88-86. win in the Blue-White game' Saturday. Scott and Blue center Rusty Clark dueled for scoring honors in the turn-over plagued contest. Clark wound up with 28 points, but made 7 errors, most by any player in the game. The Tar Heel intrasquad match was agressively played. A highlight of the rough action came at the foul line as the Blues converted 27 out of 32 free throw tries. Junior guard Eddie Foglgr initiated the race-horse proceedings in the first two minutes by making a steal for a layup and following with a short hook shot. Fogler and the Whites led at the end of the first quarter 23-19. Scott and freshman copatriot of quickness Bill Chamberlain left the game early in the second stanza, leaving the way open for a Blue comeback. Forward Bill Bunting, connecting on mostly 15 foot Smith Concerned Over Tar Heel Ball Handling Lanier On Way To One Of Few Tar Heel Gains Defense Leads State Past Duke (UPI)-A charging North Carolina State defense led by Don Carpenter got three key pass interceptions and two fumbles which opened the way for a 17-15 victory over Duke .......... . , . ,...... Ski Buffs do it! Saturday. Leo Hart, Duke's record breaking sophomore quarterback, moved his team repeatedly to scoring position only to be stopped by the Wolfpack defense. Hart ran five yards for a Duke touchdown late in the game but Carpenter and Art Hudson stopped a two-point try that would have tied the game. Twice the State line halted Duke drives on the one yard line. Bobby Hall scored from the y . . 4 . ''Wmilllwiau uuuuuiai. arohna - i fWtoi' ... IT English eather For men who want to be where the ; action is. Very schussy. Very mas- -i culine. ALL-PURPOSE LOTION. $2.50. $4.00, $6.50. From the com- plete array of ENGLISH LEATHER men's toiletries. A I'KUUL'LI 1)1 MIM UJNirANV. INC.. NOKIIIVAU. N . 07047 The Only ULTRA-VISION THEATRE in This Area NOW PLAYING ftVUWXJNT PICTURES presents tkttbrs are Tt2 Odd Ccopls two-yard, line in the second quarter for State and Charlie Bowers powered over from the five in the third. Gerald Warren kicked a 35-yard field goal and ' field goal, two extra points for the Wolfpack. In addition to his fourth period touchdown, Hart passed 17 yards to Jim Dearth in the third period. Duke's Earl Mowry kicked a 33-yard field goal in the first period following an intercepted pass by linebacker Dick Biddle. N.C. State end Mark Capuano blocked Mowry's extra point kick after the first Duke touchdown. Biddle's pass interception stopped State's first drive and Mowry quickly converted that to a three point lead for Duke. State quarterback Jack Klebe ran 42 yards on a keeper the next time State had the ball and that set up Warren's By DENNIS BENFIELD DTH Sports Writer "It was just an exhibition of good effort," commented Carolina head basketball coach Dean Smith after a Charlie Scott-led White team shaved the Blues, 88-86, in the third annual Blue-White game at Carmichael Auditorium Saturday night. Smith obviously wasn't over-joyed as he appraised the efforts of the respective Tar Heels, defending champions of the Atlantic Coast Conference and second-place finishers to UCLA in the NCAA finals last season. The UNC basketball mentor was genuinely concerned as he glanced over the statistics sheet after the contest, which nonetheless was accepted royally by a capacity house after another gridiron loss. "I don't think we could have beaten anybody in our conference the way we played tonight," remarked Smith. "Good efforfr-But it was just an exhibition." Smith tabbed the Tar Heels' "careless ball-handling" as the most outstanding minus. "Any team is going to make turnovers," Smith said, "but we're definitely going to have to cut down on thypercentage or errors." The figure which really annoyed the Tar Heel coach was the 73 total turnovers committed by both teams losses of possession -which resulted without even firing a shot. Suggs Leads USC To W m UPI Sophomore quarterback Tommy Suggs threw three touchdown passes to end Johnny Gregroy and one to end Doug Hamrick to lead South Carolina to a 34-21 victory over error-plagued Wake Forest Saturday. Suggs hit Gregory with scoring passes of 25 and 14 yards within 58 seconds of the first quarter and eight yards in the second quarter. His scoring pass to Hamrick was a seven-yard play in the second quarter. Fullback Warren Muir pushed over from the one-yard line and Suggs ran for two points in the fourth quarter for the Gamecocks' only scoring in the second half. Wake Forest's three touchdowns came on a two-yard run by fullback Jimmy Johnson in the second quarter, a one-yard run by PANMSICr-TECHMCaOir A PARAMOUNT PKTURt ?f H J Clemsom Tops Terps; Clings To Top Of ACC Shows 1 9 ,.tMJ.JUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUJUUUUUUUUUUI.t h Cd4-5 Malt UquJBt- "foiA- ouaA. ujAytfxfeiAjOtfc" utAtt: QhAo &mA cUxk. i maim Ghdm. Lia-cmma cM. 8 U WEATH I PT con" ttnm uquoq. 60X UOO BACrovMDZI203 opFtRVOip WHEfiE PROHIBITED BV LAVA if V ft. COLLEGE PARK, Md. (UPI) Sophomore fullback Ray Yauger scored both touchdowns Saturday as Clemson ekpt alive its hopes for the- Atlantic Coast Conference championship with a 16-0 whitewash of Maryland. Yauger scored from three and eight yards out in the second half and Clemson tacked on a safety when linebacker George Burnett dumped Maryland quarterback Alan Pastrana in the end zone. Maryland twice came close mm ihmmm-m Sunday Grumbles Gotcha? Cheer yerself up with a gambol through the cheer ful old emporium! Admission free, no cover charge, no entertainment tax! The Intimate . Bookshop Open til 10 p.m. to scoring. A holding penalty wiped out a 77-yard touchdown pass from Pastrana to Roland Mernitt and Al Thomas dropped another Pastrana pass in the end zone as the game ended. Clemson completely shut off the Maryland rushing attack, holding the Terrapins to just six yards on the ground. The victory evening Clemson's record at 4-4, with all four triumphs coming in ACC play, while Maryland, fell back to a 2-6 mark. Yauger, a 21-year-old Power runner from Uniontown, Pa., took over in the Clemson running attack after halfback Buggy Gore was injured in the first quarter. He carried 28 times for 139 yards after he got his big chance. The first half was scoreless, but Clemson quarterback Billy Amnions needed- only two minutes and 45 seconds in the second half to move his team 77 yards in nine plays for the first touchdown, with Yauger accounting for 48 of those yards including the last three for the score. The safety made it 9-0. Then, minutes later an exchange of fumbles gave Clemson the ball on Maryland's 35. Amnions quickly took Clemson in for its second TD, using Yauger almost exclusively he gained 27 of the 35, including the final eight yards. Clemson ... 0 0 7 9-16 Maryland ... 0 0 0 0-0 tailback Lee Clyher in the third period, and an eight-yard pass from quarterback David Connor to flanker Eddie Arrington with 19 seconds left in the game. Tom Deacon booted three extra points. Suggs' 25-yard scoring pass to Gregory came with 7:57 left in the first quarter. Two plays after the following kickoff defensive back Pat Watson made his first of four interceptions and returned the ball 19 yards to the Deacon 21. Rudy Holloman carried it seven yards to the 14 and then Suggs hit Gregory for the score with 6:59 left. Billy DuPre kicked the extra points. Five minutes into the second quarter, Watson intercepted another one of Deacon quarterback Freddie Summers' passes and returned it to the Deacon 46. Suggs guided the Gamecocks to the eight-yard line and from there he hit Gregory with a pass for six points. Carolina's basketball "Dean" noted that the Blue-White affair "really wasn't indicative, or I hope not, of how we'll be playing this year." Referring to the possibility that ACC scouts were in the stands, Smith added, "We didn't run much of our regular offensive patterns." The Tar Heel boss also commented on the new faces in Carolina Blue, the sophomores and freshmen. "Our sophomores, I think, will help us some during the year and I think the freshmen showed their potential but I want to emphasize that, only the potential I wouldn't want to single out any individuaL" Smith, who sat at the scorer's table while assistants John Lotz and Bill Buthridge took over the coaching duties, noted that this season's Tar Heels have "some hard work" in the next three weeks before the first game. Carolina tips off the hardcourt season against non-conference Oregon on December 2 at the Greensboro Coliseum. jumpers triggered the Blue comeback with 10 first half points. The Blues had caught up by half time, the scoreboard reading 45 alL The first half was played in two 12 minute quarters, the second in 10 minute quarters. Scott fired in jumper after jumper in the third period. He drew oohs and ahs throughout the game with his sensational passing, and in the third stanza he couldn't miss from the field. The 6-5 junior had accounted for at least 14 points in the canto. His assists, coming at the blink of an eye, and his unusually fine shooting touch marked the difference as the Whites opened a 70-63 margin going into the fourth quarter. Guard Jim Delaney finished with 14 points. "00 rasa m iilO n pi ft OGWG QBE $1949 P.O.E. V.TU FC3YE IT TCZAYAT: Holiday Imports Durham-CH Blvd. Ph. 439-230S Dir. 551 atos Chapel Hill: 208 W. Franklin St. Join the Inn Crowd PIZZA Featuring, Famous Fresh Baked Carry Out or Eat in Open Mon.-Thur. 11 A.M. 'til 12 P.M. Friday and Saturday 11 A.M. 'til. 1 A.M. Sunday 4 P.M. 'til 11 P.M. 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