Th Da;fvTar H?s! Barnes likes Heel showing wimmers top USC mat. honor bast Carolina, cop 1L for 3rd win in row by David Zucchi.no Sports Writer East Carolina wrestlers swept five of he ten weight classifications in Saturday's second annual North Carolina "ollegiatd Wrestling Championships at ."armichael Auditorium to lead the Urates to the strongest over-all team Dooley rewarded with new 4-year pact by Mark Whicker Sports Writer Duke and State, both ranked in the op 20 in pre-season polls, ran into oadblocks at Charlottesville and Auburn Saturday and lost their first games of the .ear. Wake Forest topped Temple 71-55, outh Carolina edged Notre Dame 85-82, Clemson whipped Mercer 61-46 and Maryland topped Buffalo in other ACC ;ames. Virginia, behind the strong rebounding if Bill Gerry and the clutch shooting of ,ubstitute... Chip Miller, beat Duke in "harlottesville for the third straight year. What galled Coach Bucky Waters the nost was the way the Devils lost it. Duke nissed 22 of its 24 field goal attempts in he final 11 minutes, blowing a 13-point ead. Center Randy Denton, with 25 points, ind sharpshooting sophs Rich O'Connor tnd Jeff Dawson built the Blue Devil ead. But Gerry, who had 22 points and 1 1 ebounds, went to the foul line regularly n the late drive and sank eight shots. Miller's 20-footer broke a 68-68 tie ind gave the Cavaliers a lead which they lever relinquished Auburn's John Mengelt, who tried his iest to knock off South Carolina EDWARD SMALL presents COLOR by f& rj) m ism Crossword Puzzle ACROSS i Greek letter 4 Pronoun 6 Rent 11 Clever 13 Clothesmaker 15 Member of Parliament (abbr.) 16 Let go 18 Parent (colloq.) 19 Supposing that 21 Narrow, flat board 22 Chair 24 Courage 26 Mix 28 Devoured 29 Eagle's nest 31 Dinner course 33 Hypothetical force 34 Great Lake 36 Want 38 Compass point 40 Gaelic 42 Waste matter 45 Collection of facts 47 Girl's name 49 Small children 50 Part of harness 52 One opposed 54 Sun god 55 Prefix: not 56 Holds back 59 Preposition 61 Conduct onself properly 63 Chief 65 Tibetan priests 66 Symbol for tellurium 67 Fruit drink Southwestern Indians Trades for money Post Dance step Falsehoods Prefix: not Fruit Chaldean city Evaluated Dines Conflagration Babylonian deity A state a(bbr.) Weary Regretted Ireland Saucy Landed property (pi.) Entrance In India, master Glossy paint 6 7 8 9 10 12 14 17 20 23 24 25 27 30 32 35 37 38 39 m mm amm m mmma mmmi 1 2 13 txl4 15 l-6 17 18 19 110 v i& -- ft- gg P!21 i" 24 25 26 27 28 29 3031 32 j33 W'ZW 4L41 7r"ZtLM7 lMl ss Xv 55 57 58 59 60 ii AT 62 63 64 iH 1 1 I liiH bH 1 DOWN 1 Scottish cap 2 Desire with eagerness 3 Guido's low note Distr. by United TCH.'TCH.'TCH.'NOU PROMISED GRR ' 9.' DISCUSS 0RR AMICABUN eri iti 2-7 T M o. rtnkrn H.II S,-.l f showing of the meet, which was organized and directed by Carolina Coach Sam Barnes. Paving the way for ECU were division champions Ron Williams (118), Steve Morgan (134), Mike Spohn (150), Bill Hill ( 1 77) and Tim Gay ( 1 90). Williams defeated Mike Paynter of Appalachian, 6-3, Morgan shaded Fred Thursday night, did State in with 45 points. After bringing Auburn to a 38-38 halftime tie, he shot the Tigers into a 1 2-point lead. Center Paul Coder, scoring 26, and soph forward Rick Holdt drew the Wolfpack within two with six minutes and within four with 1 :35 remaining. Mengelt kept sinking the long shots and drawing the fouls when he needed to, and the Tigers prevailed. He sank 15 of 33 shots from the floor. John Roche and South Carolina drove to a 45-35 halftime lead, then held off the rallying Irish in the second half. Austin Carr, the man Notre Dame depends on probably a little too much, scored only six in the first half out ended up with 27. Roche had only eight field goals, but hit every one of his 16 field goal attempts. Notre Dame tied the game twice in the second game, but Tom Riker's fourth three-point play gave South Carolina the permanent lead. Temple had a 34-28 lead over Wake Forest at the half, with the Deacs shooting only 36 per cent. They came back to shoot 60 per cent in the second half and shut out Temple in the first five minutes. Wake won 71-55 with Charlie Davis scorine 34. DeLuxe United Artists SUN THRU TUES. SHOWS 1:00-3:00-5:00 7:00-9:00 Answer to Saturday's Puzzle HlOlPf 1SIAIFIE i 1PIAIR T JLi-f PLAN LJA L A R P ROMALLE V AT "J P E T A TTj AK It S E shr Q A TjM E A L St NiiISjNiL35lTA ALAS K A Tl E VEE S "IS TAI PL A LIME AIatTeTvi o usr P I G FTs T I o N Ik o b ANEW" E PIP A 1 1 R E MlESTsj jRlElE IsLiMIBlS 41 Sicilian volcano 43 Declared 44 Steamship (abbr.) 46 Part of "to be" 48 Tilting, as a cask 51 Kind of cheese 53 Arrow poison 57 Girl's name 58 A continent (abbr.) 60 Native metal 62 Exclamation 64 District Attorney (abbr.) Feature Syndicate, Inc. ) ME NOU'b THINGS ioe ' o Bauer, also of Appalachian, 3-2 in over-time, Spohn trounced ECU's Bruce Hall. 8-1, Hill flattened Paul Pratt of N.C. State, 7-2, while Gay surprised defending division champ Connie Hicks of State. Appalachian followed ECU with three divisional winners, as Herb Singerman (126) decisioned ECU's Dan Monroe, 4-2, Alan Thompson (158) flattened Jack Jacobs of Davidson, 6-1, and heavyweight Bruce Schlogel downed defending champion Ed Newman of Duke, 4-2. Rhode, who was voted the Outstanding Wrestler in last year's ACC tournament, was awarded the Joe Murnick Trophy as the top wTestler in Friday and Saturday's meet which attracted over 250 wrestlers from 16 North Carolini colleges and universities. Carolina's nost impressive showings came in trie 142-lb, 1504b and heavyweight divisions. In the 142-lb class, Tar Heel junior Dicky Rumley reached the quarter-finals before falling with 2:30 elapsed in his bout to ECU's Robert Corbo, who eventually finished second in the division. Carolina team captain Luther Gartrell rose to the semi-finals in the 1 50-lb class by virtue of his decisions over Frank Thompson of Appalachian and Elon's David Tew, but he was stopped 4-1 by eventual division winner Mike Spohn of ECU. UNC heavyweights Charley Sara and Craig Schinaman mounted serious challenges in their divisions before succumbing in the semi-finals. UNC coach Sam Barnes described the tournament as a sort of proving-grounds for his wrestlers, who were participating in their first meet of the year. As a result Barnes was not overly distressed by Ids squad's failure to capture a division championship, but instead seemed confident and optimistic. "I think we did pretty well," he stated, "considering the fact that we're so tournament green. Of the 16 boys that S3 '11 UXWII'Mn- Tl. llll ! I I M, m - - 3 NOW PLAYING l:15-3:4b-6:20-9:00 BARBARA STREISAND OMAR SHARIFF in .... ''FUNNY GIRL'" FOR YOUR CHRISTMAS LIST Scarce old books about the American West Scarce old books about North Carolina Scarce old books about the South Scarce Southern Fiction Scarce literary first editions Scarce old maps from 100 to 300 years years old Scarce old prints etchings, engravings and hand colored prints PLUS Quite a lot of old books that look expensive and aren't The Old Book Corner .137 A E. Rosemary St. Opposite NCNB Drive-In Window Open 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. 4 I ( THEM NOU bON'T) I I TRUE -Buf II I V rvlst K. FLO J IWANT i ira , -ri oLDtN'iTpii . Ls - : - 1 1 - i " -si-ll gHLj )' 11 - - - jpfe participated in the tournament, only three wrestled in last year's meet. We won 17 bouts and lost 21, and that's nea:!v .500." The tournament, which is the first of its kind in the ration, left Barnes more than satisfied. "The meet this year was even bigger and better than last year's." he claimed. "We had 50 more entries and four more schools and sold quite a few more tickets. It was a great success." The Tar Heels entertain tournament "winner" East Carolina next Saturday in their next meet and then travel to Williamsburg, Va. the following Wednesday to meet Southern Conference powerhouse William and Mary. Duke, State year's first Head football coach Bill Dooley was given a new four-year contract Saturday by recommendation of athletic director Homer Rice. Dooley's old pact had one year to go, but Rice recommended the new pact after Carolina's 8-3 season and 59-34 triumph over Duke in the last game of the year. The recommendation received the support and approval of the University Athletic Council and Chancellor J. Carlyle Sitterson. Terms were not disclosed for the new contract, which runs through 1974. The rebuilding job Dooley had before him in 1967 was unbelievable. The Tar Heels went 2-8 that year, beating Maryland and Duke, and 3-7 in 1968, upsetting Florida, Duke and Vanderbilt. MONDAY 7:00 l-VIIl FOB Y00. SHOP US AfJD SAUE SAVE 40c 15 BULBS Indoor Set SAVE 48c Ladies Fur Trim Bedroom SHOES Asst. Colors Reg. 2.37 9 Extra Special 200 Men's SHIRTS Values to $3.00 Closeout S-3 00 f Save 1.00 Claircl Instant Hair Setter Re3. 16.87 Mottel'l (Sare 66c) No. 1 TD nnni! nn nirr" nifP t I oKi'i Tree M 42? I sl59 fi Reg. 1.W j e !9 K i ? A J K 0 f S 98 V -X A'A rXJi by Howie Can Sp rrs Wnrcr The Carolina swimming team defeated South Carolina 5-54 Saturday, to record ihird siraidit victory of the season. The Tar Heels jumped off to a quick -0 lead by winning the 400-yard medley relay with a team of Butch Bristow. Rich Williams, Jim Osborne, and Mike Rawleigh. Jike Southard won the 1000-y.ird freestyle as he turned in a 10:36.6 time, and Pete Barnes took second to stretch Carolina's lead to 15-1. suffer upsets The first signs of a powerhouse came in '69, when the Tar Heels won four of their last five games to finish 5-5. Then came this year's S-3 season, with four straight wins at the beginning and the end. The Peach Bowl invited the Tar Heels to play in Atlanta Dec. 30 against Arizona State, after Carolina humiliated Duke Nov. 21. Highlights of Dooley's career so far include three wins in four tries over Duke and a 5-3 record against the Southeatern conference. After making All-SEC as a guart at Mississippi State, Dooley served as an assistant at his alma mater. He travelled on to George Washington and Georgia, where he was the head offensive coach under his brother Vince. ALPHA EIPSDLOM DEtLT INITI 226 SAVE $5.88 7 Ft. Scotch Pine TREE J" ffiSww k i Stand rx TT I " v Xmas If Mattel's DOLL DflBY S'IJ'028 II J i ( 7 X Gamecovk Glenn Spear outdistanced Bob Nagle to win the 20O-yarJ ireestvk with a 1:51 time, foole of South Carolina was thud. CSC also took first arid third ii the 50-yard freestyle, a Trond W-JIums finished ahead of Tar Heel Bruce Wjgo to trim UNCslead to 21-13. Sophomore Gerry Chapman and freshman George Schiafftno gave Carchru a more comfortable 2M4 advantage ai they swept the 200-yard medley uh times of 2:063 and 2:07.2, respectively. The one-meter dicing was won by South Carolina Bob Mayfield. who finished with 24S.95 points. Carohni captain Chuck Humphrey was a close second with 241.75, while Gameco Moffat trailed with 227.5. Tar Heels Dave Bedell and Osborne finished eight-tenths of a second apart as they swept the 200-yard butterfly. At this point Carolina held a commanding 40-21 lead. With a :4S.7 time, USC's Williams won his second event of the afternoon, the 100-yard freestyle. Wigo and Glenn Garelia took the next two places. Warner of South Carolina outswam Phil McMunigal and Bristow to finish first in the 200-yard backstroke. His time was 2:09. In the 500-yard freestyle. Spear 5:04.1 time was enough to assure him of his second victory of the day, over Tar Heels Chapman and Southard. Although the 200 yard breaststroke was won by Weinzeitle of USC, the second- and third-place finishes of Williams and Mike Eddy moved Carolina to within one point of victory at 56-41. The three-meter diving results were identical to the one-meter scores: Mayfield, Humphrey and Moffat in the top three slots. Humphrey's second place gave UNC an insurmountable 59-47 lead with one event left. A Med. School fg3 Paper by Marcel 'Reg. 54c s-aco QJ Xmas Wreaths All Styles For Your Door One S432 UP SAVE 74c Merry Midg Lite Set Reg. 2125 1.99 U Children's Record Player 45 RPM MATTEL-0-PHONE Reg. 7.96 7 ci ct roiccVf 4 ej) DOLL with Hair f!20 that grows Reg. 9.97 - 1 PESTONE ANTI-FREEZE SAVE 33c (Save 66c) No. 2 DOLL TEfJDEO LOUE 50! f .VI 1