Newspaper Page Text
Tuesday, Dec. 10, 1968 Griffin Daily New*
Tar Heels Clobber
Vanderbilt, 100-78
By United Press International I
North Carolina’s rivals can :
forget it if they think the Tar 1
Heels are a one-man basketball 1
team.
Olympian Charlie Scott mono- i
polized the headlines as North
Six Pro Football
Officials Barred
NEW YORK (UPD—Six foot
ball officials who deprived the
Los Angeles Rams of a down in
the last minute of a crucial
National Football League game
with the Chicago Bears Sunday
have been told they will sit out
the one remaining week of the
season—plus any post-season
games.
Pro football commissioner
Pete Rozelle barred the six
from further action in a
Statement Monday that said
•‘officials erred In not permit
ting Los Angeles one more
down near the end of the
game.”
Chicago won, 17-16, keeping
its hopes for a Central Division
title alive and eliminating the
Rams from championship con
tention in the Coastal Division.
A penalty against Los Angeles
on the first down of its final
aeries nullified an incomplete
pass play. Following three
additional Incomplete passes,
Rozelle said, ‘‘the ball was
turned over to Chicago, thus
depriving Los Angeles of a
fourth down play to which it
Wright Earns
Soccer Numerals
At DePauw
Jeffrey Wright, a graduate of
Griffin High School in Griffin,
has earned freshman soccer nu
merals at DePauw University,
Greencastle, Ind.
Wright was one of 109 DePauw
student-athletes honored at the
university’s annual fall sports
banquet. The principal address
was delivered by James Jeffrey,
Kansas City, Mo., executive dir
ector of the Fellowship of Chris
tian Athletes.
DePauw’s JV team, on which
Wright played, had an undefea
ted season while the varsity sq
uad finished 6-2-2, including vic
tories over Indiana, Purdue, and
Indiana State.
Wright is the son of Dr. a n d
Mrs. Orville L. Wright, 1109 Ma
ple drive, Griffin.
49er Reserves
May Play
Falcons Sunday
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) —
Coach Dick Nolan wants to play
his reserves if possible when
the San Francisco Forty-Niners
call on Atlanta in the final
game of the season next Sun
day.
He Indicated that he wanted
to get a better chance of figur
ing out his personnel for next
aeason and Indicated he plan
ned several winter trades.
He said an injury to strong
safety Alvin Randolph hurt the
team. Mel Phillips had to
change to the unfamiliar job
from his free safety spot with
Johnny Fuller taking over at
free safety.
Imperial
Today and Wednesday
Double Feature
(G)
CLiriT EaSTWOOD
IN COLOR far ■stare I
A UNIVERSAL PICTURE
IRIS DRIVE-IN
Today and Wednesday
Double Feature
(R)
“THEYOUNGJHE
EVIL AND THE
SAVAGE”
“THE WILD
EYE”
Carolina, the nation's second
ranked college team, won its
first three games of the season
but the Tar Heels proved
Monday night that they have
other stars who can rise to a
tough occasion.
was entitled.”
Rams coach George Allen
viewed films of the game in Los
Angeles Monday and agreed his
team should gave gotten anoth
er down, but he had nothing to
say for publication. Public
criticism of game officials is
against NFL rules, and Wash
ington coach Otto Graham
recently was fined $2,500 by
Rozelle for saying “the officials
stole the game from us.”
Los Angeles was on its own
47-yard line, with five seconds
left in the game, when the ball
was given to Chicago after the
penalty and three incomplete
passes. It had 31 yards to go for
a first down but could have had
one more chance to throw a
“bomb” or attempt a field goal,
which would have come from
some 60 yards away.
HAMILTON ON LOAN
NEW YORK (UPD—Rookie
Defenseman Allan Hamilton, 22,
was assigned by the New Yorx
Rangers Monday to their
Buffalo farm club of the
American Hockey League on a
loan basis.
QUARRY GETS CHANCE
NEW YORK (UPD—Terry
Brenner, Madison Square Gar
den matchmaker, announced
Monday that he has offered
Jerry Quarry of Los Angeles a
shot at Joe Frazier’s version of
the world heavyweight title
prviding Frazier gets by Oscar
Bonavena in their Tuesday
night championship fight.
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5
Trailing Vanderbilt 40-39 at
halftime in Charlotte, N.C.,
North Carolina out-scored the
Commodores 61-38 in the final
20 minuses to raise its season
record to 4-0. Leading the
comeback with 22 points each
were Dick Grubar and Bill
Bunting with Rusty Clark
adding 18 and Scott contributing
a modest 14.
Tom Hagan scored 23 points
for Vanderbilt, which led during
most of the first half and at one
point was ahead 29-21.
Kansas, ranked No. 10, scored
a 79-56 victory over Xavier of
Ohio but Duke, No. 12, suffered
a 90-80 loss to Michigan.
Kansas, refusing to panic in
the face of Xavier’s full-court
press, led 36-24 at halftime,
forced 28 turnovers with its own
zone press and out-rebounded its
rival 49-38. Phil Harmon had 16
points and Jo Jo White 15 as the
Jayhawks scored their third
victory in four games.
Unranked Michigan handed
Duke its first loss of the season
with a fast-breaking offense
paced by Rudy Tomjanovlch’s
29 points and Mark Henry’s 20.
Duke closed to within three
points early in the second half
but Tomjanovich, Henry and
Dennis Stewart rallied the
Wolverines to a 63-52 lead.
Dayton, which shares the No.
18 ranking ■with two other
teams, breezed to a 53-34
halftime lead and trounced
Portland 95-76. Dan Sadlier
scored 18 points and Jim
Gottschall had 17 for the Flyers,
the National Invitation Tour
nament winners last March.
Bill Voight’s 22 points led
Southern Methodist to an 81-70
triumph over Southern Illinois;
6-10 center Cliff Parsons had 19
points and 19 rebounds as Air
Force downed Arkansas State
76-58; LaSalle pulled gradually
away in the second half to
defeat Rider 79-59; Gene
Williams scored six points in
the overtime period as Kansas
State beat Indiana 87-83 and
Don Adams’ 22 points led
Northwestern over Colorado 83-
66 in other games.
SPORTS
Gobblers, Rebels
Prepare For
Liberty Bowl
BLACKSBURG, Va. (UPD —
Quarterback Al Kincaid re
turned to the Gobblers Monday
as Virginia Tech and Mississip
pi worked to patch up battered
teams for the Liberty Bowl
game Saturday at Memphis.
Tech coach Jerry Claiborne
said it was Kincaid’s first full
workout since he received a se
vere Charley horse in the South
Carolina game Nov. 16.
Leon Felts, who suffered a
broken jaw against Mississippi
State, is expected to play for
Mississippi but defensive back
Ray Heidel and wingback Vern
on Studdard, both with injured
hands, are questionable.
Rebel coach John Vaught said
injuries to his sophomore-laden
team made the task difficult.
"Virginia Tech is tough,"
said Vaught. “That bunch has
changed from what they were
doing the first part of the year.
They’re a different football
team now.”
LIONS DRILL
UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa.
(UPD—Penn State’s Nittany
Lions, who won the Lambert
Trophy as the East’s best
major college football team,
will open drills for their Orange
Bowl clash with Kansas on Dec,
21 in West Palm Beach, Fla.
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212 S. 11th Street
UCLA Has No Equal
In College Basketball
By JOE CARNICELLI
UPI Sports Writer
NEW YORK (UPD—UCLA
has no equal In college
basketball.
That's the decision voiced
today by the 35-member United
Press International Coaches
Board, which unanimously listed
the Bruins as the top college
basketball team in the nation.
UCLA, defending NCAA
champion and unbeaten in three
games this season, beating
some of the nation’s leading
powers, received the maximum
350 points in the first week’s
balloting for games played
through Sunday.
North Carolina captured se
cond easily, taking 31 of 35
second place votes and amass
ing 309 points and outdistancing
Davidson (No. 3) by close to 140
points.
Kentucky was fourth, New
Mexico was ranked fifth and
Villanova was listed in sixth.
Notre Dame took the No. 7
ranking, followed by Cincinnati,
Purdue and Kansas.
St. Bonaventure led the
second 10, edging Duke and
Houston. Western Kentucky was
14th, followed by Santa Clara,
New Mexico State and Detroit.
Ohio State and Dayton tied for
18th and Southern California
completed the top 20 listing.
UCLA, seemingly better than
ever, rolled past Purdue, Ohio
State and Notre Dame, three
teams ranked in the top 20,
easily in its first three games.
The Bruins, with a talented
array of sophomores joining
awesome Lew Alclndor, back
for his final collegiate cam
paign, had little trouble, with 11
points their lowest winning
margin.
North Carolina, favored to
sweep the Atlantic Coast
Conference, put together back
to-back victories over Oregon
before stopping Kentucky. Da
vidson, also 3-0, stopped Virgi
nia Military, Furman and
Vandervllt while Kentucky beat
Xavier and Miami (Ohio) before
bowing to North Carolina.
New Mexico, also unbeaten in
three games, holds a pair of
decisions over Hawaii and a
victory over Abilene Christian
while Villanova, picked by
many as the top team in the
East, recorded triumphs over
DePauw, Princeton and Phi
ladelphia Textile.
Sophomore studded Notre
Dame (1-1) turned in an
impressive performance in los
ting to top ranked UCLA while
Cincinnati won its three games,
BLUES BOWL
MEMPIS, Tenn. (UPD—A
Negro group headed by Mem
phis businessman H. A. Gilliam
Jr., asked the NCAA extra
events committee Monday to
sanction a post season “Blues
Bowl” football game which
would always involve a predom
inately Negro school as one
of the teams.
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beating South Dakota, Kansas
State and North Dakota State.
Purdue followed up its open
ing loss to UCLA with triumphs
over North Dakota and Miami
(Ohio) while Kansas (2-1)
sandwiched victories over St.
Louis and Loyola (Ill.) around a
loss to Wisconsin.
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Three Senior
Loop Practice
Games Tonight
The practice games nave been
scheduled for tonight in the Se
nior Boys Basketball League at
the Community Center in City
Park.
The Beavers and the Vols will
play at 7 o’clock. The Sixty-Nin
ers and the Trojans will play
at 8 o’clock and the Knickerboc
kers and the Road Runners will
see action at 9 o’clock.