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Toni Hoffertih Birds En With Wa Carolina's Gamecocks close out their regular basketball season tonight against Wake Forest's Demon Deacons in the Field House at eight o'clock. The Gamecocks managed to hold the Deacs' All-American candidate, center Dick Hemric, to a mere 13 points when the two clubs met at Wake Forest two weeks ago, but Lefty Lowell Davis took up the slack with 31 points and the Deacons managed a 90-81 victory. Coach Frank Johnson used a 2-3 zone to stop Hemric last time. le had 6-7 center Lee Collins under the basket flanked by Toni Hofferth and Joe Smith and used Woody Preston and Benny Fan nin on the outside, letting them |Baseball Pra Prospect Is Practice began about two weeks ago for the Gamecock baseball team, said Coach Fred Petoskey. The work is being done at the Veteran's Hospital baseball field. The defense will be good this year and if the hitting comes through the team should have a pretty good season, said Petoskey. Hleywa rd Tunstall, who was elected by his teammahItes as cap tain, and his twin brother, How ard, will be back to pitch this year along with John Cooley, Delance l'oston, anid Hilly Frierson. New p)itchers are Harold Lewis, Tom my Van Keuren and Richard Hughes. Al Spots, Buddy Stewvart and Jimmy Cox wvill not he back this year. Cox, who was the catcher, Tank men Lose To Duke 62-20; State Meet Here Duke University's swimming team defeatedl South Carolina 62 to 20 Saturday afternoon in the Carolina pool. The Duke team took all 10 first places. Len Baranski was high scorer for Carolina with two second places in individual events and swvam a leg on the 4100-yard free style relay. The state meet will be held here on March 5. The teams en tering are Carolina, Clemson, Citadel andi Wofford. Wofford is entering this meet for the first time. "It wvill probably be a good race between Clemson and The Citadel," says Jimmy Ratliff, the Gamecock coach. The Citadel won last year when they wvere the host for the meet. The season wvill endl with the Conference meet at the Univer sity of North Carolina on March 10, 11 and 12. 300-yard met.dley relay -I. lDuko (Robens, Ke'nason, Sei,del). 2. USC (Ilardee, Camp bell, L.efferts). 3:23.6. 220-yard freestyle- I. llattler (Db) 2. Kemiphier (I)b 3. Turner (USC); 2:33.7. 50-yard freestyle' 1. StMMillan (Db; 2. Barber (1Db 3. WVait (U'SC). 24.7. I150-yard hiiidul,,I medley- I. Fuller D)iving- 1. Newhe,rry IDb; 2. Barber (Db) 3. wa.Iter (USC). 100-yard frestyle I. DevWitt (Db; 2. lHaranski (USCh; 3. Lefferts (USCh; 56.3. 200-yard backstroke'- I. Ilobens (D)); 2. Ilard,'e (USCh; 2:37.6. 200-yard breaststroke I . Neilson (Dh) 2. Itagin (USC); 3. Cam,pbe*ll (USC). 2:51.0. 440-yard freestyIe--1. lIttler (D),- 2. Trurner (USCh; 3. KemplIer (D)) 5:46.5. 400-yard relay.- . Dukm1e (lto ,ens, Neil son, Fualler 1)ceWitt)g 2. U C (Lefferts, 4.~ Joe Smith LAST GAME HERE ... These their last home game tonight wh Demon Deacons in the Field House game for the Gamecocks. Joe Smi bounder and steady scorer from I probably get back in the starting li season following a sprained ankle. d Season ke Forest drop back on Hemric and keeping the middle jammed. However, Wake has four good outsidc shots in Davis and Mau rice George at forward and soph guards Jackie Murdock and Ernie Wiggins. Davis has an uncanny jump shot which he shoots with his body bent way back and it's almost impossible to block. George has been leading the Atlantic Coast Conference much of the season in shooting percentage but is usually reluctant to shoot. Murdock and Wiggins are both consistant from outside. Hofferth will be starting his 100th game tonight for Carolina and Johnson has announced he will probably start Jackie Huf ford at the other guard spot in otice Begins; rood will be replaced by Dick Theusen or Buddy Frick. Ton Hofferth will be back at first. Bob Cross is a new boy who looks pretty good at first and has been hitting the ball well. At second base is Buddy Lee and Rod Turner, who looks like a fair hitter. Frank Ellerbe will be at shortstop and Ben Brooks at third. The outfield will probably be Jim Jarrett in left, Bill Wohrman in center, and Jack Cantey, a junior college transfer, in right. yo million times a day at home, at work or on the way There's nothing like a 1. SO BRIGHT IN TASTE... nothing like It for sparkling, rangy goodness. 2. SO QUICKI.Y REPRESHING nothing like It for a bracing bit of energy, with as few calories as half an average, juicy grapefruit. BOTTLE UNMER AUTHO9ITY Of Maha'' is astenred ardm.... Jackie Hufford three Gamecocks will be playing mn Carolina meets Wake Forest's . It will be Tom H1offerth's 100th Ii is team captain and a top re Is forward position. Ilufford will neup after being out much of the Here Tonight place of Fannin. Hufford is a senior and it'll be his last home game. He played first team last year and opened this season as a starter but severely sprained his ankle early in the season. Johnson says the ankle is okay now. Fannin, who has blossomed into a real scoring threat since break ing into the lineup, will still see a lot of action tonight. Smith, who played one of his finest games in scoring 31 points in last Saturday's overtime loss to Georgia Tech, will team with Preston at forward and Collins will oppose 11einric at center. Hemric and Collins are both listed at 6-6, but the Deacon's draft board lists him at 6-5% and Collins has been about an inch taller than any of his 6-6 oppon ents all year. And with Smith, Hofferth and Preston all listed at (-3, the Gamecocks will have a decided height advantage. Davis, a skinny 152-pounder, stands 6-2, George is 6-1 for the Deacons and neither guards hits the six-foot mark. Carolina, now 2-11 in confer ence play and 10-15 overall, will finish in seventh place regardless how tonight's game comes out. Coach Johnson says the team has shown a "lot of improvement" the last few weeks and hopes they can match the excellent game they played last time against the Deacons. That game was lost from the foul line, Carolina scor ing seven more goals from the floor than Wake. IECC-OACMAYB I .e u na.naeum Gamecocks A C C Indooi By DICK STRICKLAND I Gamecock Sports Writer South Carolina's trackmen de part today at noon for Chapel Hill, N. C., where they will com pete in the Atlantic Coast Con ference indoor meet tomorrow. t Coach Weems Baskin's cinder men, working under the handi cap of no regulation track, have been conditioning hard this semester for tomorrow's event. Dashmen Tommy Woodlee, Lar- J ry Patrick, Sonny Wilcher, and Don Whetstone will be the big guns for South Carolina in the dashes. The pace in these events will be murderous, remembering that Maryland, last year's indoor and outdoor champs, is again supposed to be loaded. Woodlee, who suffered a leg injury at last year's indoor meet, should go all the way this year. He recovered from last year's ailment to take first place in the 100 and 220-yard dashes at the state meet and the ACC outdoor meet. Wilcher, who also pulled a muscle in last year's Indoor Meet, will be one of the big contenders in the 440. He placed in the ACC outdoor meet last year. The middle-distance bid by South Carolina will be made by Fred Roberts and Dick Strick land. Roberts, who was also in jured in the Indoor Meet last year, should post a time that is under two minutes in the half mile. His best time last year was 1:55.5 (non-winning) in the half mile event at the ACC outdoor meet at College Park, Md. The distance runners will be Allen Inabinet, Johnny Reeves, Bernard Arant, and Chuck Hughes. Inabiinet, a much-im proved runner from last year should turn in a good showing for South Carolina. The mile relay team will most likely be Woodlee, Wilcher, Whet stone, and either Patrick or Roberts. South Carolina will be weakest in the hurdles where they lack suf ficient depth to be a real threat. Dbing the hurdling for them will be Jack Martin in the 120-yard UCKY DRC WHAT!S THIS? For IT'S EASY TO SEE that tU Tired anthropologist relaxii behind freshly dug-up fossi taste better to all sorts< for instance, prefer Lucki cording to the latest, greai survey. Again, the No. 1 re Luckies taste better. They first of all, because Lucky fine tobacco. Then, thai toasted to taste better. "It' the famous Lucky Strike pi up Luckies' light, good-tai to make it taste even bette fresher, smoother. So, enjo tasting cigarette . ; :Lucky WICKIES CLEANER, Fl *A.c,s, PRODUCt To Enter e Meet ligh hurdles and Don Whetstone n the 22(Y-lows. In the field events Carolina is igain weak in depth. Doing the vork in the field events will be roe Silas in the discus, Silas and tonnie Hicks in the shot put, rack Martin and Tom Collins in he high jump, Gene Berry and )on Clark in the broad jump, tichard Lockman in the pole rault, and Gene Berry and Dick 3artulski in the javelin. Maryland, North Carolina, and Duke are the teams to beat in he indoor meet. Maryland, who ,von last year by some 20 points s again favored. Duke's strong 3st asset lies in Joel Shankle, who ook last year's high and low iurdles, high jump, and broad jump. The Gamecocks should make Lhemselves known, but they might lack the depth to be a real threat in the final points race. CLUE With Music fron 5820 Noi Now Under Ne U. S. C. Stiulents n Catering to Parl For Reservatio $25 B We aive Thei in Sto We Have the Mlinialu Fred I L. G. BAL 1340 Senate Street IODLES WE V solution see paragraph below. 0e Droodle above is titled: ig with bettor-tasting Lucky L. No bones about it, Luckies >f people. College smokers, es to all other brands, ac est coast-to-coastest college ason for Luckies' wide lead: taste better, strike means tobacco is s Toasted" oces-tones ~ting tobacco ... . cleaner, y the better Strike. 1oo-yams I (FOR USE IN SK1 Annamae K< Montana State &ate L.acJZles... TASIE BENf IESHER, SMOOTH Birds Stop C14 Lose In Overt South Carolina won its second conference game of the year last Friday night by defeating Clem son 85 to 68 at the Field House. Carolina is now 2-11 in the con ference while Clemson has a 0-13 conference record. Both of Caro lina's wins were over the Tigers. The Gamecocks had a 20-10 lead midway of the first half, but it was cut to 36-29 at the inter mission. It was 60-41 midway of the second half. Coach Frank Johnson sent in an entirely new lineup with 4:21 left and a 72-50 lead. Woody Preston, a junior col lege transfer, was high man for the night with 22 points. Bill Yarborough, the Clemson star, was held to 21 points. He was fourth in the nation with a 27.8 average before the game. He hit 46 when these two teams played at Clemson. Center Lee Collins, Carolina's leading scorer, got 15 points, while Tom Hofferth and Benny Fannin got 14 each. I21 1 "The Shadows" -th Main w Management ,nd Guests Welcome 'e and Couples ns Call 4-9568 Your Official Ring 37 All Tax Included 10K Gold isy Direct from Manufacturer ek in B.S., A.B. L.L.B. re for Girls on Order Vilkins FOUR CO. Claire Towers Apartments EGOT'EM! REAR VIEW OF TINY! RABBIT MUJNCNING ON ENORMOUS CARROT .1. Leighton Crutcher University of Louisville BALD MAN BENINS FENICE AT UUNRISU Dave Fairbanks. Long Beach State College STUDENTS Lu1cky DrOOd are yours? W decitive t *o 67,r Ne' eDI lASN WRTNG) niversity II E R r-age r Ive mson 85-68: ime To Tech The Gamecocks took in 63 re bounds, as compared with 47 for the Tigers. Collins led the way with 19, and Hofferth, a 6-8 guard, grabbed 14. Clemson hit on 23 of 74 shots for 81 per cent, as compared with 36 of 90 and 40 per cent for the Gameroosters. Georgia Tech defeated Carolina 87 to 84 in an overtime Saturday night. Carolina beat the Engi neers in a close game on Woody Preston's last second shot when the two teams played at Tech. The game was close all the way through. With the score tied and about 45 seconds remaining, the Engineers froze the ball, hoping to get a shot at the basket or a foul just before the buzzer sounded. But it did not pay off and the game went into an over time. Joe Smith was high man for the night with 31 points, and Collins added 15. Bill Cohen was high for Georgia Tech with 24. Want to travel and study' abroad? Tako a university-sponsore4 tour via TWA this sumor and earn fuO cel&g* crded w"e you travel Visit the countries of your choice ... study from 2 to 6 weeks at a foreign university. You can do both on one trip when you arrange a university sponsored tour via TWA. 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