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IN THE BUCKET ... In thet air, ball in handl, is South (Caroliuna's G;rady Wallace, No. 34. Surrounding Wallace are four of Dhuke Univer sity's potent Blue Dev is. UJnder the~ hoards for Carolina is No. 31, Art Smejkal, and rushing in fromt the side4 is Lece C:ollins, No. 35. W'allace, leading team scorer with a 21.5 average, accounted for 20 markers in the Gameccocks' 63,52 loss to the numiber six team ini the nation. MARYLAND DEFENSE WORKS . .. Hennv F"annin's attempt was blocked by two Maryland defentders Monday nuight ini a 59-53 conference loss to the Terrapins. Forwards Grady Wallace anid Art Snejkal watch the play. Intramural Roundup Friday the 13th wvill be "black" ute and a half, leading a highly F"riday for either Sigma Nu or jfavored Sigma Nut squad 6-0, only Sigma Alpha Epsilon but both are to see an alert Phil Moody inter keeping many fingers crossed as cept a Fletcher Carter pa0ss on his they are slated to clash for the fra- own two-yard line and struggle 68 ternity championship -then, game yards to the KA 10-yard line. Then time scheduled for 4 p. m. wvith time rapidly running out, SA E labeled themselves as solid Preston WVhaley calmly spotted Jim favorites to defend their title for Emery and fired down the middle the second straight year as they frtetcn cr.Wt ra blasted an undefeated Sigma Chi axeycepn vravr ag team by the score of 19 to 0. Buzzycrw as)themslndu fo Carmichael's boys scored the first tt r o h xr on,qatr time the ball was in their posses- hc mr aldtergtpa sion arnd completely outclassed the a ern urysipdotit losers from then on.thfltadnreaWaey)5 Iloyall Interceptsfothl)itadvcry Bob Royall intercepted a ChtarlieThmsSoe Rosson pass early in the first Gog hmshdlu ap period and this erupted a spiritedAlhouinfnteryntefrs SA E squad. Behind the brilliantpeodahem easeccur passing of Charlie Jacocks and ter-cahofal5 fo.ethrC rific line play of Shell Suber and trfrterol cr,tepa Gary Banks, the winners marched cvrn prxmtl 5yrs to their first touchdown. The lastTomswsutaniglldys 23 yards was covered by a Jacocks- wsE uln n Telmsi to-Carmichael scoring pass play. teK ie Apeetdahr Just minutes before the first halfchriglnalafronwih ended, Jacocks sprinted seven yards kp h im i asrofbl to score, giving SAE a 12 to 0 leadaneTiendtm agnwhnt at halftime. The second half turnedsemdaifteN'wretr into a bitter defensive strugglein a rveth hulngK' with tempers flaring on numerouswolbeathritpacatte occasions. SAE managed to get a rgttm n tpi.I a drive going late In the fourthveytuhgm tolsbtte period and with only seconds left, lsr a evr rulo h Jacocks passed to Larry Ford for ~enpa hydslyda i the final score. The try for point SgaN nsc ls aea after touchdown was good and i undott e nlavr m SAE had just earned themselves a pratoea ht berth in the finals with Sigma Nu who had earlier defeated K A. Not denett only will SA E be gunning for the Inpnetplyigogrgh championship In this game but willdontth wie hsweka be trying to protect their outstand-reuashdldgmsaestl Ing feat of not having been scored bigpae.Cafr' l-tr on in two consecutive seasons.. rmi neetdi egepa Sigma Nu-KA terncs utwiigo lp The Sigma Nu-Kappa AlphaBoRol,inam -lofca,hs game will long be remembered byiniaeththewoopemsn both teams. Kappa Alpha could be teIdpnetLau ilpa classed as the "Cinderella Team" of Mna,Jnay1,frtecan the playoffs as they presented nopinh.IntevnthaPrso great stars but a well balanced, sol i vrteSas nte spirited and fighting team that gm ol encsayt e gav al Ithaduntl te fnalm k Emer yh winner.h igtpa USC Play By Bill Atkinson Sports Writer South Carolinas cage five round out two rugged weeks of basketball among ACC competition with a game versus UNC tonight, to be played in the new Charlotte Coli seumn. The Tarheels previously downed Carolina, 92-75, in Chapel Hill. Wednesday, Jan. 18, the, Game cocks face the likes of Clemson in the USC field house, in what should be a royal battle. Carolina dropped its holiday 'Gator Bowl championship bid to this arch rival and Coach Frank Johnson figures his team's best chance to avenge looms on the home court. Clemson, however, will be in the role of favored. The loss at Jacksonville was Carolina's first at the hands of the Tigers since 1952. Clemson Improved When the Gamecocks strike out from the dimness of the conference cellar against Clemson, they'll be meeting what is generally conceded the most improved team in the ACC. Sophomores Vince Yockel, Tom Cameron and Gene Seay are the difference between Clemson's 1954-55 won-lost record of 2-21 and this season's 6-7 record-in-progress. Tonight's game is the second ap pearance of the season in Charlotte for the Gamecocks. They carry a won-lost record of 4-8, including one 84-83 loss to Virginia last week. Carolina had edged the Cavaliers, 70-69, in Columbia on the eve of Christmas holidays, a thriller that was decided in the final seconds of play. , The 84-83 defeat was also a product of the last 15 seconds, when guard Bobby McCoy, aftor laying up at field goal, missed a foul hot that would have dead locked the score and probably sent the game into an overtime. Wallace Off Scoring leader Grady Wallace fell somewhat off his mark in last week' Maryland game at College Park. He hit for a scanty seven points--while the team itself con nected on only 24 per cent of its shots. Lee Collins' 16 points was high. But on Monday night the highly rated Terrapins had no guarantee of :a victory until the final sixty seconds, when with a six-point mairgin Coach Bud Millikan's team extended its control tactics to pass ing and dribbling while the clock Young en, Richard C. Shafer, B.S. in mechanic was one of 1 6 engineers assigned to toughest post-war projects - develoj niques for mass-producing (with green amazing transistors which are alread~ electronics. Paul J. Gebhard, B.S. M.E. at the Univ of Maryland, was one of a team that h develop Western's new electrofor process for coating steel telephone with copper, lead and brass in one co ous operation. His job: to develop conc resistance-annealing equipment and e0< lyte fltration and circulating systems Bobby L. Pettit (at right), an E.E. from* A. & M., is one of several hundred mem of Western Electric's Field Engineering I These F.E.F. men can be found all ovn world -- working most closely with the Navy and Air Force -advising on thei lation, operation and maintenance of 5'UNC Ant ticked off. Birds Lead Grady Wallace was the first to score for the Gamecocks, and they were in the lead or tied for the better part of that point-for-point ball game. Halftime score was 29 28 in favor of the home team. The turning point was at 6:30 in the second period, when two foul shots by Terp guard Sandblower broke a 49-49 tie. Collins left the game on fouls at the four-minute mark, and Mary land was -able to widen its margin from two to six points and pre serve the victory. High scorer for both teams was Wallace who had 21 points, his average. Lee Collins scored 14 points and 15 rebounds. The partisan crowd of 2,000 wasn't particularly pleased at all times with Maryland's lonesome style of controll ball. And a number of the officials' calls in the second period were loudly protested. At one point, a light rain of wadded paper came down- from stands. Duke Wins Duke, the nation's No. 6 team, RUSSELL HOUS Breakfast COFFEE BREAK COFFEE, MILK, CEREALS . Lunch Dinner RUSSIA and the IRON CUR YOUR urnmmer trav SCANDINAVIA : 1 BUCHAREST BUF MUNICH PAR All inclusiv( For detailed infa Ken Ste Georgetown Washingtoi ineers mal at 7est ern goes 'way telephon< serv'ice. I importan pooling o skills. New ni mlegneig tLhg, ethiods oneof estrnEletri's produce 1 in anufcturng tch- tral office y causing a revolution in cablles, 1n mnent to ever- grov~ utfactuarin Systemn, 3l duicing in mnent for t young en doing imT with the x trol systc and spcC systems. Write for be Electric." C4 195 Broad; ersity ... alped ming wire rexas nbers orce. ir the irmy, nstal- P .Ecrn Clemson lefeated Carolina on Tuesday night, 63-52, in a comparatively low-scoring battle. Once again, the ,;amecocks took an early lead and held until 4:30 remaining in the rirst period. The Blue Devils then Look over once and for all. Carolina threatened in the sec mnd period, moving within seven )oints at one time. Grady Wallace ;cored 20 points to head Carolina, (nd Collins had 17 rebounds. Basketball Schedule Jan. 29-Virginia Tech at Co lumbia Jan 31-Furman at Columbia Feb. 3-The Citadel at Co lumbia Feb. 5-Miami at Miami, Fla. Feb. 11-Wake Forest at Wake Forest, N. C. Feb. 12 - North Carolina State at Raleigh, N. C. E CAFETERIA 7:00-9:00 9:00-11:00 FIIIJIT JXl1WE. I'ASTRY 11:00-2:00 5:30-7:00 TAIN Countries can be in pl plans for 1956 ;USSIA (4 weeks) APEST : VIENNA IS : I)NDON : $1,930.00 rmation write: inbeck University a,D. C. dng news Electric's primary job)-whichl back to 1882-is to make good equipment that helps Bell companies providIe good t's a very big joh)-andl a very one-which calls fo the f varied types of engineering anuifactuiring processes and( are constantly requ ired to >etter telephontes, better ceni equipment, better wires andl 'aw types of electronic equip keep pace with the nation's /ing need for more and b)etter service at low cost. tion to doing our job as man g unit of the Bell Telephone Vestern Electric is buisy pro my types'of electronic equip he Armed Forces. HeIre again, gineers of varied training are portant work in connection nanuifacture of radar fir.e con mns, guided missile systems ial military communications okiet "Your Opportunit y at Western ~llege Relations Dept. Room 1029, vay, New York 7, N. Y. Carolina Loses Beat Georgia I South Carolina took a double de feat in the championship game of the 'Gator Bowl during Christmas holidays. The Gamecocks wound up on the bottom end of a 94-87 score, and on the top end happened to be Clemson, a collegg from another part of the state. Both the Birds and Tigers washed hands of Southeastern Con ference competition-without much trouble-in the first round of play, in Swisher Gymnasium of Jackson ville Junior College. Carolina put a quick stop to the University of Georgia's mild win bid, taking a 15-8 lead in the early minutes. Georgia's first tally came after the game had been in prog ress three minutes. Halftime score was 40-28. Forward Grady Wallace hit good on 10 of 22 goal attempts, and three free throws, to take scoring honors, and the team as a whole sunk 34 of 77 attempts. Big Lee Collins once again controlled ARROW I 1209 ( 1631 ( Quality 3-Hour 4 1-Day I Press Whi ' Hats 2 or noi Suits 1-day s Suits 2-day a (Author of "B ADVENTURES IN S04 Doff your caps and bells; ther day. Today, with earnestness an of our forays into social scient basic of all the social sciences Sociology teaches us that mar instincts or his heredity that d environment. This fact is vividl any of the several cases of childr mals. Take, for example, the dos Julio, abandoned as an infant was adlopted by a pack of wild < own. When .Julio was found by a poor child was more canine tha barked and growled, ate raw mea andI could neither speak nor ui short, he was a complete produc ... e u& a cOuplete p,0 - (.Julio, incidentally, was more dIren. They never become truly b tionial. Bit by bjt, he began to ta as plell do. His long dormant mi at last, turned out to be remarl bright that he learned to read an grammar school in five years ar JuneW. as thousands of spectator I ground, stood and cheered, he wi 'al Tech with a degree in astrc < Who can say to what toweri wouli have risen had he not been ment while chasing a car?) But i digress. To return to soci groupjs-a tendency that began, dluction of Philip Morris Cigare they, are ! How benignly one lool of Philip) Morris's gentle, pleasar it makes one to share, to comm friendship! H-ow grateful we all inig possible this togetherness! Ii )pe-Philip) Morris world, with es The groups that people live in I :ary widely in their customs. V one society may be outlandish in 'ase of Ug Poopoomoogoo. Ug, a Polynesian lad, grew L whiere the leading social event of he sun godl. A qulaint all-day c daninmg, war chants, fat ladyr for the grandl finale, the sacrific According to Ug's folkways, arrep'ltable, but when in his eigh exebanige studient to the Universi hat A mericanis take a (him view at any rate. The first twelve ori lie was let off with a wvarning. WI tic mieasu res were taken-he wa A broken man, Ug quit school a today he earns a meagre living This coiumna, Is brought to you Cigarette-s, who are othe'rwise. rat To Tigers; [n Bowl the backboards in his best job of the season -- 25 rebounds. Clemson's Billy Yarborough gave another not-too-hot per?ormance in the final game with Carolina, but Vince Yockel's 31-point job gave Carolina a glimpse of what is part of the Tigers' 'new look." The Gamecocks, paced by Wallace and Bobby McCoy, kept matters in hand during the first half, and when the halftime buzzer sounded they held a 44-42 edge. The margin in the second half fluctuated, with Caro-Q lina holding a flimsy lead. And it remained close after the tide had turned. Clemson began to inch away when first Collins and then .Wallace fouled out in the final minutes. Wallace scored 20 points, while McCoy had 21 and. Collins 15. Dave Neilson, who has been shift ing at one of the forward positions with Marshall Perkins, and has looked good despite his sub role, shared rebound honors with Lee Collins. Each had 17. LEANERS ervais rervais Always _leaning aundry le-U-Wait re $ .36 each ervice $ .90 ervice $ .72 arefoot Boy With Cheek," etc.) IAL SCIENCE: NO. 2 e will be no fun and games this d sobriety, we make the second e. Today we take up the most sociology itself. is a social animal. It is not his etermine his conduct; it is his y borne out when one considers en who were raised by wild ani sier on ,Julio Sigafoos. in a dark wood near Cleveland, logs and reared as one of their hunter at the age of twelve, the n human, lie ran on all fours, .t, lapped water with his tongue, riderstand one single word. 'In t of his environment. t of bIu et iO"?ti '... fortunate than most wild chil umanized, but Julio was excep ilk and walk and eat and drink ental processes, when awakened ably acute. in fact, he was so d write in a month, got through d high school in two. And last s, knowing Julio's tragic back 5 graduated valedictorian from physics! *ng heights this incredible boy killedl the (lay after commeno ology, people tend to gather in as we all know, with the intro ttes. What an aid to sociability Ca upon his fellows after a puff t, flavorful tobacco! How eager unicate, to extend the hand of are to Philip Morris for mak ow good not to live in the bleak f lery man a stranger! oday (thanks to Philip Morris) Vhat is perfectly acceptable in another. Take, for instance, the ~p in an idyllic South Sea isle the year was the feast of Max, eremony was held, with tribal aces, pie eating contests, and, 3 of two dozen maidens. sacrificing maidiens was quite teenth year he was sent as an ty of Wisconsin, he soon learned of this p)ractice. -in Wisconsin, ~hirteen maidlens Ug sacrificed, en, however, he persisted, dras a de-pledged by his fraternity. nd moved to Milwaukee where as a stein-. @Iai Shulman, 1955 .by he miaere of Phlip Morri. joinal m,ene. Aak for new PhaJUp