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The Flea Market GAMECOCK WANT AD 3BRassell Hese RATE Five ceats per werd with a Miimu ol 10 words. ERRORS If mtfled withi a three day. THE GAMECOCK wilt print a corrected ad without charge In the fellowing Fkeamarket section, OFFICE HOURS Monday, 2-5 p.m. Wednesday, 2-6 p.m. LOST AND FOUN) Lost since October 3 - gold ring with brown figuehead stone. Engraved band. Please call Larry at 77746. A reward is offered for the ring or information leading to its return. WANTED College girls to work as waitresses for national company. Full or part time, good pay, hours can be worked around school schedule. Apply in person Abner's Beef House, 1114 College Steet. Wanted: Typewriter, used, standard, 12" carriage, Mike Jackson, Box 38. 254-3270. Seamstresses wanted to hem dresses. Call 5676. Part time, $60 per week. 6 young college men. Must be married, over 21 and have a car. FOR S.-LE Bridal gown---Re-embroidered lace with cathedral mantilla. Size 10. $110, originally $200. 794-3505 after 5:00. SERVICES TYPING---Term papers and thesesi Reasonable. 256-8316 or 787-4642 after 5 p.m PERSONALS Wade: Champagne out of beer glasses, Scotch out of a wine glass, Ranch sour cream, and Christmas every week. We may be a bit eccentric, but NO ONE can say we don't have fun!!!!! Mae West, the second WOLF: Take your inflated ego and go crawl in a HOLE! To third floor WOLFPACK: What's the matter? We haven't heard you howling lately!!!! Slipping????? 8th &9th floors South. Wanted!! Three fleas. College degree required. Apply C-504 Bates House. 5 p.m.-9 Jp.m. To Crazy Bill and Mister Pooh: You all are chicken. Coke Footb Air Force 33 Auburn 35 Army 27 Arkansas 33 Citadel 26 Colgate 31 Cornell 26 Colorado 24 Cincinnati 19 ConnectIcut 19 Dartmouth 34 Duke 24 Davidson 26 Florida St.- 28 Georgia 24 Harvard 31 Houston 40 Iowa Kentucky 27 L.C.U. 24 Maryland 14 Miami, Fla. 31 Mississippi 28 MissourI 17 Michigan 33 Nebraska 28 North Carolina 26 Notre Dame 35 N. Carolina A&T 21 Ohio St. 40 Ohio U 14 Oklahoma St. 20 Purdue 31 chrdood 20 S. California 38 Syracuse 19 S.M.U. 24 Tennessee 31 Texas 28 .C.U.- 28 ane 20 Villanova 17 Virginia 20 W. Virginia 28 Yale 31 NATIONAL FOOTBALL LE Chicago 31 Dallas 1 Detroit 2 Green Bay 3 Los Angeles 3 Minnesota 3 Phuiladelphia 31 St. Louis 3 AMERICAN FOOTBALL LE Boston 2 Houston 2 Kansas City 3 New York 31 Oakland 2 Pred DRL TRADE PiKa ha Winning the title in leagu Kaps 6-0 to end the season Delta Thea in the first roi The winner of the fraterr Bowl, between the indepe on Nov. 20. Student gets with Five USC students have forme a, rhythmical gymnastics team. Kay Boss, Jennie Cox, Bet] Hook, Karen- Pratt and Helei Timmermans, sponsor, ari members of the team, who us hand apparatus such as hoops all Forecast Utah State Miss. State Oregon Rice Maine 2 Bucknell 2 Brown Kansas 2 Louisville 1 Rutgers Columbia Clemson E.Carolina1 V.P.I. I Florida 1 Princeton Tulsa Indiana Vanderbilt 11 Alabama II Miami,O. 1 Navy 1: Chattanooga2 Oklahoma 14 Illinois i: Iowa St. V.M.I. Pittsburgh2 Florida A&M 11 California 2 Wisconsin iF Bowling Green Kansas St. Michigan St.2 Furman Washington St. Arizona Texas A&M S. Carolina Baylor Texas Tech 21 Georgia Tech I Dayton Wake Forest Wm.& Mary Pennsylvania AGUE - NOVEMBER 9 Pittsburgh New Orleans A tlanta Baltimore2 San Francisco2 Cleveland2 Washington2 New York2 AGUE - NOVEMBER 9 Miami Cincinnati San Diego Buffalo Denver ictions by Monti's Sports Service VAK( -Art Ca rter uls in pass e number 1, PiKa downed Phi undefeated. Pi Kas will play Phi und of the football tournament. ity bowl will play in the Super -ndents and Fraternity winners gyvmnasts rhythumn d balls, wands, ribbons ropes, and clubs to perform routines to music. I "You work with balls and hoops I and do various types of leaps and dance stunts to music," said Miss Timmerman, sponsor of the ,group. This type of gymnastics, although new to the United States, originated in Europe around 1939. Since that time, rhythmic gym nastics has grown tremendously, to the point of progressing to a world championship in Hungry in 1963. The gymnastic's team has aledxie eosrto o and i Febrary t t Couther 13 numbes1 Pind ovw00edcahis undfeaed imras fell pla Phis n ftype oomaticsrisa"ealgont. need bowewil greay sil the Suer ndnt anyon Fraterited winnte team laenatsee balls,rwans, ribbon Wrdoes and7 8191). to permrieneis tocessary "You oracic with ball held hoops andedo vaiuesaypsoes andrdy 4:005:0 tpmen of gymtis oriinteainEuop arond 939 worlch Moi noHugrymin 122e Cliic or PhsiclEuct. Physical Edtien Covnto Dirit ctrs hcicue From The PRESS BOX By SCOTT DERKS Sports Editor While a great many people wander about mumbling, "I wish we d idn't have to go to Tennessee this week end, players like Pat Watson get riled. Suddenly the talk goes from "our team is doing great" to "they got beat" and front-runner fans just aren't very useful, he feels. During Paul Dietzel's Quarterback Show on Sunday afternoon, Watson issued a strongly worded impromptu speech to all the fans who felt the team should Just practice this week and forget the football game with Tennessee. "If you don't feel you can be with us In spirit," Watson said, "then just tune In the Clemson game." "Even though we lost to FSU," Watson said later, "we aren't quitters. We are going to Tennessee with the idea of winning and I just wanted the people to know that we were not front runners. According to Watson the team is looking forward to the contest. "There is no pressure on us. Besides, lots of people get beat by teams that aren't supposed to touch them." The last time the Gamecocks downed the Volunteers was in 1903. In the first meeting between the teams, USC clobbered Tennessee 24-0. The Volunteers have been taking revenge ever since. Though there have been two ties, the Vols have won four includihg a 27-19 affair in 1966. Coach Dietzel called the game, "A tremendous challange, they are a fine football team. They are so overpowering a team that it is often no contest." A look at statictics shows that Tennessee this year has scored 208 points while their opponents have racked up 57 points. Carolina scouting reports say that Tennessee's defense makes the team go but a 41 point scoring average is quite a threat to anyone. I" ~ ~ To Norman 4r Soth sqa for th seonAnna i1 eweer w3'r Repir BrTanchma Watson o' casesoppiningeogi Sout Caolia's aulDiezel Lions Club, began last year and hasbee nmedhea cachof he Gamecock defensive back Roy Don Reeves played in the first Sout sqad or he scon anual contest. Dietzel's assistants with Lion AmeicanBowlfootall the South squad will be coaches gamein Tmpa Fla. Ja. 3Darrell Royal of Texas, Charlie The ame sposord bythe Tate of Miami (Fla.) and Fran Curci of Tampa. Notre Dame head coach Ara cIew Le~3coach of the North and he will be assisted by Joe Paterno of Penn State, Bob Devaney of Nebraska and Walt Corey of Utah State. SwhPucaeTicket office Centr i reloca ted The University of South Carolina ticket office, Gamecock Club, business office and sports in formation offic - have moved into newly renovated and enlarged quarters at the Rex Enright Athletic Center in Columbia. The ~ ~-~ur'four divisions of the athletic department had operated from O~O temporary quarters since last May while the athletic annex building adjacent to the "Roundhouse" was enlarged and remodeled. Football recruiter Jesse Berry and head track coach John West, who assists % with recruiting, also occupy the new building. DuPre ties school record South Carolina placekicker Billy DuPre tied a school record for ~> most field goals in a season when he booted a 32 yarder against Florida State. The three pointer was DuPre's 6th of the season, tying the school mark set in 1965 by Jimmy Poole. Earlier this season, DuPre tied a 43 year old school record for longest field goal when he kicked a 47 yarder against Virginia Tech. The high .Elliott Borenstein ...and the low of it Even Head Basketball Coach Frank McGuire looks up to towering freshman player Danny Traylor. McGuire and freshman Kevin Joyce do seem somewhat concerned about the size tennis shoe Traylor takes...or is this a presentation? bill currie MOUTH of the SOUTH When Grandma was trying to teach daughter Sarah how to trap a husband, her admonition was: The surest way to a man's heart is through his stomach. This may be true, but it is a certainty that a man's age is best determined by his stomach just as a horse's years are computed by feeling of the wear and tear on his teeth. College athletes with those Greek god physiques tend to become pussle gutted and obese by the time they are twenty-five, and walking gobs of flaccid flesh at thirty. If you doubt this, take a close look at ninety-nine per cent of the professional football players in the world, and you'll see that hanging stomach pushing its way over the belt. Because the stomach has bogged down so many otherwise well qualified athletes, when one ma-nages to advance a few years and keep his stomach within reasonable bounds, he may expect to play on. If a miracle is wrought, and a man keep his belly flat, then he can be a star until his legs finally give out. That's the secret of Doug Moe, the former Tar Heel basketball great who is now, without question, the finest basketball player in the A BA. And, with the exception of some freakish folks who grow to unusual heights like Lou Alcinder, he may be the best in the country. At least it appears that he is among players of sizes within the range of normalcy. Moe is thirty-one, and that isn't exactly a kid. He has been the object of much speculation among the folks who have been watching him with the Cougars this fall. His spring is good, his speed superior, his eye unerring, and his hustle increasing. How come? How can it be? Well, the answer is his stomach is flat. Man, I don't mean sort of flat; I mean flat flat! You know, with wrinkles. As soona I saw his stomach in the dressing room, I ran out screaming to the guys along the press row: It's his stomach! That's his secret. Well, we have now accounted for Moe's tremendous physical prowess. It's all in his stomach. But what about the psychological benefits which accrue to the team with which he plays? The national press, literally crawling with dumbs as always, has spent the bulk of the new pro season talking about Rick Barry, playing or not playing. Barry was an unusual talent; emphasis on the ''was''. He is through. Long layoffs because of injuries and litigation have robbed him of his previous magic. The new fromt line headliner in the A BA has not got to be Moe. The guy was good in college. Perhaps better than that. But he was too quiet, too dead panned. Now, in his maturity, Moe is a floor leader, a coach within the game. Heisa personable fellow, with an easy smile, and the time to talk to folks off the floor. His teammates not only respect him; they like him. It's easy to respect a man of skill, but it isn't always easy to like him. Sooner or later this season, the foggy bottom boys who write bask etball are going to wake up and suddenly realize that Moe is a super star of gigantic propor tions. He always has been He has never played on any team that didn't win its division. He was just out of the country so long before he go it th AB ththspress clippings were forgotten. nd, everybody knows, a sports writer knows only what he reads from other sports writers. Well, if you're a sports writer, read it here, and maybe you can be among the first tstart being smart: Doug Moe Is THE man in the ABA