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C ~ ~ ~ ~ o Vo1eIng mntg th '. m thereu---"r USC All-Anlerica guard John Roche lays one In durini opening day basketball drills while John Rlbock, Bol Carver and Manny Traylor wait their turns. T' 4Tennessee Hills ran red with violence W; day the sheriff walked away From the lawl espgtygg A eHN FR ANKENHEIMER-EDWARP LEW15 Prdud.on ig* AM * MM M x il- selW hs &-Ac7atures A .. ...RITZ. er ignoi res aga CSS, however, has had plenty of time to think about the upcoming pickr as he has been locked in his room to escape the wrath of the USC football team. For some reason the footballers seem angry about last week's soothsayer column. Last week, 27-13-0.675. Including Stanford over Southern Cal. Overall 73-31-2.701. The USC bandwagon is finally rolling behind Tommy Suggs, Jackie Young, and a superb pass defense. Maryland's Terps are sixth in the ACC in total offense, whereas the USC defense ranks second. Maryland is yielding 329 yards a game to the opposition, while USC is averaging 382. Unfortunately, the Turtles will not get out of the way of the Gamecock wagon. USC 41, Maryland 9. Michigan State's anemic offense has yet to get untracked. If the Spartans think the past games were tough, Duffy's boys are in for a long afternoon, Michigan 28, MSU 0. UNC's Don McCauley had the second best game of his career in a losing cause to the Gamecocks. He was injured during the second half, but he is healthy for the Tulane game. UNC is ripe for a convincing win. Tulane is in the wrong place at the wrong time, UNC 24, Tulane 10. Georgia Tech's sophomore phenom quarterback, Eddie McAshan, has been in a rut since their opening game. Meanwhile, Auburn either leads the SEC or is tied in nearly every major category, both offense and defense. Thus the rut continues, Auburn 31, Tech 14. * 7-9 p.m. THE TH , BOB & ALICE A COLDV# Loving, br Joseph E Levine presents An Avce es Wibh Williom Smith Executive Producer Joseph E Levi SrnpybyRoger Smith Produced byAllon Conr And Rogi Directed by Seymour Robbie Color by Movielab es Duke, fresh off a win over nationally ranked West Virginia, has found an effective complement to the passing of Leo Hart; the running of sophomore Steve Jones. North Carolina State is seventh In the ACC in pass defense. So let Leo throw to his Hart's content, Duke 28, NCS 14. Hootie Ingram's Clemson Tigers are on a three game losing streak and has an injury problem. Wake Forest has found out what it takes to win: a team on a three game losing streak with a definite injury problem. Wake Forest 19, Clemson 14. Virginia is not a threat to any of the national powerhouses. But then again, Army is not a national powerhouse. Or an Eastern powerhouse. Or a ser vice..,.Virginia 13, Army 9. THE OTHERS: EAST: Penn. St. 31. Syracuse 10: West Virginia 42. Pittsburgh 20: Dartmouth 20. Brown 13: Colgate 21. Princeton 20. SOUTH: MississIppI 51. Southern Miss. 3; Tennessee 28. Alabama 17; LSU 24, Kentucky 7; Miss. State 27. Texas Tech is: Tlalsa 21. VPI to: William and Mary 17, VMI 14; FlorMa State 24. Memphis State 21: Georgia 22, Vanderbilt 18; Flora 44. Richmond 7; Fur man 20. DavIdson 17; Citadel 13. Bucknell 8; Tampa 21. Miami 17. MIDWEST: Ohio State 38, Minnesota 0; Notre Dame 41. Missouri 10: Colorado 35. Oklahoma 21: Illinois 20. Indiana 7; Nor thwestern 23. Wisconsin 17; Iowa 10. Purdue 14: Kansas state 24. Iowa State 22; Miami (Ohio) 14. Ohio University 12. SOUTHWEST: Houston 28. Oregon State 24; Southern Methodist 25. Rice 6: Texas Christian 28. Texas A & M 15; North Texas State IS, West Texas State 14. FAR WEST: Southern California 33. Washington 21 ; Wyoming 20, Utah 13; Stan ford 37. Washington State?: San Diego Stote 17. San Jose State 10; Oregon 28. Idaho 13: Air Force Academy 52. Navy 9; UCLA 26. California 13: New Mexico 18. New Mexico State 14; Arizona 31. BYU 7: Texas El Paso 27. Colorado 17. ;ODFREY CAMBRIDGE in TEVE McQUEEN in OMAS CROWN IF FAIR CAROL & TED & PLUS FIND IN AUGUST e Namati cawling and bau Embossy N,m siomrng C.C.Ryder Sm,lth ->__Beat UNC quarterback Johnny Sw Al Usher (33) and Candler Bo, McCauley ACC rusta Hard-running Don McCauley of North Carolina, who had the second best day of his career with 187 yards rushing last week, is well on his way toward setting a new Atlantic Coast Conference career rushing mark. McCauley, according to the ACC Service Bureau's latest statistics, has piled up 712 yards in five games this fall for a high-ranking national average of 142.4 yards per game. This, with the 1,437 yards he gained his first two years with the Tar Heels, leaves him only 546 yards shy of Frank Quayles' career mark of 2,695 yards. The 187 yards McCauley gained against Carolina last week is just one-yard short of the 188 yards he picked up against Wake Forest last year. McCauley will have to average only 91 yards in the Tar Heels' six remaining contests to erase Quayles' record. Sophomore Steve Jones, Duke's all-purpose back, moved into second place behind McCauley while Clemson's Ray Yauger, who suffered a leg injury against Auburn last week after carrying on five times for 36 yards, dropped to third place. Sigma Ni Hv DOUG WILLIAMS Sports Writer Jon Howell threw three touch down passes, two to Jim White, leading last year's campus champs Sigma Nu to a 35-0 blanking of Sigma Phi Epsilon. Roy James picked off a pass and returned it all the way for another Sigma Nu score. stln'It upi asigirl e:05-3-5s. ;7-9: 10 IAD/mN.. AAarland Tar Heel halted offord finds the going tough a yd (35). approac Lrg recor4 Jones, in addition to ranking second in rushing, stands seventh in total offense, seventh in pass receiving, second in kickoff returns, and is tied with McCauley for the scoring lead with 36 points. Among those punters who have kicked more than 10 times, Jones has the best average with a 42.9 figure. USC's Bo Davies picked off two passes against North Carolina Saturday to run his conference leading total to six while teammate Dick Harris moved on top in punt returns by returning two for 155 yards, including one for 97, in last week's win over the Tar Heels. Harris is also the leader in kickoff returns. North Carolina and USC con tinue to hold their lock on most all team statistical leads in the Atlantic Coast Conference after the first five weeks of the 1970 campaign. The only category in which the two rivals switched positions after Carolina's 35-21 victory at Chapel Hill is scoring. The Gamecocks took over the scoring offense lead with a 25.8 figure and scoring 1 posts t Sigmna Nu registered another whitewash earlier in the week, shutting out Pi Kappa Phi 25-0. Howell threw four more touchdown passes, three to Dan McCants. Kappa Sigma scored its second win of the season defeating Zeta Beta Tau. 30-12. Steve Smith led the winners by hurling three scoring passes. ATO also won twice, beating Sigma Alpha Epsilon, 26-0. and nipping Pi Kappa Alpha, 12-8. Against PiKa, Tom Thaxton's 25 yaird touchdown run, Tom Gasiney's interception, and hard nosed play by middle guard IDE A little too young A little too knov Hello-C AT 1-3-5 .7-9' Vs k2C -osa ISe*mN s he runs into Gamecocks les I defense with a 13.o mark. North Carolina was the leader in both before last week's meeting. USC heads both sides of the passing ledger, averaging 202.2 vards on offense and limiting its foes to 91.8 on defense. Duke, the No. 2 team in pass offense, has the most completions. 82, and the best percentage at .590. Both North Carolina and USC have identical averages of 4.0 per rushing play while Wake Forest is a close third at 3.9. In total offense, the Gamecocks are averaging 5.2 yards per play while the Tar Heels are second at 4.7. Carolina, which gained 208 yards on seven returns last week, is averaging 11.7 yards per punt return and 26.6 per kickoff return. North Carolina is still the only ACC team averaging more than 200 yards per game rushing, and the only club limiting its opponents to less than 100 rushing yards per contest. USC, which was second in both of these divisions a week ago, dropped to third with Wake Forest moving into the runnerup spot in rushing offense and Virginia taking over second place in rushing defense. LIn W1nS Richard Nance paced the victory. Pika's only scores came when Al Heckel nailed the ATO quar terback in the end zone for a safety and on a long kickoff return by Bob, Moran. In other action. Horseshoe blanked Snowden by a 13-0 margin. Stan Hinson accounted for both of the winners' scores, hitting Dave Owens and D)ave D)ilks with s(corimg passes. Horseshoe came up with four big interceptions to kill Snowden drives. Joe Burch stole two passes. while Trommy Lawrence and Tony McLauwhorn had one apiece. ~ny. for her husband. ing for her lover. hodbye"