By the Late Henry Hadley, Vol. XXIX

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

By the Late Henry Hadley, Vol. XXIX : THE TECHNICIAN of NORTH CAROLINA STATE-COLLEGE Vol. XXIX, Number 18 STATE COLLEGE STTON, RALEIGH, N._C., FBREUARY 1,1949 Offices : 10 and 11_mpkms‘Hall McIntyre To l'elure Ball This Weekend " By JAMES HOLLINGER The Engineer's Ball will open to- . Book Exchange night in Memorial Auditorium fea- turing the music of Hal McIntyre and his orchestra. -. Becomes Reality The Ball will continue tomorrow By OSCAR WILLIAMS asaninformalteadanceatlltofi- A student book exchange will P.M., and the semi-formal feature open at‘the end of the winter term. ball tomorrow night at RM. The Col. Harrelson this week approved Engineers’ Council has distributed the Campus Government plans. tickets to all engineers for the two Alpha Zeta will be in charge of evening dances. All students are i. the exchange, which is scheduled invited to the tea dance and con- to open in the Campus Government cert tomorrow afternoon. office. AZ is carrying out the proj- The main event of the Saturday ect under authorization of the Cam- dance will be the awarding of pus Government as a service to prises to the outstanding seniors. students. There are two men whose grades, These are the rules to remember personalities, and activities rank in trading at the exchange: them equal as the outstanding sen- 1. Each student will name the .iors in the School of Engineering. price he wants for a book. The identity of these seniors is se- 2. He will place his price, name, cret until annomced tomorrow and address on an AZ envelope night. which goes in the book. Members of the Engineers’ Coun- 3. When the text is sold AZ will cil will be active during the Ball. place the money in the envelope Tomorrow evening they will have and hold it for the student. a banquet just before the final 4. When the original owner comes dance. The members will be intro- to collect he receives the en- duced to the crowd during the in- velope and pays Alpha Zeta ten termission of the feature dance. cents to cover expenses. They will form a monogram on the dance floor to remind the students thlat they have an Engineers' Coun- c1 . Merit Rating System The sponsors of the. Ball are pic- tured elsewhere in The Technician. The president, vice-president, sec- Hailed A Success retary, treasurer, and the dance The Merit Rating System is in committee members are escorting effect. Last Monday morning the sponsors. first groups of students undertook Pictured above are eight of the nine members of the Sophomore Class that were recently initiated About 1400 students and their to rate their professors and in- into the Order .of Thirty and Three. They are, left to right front row: Harvey Harry Scheviak, Ralph dates are expected to attend to- structors. Henderson Scott, Henry Sheldon Odom, and John Crittenden Umberger; back row: Ross Warren night’s part of the Ball. Over 400 Lampe, Wells Denyes, Ton Romanowsky, and Linzy Elwood Boyles. Absent when the picture was Thus far thirty thousand forms made was Noah.Warren arroll. Two more members of the class, Vic Babes and Paul Horvath. were are expected to attend the tea have been used and ten thousand to have been intiated last night, making the required eleven members from the class. dance. Attending the climax of the more have been ordered to complete Ball tomorrow will be a record the ratings. The total number of 1600 engineers and dates. The Sat- forms was under-estimated in the urday dance is feature of the whole beginning because each student is Vote Increase Trailwood Plans . Germany's Agriculture Ball, completing one of the best af- using an average of six forms. fairs in the history of the school. Fred Kendall, President of the The Executive Committee of Bowling;. Dance’ Needs Help—Schaub The music for all three dances Campus Government, has expressed the Board of Trustees passed a will be furnished by Hal McIntyre, the opinion that the rating should a Glenn Miller graduate, and his resolution favoring the increase you would like to bowl, sign up for “Our greatest help in building be completed by the end of the in tuition at the three units of orchestra. Mylntyre’s vocalists are week. one of the six teams being organ- the agriculture 01 Germany is in Betty Norton and New. the Greater University, accord- ized in Trailwood and West Haven. teaching them our modern meth- The majority of students are go- ing to 0. Max Gardner, Jr. The About seven years ago, Hal was about the ratings in a fair and Trailwood athleticdirector, Ruth och,” declared Dr. I. o. Schaub, ing meeting was held at the Capitol McSwain, is organizing the league . the first man that Glenn Miller impartial manner. The faculty is Wednesday afternoon. The group hired when he formed his great of their which will bowl each Tuesday night director 0f the North Carohna co-operating to the limit passed the resolution in view of at Manmur Bowling Center, 8 to State 0011989 Extension Service, band. McIntyre is best known for ability. the present cost of living and 10 RM. Bowling shoes will be “rent who recently returned from a his variations in made. His is one At a Student Government meet- economic conditions» but also free,” but each member will pay 76 three-months tour of Germany. of the most modern and polished ing on Wednesday, the final plans passed it with the idea of lower- cents per bowling week. name bands. for tabulation were made. ing it when conditions again Plans have also been completed Dr. Schaub, who went to 'Ger- Hal’s popularity is proven by his reach normaL The entire Board for the big Trailwood Square Dance many for the United States Army full schedule of college prom dates. as consultant on agricultural exten- Inthepastfewyearshisbandhas Little Symphony of Trustees will meet in the near which is to be held February 25 at future, and if the resolution is the Vetville YMCA at 8 RM. The sion work, reports there is no evi- been featured at lasing colleges Concert Sunday passed at that time, State Col- admission, which will be 25 cents dence of starvation at the present all through the naioa. IcIntyre’s The thirty-seven musicians com- lege tuition will be increased per couple, will be used to pay for time. However, he said, eight-to-12 first successffl recording was prising the State College Little from $90 to $150. the refreshments. year-old children still show the ef- “Commando Serenade” and his Symphony Orchestra will be heard fects of malnutrition during the “Sentimental Journey" became the in a public concert in Pullen Hall war nation's top tune. Mae now records Sunday afternoon, February 20, at Here This Week-End “The best way to teach our mod- for MGM. four o’clock. The program an- ern methods of farming," Dr. nounced by the conductor,’ Chris- Schaub said, “is to bring over ROTC Inspection tian Kutschinski, includes two workers from Germany and let overtures: (the classic “Barber of them work with our county agents. To Be April 14,15 Seville” by Rossini and the more They could then return to Germany The annual Department of Army modern dramatic overture “Herod” and put into practice what they and Department of Air Force in- 'by the late Henry Hadley, out- had learned.” spection of N. C. State College standing American composer), the Although rapid progress has ROTC Cadet Corps is scheduled Emperor Waltzes .. by Johann been made since the war, Dr. for April 14 and 16, C01. Samuel Strauss, Friedemann’s “Slavonic Schaub cities not believe German A. Gibson, Commandant of the col- Rhapsody, No. 2”, and Selections agriculture is up to pre-war levels. lege’s Department of Military from Verdi’s famous opera “Aida.” German agricultural scientists icience and Tactics, announced to- Mu Beta Psi, honorary music are “hungry for news and just beg y. fraternity, is sponsoring the con- for technical magazines,” Dr. The members of the board to in-, cert, and members will be on hand Schaub reported. They were pro- spect the Cadet Corpsis yet to be to see that everyone has a program hibited from exchanging infom announcedpand the actual inspec- - Wood seat. There is no ad- tion with other agricultural work- tion will be similar to the inspec- mission fee, and everyone is invit- ers throughout the world from 1932 tions of the past two years. The in- ed. Members of the musical organ- until the end of the war. spection board will be composed of izations are greatly encouraged by Hal McIntyre, left and vocalist Dr. Schaub said there is a large Air Force, Infantry, Signal Corps, the increasing interest and atten- Betty Norton, right, Will be feI- number of extension workers in Ordinance, Quartermaster and En- dance on the part of students at tured this week-end when MCIII- Germany, but club work, such it gineer officers to correspond with the programs presented by YOUR tyre’s orchestra plays for the au- our 4.H clubs, is not being carried the six ROTC units at State Col- college musical organisations. nual Engineer‘s Ball. on. less. ....'. .. __ -W-r Lam-am “bu‘Q—w .«wu .., THE TECHNICIAN February 18, 1949" Spensers of the Engineer’s Ball at N. C. 'campus. Members are selected on State Kappa Phi Kappa the basis of leadership, citizenship, Inltiates Seven scholarship, and sportsmanship. James .0. Barber, Jesse P. Mor-- . Kappa Phi Kappa fraternity ‘ac- gan, Silas J. Little, Jack D.: cepted seven new members in form- Teague, Robert w, Leith, Harrell al initiation ceremonies Thursday B.
Recommended publications
  • 2012-13 BOSTON CELTICS Media Guide
    2012-13 BOSTON CELTICS SEASON SCHEDULE HOME AWAY NOVEMBER FEBRUARY Su MTWThFSa Su MTWThFSa OCT. 30 31 NOV. 1 2 3 1 2 MIA MIL WAS ORL MEM 8:00 7:30 7:00 7:30 7:30 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 WAS PHI MIL LAC MEM MEM TOR LAL MEM MEM 7:30 7:30 8:30 1:00 7:30 7:30 7:00 8:00 7:30 7:30 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 CHI UTA BRK TOR DEN CHA MEM CHI MEM MEM MEM 8:00 7:30 8:00 12:30 6:00 7:00 7:30 7:30 7:30 7:30 7:30 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 DET SAN OKC MEM MEM DEN LAL MEM PHO MEM 7:30 7:30 7:30 7:AL30L-STAR 7:30 9:00 10:30 7:30 9:00 7:30 25 26 27 28 29 30 24 25 26 27 28 ORL BRK POR POR UTA MEM MEM MEM 6:00 7:30 7:30 9:00 9:00 7:30 7:30 7:30 DECEMBER MARCH Su MTWThFSa Su MTWThFSa 1 1 2 MIL GSW MEM 8:30 7:30 7:30 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 MEM MEM MEM MIN MEM PHI PHI MEM MEM PHI IND MEM ATL MEM 7:30 7:30 7:30 7:30 7:30 7:00 7:30 7:30 7:30 7:00 7:00 7:30 7:30 7:30 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 MEM MEM MEM DAL MEM HOU SAN OKC MEM CHA TOR MEM MEM CHA 7:30 7:30 7:30 8:00 7:30 8:00 8:30 1:00 7:30 7:00 7:30 7:30 7:30 7:30 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 MEM MEM CHI CLE MEM MIL MEM MEM MIA MEM NOH MEM DAL MEM 7:30 7:30 8:00 7:30 7:30 7:30 7:30 7:30 8:00 7:30 8:00 7:30 8:30 8:00 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 MEM MEM BRK MEM LAC MEM GSW MEM MEM NYK CLE MEM ATL MEM 7:30 7:30 12:00 7:30 10:30 7:30 10:30 7:30 7:30 7:00 7:00 7:30 7:30 7:30 30 31 31 SAC MEM NYK 9:00 7:30 7:30 JANUARY APRIL Su MTWThFSa Su MTWThFSa 1 2 3 4 5 1 2 3 4 5 6 MEM MEM MEM IND ATL MIN MEM DET MEM CLE MEM 7:30 7:30 7:30 8:00
    [Show full text]
  • 2013-14 Men's Basketball Records Book
    Award Winners Division I Consensus All-America Selections .................................................... 2 Division I Academic All-Americans By School ..................................................... 8 Division I Player of the Year ..................... 10 Divisions II and III Players of the Year ................................................... 12 Divisions II and III First-Team All-Americans by School ....................... 13 Divisions II and III Academic All-Americans by School ....................... 15 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners by School................................... 17 2 2013-14 NCAA MEN'S BASKETBALL RECORDS - DIVISION I CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS Division I Consensus All-America Selections 1917 1930 By Season Clyde Alwood, Illinois; Cyril Haas, Princeton; George Charley Hyatt, Pittsburgh; Branch McCracken, Indiana; Hjelte, California; Orson Kinney, Yale; Harold Olsen, Charles Murphy, Purdue; John Thompson, Montana 1905 Wisconsin; F.I. Reynolds, Kansas St.; Francis Stadsvold, St.; Frank Ward, Montana St.; John Wooden, Purdue. Oliver deGray Vanderbilt, Princeton; Harry Fisher, Minnesota; Charles Taft, Yale; Ray Woods, Illinois; Harry Young, Wash. & Lee. 1931 Columbia; Marcus Hurley, Columbia; Willard Hyatt, Wes Fesler, Ohio St.; George Gregory, Columbia; Joe Yale; Gilmore Kinney, Yale; C.D. McLees, Wisconsin; 1918 Reiff, Northwestern; Elwood Romney, BYU; John James Ozanne, Chicago; Walter Runge, Colgate; Chris Earl Anderson, Illinois; William Chandler, Wisconsin; Wooden, Purdue. Steinmetz, Wisconsin;
    [Show full text]
  • Aw a Rd Wi N N E
    Aw_MBB01_sp 11/21/00 8:50 AM Page 105 Awa r d Win n e r s Division I Consensus All-American Selections .. .1 0 6 Division I Academic All-Americans By Tea m .. .1 1 1 Division I Player of the Yea r. .1 1 2 Divisions II and III Fi r s t - Te a m All-Americans By Tea m. .1 1 4 Divisions II and III Ac a d e m i c All-Americans By Tea m. .1 1 6 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners By Tea m. .1 1 7 Awar MBKB01 11/20/00 3:53 PM Page 106 10 6 DIVISION I CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICAN SELECTIONS Division I Consensus All-American Selections Second Tea m —R o b e r t Doll, Colorado; Wil f re d Un r uh, Bradley, 6-4, Toulon, Ill.; Bill Sharman, Southern By Season Do e rn e r , Evansville; Donald Burness, Stanford; George Ca l i f o r nia, 6-2, Porte r ville, Calif. Mu n r oe, Dartmouth; Stan Modzelewski, Rhode Island; Second Tea m —Charles Cooper, Duquesne; Don 192 9 John Mandic, Oregon St. Lofgran, San Francisco; Kevin O’Shea, Notre Dame; Don Charley Hyatt, Pittsburgh; Joe Schaaf, Pennsylvania; Rehfeldt, Wisconsin; Sherman White, Long Island. Charles Murphy, Purdue; Ver n Corbin, California; Thomas 1943 Ch u r chill, Oklahoma; John Thompson, Montana St. First Te a m— A n d rew Phillip, Illinois; Georg e 1951 193 0 Se n e s k y , St. Joseph’s; Ken Sailors, Wyoming; Harry Boy- First Tea m —Bill Mlkvy, Temple, 6-4, Palmerton, Pa.; ko f f, St.
    [Show full text]
  • (Iowa City, Iowa), 1948-03-11
    THE WEATHa TODAY ~ , 8urglars Do 8elieve in Signs Stat.,. CRISFIELD, Md. (JP}-Bur,lars In Crisfield c~n read Partly cloudy and very cold today follow­ 1921 to an,way. Samuel S~ltz. proprietor of a furnl\ure s\ore, alwaya ed by snow tonight. High today 5·10 luvea this sl,n when he ,oos home at nl,ht: above north and 10-15 above south. Yes· "There Is no money In the lafe. Take tbe mon~l' In tbe cad register and be satisfied," terday's high 11, low O. The burr lars did and rot about $tO. OWGI1 Established 186B-Vol. 80, No. 140-AP News and Wirephoto Iowa City, Iowa, Thursday. March 11, 194B-Five Cenls ---------~------------------------------ Polillcs - • 'Wier MacArthur \ ' Is AII-America'n Keeps Aloof irteen Ie \ Murray Makes National-- Harriman Accuses From Politics AP First Team. Subcommittee of Refuses To Make Any By TED MEIER Fu'rther Statements to n -.-ras NEW YORK (IP)-Contrary to Un-American Action Press, Pose for Photos the Impression in some circles, TOKYO (IP)-General MacAr­ ,ood "little guys" aren't overlook­ W ASHTNGTON (IP)-Secretary thur's retusal to let the U.S. pres­ Internatlonal -- The Czechoslovakia Situation of Commerce W. Averell Harri­ Idential campaign interfere with rake Off ed In present-day college basket­ man last night accused a house ball, his occupation job Indicated yes­ un-American activities subcom­ lerday he will remain aloot !rom Two of them-one 5-feet 10- mittee of un-American action, campaign issues, at least for the Czech Requests UN Probe of Fails in Inches, the other 5-feel-9 made lhe In a formal statement dealing present.
    [Show full text]
  • Men's Basketball Award Winners
    MEN’S BASKETBALL AWARD WINNERS Division I Consensus All-America Selections 2 Division I Academic All-Americans by School 14 Division I Awards 16 Divisions II and III First-Team All-Americans by School 22 Divisions II and III Academic All-Americans by School 27 Divisions II and III Players of the Year 30 NCAA Postgraduate Scholarship Winners by School 32 DIVISION I CONSENSUS ALL-AMERICA SELECTIONS 1909 1915 BY SEASON Biaggio Gerussi, Columbia W.P. Arnold, Yale Teams used for consensus selections: (Helms Julian Hayward, Wesleyan (CT) Leslie Brown, Cornell Foundation 1905-48; Converse Yearbook 1932- Tommy Johnson, Kansas Ernest Houghton, Union (NY) 48; College Humor Magazine 1929-33, 1936; Charles Keinath, Penn Charlie Lee, Columbia Christy Walsh Syndicate 1929-30; Literary Digest Ted Kiendl, Columbia George Levis, Wisconsin Magazine 1934; Madison Square Garden 1937- Pat Page, Chicago Elmer Oliphant, Army 42; Omaha World Newspaper 1937; Newspaper John Ryan, Columbia Tony Savage, Washington Enterprises Association 1938, 1953-63; Colliers Raymond Scanlon, Notre Dame Ralph Sproull, Kansas (Basketball Coaches 1939, 1949-56; Pic John Schommer, Chicago Wellington Stickley, Virginia Magazine 1942-44; Argosy Magazine 1945; True Helmer Swenholt, Wisconsin Ray Woods, Illinois Magazine 1946-47; International News Service 1950-58; Look Magazine 1949-63; United Press 1910 1916 International 1949-96; Sporting News 1943-46, William Broadhead, NYU Roy Bohler, Washington St. 1997-present; The Associated Press 1948-pres- Leon Campbell, Colgate William Chandler, Wisconsin ent; National Assoc. of Basketball Coaches Dave Charters, Purdue Cyril Haas, Princeton 1957-present; U.S. Basketball Writers Association William Copthorne, Army George Levis, Wisconsin 1960-present).
    [Show full text]
  • 'S SUPPORT OII' ADVERTISERS Vol. XXX, Number 10 HE 'ECHNICIAN
    * SUPPORT BEAT OII' WASHINGTON HE 'ECHNICIAN AND LEE ADVERTISERS * of NORTH CAROLINA STATE COLLEGE Vol. XXX, Number 10 STATE COLLEGE STATION, RALEIGH, N. 0., DECEMBER 2, 1949 Offices: 10 and 11 Tompkins Hall COLISEUM OPENS TODAY Wolfpack Cagers Meet Washington & Lee Coliseum To Be Ready Tonight Big Crowd Expected Big Rush For Opening Game To Open By JACK BOWERS The 1949-50 edition of the Wolfpack basketballers will be unveiled By LLOYD V. CAPPS tonight when Coach Everette Case’s lads tangle with the Washington This is it! State Wolfpack opens its 1949-50 basketball season Fri- and Lee Generals in the first game to be held in the new William Nell day, December 2, at the gigantic Reynolds Coliseum. The 21,5 million dollar structure, which holds 12,000 new William Neal Reynolds Coli- fans, will enable the entire State student body to see the Pack perform seum against Washington and Lee. at every one of this year's home games. The Coliseum is finally near com- pletion after a delay of eight years. Dark Horses The huge indoor arena was pre- viously designed by Ross Shumaker, W&L’s Generals have been established as the dark-horse of the official State architect, in 1940, and Southern Conference. Led by the high-scoring duo of Sophomore Jay at that time it was planned for the Handlan, who dumped in 370 points as a GI freshman last year, and building to cost $541,000, seat 10,- Bob Goldsmith, the bounding center who tallied 332 points, the Vir- 000 and open in September, 1942.
    [Show full text]
  • Men's Basketball
    Men’s Basketball Record Book July 2010 Index Individual Records .................................................................. 1-5 Team Records .......................................................................... 6-9 Coaching Records ......................................................................10 Annual Statistical Leaders .................................................. 11-15 Conference Awards ..............................................................16-17 All-Conference Teams ......................................................... 18-22 All-Freshmen Teams............................................................ 23-24 All-Time Standings ............................................................. 25-31 SoCon Champions .....................................................................32 Tournament Results ............................................................ 33-43 All-Tournament Team .........................................................44-47 Tournament Records .................................................................48 National Awards ........................................................................49 Players In Th e NBA ...................................................................50 NBA Draft Picks ........................................................................51 NCAA Tournament ............................................................. 52-53 NIT .............................................................................................54 INNDIVIDUALDIVIDUAL
    [Show full text]
  • Ncaa Men's Basketball's Finest
    The NCAA salutes 360,000 student-athletes participating in 23 sports at 1,000 member institutions NCAA 48758-10/05 BF05 MEN’S BASKETBALL’S FINEST THE NATIONAL COLLEGIATE ATHLETIC ASSOCIATION P.O. Box 6222, Indianapolis, Indiana 46206-6222 www.ncaa.org October 2005 Researched and Compiled By: Gary K. Johnson, Associate Director of Statistics. Distributed to Division I sports information departments of schools that sponsor basketball; Division I conference publicity directors; and selected media. NCAA, NCAA logo and National Collegiate Athletic Association are registered marks of the Association and use in any manner is prohibited unless prior approval is obtained from the Association. Copyright, 2005, by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Printed in the United States of America. ISSN 1521-2955 NCAA 48758/10/05 Contents Foreword ............................................................ 4 Players................................................................ 7 Player Index By School........................................168 101 Years of All-Americans.................................174 Coaches ..............................................................213 Coach Index By School........................................288 On the Cover Top row (left to right): Tim Duncan, Bill Walton, Michael Jordan and Oscar Robertson. Second row: Jerry West, Dean Smith, James Naismith and Isiah Thomas. Third row: Bill Russell, Shaquille O’Neal, Carmelo Anthony and John Wooden. Bottom row: Tubby Smith, Larry Bird, Lew Alcindor (Kareem Abdul- Jabbar) and David Robinson. – 3 – Foreword Have you ever wondered about how many points Michael Jordan scored at North Carolina? Or how many shots were swatted away by Shaquille O’Neal at LSU? What kind of shooting percentage did Bill Walton have at UCLA? What was John Wooden’s coaching won-lost record before he went to UCLA? Did former Tennessee coach Ray Mears really look like Cosmo Kramer? The answers to these questions and tons more can be found in these pages.
    [Show full text]
  • Individual Record Book
    INDIVIDUAL RECORD BOOK Scoring Game Furman’s Frank Selvy 1. 100 Frank Selvy, Furman vs. Newberry NCAA record Feb. 13, 1954 scored an NCAA- 2. 67 Darrell Floyd, Furman vs. Morehead State Jan. 22, 1955 record 100 points 3. 66 Jay Handlan, Washington & Lee vs. Furman Feb. 24, 1951 against Newberry on 4. 63 Frank Selvy, Furman vs. Mercer Feb. 11, 1953 Feb. 13, 1954. 5. 62 Darrell Floyd, Furman vs. The Citadel Jan. 14, 1956 6. 58 Frank Selvy, Furman vs. Wofford Feb. 23, 1954 7. 56 Darrell Floyd, Furman vs. Clemson Feb. 24, 1955 8. 56 Stan Davis, Appalachian State vs. Carson-Newman Jan. 24, 1974 9. 55 Skip Henderson, Marshall vs. The Citadel March 4, 1988 10. 54 Rod Hundley, West Virginia vs. Furman Jan. 5, 1957 54 Jordan Lyons, Furman vs. North Greenville Nov. 15, 2018 Season 1. 1,209 Frank Selvy, Furman 1953-54 2. 974 Stephen Curry, Davidson 2008-09 3. 946 Darrell Floyd, Furman 1955-56 4. 931 Stephen Curry, Davidson 2007-08 5. 908 Jerry West, West Virginia 1959-60 6. 903 Jerry West, West Virginia 1958-59 7. 897 Darrell Floyd, Furman 1954-55 8. 877 Andrew Goudelock, College of Charleston 2010-11 9. 855 Bob McCurdy, Richmond 1974-75 10. 820 Jason Conley, VMI 2001-02 Career Field goals made S 1. 2,635 Stephen Curry, Davidson 2006-09 Game 2. 2,574 Skip Henderson, Marshall 1983-88 1. 41 Frank Selvy, Furman vs. Newberry Feb. 13, 1954 3. 2,571 Andrew Goudelock, College of Charleston 2007-11 2. 27 Darrell Floyd, Furman vs.
    [Show full text]
  • V Dewflndehdhoo-Hr
    38:“.4m ©me 63896: deWflndeHdHoo-Hr V Buy an Agromeck! 1' , " 4 Z7 if ,9 ‘ /!l All of the exciting events that occur during the year are captur- —————————————————————————————————————————— ed in our North Carolina State Yearbook. the Agromeck. Sports, groups, speakers. faces, Greeks, dress—ups, concerts, news, one hundred years for ten dollars. features...the list continues. Also in the I987 edition will be a Name l ““1085” and will Pick my special section devoted to NC. State’s 100th anniversary. You ”mm" "P '" the fa” “f '987' can purchase your personal copy of this great yearbook for a ( ) Enclosed is SIS. mail my book to measly $10 (the money you have saved since ‘prohibition';. You AddI'CSS this address in the fall of I987 can participate in the dress-ups and the free individual portia ‘siningsWin popinup.the.. spring, and you never know where our cameras City/State/Zip' ' Make“87 WkChecks payable to the . (‘Books unclaimed on Feb. 1. I986 Keep your memories alive. Clip this coupon and buy the book. SOC. 560. No. “i" b‘ 50"” MV‘ Contents Table of Contents Basketball Twilight Zone Profiles Memories of ’84 follow current men Mike Giomi . Page 10 Bennie Bolton. Page 14 All fall Jim Valvano has been saying, ”It's like Drummond's defense and Quentin’s outside shot, Jim Valvano. .. Page 16 deja vu, it’s like deja vu in 1984." you’d have an all-America," Valvano said. Kay Yow........... .. .......Page 18 Now whether he is talking about the weird The other positions are much more stable — if Dick Stewart.
    [Show full text]
  • NCAA Men's Final Four Records (The Final Four)
    The Final Four Championship Results ............................... 8 Final Four Game Records.......................... 9 Championship Game Records ............... 12 Semifinal Game Records ........................... 14 Final Four Two-Game Records ............... 17 Final Four Cumulative Records .............. 18 8 CHAMPIONSHIP RESULts Championship Results Year Champion Score Runner-Up Third Place Fourth Place 1939 Oregon 46-33 Ohio St. † Oklahoma † Villanova 1940 Indiana 60-42 Kansas † Duquesne † Southern California 1941 Wisconsin 39-34 Washington St. † Pittsburgh † Arkansas 1942 Stanford 53-38 Dartmouth † Colorado † Kentucky 1943 Wyoming 46-34 Georgetown † Texas † DePaul 1944 Utah 42-40 + Dartmouth † Iowa St. † Ohio St. 1945 Oklahoma St. 49-45 New York U. † Arkansas † Ohio St. 1946 Oklahoma St. 43-40 North Carolina Ohio St. California 1947 Holy Cross 58-47 Oklahoma Texas CCNY 1948 Kentucky 58-42 Baylor Holy Cross Kansas St. 1949 Kentucky 46-36 Oklahoma St. Illinois Oregon St. 1950 CCNY 71-68 Bradley North Carolina St. Baylor 1951 Kentucky 68-58 Kansas St. Illinois Oklahoma St. 1952 Kansas 80-63 St. John’s (N.Y.) Illinois Santa Clara 1953 Indiana 69-68 Kansas Washington LSU 1954 La Salle 92-76 Bradley Penn St. Southern California 1955 San Francisco 77-63 La Salle Colorado Iowa 1956 San Francisco 83-71 Iowa Temple SMU 1957 North Carolina 54-53 ‡ Kansas San Francisco Michigan St. hotos 1958 Kentucky 84-72 Seattle Temple Kansas St. P AA 1959 California 71-70 West Virginia Cincinnati Louisville C N 1960 Ohio St. 75-55 California Cincinnati New York U. 1961 Cincinnati 70-65 + Ohio St. * St. Joseph’s Utah cKee/ 1962 Cincinnati 71-59 Ohio St.
    [Show full text]
  • 1 Enrollment Reaches 1679; Late Arrivals Swell Total
    .. \ , ______________~ RELIGIOUS STARTS FOCU~. ~OND~Y, ®lb ~nl~ null ~lark,,, WE~.K FEB.1 * * Volume XXXIII, Number 17 Wake For~st, N. C., Friday~ January. 30, 1948 Telephone 304-6 ''Christ In Campus Living.'' 1 Enrollment Reaches 1679; To Be the Theme of BSU.'s, Third .Religious F·orum ·Week Late Arrivals Swell Total Activities tO Begin Feb- Forum .Leader ruary 1 and Continue rr NOMINATIONS - Prof. McDonald Adverse Weather Forces Many Stnd~nts to Wait Through Week Claims Tar .J;J..eels ... , But Is FurPiner For- lmprove~ent of Transportation Facilities "Christ in ·campu~ Living" will Enters Contest be the theme of the B~tist Stu- Local School Registration Soars to Record Breaking To Be in Competitjon with Total of 145; Only Students Pursuing ~ Two of His Former Degree Are Listed Stud~nts ---- , Despite two inches of snow covered with sleet which com­ bined to give Wljke Forest and vicinity its worst "registration" weather in. yeat;"S, some 1679 students had enrolled in the schools of law and liberal arts through Wednesday afternoon, according to Registrar Grady S. Patterson. At least 100 students were members in a week of religious expected to register yesterday pending· the improvement· of emphasis._ There will be worship transportation facilities from Raleigh to Wake .Forest. services, classroom discussions led by the visitors, seminars for stu:­ J dents, seminars for' faculty mem­ bers, chapel services, informal discussions .an<i private confer- ences. Speakers Listed CAPTAIN TO. SPEAK ON CADET.PROGRAM Captajn Rixc;n of the P,.rmy Air Force will explain the Aviation Cadet Program to all interested students at 10:00 on February 12 in the auditorium of the Johnston building.
    [Show full text]