The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, December 8, 1967 Page: 4 of 6
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PAGE 4—THE CAMPUS CHAT
Friday, December 8, 1967
Soulsters Meeting Inn-men
To Begin 'Mural Playoff
Intramural football playoffs be if in
Tuesday with the Residence league
champions, Inn-men (4-0), meeting the
Independent I,eague winners, Soulsters
(11-1), on Field B at 4:15 p.m
The winner of Tuesday's game will
meet the Fraternity League representa-
tive, Sigma Nu (9-2). at 4:16 p.m. Wed-
nesday on Field B.
Kappa Alpha won the Fraternity
League title, but was disqualified when
the fraternity was suspended Sifnia Nu
was the league runner-up.
Millard Fisher said the season will end
Monday with three games
The Soulsters captured the indepen-
dent title by defeating the Industrial
Arts Club 2-0 Tuesday on a safety
with 1:43 left in the game.
The Inn-men are 4-0 with one game
to play. They have won the residence
title because the rest of the teams have
lost at least two games.
In intramural basketball, Garrison's
Gorillas are pacing Independent League
No. 1 with a 4-0 record. They have
scored 297 points, for a 74 point average.
Their opponents are averaging 83
points per game.
FavoriteB in the independent No. 1 are
Garrison's Gorillas, Turnips, Disciples
and Saints.
The faculty team posted its first vic-
tory, after two losses, by beating the
Friars 44-33. The faculty later absorlwd
a 56-12 stomping from the Bullets.
Favorites in the Independent No. 2
are the Bullets, Indicators, West Dorm
No. 3 and Outcasts (BSU No. 2).
Some fraternities that showed early
Strength include Sigma Nu, Phi Kappa
Theta, CJeeiles and Sigma Phi Epsilon.
In a tough battle Tuesday night, the
Geezles topped Sigma Nu. 43-41, to high-
light fraternity play.
13 Athletes Eye
Houston Meet
Track Coach Winton E. (Pop) Noah
will enter 13 athletes in five events at
the Houston Invitational Track meet
Saturday.
Louis Smith will be the team work-
horse, entering the 440-yard relay, the
mile relay, 440-yard shuttle relay and
the 120-yard high hurdles.
Oscar Howard and Carl Wayne Jack-
son are entered in the 100-yard dash
and the 440 relay. Jimmy Jones will run
in the mile relay and the 440 shuttle
relay.
Seventeen colleges and universities
will compete on Butler Stadium's com-
position track beginning at 2 p.m.
The NTSU team will leave this after-
noon.
The 440 relay team — Smith, Mike
Neeley, Howard and Jackson has run
the event in 41.2 seconds.
Smith, Ronald Soncini, Calvin Mur-
phy and Jones will run the shuttle relay.
Smith, Jones, John llagler and Neeley
of the varsity mile relay team will be
trying to better their practice time of
3:12. Terry Chilton, Davey Cranfill, Den-
nis Stephens and Richey Rose will run
the freshman mile relay
Eagles Look for First Win
Creighton To Visit; Students Need Tickets
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By WAYNE DAVIS
Men's Gymnasium will come to life
for the first time in the eight-day-old
basketball season Saturday as the Ea-
gles meet Creighton University at 8 p.m.
Coach Dan Spika said Wednesday he
is expecting a hard night. "They are
always tough," he said.
Students cannot get into the basket-
ball games just by showing their ID
cards. If they try they will be turned
away.
To get tick', us. students must go to
the University Store of the Union Build-
ing, where they must prosrnt their ID
cards to pick up a free ticket. They must
present both the ticket and the ID card
to get into the game.
Creighton, a Catholic school in Omaha,
does not play in any conference. The
Bluejays, like North Texas, lost their
first two games of the season.
Injuries have given Creighton trouble
in the early going. "Their top gvard,
Dave Hickey, is hurt," Spika said. "We
don't know yet whether he will see ac-
tion against us."
Hickey, the teum playmaker, has a
sore tendon in his foot.
THE JAYS have a candidate for All-
America in fi-5 junior Bob Portman. He
penetrated Temple's zone for 28 points
and took down 13 rebounds.
Creighton, coached by John J. (Red)
McManus, had a 12-13 record last year,
the same as NTSU. Its loss to Temple
was the first in an opener in 22 years.
The Jays have won both the games play-
ed with NTSU.
Coach Spika made one change in his
starting lineup to get ready for Creigh-
ton. He put Robert Taylor, 0-4 sopho-
more, in for Hamp Hazelton, 6-7Mi sen-
ior. Other starters will lie Bill Cutter,
Matthew Huff, Leroy Winfield and Joe
Stephens. One Eairle, center-forward
Larry Bonzowmet, is out indefinitely
with mononucleosis.
SPIKA SAID, "We have plenty of
spirit and are looking pretty good in
workouts. We still need better rebound-
ing though."
The Eagles will be trying to break a
two-game losing streak compiled on the
road against Southwest Louisiana and
Oklahoma City University.
In the Southwest Louisiana game the
Eagles lost, 62-81, at the final buzzer.
Oklahoma City took a 97-78 victory
behind Rich Travis's 52-point output.
Spika said," Travis got off to a hot start
and never cooled. We also had our usual
weakness on the lx>ards. Both Stephens
and Winfield had a good night against
Oklahoma."
Stephens, the 6-2 junior college trans-
fer from Riverside, Calif., has 88 points
to lead the team in scoring.
Three home games follow the Creigh-
ton game, University of Pacific Tues
day, Texas A&M Wednesday and Cen-
tenary next Saturday.
NT High in Valley Statistics
The NTSU football team, which won
the Missouri Valley crown this season,
also wrapped up most of the statistical
titles.
Most impressive in the final league
statistics released this week was the
defensive record. North Texas led in
ev*ry category; total defense, 202.3 yards
per game; passing defense, 123.2; rush-
ing defense, 70.1, and scoring, 15.3
points.
The Eagle offense led in scoring, aver-
aging :t0. points per. name. j
Individually, Steve Ramsey won the*
total offense crown, although he lost
1<>8 yards rushing. The sophomore quar-
terback gained 1,564 yards this season.
He also led Valley passers, throwing
for 1,732 yards and 21 touchdowns —
both North Texas records. The scoring
passes led the nation.
EAGLE FULLBACK Vic Williams
finished third in rushing with (?0fi yards,
and halfback Tony Reese was sixth with
369 yards.
North Texas' James Russell, who was
the first man in 11 years to In* first
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string All-MVC three years in a row,
was fourth in pass receiving with 44
catches for 624 yards. Ronnie Shanklin
was fifth with 41 catches for 867 yards.
Shanklin caught a record 13 TD passes,
best in the nation.
Russell led the punters with a 40.8-
yard average on 26 kicks. Defensive back
Mike Shook tied for the lead in inter-
ceptions with seven.
Rick Eber, whose Tulsa team played
10 games to nine for NTSU, edged
Shanklin for the scoring title by two
points — 80-78. Randy Henry, the Ea-
gles' sophomore kicking ace, was sev-
enth, scoring 48 points on 30 extra points
and six field goals.
Cagers Warned
About Drinking
Intramural basketball players were
warned this week not to show up early
for games- and not to show up at all
if they have been drinking
Student coordinators Earl Hansen and
Dave Snyder said, in a letter to all
teams, that officials who smell liquor on
a player's breath will lie required to
banish the player from the gym.
The intramural office also said teams
that go into the playing area in Men's
Gym before it is cleared of earlier-
scheduled games will be liable to for-
feiture of a game.
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Tittle, Mel. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 51, No. 22, Ed. 1 Friday, December 8, 1967, newspaper, December 8, 1967; Denton, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth307389/m1/4/: accessed August 15, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.