The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962 Page: 4 of 6
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page 4— sports
The Campus Chat
Cagers Unwrap New Season
North Texas and West Texas
State will open the basketball sea-
son at 8 p.m. Saturday with both
teams trying to start winning sea-
sons.
The Buffaloes won only five
frames last year, and the Envies,
whose last winning team went 19-9
in 1953-54, had only three victories
in the last campaign.
The game will be the first of
three consecutive home games for
the Kagles, and Coach Charles
Johnson would like to start a win-
ning habit early.
"I just feel like if we can win
these first three it will make us
jell into a winning outfit," John-
son remarked about his fourth sea-
son. "But of course, we've got to
tret them one at a time, and that's
how we hope to do it."
Tuesday night the varsity will
play the Hardin-Simnions Cow-
boys, and Saturday, Dec. 8, the
opponent will be Abilene Christ-
ian.
AfiAINKT THE MI FFS, John-
son plans to start John Savage
and David Burns at forwards, Nor-
man Colirlasier and Oscar Miller
at guards and David Ebershoff at
center.
Savage, who led the team in
searing last year and was second
top scorer in the Missouri Valley
Conference with a 19.5 average,
was the only sophomore to make
the all-conference team.
The (5-5 junior is a train expected
to carry the storing leadership for
the team, and Johnson said, "He's
our strength as far as rebounds
go. He's doing fine this year, and
we are also planning to alternate
him into the post position where
he started last year."
Miller, a 5-11 senior, averaged
14.3 points per (fame last year
when he earned honorable mention
All-MVC. He has held the guard
position most of the time in his
last two seasons.
The other two lettermen in the
starting plans are Colglazier, a
tl-2 senior who averaged only 3.0
as a transfer from Pueblo Junior
College, and Kbershoff, (5-7 senior
who had a 7.4 mean for the sec-
ond semester last year, when he
became eligible to play at NTSU.
THE fi-4 BFKNS steps into a
starling role as a sophomore. He
had a lti.6 freshman team average
JOHN SAVAGE ... on ball for Eagles.
'Mural Officials Name
32 to All-Star Roster
Thirty-two intramural football
players were named to indepen-
dent and fraternity all-star teams
this week by intramural officials.
Intramural champion Baptist
Student Union and the Playboys
each placed three men on the ros-
ter. Seven fraternity teams had
two men each on their league's
all-star list.
Independent League all-stars se-
lected were: Kay Woody and Ter-
ry Mahan, Air Force ROTC;
Wayne Searcey and James A1 read,
Quads; Bill I'arrish and Mike Bain-
bolt, Delta Signia Pi; Karl Prohl,
James Caldwell and Dennis Phil-
lips, BSU; Butch Patterson. Phil-
lip Harrelson and Mike Conn,
Playboys; Murphy Daniels and AI
Nickleberry, Spartans; and Bill
Graves and Guy Todd, Hogs.
Fraternity football all-stars are:
Philip Pear re and Fred Harring-
ton, Lambda Chi Alpha; Sonny Mc-
Natt and Charles Diehl, Kappa Al-
pha; Jeff Jeffers and Robert Me-
Mullin, Sigma Nu; Martin Stacey,
Sigma Phi Epsilon; J. C. Fishbeck
and Gary Brooks, Kappa Sigma;
Tommy Alsop, Phi Kappa Sigma;
Larry Cruise and Melvin Burns,
Geexles; Bobby Mason and Denny
Smith, Pi Kappa Alpha; and Bon-
nie Purdom and Marshall Dooley,
Theta Chi.
The annual all-star game, which
would have matched the two
leagues in November after the
intramural championship game,
failed to take place because of a
lack of interest.
NORMAN COLGLAZIER
. . . senior guard.
DAVID EBERSHOFF
. . . starts at center.
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j and will be taking the place of
Ardie Dixon, who averaged 17.6
points a gome in his senior year.
Johnson said others who will be
playing "a whole lot of ball" are
forward Don Mitchell, a <i-l soph-
omore transfer from Kansas State;
center Carl Miller, ti-8 sophomore;
guurd Garland (Bubbu) Bailey, 6-2
junior transfer from San Angelo
College; and Mike Long, a fi-2 jun-
ior guurd who transferred from
Paris Junior College.
"WHOEVER DDKS the best
job between (Carl) Miller and Eb-
ershoff will be playing the most,"
Johnson elaborated. "One of our
weaknesses now is finding: another
capable rebounder to go with Sav-
ajre."
West Texas is expected to start
a front line from a foursome of 6-8
Frank Schaffer, 6-7 % Scottie
Pierce, 6-6 Bobby Roland and 6-4
senior Dave Seal, who led the
team in scoring with a 13.5 aver-
age last year. Other starters will
be chosen from 5-10 senior Sonny
Blankenship, 6-0 sophomore Ver-
non Welch and 6-3 senior Steve
Slagle.
Johnson said the Buffs' strength
is their rebounding ability. He
said Roland was reported to be a
"good, young rebounder," along
with Schaffer and Pierce, who
played regulurly as sophomores
last winter.
"We'll probably have a big
crowd at the game," Johnson said.
"In addition to our students, we
think a lot of Borger people will
stay over from the football name
with Irving Saturday afternoon to
see the basketbull name."
While the Eagles are playing at
home, Johnson will have a scout
at Stillwater, Okla., Saturday
night to watch Tuesday night's
opponent Hardin-Simmons play
Oklahoma State.
"THEY'RE AN unknown team
with a new coach and a lot of
transfers," Johnson said, "but
after scouting them Saturday and
a train on Monday when they play
Howard Payne, we should know
more what to expect."
H-SU, which the Eagles defeat-
ed twice last season, returned
starters Don Seamster, 6-0 jun-
ior who averaged 10.9, and 5-9
senior Barry Oxford, who scored
at an 11.8 clip, to this year's team.
The Eagles wind up the home
stand against the ACC Wildcats,
which last year's team defeated
for its third win.
Friday, Novemb
iWHIiWHMWM
OSCAR MILLER . . . begins third season
Frosh To Battle
Ranger Saturday
The Eaglets will be meeting
Ranger Junior College for the
first time when they open their
14-game schedule at 6 p.m. Satur-
day. Tuesday the freshmen take
on the Hardin-Simmons B team
before the varsity game with H-
SU.
Starters for Coach Travis Dun-
can's team will include 6-6 Fred
Schulz from South Bend, Ind., at
center and 6-4 Gary Shipman
from Tyler and 6-5 Albert Jones,
former all-stater from Killeen, at
forwards.
Johnny Locke, a 6-2 Natoma,
Kan., native, will start at one
guard slot. The other position will
go to either 5-11 Bill Hughs, who
played in Killeen High School
with Jones, or 6-0 Leon Miller,
brother of the varsity's Oscar
Miller from Fort Worth.
Top substitutes are guard-for-
ward Jerry Curtainger of Here-
ford. center Ira Daniels and for-
ward Dwight Lowery, both from
Dallas. Only 12 of the 16 players
who have been working out will
be suited up for the game, Dun-
can said.
"This may be one of the best
freshman teams to ever play at
North Texas," Assistant Coach Les
Pollock noted.
Duncan agreed with Pollock:
"This team has more speed than
last year's and is taller, too.
They're also more consistent in
hitting the basket, and I'll be dis-
appointed if they don't hit better
than 50 per cent of their shots
every game."
As for individual performances
in the first six weeks of practice,
Duncan thinks Schulz and Jones
"particularly have looked real
good, and as sophomores they
probably will be playing a lot of
ball on the varsity."
But Duncan won't know the full
capabilities of his team until he
gets them into action this weekend.
The freshmen have only scrim-
maged some third-string varsity
players this fall and have scrim-
maged among themselves most of
the time.
Ranger will he meeting North
Texas for the first time in basket-
ball, and Duncan said, "We sched-
uled them because we believe they
will have a good team, especially
since their school's president used
to play basketball and is definite-
ly interested in the game."
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Veteto, Bob. The Campus Chat (Denton, Tex.), Vol. 46, No. 19, Ed. 1 Friday, November 30, 1962, newspaper, November 30, 1962; Denton, TX. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth314244/m1/4/: accessed June 19, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting UNT Libraries Special Collections.