North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

93
Clemson University Clemson University TigerPrints TigerPrints Football Programs Programs 1976 North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976) North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976) Clemson University Follow this and additional works at: https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/fball_prgms Materials in this collection may be protected by copyright law (Title 17, U.S. code). Use of these materials beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law. For additional rights information, please contact Kirstin O'Keefe (kokeefe [at] clemson [dot] edu) For additional information about the collections, please contact the Special Collections and Archives by phone at 864.656.3031 or via email at cuscl [at] clemson [dot] edu Recommended Citation Recommended Citation University, Clemson, "North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)" (1976). Football Programs. 124. https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/fball_prgms/124 This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Programs at TigerPrints. It has been accepted for inclusion in Football Programs by an authorized administrator of TigerPrints. For more information, please contact [email protected].

Transcript of North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Page 1: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Clemson University Clemson University

TigerPrints TigerPrints

Football Programs Programs

1976

North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976) North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Clemson University

Follow this and additional works at: https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/fball_prgms

Materials in this collection may be protected by copyright law (Title 17, U.S. code). Use of these

materials beyond the exceptions provided for in the Fair Use and Educational Use clauses of the

U.S. Copyright Law may violate federal law.

For additional rights information, please contact Kirstin O'Keefe (kokeefe [at] clemson [dot] edu)

For additional information about the collections, please contact the Special Collections and

Archives by phone at 864.656.3031 or via email at cuscl [at] clemson [dot] edu

Recommended Citation Recommended Citation University, Clemson, "North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)" (1976). Football Programs. 124. https://tigerprints.clemson.edu/fball_prgms/124

This Book is brought to you for free and open access by the Programs at TigerPrints. It has been accepted for inclusion in Football Programs by an authorized administrator of TigerPrints. For more information, please contact [email protected].

Page 2: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)
Page 3: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 4: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

cmjEivrsoisr xjisti^teflsit"^

OfficialProgram

Published by

ATHLETIC DEPARTMENTCLEMSON UNIVERSITY

Edited by

BOB BRADLEYDirector of Sports Information

Assisted by

JERRY ARPSports Promotions Director

AL ADAMSPublicity Assistant

Photography by Jim Bums. Charles Haralson. Tom Shockley, Vince Ducker. BenHendricks. Hal Smith, and Jim Martin of the Clemson Communication Center: TAPS 74(Clemson Yearbook); and Jim Bradley ot Dallas, Texas.

PASS OUT CHECKS: Pass out checks will be available at Gates 1 - 5 - 9 - 13.

Any person leaving stadium other than with team pass must have pass out

checks, as well as admittance stub for other type tickets to be readmitted to

game. Ticket stubs will be secured in receptacles provided.

EMERGENCIES: First aid stations are located under Section J on South side

of Stadium and under Section T on the North side Trained nurses are on hand

all during the game Should a doctor be needed, ask any usher Each usher has

been informed the seat location of doctors. Ambulances are located at Gates

1, 5, 8 and 13

TELEPHONES: Telephones are located at Stadium Ticket Offices at Gates 1,5,

9 and 13.

PUBLIC ADDRESS SYSTEM: The public address system is intended primarily

for the information of spectators concerning the game Please do not request

the use of the public address system to make social contacts at the game.

RESTROOMS: Ladies and men's restrooms are located beneath the stands

and can be reached by exit from any portal.

LOST & FOUND: If any article is lost or found, please report same to Gate 1

Information Booth.

CONCESSION STANDS: Concession stands are located beneath all stands

and can be reached by exit from any portal A concession price list is published

on the back page

EMERGENCY CALLS: Emergency calls are received over the telephone lo-

cated in the press box. the number of which is listed with the operator as Press

Box, Clemson Memorial Stadium.

NOTICE: Possession or consumption of alcoholic beverages are prohib-

ited by Act No. 550 of the General Assembly of South Carolina, 1967, and

rules of the alcoholic beverage Control Commission in this stadium and

the surrounding area. By order of: S. C. Alcoholic Beverage Control

Commission.

NOTICE: Solicitation for any purpose is prohibited at an athletic contest in

Clemson Memorial Stadium and Littlejohn Coliseum.

ClemsonBoard of Trustees

Paul W McAhster,

Laurens, Chairman

Robert R. Coker Hartsville

T. Kenneth Cribb Spartanburg

Willie Green DesChamps Bishopville

Lewis F. Holmes, Jr Trenton

E. Oswald Lightsey HamptonW. Gordon McCabe, Jr Greenville

Thomas B. McTeer, Jr ColumbiaBuck Mickel Greenville

Paul Quattlebaum, Jr Charleston

James C. Self GreenwoodD. Leslie Tindall PinewoodJames M. Waddell, Jr Beaufort

ClemsonAthletic Council

Dean Kenneth N. Vlckery

Chairman

Dr. J. V. Reel, Jr.

Secretary

Dr. I. Carolyn Briscoe

Dr. R. C. Harshman

Dr. Corinne H. Sawyer

Dr. B. J. Skelton

Dr. E. A. Vaughn

J. Garner Bagnal

Pres.. Alumni Assn.

Lawrence V. Starkey

Past Pres.. Alumni Assn.

George G. PoolePres.. IPTAY

Forest E. HughesPasf Pres.. IPTAY

Billy L. EdgePres., Faculty Senate

Pamela A. RoupeChm.. Graduate StudentAssn.

Patncial L. WarrenPres.. Student Senate

Mark S. LeePres.. Block 'C Club

Page 5: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

*Tiger t&rotfhrRood & Qhtnson ^Slnimrsity's

Mrs. Jna ^>urRam"I wouldn't trade my job for any other

on campus," says Mrs. Ina Durham,who serves as the information desksupervisor in Clemson's modern EdgarA. Brown Student Union.

"I'm in constant contact with the stu-

dents, and that's what university life is

all about."

A native of Columbus, Ga., Mrs.

Durham graduated from Auburn Uni-

versity in 1 953 with a degree in elemen-

tary education, and although she's

spent but a brief few months in the

classroom since that time, she's found

a way to put her degree to use in a very

practical and extremely enlightening

way.

And during special ceremonies at

today's game, she'll be honored as

Clemson University's Mother-of-the-

Year, an award which recognizesthose women who have contributed the

most to Clemson through their own ac-

tions, or through the actions of their

children.

The award is presented by Tiger

Brotherhood, a local honorary service

fraternity, and votes are cast by both

student and honorary members of the

organization.

The wife of Harry Durham, who is

director of Clemson's communicationscenter, she is the mother of one son,

Kelly, a freshman at Clemson, and onedaughter, Kathy, a senior at Auburn.

Yet in her dozen years as a resident

of Clemson, Mrs. Durham has found

ample time to serve as a parent to morethan 25 University students, thanks to

the Adopted Students Program whichhad its beginnings at the First Baptist

Church in Clemson.

"Interested church families wouldsign up for this program, as well as the

interested Clemson students who weregoing to our church during the school

year," explains Mrs. Durham.

"Familes were then assigned a stu-

dent who would become part of the

household membership for the year."

In the Durham home, "the students

do exactly what they feel comfortable

doing," says Clemson's 1977 Mother-

of-the-Year.

"This may be anything from cutting

the grass, baby sitting with the children,

or simply walking right in the house like

any other member of the family andturning on the television."

Mrs. Durham points out that the

adoptive parents get involved in moreways than with just the assigned stu-

dent.

"We've had heart-warming associa-

tions with students who came to our

home with their roommate, who wasone of the adopted students.

"For example, Bob Rutland, of At-

lanta, brought his roommate, Dick Sar-

gent, who was a baseball player.

"And Randy Collins, who is now in

Clinton in the plumbing supply busi-

ness, came because his roommate, EdGordon, was one of our students," Mrs.

Durham states.

"Ed graduated about four years ago,

spent some time in the service, workedfor a textile concern, and is now back in

graduate school."

Mrs. Durham reports that she andher husband have enjoyed a close rela-

tionship with the parents of these stu-

dents as well.

"We encourage the parents to visit

with us when they're in Clemson, andbecause of the relationship we havewith both the students and parents, I

believe that we've actually helped themunderstand each other a little more.

And I'm positive that all of this hashelped us with our children."

Some of the Clemson students whofrequent the Durham household are

Malcolm Marler, Gary and Trav Webb,and Ford Gibson.

In addition to her active part in the

adopted students program, Mrs.

Durham took part in freshmen orienta-

tion group discussions this past sum-mer, "in an effort to help our campusnewcomers become better adjusted to

the University."

Moreover, Harry and Ina Durhamwork actively in the student department

at their church with the college-age

group.

"All of this has made my life muchmore interesting and rewarding. My job

allows me to keep in constant contact

with the students, and the adopted stu-

dents program has allowed us to follow

these students through four years of

college."

And many, like Mack Jones, now a

doctor in the Air Force, and DannyMalphrus, a banker in Fort Mill, remain

in contact with their adopted parents.

Mrs. Ina Durham, who wouldn't trade

her job with anyone on campus, has

added greatly to the lives of a large

number of Clemson students.

And that's why she's being honored

today as Tiger Brotherhood's Mother-

of-the-Year.

Page 6: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 7: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Hall cflameNew Numbers 24

Five former athletes and one special inductee

are being honored today during halftime as the

newest members of the Clemson University Ath-

letic Hall of Fame.This is the fourth induction and brings to 24 the

number named to this elite group.

The Hall of Fame is sponsored by the Associa-

tion of Tiger Lettermen. After nominations are

screened by the association, nominees are rec-

ommended to a panel made up of the university

president, the athletic director, the faculty chair-

man, the president of IPTAY and the president of

the lettermen's association for final action.

The 1975 inductees are the late L. M. (Bull)

Lightsey who lettered in football four years

(1917-20); Bobby Gage, also a four-year letter-

man in football (1945-48); P. B. (Hoby) Holtzen-

dorf, III, who lettered in swimming and tennis in

1 939-41 ; John S. Dunkelburg, a track record set-

ter in 1958-59-60; and John J. Snee, a four-year

basketball star (1949-52). The special inductee

is Herman McGee, long time employee of the

athletic department in various capacities.

Previously inducted into the Hall of Fame wereB C. (Stumpy) Banks, Joe Blalock, Fred Cone,T. M. (Mac) Folger, James G. (Mutt) Gee, Frank

Howard, Capt. Frank J. Jervey, Robert M. (Bob)

Jones, Joseph B. (Joe) Landrum, Banks McFad-den, H. R. (Randy) Mahaffey, John D. Maxwell,

A. W. (Rock) Norman, Billy O'Dell, W. A. (Shorty)

Schilletter, Joel W. Wells, Charlie Woods andWilliam T. (Bill) Yarborough. Banks, Blalock,

Maxwell and Schilletter are deceased.Lightsey played under E. A. (Jiggs) Donahue

his four years and the Tigers won 21 , lost 1 2 andtied 2, including a 17-2-2 record against teamsfrom the Palmetto state. Lightsey's four Clemsonteams were 3-1 against South Carolina and 2-1-1

with Furman, which then was the Tigers' big

rivalry.

The former guard and tackle, who will be rep-

resented at the induction ceremonies by his

brother, Judge Harry Lightsey, Sr., was named to

the All-State team in 1917, 1919 and 1920 andthe latter two seasons, was chosen on the All-

Southern squad. Lightsey was also selected on

the All-Clemson team from 1 896-1 935 chosen by

the Capitol City Newspaper Sportswriters, ac-

cording to a story in the Washington Post in

November, 1935. Other Hall of Famers on this

same team were Maxwell, Schilletter, Jones and

Banks.

Page 8: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Gage, who now lives in Greenville, was the

tailback on Clemson's first post-war bowl team,the 1949 Gator, which edged Missouri, 24-23.

The Anderson native was All-State three years(1946-47-48), but it was 1948 when he reapedmost of his honors.

He was selected to the All-Southern. All-South

and All-American teams and topped his career

by being named the most valuable player in the

Gator Bowl.

Through 80 years of Clemson football. Gage is

the total offensive leader with 3,757 yards. 2,448coming on passing and 1 .309 on rushing. He wasresponsible for 35 touchdowns, second only to

Ray Mathews' 39. Eight of Gage s came on rLSh-

ing, 24 on passing and one each on receiving,

kickoff return and punt return. His punt return

against N. C State in 1948 was the game's only

score

Gage had eight games where he amassed 200yards or more total offense and his 374 yardsagainst Auburn in 1947 is still a school record.

His four TD passes in that game still stand as a

Clemson high. Altogether, Gage owns or is tied

for 1 2 Clemson records, which have withstood 27years of competition.

P. B. Holtzendorf

Holtzendorf is one of two Clemson natives

being inducted into the Hall today His father, the

late P B Holtzendorf, Jr , was for many years

secretary of the Clemson 'Y' and was the

school's swimming coach.

The younger Holtzendorf. who is now the di-

rector of the YMCA of Pickens County and nowlives in Easley, lettered in tennis in 1939, 1940

and 1941 and was the team captain his senior

year. But he is best remembered for his swim-

ming.

He served as team co-captam in 1941 . but in

1939 he led the Tigers to both the state and

Southern Conference titles. He swam the 50-

yard dash in 29.9 seconds in the state go. but

came back with a 24.5 time in the conference

meet. He also swam a leg on the winning 400-

yard relay team in the state meet.

The Clemson basketball and swimming teams

won Southern Conference titles the same day

and Holtzendorf played a big part in the

tankmen's victory. In qualifying, he set a league

record in the 100-yard free style with 55.6 sec-

onds and came back the next day to better this

with a 55.4 time. The relay team came in second

and Holtzendorf swam a leg in this event.

Herman McGee

McGee now holds the longevity mark on the

Clemson athletic staff. He came on the payroll in

March of 1 934 and is now in his 43rd year with the

Tigers. Almost every athlete who returns to the

campus asks. "Where's Herman?" Because in

his 42-plus years most of them have had a bruise

massaged, or an ankle taped, or a musclewrapped by Herman He is a fixture in the training

room as much as the whirlpool or heat lamp.

McGee, who is now assistant trainer, served in

that same capacity from 1934 through 1948. Hewas trainer until 1957 and then was assistant

trainer and equipment manager for two years. In

June of 1965 he was recognized by the National

Athletic Trainers Association for "twenty-five or

more years of meritorious service in the field of

athletic training.

"

There are two things Herman refuses to do—to

name his favorite sports and his favorite athlete.

But he will tell you the play that stands out in his

mind the most. That came in the 1951 OrangeBowl against Miami when Clemson's Sterling

Smith tackled Frank Smith of the Hurricanes for a

safety giving the Tigers a 15-14 victory.

Herman s Hall of Fame plaque says: "Trainer

and Friend of Clemson Athletes Since 1934.

"

That just about sums it up and nothing flowery is

needed.

Johnny Snee

Snee. who is now president of the Eastern

Shore Oil Co., in Salisbury, Md , led the Tigers in

scoring for three straight years. His freshmanyear (1948-49) Clemson posted a "10-11 markand then broke even (10-10) the following sea-

son. But then came Coach Banks McFadden s

two best marks (11-7 and 1 7-7) and Snee played

a big pari in these successes with scoring aver-

ages of 17.5 and 14 7

At one time during Snee's senior year ( 1 951 -

52), the Tigers won 1 2 out of 1 4 games, including

10 Southern Conference triumphs, eight of themin a row.

That was the year Snee was team captain andhe was also named to the All-Southern squad.

When he completed his eligibility, the Tigers hadcompiled a four-year mark of 48-35

Although he never scored 30 points in a game,he was a consistent scorer. He is one of nine

Clemson players who has scored over 1 .000

points in a career and his 1 3. 1 per game scoring

average is the ninth highest in Tiger history. His

76. 1 free throw percentage is the best ever com-piled by a four-year Clemson player, with his best

effort coming as a junior (85.2%), high for that

class.

John Dunkelburg

Dunkelburg is the second Clemson native

being inducted today. His late father was on the

ag engineering staff for many years. Dunkelburg

is now working on his Ph.D. in business man-agement at the University of South Carolina after

having worked with South Carolina Electric &Gas in Charleston and with Ralston Purina in

Mexico and South America.

"Dunk"' lettered in both cross country and track

three years and served as team captain his junior

and senior years with record-breaking perfor-

mances.He helped establish a new state mile relay

record in 1 958 with a time of 3:20.7 minutes and a

year later came back to establish new times in

the 440 dash (48.0 seconds) and in the 880 run

( 1 :53. 1 minutes). He lowered his time a tenth of a

second his senior year in the 440 which estab-

lished a new Atlantic Coast Conference record

His time of 1 :1 2.7 in the 600 yard dash at the ACCIndoor Meet in 1959 tied a conference mark.

Clemson salutes six of her own today for

success in athletics ... for success in life

Page 9: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

PRE-GAME12:45 p.m.

GAME1 :00 p.m.

HALFTIME

Today's ProgramClemson University TIGER BANDTiger Rouser: SOCK IT TO EM (Filmore)

TIGER RAG (Arr. Yoder)

Presentation of Colors: SINFONIANS (Williams/Tatgenhorst)

Clemson University Army ROTC Honor GuardCommanded by Cadet Captain Charles F. Smith

Prayer: Offered by a representation of the Fellowship of Christian Athletes

NATIONAL ANTHEM (Arr. Damrosch-Sousa)ALMA MATER (McGarity-Hawkins)

Clemson University Chorus, William W. Campbell, Director

Retirement of Colors

Tiger Rouser Reprise

CLEMSON UNIVERSITY vs. UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINAGame Announcer: Ken Allison

For the Clemson Band: Nick Peck

University of North Carolina BandJohn F. Yesulaitis, Director

Clemson University TIGER BANDThe Sound of "The Big Band"

Entrance: STRING OF PEARLS (Arr. Love)

Trumpet Soloists: Dean Norton and Keith Snelgrove

Circle Drill: NIGHT TRAIN (Arr. Leach)

Featuring the Trumpet Section

Feature: SING, SING, SING (Arr. Leach)

Percussion Soloist: Mike DelCampoTenor Saxophone Soloist: Geoff Roach

Exit: TIGER RAG (Arr. Yoder)

Hall of Fame Presentations

Entrance Drill Designed by TIGER BAND graduate student Jim Lucas

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Page 10: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 11: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 12: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

President Robert C. Edwards

It's good to have you as our guest

today on the Clemson University cam-pus for an afternoon of Tiger football.

College football has become as muchof an American tradition as some of the

events we have celebrated during our

Bicentennial. Indeed, a strong intercol-

legiate athletic program is a valuable

asset to a university and to the students it

serves. Pride in victory and in school

spirit is also part of the fabric of our heri-

tage.

It seems appropriate in this year of

reflection to give thought to the educa-

tional taproot from which has grown this

great tradition of intercollegiate competi-

tion. We are here today because Clem-son University is here, and Clemson, like

other colleges and universities, is about

education.

Higher education has come through

some rough times since the late 1960s

when campus unrest and protest were

widespread. It became the vogue to

make universities and their adminis-

trators the whipping posts for many of

society's ills.

Now it appears that in 1976, history is

repeating itself, although in a different

form. In recent months higher education

once again has become the target of se-

vere criticism, especially in a book.

Caroline Bird's The Case Against Col-

lege, which has received national atten-

tion. It attacks the very concept of a col-

lege education, using generalizations

and popular myths to create a distorted

picture.

Criticism per se is not the issue here. It

would be more than foolish to even

suggest that higher education never de-

serves criticism. What is the urgent con-

College:

It's Worth It

cern. and the thing which is disturbing, is

that this type of across-the-board indict-

ment of our colleges and universities will

be accepted as factual without a relent-

less, personal inquisitiveness from each

of us. If we don't do this, then we indeed

have a true American tragedy.

If there ever was a time for believers in

higher education to come forward andspeak up, it is now. The public deserves— and has a responsibility, if you will —to have the case for higher education

stated in a clear, undistorted way.

A favorite expression in football

strategy suggests that the best defense is

a good offense. I propose that our col-

leges and universities, especially those

member institutions of the national

land-grant system, have been on the of-

fense for more than 1 00 years, ever since

Congress gave us the ball in the form of

the Morrill Act which established the

land-grant system of higher education in

1862.

This system has given every American

so many reasons to be proud. State uni-

versities and land-grant institutions don't

need to make any apologies for their

performance in the public arena. It is a

fact the influence of land-grant institu-

tions extends into the homes and work-

ing lives of all Americans, and of manypeoples around the world.

Clemson. as are other state and land-

grant universities, is concerned with the

real world and people's problems: im-

proving the quality of life for all our citi-

zens — better housing, adequatesupplies of food and fiber, energy, the

protection of our environment andnatural resources. Yes, these and manyother basic concerns.

Consider these remarkable land-grant

institution achievements: discovery of

streptomycin for treatment and control

of tuberculosis; development of the

anti-coagulant dicoumarol which pre-

vents blood clotting; development of the

TV tube, the transistor, the first cyclo-

tron, and production of pure uranium.

Clemson' s impressive contributions to

the quality of life include development of

new food products and nutrient-rich

food substitutes; major advances in food

production and harvesting; break-

throughs in biomedical research such as

artificial body implants and replace-

ments; special programs for the young,

the elderly, the sightless, the mentally

handicapped.

From these few examples, it is obvious

the cumulative benefits of state andland-grant university research has morethan repaid the public for tax dollars

spent in support of these institutions.

I believe that some of the finest

spokesmen for the value of higher edu-

cation are the millions of men andwomen who have been richly-served bytheir college diplomas.

The real facts — the true story —about modern higher education also

makes interesting reading. In most cases,

truth is indeed stranger and more excit-

ing than fiction.

College is worth it.

CLEMSON UKri^T-EFtSIT-^r

Page 13: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

BILL McLELLAN — Athletic Director

Very few of his peers can boast of

the formal training or experiencewhich Bill McLellan has acquired over

the past 17 years.

Only the third man to own the title of

Director of Athletics at Clemson,McLellan was elevated to his present

position Feb. 4, 1971, following morethan a decade of service to the univer-

sity's athletic department.

That service began as an appren-

ticeship in the spring of 1958, on the

eve of two consecutive post-season

bowl appearances by the football Ti-

gers.

Carrying the title of assistant busi-

&l ness manager, McLellan had been

ffim credited with handling the majority of

fink the university's athletic business and

BPa^ operation long before his appointment

as the school's athletic director.

His duties included such things as the overall operation of the ticket

office and mail room; the overseer of purchases and expenditures by the

department; and the supervision of all the department's athletic facilities.

After a majority of his staff had called it a day, McLellan wound up on the

football practice field where he assisted his former coach, Frank Howard,with the latter's gridiron chores.

In 1 966 McLellan was named Clemson's assistant athletic director, andtwo years later as associate AD.

During the past decade, Clemson's athletic physical plant experienced

a major face lifting under McLellan's direction.

The Tiger basketball team plays in Littlejohn Coliseum, now eight years

old and the newest cage facility in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Last

year the cagers won a school -record 18 games.Six years ago the baseball team christened a new facility, and this past

spring, recorded its 19th consecutive winning season, made its secondstraight trip to NCAA post-season playoffs and its third trip to the College

World Series.

In 1972 the A. Hoke Sloan Tennis Center, surrounded by 14 Laykold

courts, was completed; and in the same year, the soccer team, winner of

four straight ACC titles, moved to a Bermuda-turfed field, complete with

bleachers and electric scoreboard.

A new all-weather, nine-lane track was used for the first time in 1973,the same year the Jervey Athletic Center was occupied. This facility

houses all athletic personnel, has carpeted dressing rooms for eachathletic team, workout and training rooms and a two-court, tartan-

surfaced gym.

And last winter, the Tiger swimming teams opened their season in the

new Fike Natatorium with its electrically-timed eight-lane pool and sepa-rate diving tank.

McLellan's efforts have been directed in many areas since 1958, andregardless of the matter at hand or the sport in season, he is continually

looking for ways to improve both the athletic program and the university's

overall goals.

A native of Hamer, McLellan, 44, played football for Clemson and was amember of the Tigers' 1952 Gator Bowl team.

He married the former Ann Rogers of Fork, June 5, 1 954, and they havefour children— Suzy, a junior at Winthrop; Bill, a freshman at Spartanburg

Methodist College; Cliff, a senior at Pendleton High School; and Arch

Anna, a freshman at Pendleton High.

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Page 16: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

RED PARKERHead Football Coach

The Clemson Tiger Express, boundfor the nation's football elite and des-tined to reach its goal, suffered a

temporary derailment one year ago,

but Red Parker sees no reason whyhis Tigers cannot get back on track in

pursuit of their original goal.

Entering his fourth season as chief

engineer of Clemson's football for-

tunes, Parker laid the track for the Ti-

gers return trip to the top of the Atlan-

tic Coast Conference.

He came to Tigertown in December,1972. following a season when Clem-son had managed but four gridiron vic-

tories

Yet the Hampton, Ark., native,

whose repertoire included headcoaching stints at Fordyce, Ark., High

School. Arkansas A&M and TheCitadel, brought an exciting triple op-

tion offense and a heart full of dedication with him.

His first season, 1 973. was a success. Clemson recorded five wins andscored 231 points, more than any other Tiger team had accumulated in

any one of the previous 13 campaigns.

One year later, Parker faced a season with a more confident group of

players, but against an even tougher schedule than the year before.

It was Excitement Galore, as the Tigers won seven and lost four, andmissed an eight-win season and a post-season bowl trip by two points and

90 seconds

For his achievement, Parker was recognized as Coach-of-the-Year in

both the State of South Carolina and the ACC.

Then, despite some key losses, demson was picked as the team to

beat for the 75 ACC crown. But some unexpected and uncontrollable

bounces of the football, together with some critical injuries to key person-

nel, led to a dismal season.

But Parker, who has never served as anything but a head coach, spent

the next nine months going over the things that might have been, the

things as they were and the things that were going to be in hopes of putting

the Tigers back on the track where they left off in 74 — as one of the

nation's most exciting football teams.

Parker's collegiate coaching began at his alma mater, Arkansas A&Mwhere his teams posted a 29-19-2 record from 1961 through 1965. In his

last three seasons there his teams were 24-5-1 and won a pair of confer-

ence championships. He then went to The Citadel where in seven sea-

sons the Bulldogs were 39-34, including an 8-3 finish in 1971.

But his climb in the coaching world started at Fordyce where he took a

team that had lost 22 straight, and in eight seasons, amassed a 75-12-4

record. At one stretch Fordyce won 37 straight games and bagged three

consecutive Arkansas prep titles.

Parker, the 1 9th man to hold the head football job at Clemson, now has

a 15-year collegiate record of 82-72-2.

The 44-year-old Parker (he'll be 45 Oct. 26th) earned a BA degree from

Arkansas A&M at College Heights, Ark., in 1953. In his undergraduate

days he earned three letters as a running back-defensive back, three as a

second baseman-shortstop and three as a sprinter.

He married the former Betty Goggans of Rison. Ark.. May 26. 1951

They have three children — Mrs. Vicki Wallace; Cindy, a senior at Clem-

son; and Jim Mack, a sophomore at D W Daniel High School.

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The uniqueness of each order requires that we quote you a total costimmediately upon receiving your order coupon, school letter and $40deposit. A $3 charge will be added to your order to cover postage andhandling. Work will begin only after receiving your go-ahead. Delivery

may be expected within four weeks after confirmation is received. All workguaranteed.

See Campus Keepsakes designs at Robin Hood Wool Shop, 336College Avenue in Clemson. On display Fridays prior to footballSaturdays from 5 to 9 p.m. and on football Saturdays from 10 a.m. toNoon and from 3:30 p.m. to 6 p.m.

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Page 17: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Clemson Assistant Coaches

DWIGHT ADAMS TOM BASS LARRY BECKISH JOE BURSON ED EMORY BUDDY KING

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Page 18: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 20: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

TIhe official celebration was in 1969.

It was designated as "The CentennialYear" of college football by the Na-tional Collegiate Athletic Assn. ThePost Office issued a commemorativestamp. Newspaper accounts said a

"planned antiwar demonstration" wasset if Richard Nixon came toa"Centen-nial Came" in New Brunswick, N.J.

and 20,000 showed up for a parade.

That was the historical tribute, a

genuflection to the beginning of the

game, yet there is very strong evi-

dence to suggest that the game playedbetween Princeton and Rutgers on anempty lot on Nov. 6, 1869 was not

really football. Rather it was soccer

and, in the sense of accuracy, wasn't

the first football game played five

years later? In Cambridge, Mass.

It was between Harvard and McCill

University of Montreal. It was knownas "Boston football" and it took its

roots from the tradition established

by the Oneida Football Club of Bos-

ton, the first organized football club

in the United States. The surviving

members of the club erected a monu-ment to its brief history (1862-65) onthe Boston Common in 1925.

If the nation at large observed

1869 as the starting date of college

football, the people at Harvard had

some fun two years ago, recreating

the game it had played 100 years be-

fore and referring to the 1974 season

as "The Real Football Centennial."

Decals were put out, stories werewritten and it passed quietly into his-

tory.

Harold M. Kennard, a football his-

torian, wrote a letter to Harvard pub-

licist Dave Matthews in 1973. "I have

been agitating, to little avail, for over

35 years," he said, "to get football

sports writers to drop the myth of

that Princeton-Rutgers soccer game in

1869 as being the first game of Amer-ican football. More power to you."

At the time, there was no response

from the good people at Rutgers and

Princeton. They simply let Harvard

have its say, refusing to change their

records. What most recent histories

say is that Princeton and Rutgers set

the stage, but the origins of the gameas we know it today began on that

day in Cambridge, Mass. when Har-

vard met McCill.

continued on 3t

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Page 21: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 22: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Early Years continued from 1t

"The year 1874," wrote AllisonDanzig in his The History of Ameri-can Football in 1956, "was a momen-tous one in American football. McCillUniversity, through its captain DavidRoger, challenged Harvard to a game.Lacking games with other collegesbecause of the difference in its rules,

"On Saturday, November 6th,Princeton sent twenty-five picked mento play our twenty-five a match gameof foot-ball," it read. "The strangers

came up in the 10 o'clock train, andbrought a good number of backerswith them. After dinner, and a stroll

around the town, during which stroll

The 1894 Yale team at leisure.

Harvard welcomed the proposal andits captain, Henry Grant, accepted.

"McCill played rugby and Harvard

played a game in which a player waspermitted to run with the ball if pur-

sued, but which was largely soccer.

It was agreed that the first of the twogames at Cambridge should be under

Harvard rules. Harvard won it, three

goals to none.

"The second game was played un-

der McCill rules, in three half-hour

sections, and resulted in a scoreless

tie. This was the first intercollegiate

Rugby game played in the United

States and the first Rugby match of

any kind in this country, unless it ac-

tually was Rugby that Yale and Eton

players played (1873), which was not

likely."

Co back, first, to Nov. 6, 1868, the

day when Princeton traveled to Rut-

gers. Even an account in One Hun -

dred Years of Princeton Football >

published in 1969, admitted the game"bore no resemblance to the football

of todav. It was, essentially, soccer."

Yet, the student newspaper at Rutgers,

The Targum , carried an account of

it.

billiards received a good deal of at-

tention, the crowds began to assembleat the ball ground, which, for the

benefit of the ignorant, we would say

is a lot about a hundred yards wide,

extending from College Avenue to

Sicard Street.

"Previous to calling the game, the

ground presented an animated pic-

ture. Grim-looking players were si-

lently stripping, each one surrounded

by sympathizing friends, while aroundeach of the captains was a little crowd,intent upon giving advice, and saying

as much as possible.

"Very few were the preliminaries,

and they were quickly agreed upon.

The Princeton captain, for some rea-

son or other, gave up every point to

our men without contesting one. Theonly material points were that Prince-

ton gave up 'free kicks' whereby a

player, when he catches the ball in the

air is allowed to kick it without hind-

rance. On the other hand, our prac-

tice of 'babying' the ball on the start

was discarded, and the ball wasmounted, in every instance, by a vig-

orous 'long kick.'"

Whatever, Rutgers won that game,

6-4. "To describe the varying fortunes

of the match," observed The Tar -

gum, "game by game, would be a

waste of labor, for every game waslike the one before." In a 1971 book,Oh, How They Played the Came ,

Danzig noted, that game "was soccer,

or association football, with twenty-

five men to a side. Running with the

ball and passing it by hand werestrictly forbidden."

Here Danzig elaborated. "Soccerwas the game played everywhere onthe American campus in 1869, except

at one college. It might have remainedthe only football, or at least THEgame of football, played to this dayhad it not been for the fact that at

Harvard they had come up with a

variety of football that had elementsof rugby."

After 1869, Columbia and Yale en-

tered the sport and, on Oct. 19, 1873,

the four schools met in New York to

formulate the first set of intercollegi-

ate rules. Harvard declined an invita-

tion, preferring to stick with its ownrules and, a year later, met McCill

in the two games that ultimately

would lead to a more universal adop-tion of these rules.

"Football historians," reads a sec-

tion in the official book put out by the

National Football Foundation in 1971,

"believe that Harvard's decision wasthe most important and far-reaching

in the annals of American football.

Had the Crimson accepted the invita-

tion and gone along with Yale, Prince-

ton, Columbia and Rutgers in the

adoption of the code they eventually

drafted in New York, the Americangame, as we know it today, never

would have evolved and soccer wouldhave been established as the No. 1

college sport."

"Intercollegiate soccer," wrote his-

torian Tim Cohane in the Harvard

Football News , "had been played byPrinceton and Rutgers since 1869, andColumbia since 1870. Yale also tookup soccer in 1873." He talked aboutthe meeting in New York. "The Can-tabrigians realized that any 'compro-mise' of games with four soccer-play-

ing colleges probably would retain

very little 'Boston football.'"

The following year, in 1875, Har-vard issued a challenge to Yale to

play a game under a compromise set

of rules. Adopting "concessionaryrules," the two met on Nov. 13, 1875.

It was mostly a game of rugby. Har-

continued on 7t

3,

Page 23: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 24: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Early Years continued from 3t

vard agreed to some soccer rules, Yale

conceded to play 15 men to a side.

The next year, Yale switched to the

Harvard rules.

"There were many points of differ-

ence," wrote William R. Tyler in the

Harvard Advocate, "in Harvard's Bos-

ton Came from the rugbv game. It

was eminently a kicking, as distin-

guished from a running and tackling,

game ... I would question if there

were three men in college who had

ever seen the egg-shaped ball. A dropkick was unknown."

There were a couple of Princeton

men in New Haven to see the first

Harvard-Yale game in 1875 and, after

returning to campus, argued for an

adoption of the different rules. Senti-

ment was strong to retain the rules

drawn up in 1873, but eventually

Princeton voted to change and invited

representatives from Harvard, Yale

and Columbia to a meeting in Spring-

field, Mass."... for the purpose of adopting

a uniform system of rules and con-

sidering the advisability of forming an

Intercollegiate Football Association. It

is generally understood that all the

colleges have adopted the Rugby Un-

ion rules, but that each is playing

them in some slight variations." Rugbyrules, permitting running, wereadopted and soccer rules, favoring

kicking, were the result—America had

a new game.Oddly, wrote Harold Kaese of the

Globe in a recent history of football at

Tufts, "The only football game Harvard

ever lost was to Tufts." That was on

June 4, 1875, when Tufts, a small col-

lege in nearby Medford, beat Harvard

with one touchdown and one goal to

none. "To purists," wrote Kaese, "the

first Tufts-Harvard game was the first

real football played between Ameri-

can colleges." Oddly, as well, most

histories of the game completely omit

it.

"We borrowed horses and a hay-

wagon from the farmer who cared for

the college cows," said Eugene Bo-

wen, the Tufts manager, "and trav-

eled to Cambridge with urchins call-

ing us farmers and hayseeds. There

were approximately a hundred stu-

dents at Tufts, and it was a job to

persuade twenty-two to have prac-

tice."

"They played briskly," noted the

reporter in the Globe the next day

"and ere long five or six Tufts men

found themselves laid on their backs

so violently that they imagined it wasevening by the stars they saw." TheBoston Transcript said, "The Harvards

did not watch their movements as

closely as they should have, conse-

quently Tufts made the first and only

goal."

Out of it, too, came the first excuse.

The Harvard Advocate blamed it onan insufficient Spring practice andoveremphasis on sports such as base-

ball and rowing. Now, Harvard andthe Ivy League, do not tolerate ANYspring practice. In the formative years,

there were seven games in the Spring.

In the Fall, Harvard traveled to Med-ford and, on a field where cowsgrazed, avenged its loss to Tufts.

On Nov. 6, 1875, a "Second Eleven"

at Tufts went to Lewiston, Maine for a

game against Bates. "The game,"wrote Kaese, "had been arranged be-

tween Charles Cushman, a veteran of

the first encounter with Harvard, andhis friend Frank Briggs, who had beenconvinced to form a team at Bates.

It provided the state of Maine with

its first taste of intercollegiate foot-

ball."

"To Harvard," wrote Alonzo Stags

in the 1944 Football Guide, "goes the

credit for taking up Rugby and play-

ing it consistently in 1874, 1875 and

1876. To Princeton belongs the credit

of initiating the calling of the con-

vention. To Yale, belongs the credit

of persistently contending that the

number of players on a team be fixed

at eleven instead of fifteen and finally

winning her point in 1880."

The man generally recognized as

"The Father of American Football"

was a Yale freshman in 1876 namedWalter Camp. Although he credited

his 1876 captain at Yale, Eugene V.

Baker, with sowing, "the first germs

of real football at Yale . . . and taught

me the best part of football as I knowit," it was Camp who left his imprint

on the game. He changed a rugby

scrum to a football scrimmage and

adopted the system of downs and

yards to gain.

Among the other things he did was

to back up the Yale plea for an 11

man team. He originated signal call-

ing and the quarterback position. Hepersuaded the rules committee, on

which he served for 48 years, to per-

mit tackling below the waist and, after

serving as first head coach at Yale,

he moved West in 1892, to becomethe first head coach at Stanford.

"If Walter Camp had contributed

not a single thing else to football,"

noted John D. McCallum and Charles

Pearson in the National Football Foun-

dation book, "his name would still

rest secure on the scrimmage, perhaps

the greatest single invention in any

game." And, for terminology, a Prince-

ton man, Ned Peace, turned to Campat an 1882 convention after Camptalked about lining the field, "That

will look like a gridiron," said Peace.

"Precisely," replied Camp.The changes made, the game in-

creased in popularity, branching out-

side the East to Minnesota, Purdue,

Notre Dame, Indiana, Virginia, South-

ern California, Washington."From 1888 on," wrote Danzig,

"following the legalizing of the lowtackle and the contracting of the line

and backfield into a close formation,

the style of football was to changeradically."

Stagg, a Yale man who started

coaching at Springfield, later wrote,

"I am sure the push-and-pull period

of offensive football started with mycreation of the ends back offense in

1890." He moved to the University of

Chicago. "In 1890," wrote Stagg,

"when, as a student, I was given per-

mission to organize a team at Spring-

field, I created a new system of play

by playing both ends behind the line."

The flying wedge was introduced at

Harvard, in 1892, and the revolving

wedge the same year at Minnesota.

Vanderbilt used the flying wedgeagainst North Carolina and against

Georgia Tech in 1892. "By 1893,"

wrote Stagg, "everyone was using his

flying wedge and the mass principle,

and the game so increased in rough-

ness and injuries as a consequencethat the season ended in an uproar,

and the Army and Navy Departments

abolished the service game (for

1894.)"

New York was the scene of an 1894

meeting of representatives from Har-

vard, Yale, Princeton and Penn to save

the sport. The rules changes included

outlawing the wedge and flying

wedge, cutting time from 90 to 70

minutes, dividing the game into

halves, prohibiting a player fromtouching an opponent until he hadthe ball and the ball had to travel 10

yards before it could be touched ona kickoff. #

7

Page 25: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

1HE LIFE OFACORNERRACK

A cornerback has to be quick enough to

cover the pass, and also tough enoughto bring down the biggest backs.

rootball coaches seldom agree onanything. Defensive alignment. Of-

fensive formations. Each has his favo-

rite and isn't easily convinced to

change or accept another philosophy

as better.

But ask them what player on their

squad has to be the best athlete

pound for pound — and you get a

unanimous answer: the cornerback.

"The cornerback faces more crucial

responsibility than anyone else onthe field," one top college coachclaims. "He can certainly cost a teama touchdown quicker than anybodyelse. Surely faster than any offensive

player can be expected to get oneback."

What does a coach look for in a

prospective cornerback?

"Speed, agility, quickness, coordina-

tion, judgment—and then somethingmore which you can't coach or

teach," another major college mentoranswers. "That's a kind of sixth-

sense, the uncanny ability some kids

have of knowing or just feeling whatis coming next."

Another answered, "A lot of fine

athletes can't master the art of play-

ing cornerback. Particularly because

by Virgil Parker, Lincoln JOURNAL

of the agility that is required. Hemust drill on his footwork hour after

hour, until it becomes second na-

ture."

A tall cornerback is a rarity. It's be-

cause he is smaller than most of his

mates that the accolade which started

this article carried the "pound for

pound" qualification.

"A tall person is obviously going

to have longer legs," a top defensive

backfield coach points out. "That

means more to get tangled up whenhe's trying to stay with a split endwho is faking and cutting four differ-

ent directions at once while running

his pattern."

The ideal college cornerback is from5-10 to 6-1, the coaches contacted

agreed. He has more speed, quickness

and agility than any other player onthe defensive unit.

"Wide receivers who are :09.5

sprinters from the track team are a

dime a dozen," one coach observes.

"That's who our cornerback is ex-

pected to cover. And remember, the

receiver knows where he is going

cutting this way or that; pretending

he's headed for the sideline only to

suddenly streak downfield; or ap-

pearing to be in a 'fly' pattern straight

down the field, only to put on the

brakes and come back into the 'hook'

zone.

"No matter what the receiver does,

we—and the fan in the stands—ex-

pect the cornerback to stay with that

receiver like they were glued to-

gether," the coach admits.

Obviously, that's an impossible as-

signment. So, defensive coaches cameup with help for the cornerback in

the form of the zone defense. Thebiggest advantage of the zone is to

give the cornerback some support

underneath.

As soon as the cornerback reads

pass, he starts to drop with the split

end. He knows that the linebacker

will be falling back into the 'hook'

zone. (See #1 .)

#1-The linebacker will be able to bat

down a low-thrown ball. If it sails

high, the cornerback will be in a po-

sition for an interception.

But the cornerback can't come uptoo tight on the receiver. He mustguard against a 'stop and go' pattern,

where the receiver might fake a

'hook', then suddenly turn again andstreak on down field. (See #2.)

#2-In this case, the cornerback must

be alert for such a 'stop and go' ac-

tion and be ready to immediatelyreact and prevent the receiver fromgetting behind him for the 'long

bomb.'"By the same token," one coach

points out, "the cornerback can't play

so loose off his man (10-15 yards),

that the opposition can complete a

series of hook or sideline passes all

the way down the field and get into

scoring position."

This is where the needed qualities

of a good cornerback come into play

—speed and quickness plus reaction

time.

Then comes the footwork and agil-

ity.

"We have our cornerback running

stride for stride with a speedy re-

ceiver," a defensive backfield coachhypothesizes. "Though we teach ourother defensive backs to holler 'ball'

when the pass is on its downwardflight toward the receiver, a goodcornerback will almost sense—fromthe action and movement of the re-

ceiver — when the ball is coming.Then, in an instant, he must look upand locate the ball while maintaining

good body control and balance.

"He must get into the best possible

position to bat down or intercept the

ball—all the while running at top

speed. And he must take care not to

unfairly bump or interfere with the

receiver—thus drawing a costly pen-

alty."

Pass interference is one penalty in

which there is a great deal of judg-

ment on the part of the official.

"When the ball is in the air, it

doesn't belong to anyone," another

defensive coach states strongly. "Thedefensive back needs to go up with

the receiver with his hands and armshigh in the air. If he has them up to

catch or bat the ball away, he can't

be accused of using his hands to

push the receiver."

When does a cornerback try for

a pass interception?

"Only when he is POSITIVE he will

get his hands on the ball," one coach

emphasizes. "Losing dressing roomsusually have a player telling his coach

or the press that 'I thought I could

cut in front of him and make the in-

terception,' while explaining how the

opposition completed a short side-

line pass that turned into a long

gainer after the catch."

"The well-run pattern and per-

fectly thrown ball is going to be a

completion," the coach continued.

continued on 12t

Page 26: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 27: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

continued from 10t

"You've got to accept that.

"In that case, the cornerback's job

is to see that the receiver doesn't get

another inch of yardage after the

catch.

"For starters, his best chance to

create an incompletion is to time his

tackle to occur at the instant the ball

touches the receiver's hands. There's

a good chance that a solid hit will

cause him to drop the ball.

"If that doesn't work, while mak-ing the tackle he should hang onwith one arm and reach in with the

free hand and try to 'strip' the ball

loose. Or, at the time of the initial

contact, slam one fist in there to try

to punch the ball out.

"But in any case, the first objective

should be a sure and firm tackle—to

make sure the yards gained on the

completion are all the receiver's go-

ing to get."

Some of the other major cover-

age problems a cornerback regularly

faces include:

#3.A running sweep to your side.

Don't be too quick to come up andlend support against the run—it maybe a run-pass option. The corner-

back's first responsibility is to a deepout pattern by the split end. Onlyafter he has committed himself to a

block, should the cornerback try to

elude the block and come up to help

out.

#4A running sweep to the opposite

side. The defensive end has chasedthe play from the back side. Yourmain responsibility is to come up,

protecting to the outside against a

double reverse or end-around whichwould be coming back your way.

Quicker support against the run is

called for here. Same running play

your direction, but the split end has

blocked against the outside line-

backer. Now you come up immedi-ately to assume his duties in stopping

the run.

A crossing pattern between the

tight end and the flanker on your

side. The cornerback takes the re-

ceiver to the outside, with the safety

picking up the player coming downthe middle.

#7Almost the same play. But don't

commit yourself too soon. The re-

ceivers may not actually crisscross.

The cornerback still has the man to

the outside.

Playing cornerback is far from a

science.

"It's not a 1-2-3 thing," one coachassures. "We give him the basic rules

and he has to adjust to them accord-

ing to the opponent, the skills of the

particular player he's covering, the

position on the field, the velocity anddirection of the wind, the score of

the game, the down and yardage for

that particular play, the time remain-

ing— lots of factors. But don't makean error in judgment. It'll be morenoticeable to the fans in the stands

than the mistake made by any other

player on the field."

Such is the day in the life of a

cornerback.

"Try using ordinary binoculars to follow the Quarterback fadingback for a pass and then switching to a wide receiver sprinting

into the end zone. Can't be done. Because no matter howgood your binoculars are, you miss a lot of the action if youcan't change focus fast enough.

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Page 28: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 30: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

If You Can Afford Their Hamburgers— You Can Afford Our Steaks

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Page 31: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

The Edgar A. Brown Student Union now fills an area that was once just an empty quadrangle between the Loggia and Harcombe CommoiDiniriCj KaiJ.

Page 32: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

First. For good reason.

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Page 33: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 34: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

iubstitution Infractions

Illegal Procedure

or Position

Offside (Infraction

of scrimmage or

free kick formation) Illegal Motion Clipping

Ineligible Receiver

Down Field on Pass

Touchdown or

Field Goal

Personal Foul

Incomplete Forward Pass

Penalty Declined,

No Play, or No Score

Illegal use of

Hands and Arms

A

Helping the Runner, or

Interlocked Interference

Illegally Passing

or Handling Ball Forward

Ball Dead; If Handis Moved from Side

to Side: Touchback

>

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Page 35: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 36: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 37: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

1. Mrs. Elizabeth Goggins has to be thinking, "Give the ball to

Harold."

2. Mrs. Betty Hudson waves her Tiger Rag with a smiling approval of

another fine play.

3. By the smile on the face of Willie Jordan's mother, you can rest

assured that her son came up with another fine play.

4. Mr. and Mrs. Steve Kenney seem concerned about the next play.

Mr. Kenney, incidentally, played football at North Carolina.

5. The Rev. Lewis Marler with son Malcolm, who will follow in his

father's footsteps as a Baptist minister. Malcolm will enter the

Southern Theological Seminary in Louisville, Ky., after graduation.

6. Mrs. George Webb chats with son Trav after a game. Son Gary is

also a member of the '76 Tigers.

— photos by Blake Banta

Page 38: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

tit!

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Page 39: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 40: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 41: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

The North Carolina Series

History, conference championship settlements, humor, controversy,

and excitement have highlighted the Clemson-North Carolina series, onewhich the Tigers hold an edge of 1 4 victories compared to the Tar Heels'

10.

History inasmuch as the series began in 1897, only the second year

that the Tigers fielded a football team.

The game marked just the sixth football contest involving a Clemsonvarsity grid team, and the Tar Heels blanked the Tigers by a 28-0 score,

which was the first of three shutouts that UNC has pinned on Clemson.

There were four games in the early part of the Twentieth Century, and

each team won a pair with Clemson's first series win coming in the second

Tig-Tar Heel battle, 22-10 in 1901.

Following a 9-7 UNC victory in 1915, the two teams did not meet on the

football field until 1 957, and in a year that a man named Jim Tatum was in

his second season at North Carolina as Tar Heel coach.

UNC blanked the Tigers 26-0 in Chapel Hill, and since that game, the

teams have faced each other every single season.

Atlantic Coast Conference championships were reportedly on the line

in the next two Clemson-UNC encounters

Tatum's Tar Heels invaded Death Valley in the second game of the '58

season, and the Tigers presented Clemson's Frank Howard with his

100th career coaching victory, a 26-21 decision, and his first ever over

"Sunny Jim." The Tigs won the ACC title that year and advanced to the

Sugar Bowl to face top-ranked LSU.

Tatum, incidentally, called Howard and talked to not only the Bashful

Baron but to some of the Tiger players to wish them good luck against

LSU. "He told us that the entire ACC was pulling for us." said captain and

center Bill Thomas."Sunny Jim's" unexpected death ended a legendary coaching era, but

youthful Jim Hickey inherited the Tar Heel reins and a promising UNCprogram in 1959.

The Tigers and Tar Heels met in the season opener at Chapel Hill that

fall in a game described by one sportswriter as a contest "between two

power-laden aggregations rated among the nation's elite."

Clemson built up a 14-6 halftime lead but had to foil a UNC two-point

conversion attempt with 1 :20 to play in the game to claim a 20-1 8 victory.

Clemson again won the ACC crown and played in the first annual

Bluebonnet Bowl that year.

On the humorous side, Howard had boasted to UNC star running back

Ken Willard after the Tar Heels' 35-0 win over Air Force in the '63 Gator

Bowl, that he would give Willard a kiss if UNC could beat Clemson in

Death Valley in '64.

After a 29-0 UNC win, Howard strolled into the Tar Heel dressing room,

found Willard, and gave the UNC senior a kiss goodbye.

Controversy struck the '65 game when Clemson cut a 1 7-7 UNC lead to

17-13 with four minutes left in the game. Tommy Ray hit Phil Rogers on a

pass for the two-point conversion, but the officials ruled the catch wasmade out of bounds. Howard swore the films showed the catch was good.

Time ran out on the Tigers with Clemson at the UNC one-yard line. Hadthe conversion attempt been good, a Tig field goal would have given

Clemson a win.

Excitement and scoring can best describe the last three Clemson-North

Carolina games, as a total of 225 points, or an average of 75 points per

game have been scored.

Clemson broke a four-game UNC series win streak with a 37-29 win at

Chapel Hill in 1973, Red Parker's first year at Tigertown, came back to

crush the Sun Bowl bound Tar Heels 54-32 at Clemson in '74, and then

rallied from a 14-0 deficit to nudge UNC 38-35 at Chapel Hill a year ago.

And that game was still unsettled until Dennis Smith picked off a Tar Heel

pass at the Clemson goal line with 1:19 to play.

Whatever highlights the 1976 Clemson-North Carolina game, you can

bet it will be another interesting battle this afternoon.

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Page 42: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 43: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

1976 CLEMSONNo. Name Pos. Age Hgt.

1 Tony Masone QB 18 6-1

2 Warren Ratchford RB 20 5-9

3 Billy Lott QB 1

7

6-1

4 Steve Fuller QB 19 6-3

5 Willie Jordan DB 1

9

5-1

1

6 Richard Holliday P 1

9

6-2

7 Brian Kier DB 21 6-1

8 Rul Livingston DB 21 6-2

9 John Goodloe DB 22 5-1

1

10 Joey Walters SR 21 5-11

11 Mike O'Cain OB 22 6-0

12 Rick Weddington SR 21 6-2

1

3

Rex Varn DB 1

8

6-0

1

4

J D Haglan DB 20 6-0

1

5

Jerry Butler CDon 1

8

6-1

1

6

bill Wingo DB 21 5-8

1 7 Mike Cornell DB 21 5-9

18 Ogden Hansford DB 22 6-2

19 Rickey Bustle SR 23 5-1

1

21 Carl Mayer RB 18 6-1

22 Malcolm Marler DB 21 5-8

23 \j j i yier nnUb 24 5-1

1

24 Gary Webb DB 19 5-9

25 Roy Eppes SR 22 6-1OC*iO Mike Baldwin 20 6-1

27 Eric Young SR 1

8

6-1

nicK vvyaii nnUd 1

8

6-1

29 tJOu iviCrninips SR 1

8

6-1

30 Dwight Clark SR 19 6-4

31 Marvin Sims RB 19 6-4

32 Harold Goggins RB 19 5-1

1

34 Garry McDowell 1 RLb 20 6-3

35 nanay ocon LB 1

9

6-0

36 Howard Callahan DB 1

8

6-1

37 Gary Adkins DB 18 5-1C

38 Ronnie Smith LB 20 6-2TQjy Douuy L/Oinran UD on 5-8

40 Rick Basich RB 18 6-1

41 Steve Godfrey RB 22 5-9

42 John Mulcahy RB 18 6-1

43 dod L/Oiiey RB 21 6-0

44 Lester Brown RB 1

9

6-1

45 Fritz Edwards RB 20 6-1

46 Tracy Perry RB 1

9

6-1

47 Marlon Brown LB 1 8 6-1

48 Jimmy Russell PK 18 5-10

49 Rich Bollinger TE 21 6-5

50 George Jehlen OL 20 6-2

51 Rich Tuten MG 22 6-2

52 Jeff Soowal DE 20 6-2

53 Steve Kenney OL 20 6-4

54 Bobby Sharpe LB 22 6-1

55 Trav Webb Q 2i

56 Mitch Blackman OL 1

9

6-4

57 Jim Wyman LB 20 5-9

58 Gregg Smith C 21 6-3

59 Jeff Bostic C 1

7

6-1

60 Nelson Wallace MG 21 5-1061 Kevin Kreis C 21 6-2

63 Danny Jaynes Q 20 6-5

64 Jim Wells OL 20 6-1

65 Archie Reese DT 20 6-3

66 Jen Mills DT 20 6-3

67 Johnny Lyons OL 1

9

6-0

68 Chris Pickens OL 1

8

6-1

69 Lacy Brumley OG 20 6-7

70 Rocky Myrick OL 18 6-2

71 Joe Bostic OL 19 6-4

72 Lacy Foulks ni\

rt

6-4

73 Darrell Misenheimer UL 1 9 6-3

oiiiy nuQSon UL 20 6-4

75 Thad Allen OL 20 6-27K/ o Toney Williams U 1 21 6-4

78 Greg Early OL 1

8

6-3

79 Jimmy Weeks OL 20 6-4

80 Steve Gibbs DE 20 6-3

81 Harold Cam TE 21 6-6

82 Chris Clifford DE 21 6-4

83 Jim Stuckey DE 1

8

6-4

84 Jonathan Brooks DE 1

9

6-4

86 oun oray CDon 1

9

6-4

87 MarK L/iirioro TE 1

9

6-4

88 Anthony King 1 RLD 1 Qi y

89 Bob Goldberg DE 1 8 6-1

90 Jim Goehring LB 18 6-2

91 Ken Yoemans DT 18 6-3

92 Ken Weichel DT 21 6-5

93 Chris Dolce MG 17 6-2

94 Gary Kesack DE 22 6-2

95 Buddy Hopkins 18 6-0

96 Chip Pruett DT 18 6-2

97 Marty Lyons LB 19 5-11

98 Mark Heniford DE 20 5-11

99 Ciro Piccinllo PK 19 6-1

FOOTBALL ROSTER

Wgt Ltrs. Class Hometown

185 Fr. Bridgeport, Conn155 1 So. Gaffney. S C.1 80 Fr Jesup. Ga.1 97 1 So. Spartanburg, S C191 1 So Griffin, Ga.203 So. Belton, S C1 80 -]

Jr. Haines City, Fla.

191 Jr Hendersonville, N. C171 Jr Chester, Va

175 2 Sr Florence, S C184 2 Sr. Orangeburg, S C193 Jr. Charlotte. N C1 70 Fr. Martinsville, Va1 85 So. Conway, Pa.

1 73 So. Ware Shoals, S. C.1 70 3 Sr. Union, S C1 55 2 Jr. Delaware, O182 2 Jr Macon, Ga.1 88 2 Sr. Summerville, S C

180 Fr Middlesex. N J

159 3 Sr. Gardendale, Ala.

1 72 1 Sr. Fernandina Beach. Fla

1 81 So Graham, N C1 79 Jr. Anderson, S C210 1 Jr Baltimore, Md1 75 u Fr. Henrietta, N C1 90 Fr. Honaker, Va.

1 75 Fr. Cincinnati, O

200 1 So. Charlotte, N C222 Fr. Phenix City, Ala

1 92 1 So. Clinton, S, C.220 2 Jr. Griffin, Ga.219 So. Waycross, Ga190 Fr. Delta, O1 72 Fr. Delta, O21 7 2 Jr. Sylva. N. C.

1 40 So Lexington, S C

207 Fr. Delta. O163 Jr Greenville. S C205 Fr. Potmac, Md1 92 1 Jr Linwood, N J

1 80 Fr. Myrtle Beach, S. C.

1 93 So. Gresham, S C21

7

Fr Roxboro. N C21

8

Fr. Loudon, Tenn170 Fr. Greenwood, S. C.

202 Jr. Denville. N J

227 2 Sr Glen Ridge, N J

237 So. Arlington, Va217 So Hilton Head, S. C241 So. Haieigh, n l-.

21 1 Sr. Anderson, S. C236 2 Jr. Graham, N. C220 So. Clinton, N. C.

1 93 Jr. Mauiuin, b. o21 5 Sr. Toccoa, Ga.218 Fr. Greensboro, N C

202 3 Sr Pageland. S C214 Jr. Baltimore. Md.240 So. Charlotte, N C210 So Greenville, S C246 1 Jr Mayesville, S. C.

238 2 Jr. Greenville, S. C.

247 So. Anderson, S. C.

228 So Anderson, S C267 2 Jr. Kannapolis, N C

235 Fr. Wilmington, N C.

250 1 So. Greensboro. N C245 Fr Thomasville, N. C.

256 So. oalisoury, n o.

240 oO. L/OiumDia, o. l.

250 2 Jr. Charlotte, N C.

242 So. Darlington, S C235 Fr. Clyde, N. C.

236 1 Jr Rocky Mount, N. C.

210 1 So Greer, S C231 2 Sr Columbus. Ga.213 1 Jr. Miami, Fla.

238 Fr Cayce, S. C.

210 1 So. Saluda, S. C212 So Stone Mountain, Ga202 So Miami, Fla.

220 So. Cornelia. Ga,

210 Fr. Lake Hiawatha, N. J.

207 Fr. Durham. N C235 Fr. Richmond, Va243 Jr Whitehall, Pa.

245 Fr. Verona, N J

210 2 Sr. Bethlehem. Pa190 Fr. Townville, S C228 Fr. St. Simons Island. Ga226 So. Anderson, S C200 2 Jr Loris, S. C223 So Elberton, Ga

Page 44: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 45: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

15

69

71

55

53

79

81

4

32

46

10

89

71

84

92

81

57

49

17

38

2031

when Clemson

has the ball

TIGER OFFENSE

JERRY BUTLER SE

LACY BRUMLEY LT

JOE BOSTIC LGTRAV WEBB CSTEVE KENNEY OLJIMMY WEEKS RTHAROLD CAIN TESTEVE FULLER QBHAROLD GOGGINS RBTRACEY PERRY RBJOEY WALTERS FLK

TAR HEEL DEFENSE

KEN SHEETS LE

DEE HARDISON LT

DAVE SIMMONS MGT. K. McDANIELS RTBILL PERDUE REBUDDY CURRY LLBRONNIE DOWDY RLBRUSS CONLEY LCBALAN CALDWELL SSRONNIE JOHNSON FS

BOBBY CALE RHB

THE TIGER2 Ratchford, RB

3 Lott, QB4 Fuller, QB5 Jordan, DB7 Kier, DB9 Goodloe, DB10 Walters, SRI I O'Cain, QB12 Weddington, SR13 Varn, LC14 Haglan, DB15 Butler, SR17 Cornell, DB18 Hansford, DB19 Bustle, SR22 Marler, DB23 Tyler, DB24 Webb, DB25 Eppes, SR26 Baldwin, DE28 Wyatt, DB30 Clark, SR

31 Sims, RB

32 Goggins, RB

34 McDowell, LB

35 Scott, LB

37 Adkins, DB38 Smith, R„ LB

40 Basich, RB

43 Coffey, RB

44 Brown, L., RB46 Perry, RB

47 Brown, M., LB

48 Russell, PK

SQUAD49 Bollinger, TE

50 Jehlen, OL51 Tuten, MG52 Soowal, DE53 Kenney, OL54 Sharpe, LB

55 Webb, C58 Smith, C59 Bostic, C60 Wallace. MG61 Kreis, OL63 Jaynes, C64 Wells, OL65 Reese, DT69 Brumley, OG70 Myrick, OL71 Bostic, OL74 Hudson, OL75 Allen, OL76 Williams, DT79 Weeks, OL80 Gibbs, DE81 Cain, TE

82 Clifford, C83 Stuckey, DE84 Brooks, DE86 Bray, SR

88 King, LB

89 Goldberg, DE90 Goehring, LB

92 Weichel, DT94 Kesack, DE98 Heniford, DE99 Piccirillo, PK

DE

TODAY'S GAME OFFICIALS

REFEREE Vincent Price (No. 7)

UMPIRE Ray Moore (No. 47)

LINESMAN George Manning (No. 18)

LINE JUDGE . . .William Luper (No. 26)

FIELD JUDGE .. Ernie Cage (No. 51

)

BACK JUDGE Weldon Wa.tes (No. 36)

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Page 46: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

when N. Carolina

has the ball

28

79

60

55

64

77

88

12

4421

36

84

83

60

51

98

35

47

13

23

5

22

TAR HEEL OFFENSEWALKER LEE SE

MARK GRIFFIN LT

JOHN RUSHING LGMARK CANTRELL CCRAIG FUNK . . RGBOBBY HUKILL RTBROOKS WILLIAMS TEMATT KUPEC QBMIKE VOIGHT TBMEL COLLINS WBBILLY JOHNSON FB

TIGER DEFENSE

JONATHAN BROOKS LE

JIM STUCKEY . . LT

NELSON WALLACE MGRICH TUTEN MGMARK HENIFORD RERANDY SCOTT LLBMARLON BROWN LB

REX VARN LCO. J. TYLER . . . DBWILLIE JORDAN S

MALCOLM MARLER RC

THE TAR HEEL SQUAD10 Christensen, QB 57 Curry, LB

12 Kupec, QB 58 Thompson, MG14 Stratton, QB 60 Rushing, OG1 5 Gay, P., QB 61 Wilson, OT16 Menapace, QB 62 Span, OG17 Conley, DB 63 Duffy, LB

18 Elam, QB 64 Funk, OG19 Rouse, SE 65 Guthrie, OG20 Johnson, R., DB 66 Dunn, OT21 Collins, WB 67 Rhames, MG23 Maclc, DB 68 Saliano, OG24 Casey, TB 70 Broadway, DT26 Daw, DB 71 Hardison, DT27 Batchelor, DB 72 Burkett, OT28 Lee. SE 73 Pearson, OG29 Mabry, WE 74 Hackley, OT30 McGee, DB 75 Shonosky, MG31 Cale, DB 76 Hughes, DT

32 Tedder, DB 77 Hukill, OT36 Johnson, B , FB 78 Hamrick, OG37 Caldwell, J., DB 79 Griffin, OT38 Caldweli, A., DB 80 Ange. DE42 Mills, FB 31 Perdue, DE43 Loomis, FBB 82 Lancaster. DE44 Voight, TB 83 Corbin, TE

45 Rudolph, LB 84 Simmons, MG47 Smith, B , FB 85 Finn, LB48 Winters, DB 86 Austin, LB49 Dowdy, LB 88 Williams, TE51 Smith, T, C 89 Sheets, DE52 Ragaizo, C 90 Kleinman, KS53 Andrews, C 91 Biddle, KS54 Gay, B„ LB 92 McDaniels, DT55 Cantrell, C 93 Lippencott, DE56 Davison, C 95 Smith, C, DT

COCA-COLA BOTTLING COMPANY

Anderson. South Carolina

Page 47: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

THE DELUXE HUSKEE: A quarter pound of charbroiled100% pure beef topped with six fresh ingredients:cheese, lettuce, tomato, pickles, onion and mayonnaise.

Served in a toasted sesame seed bun.

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Page 48: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

1976 NORTH CAROLINA FOOTBALL ROSTER

NO. NAME POS. CL HGT. WGT. HOMETOWN

1 n _, . .

LfiyQG Ohnstensen Lid Jr. 5-9V2 1 73 Fresno, Calif.

1

1

nnUO r.rr. 5-9V2 1 64 Virginia Beach. Va.

12 Matt Kupec QB Fr. 6-1 181 Syosset, N. Y.

14 Johnny Stratton QB Jr. 5-11 175 Salisbury, N. C.15 P. J. Gay QB So. 6-0 183 Sanford. N C.16 Bernie Menapace QB So. 6-0 182 Sterling, Va.1

7

Russ Conley DB Sr. 6-OV2 175 Canton, N C18 John Elam QB Jr. 6-0 200 Charlotte, N C19 Jim Rouse SE So. 6-2 180 Wilmington, N. C.

DfM"\r\w hncr\nnuiiiiy juinibun nnUO or. 5-10 1 93 nigh roint. in.

c. 1 WD I,jr C Qb-o 1 f\) Fairfax, Va.

23 Ken Mack DB So. 6-0 195 Goldsboro, N. C.

24 Carey Casey TB Jr. 6-OV2 190 Salem, Va25 Doug Paschal TB Fr. 6-2 213 Greenville. N. C.

26 John Daw DB Sr. 5-7V2 157 Smithfield, N C27 Scott Batchelor DB Jr. 6-0 170 Winston-Salem. N. C28 Walker Lee SE Jr. 6-0 169 High Point, N. C.29 Bill Mabry WE Jr. 5-11 192 Mt. Airy, N. C.

oU Max Mcoee UD bo. 5-1 OV2 1 80 Tampa, Ha.Q 1o 1 DODoy oaie r»nUb 60. 6-0% 1 69 Miduietown, uei.

32 Larry Tedder DB Jr. 6-0 195 Raleigh. N C34 Doug Banks TB Fr. 5-1 1V4 191 Maysville. N. C.

35 Mitchell Strickland TB Fr. 5-11'/2 186 Sanford, N. C.

36 Billy Johnson FB Fr. 6-1 V4 245 Buckingham, Va.

37 Jeff Caldwell DB Jr. 6-2'/4 180 Clyde, N. C.

38 Alan Caldwell DB Jr. 5-11 172 Winston-Salem, N C39 Delbert Powell SE Fr. 5-1

1

178 Elizabeth City, N C

<4 I

TWayne 1 ucker VA/RW D Pli b-o 1 03 nicnniunu, »d.

42 Tony Mills FB Jr. 6-0 210 Sanford, N. C43 Bob Loom is FB So. 6-3 216 Silver Spring, Md.

44 Mike Voight TB Sr. 6-0 205 Chesapeake, Va.

45 Garry Rudolph LB So. 6-2V2 215 Havre de Grace. Md47 Brian Smith FB Sr. 6-OV2 212 Merrick. N Y48 Francis Winters DB So. 6-0 184 LaPlata, Md.

49 Ronnie Dowdy LB Jr. 6-2V2 228 Durham. N C

o I 1 Ul 1 H 1 ly Ol Mill 1|r 6-3 210 York, S. C.

52 Phil Ragazzo C So. 6-4V2 235 Chapel Hill. N. C53 Jim Andrews C So. 6-4 240 Roanoke. Va54 Bobby Gay LB Jr. 5-1 OVi 216 Hopewell. Va.

55 Mark Cantrell C Sr. 6-3 246 Atlanta, Ga.

56 Scott Davison C Jr. 6-2'/2 230 Virginia Beach, Va.

57 Buddy Curry LB Fr. 6-3 202 Danville, Va

58 Duke Thompson MG Sr. 6-2V2 220 Roanoke. Va

60 John Rushing i-\pUb oO. D-*. 72 VA/innato M PWliiydlc. IN.

b 1 r\m wiison \J 1 6-3 V2 221 Pi imhprla nrt Mrl

62 .II cbill bpan CtdUU jr. 0-0 £OU \/iminis Qoafh \/a

. 1 DUdLII, Vcl.

63 Mike Duffy LB Sr. 6-0 210 Massapequa. N Y

64 Craig Funk OG Sr. 6-2V2 230 Fairfax. Va.

65 Billy Guthrie OG Jr. 6-2V2 230 Appomattox, Va.

66 Billy Dunn OT Jr. 6-2V2 242 Hampton, Va.

67 Ulyesses Rhames MG So. 6-2V2 235 Wilmington, N. C.

68 Mike Salzano OG So. 6-3V2 240 Durham, N. C.

69 Ron Fowler OG So. 6-4 230 Richmond, Va

70 Rod Broadway U 1 or. e oilD O '2 245 Oakhnrn N P

71 Dee Hardison U 1

i,jr. 6-4Vi 250 Mpuutnn Pmv/o N PI'ICWIUI 1 UIUVC lil. v>

72 T~ „ . , Q . . -1, —

u

I om burkett r\Tu i

c.or. Do 270 WmQtnn-9alpm N PVVM IblUI 1 OdlCl M, I1*.

73 Boyd Pearson OG Jr. 6-3 240 Graham, N C74 Carl Hackley OT So. 6-3 246 Bristol, Va.

75 Roger Shonosky MG Sr 6-1 217 Norwich. N Y

76 Brian Hughes DT Sr. 6-3V4 225 Alexandria, Va.

77 Bobby Hukill OT So. 6-5 241 Wilmington. Del.

78 Danny Hamrick OG Jr. 6-4 230 Kannapolis. N C79 Mark Griffin OT Sr. 6-5 240 LumDeriand, Md

80 Dwight Ange Ub |rjr. 00/4 215 William Qtnn N C

81 Bill Perdue Sr. 6-2'/2 228 Roanoke, Va.

82 Stan Lancaster npUt jr. 6-2 21

7

("'hPQprifiakp

83 Mike Corbin TE Sr. 6-1% 222 Richmond, Va

84 Dave Simmons MG So 6-4'/2 210 Goldsboro. N. C.

85 Mike Finn LB Jr. 6-3V2 225 Natick, Mass.

86 Chuck Austin LB Sr 6-2 206 Naruna. Va

87 Kenny Rogers TE Fr. 6-5 247 Washington, N. C.

88 Brooks Williams TE Jr. 6-4'/2 223 Virginia Beach, Va.

89 Ken Sheets DE So. 6-3 222 wooorjriage, va.

niuiidiu r\iciiiiiiaii KS Jr. 6-1 178 Great Neck, N. Y.

91 Tom Biddle KS Jr. 6-0 184 Yorktown. Va.

92 T K. McDaniels DT So. 6-3V2 230 Bladensburg, Md

93 Van Lippencott DE Jr. 6-OV4 204 Brownsville, Pa.

95 Chip Smith DT Jr. 6-4'/2 225 Siler City. N. C.

96 Steve Junkmann DT So. 6-3 245 Woodbndge. Va

97 Jeff Arnold KS Fr. 6-3 165 Wilmington, N. C.

Page 49: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

FAMILYAFFAIR

By

E. Coke Ellington

University News Editor

Beth Carter's parents didn't just send herto col-

lege. After she had been at Clemson for a year,

they joined her.

Beth is a 20-year-old junior majoring in indus-

trial education.Her father, Will, who earned his B.S. in second-

ary school education at Clemson in 1951 andspent 24 years in the Army, is a graduate studentin industrial education.And her mother, Betty, who received her

bachelor's degree at Greensboro College, is

studying for a master's degree in personnel ser-

vices.

Beth's choice of colleges had nothing to dowith its being her father's alma mater. Her parentstold her how much they could afford to spend onher education and let her make the decision.

First she narrowed her choice to seven col-

leges. Then she visited the campuses. She liked

Clemson, was accepted, and enrolled as afreshman in the fall of 1974.

She says an advantage to having parents in

school is "They understand when you run into

problems with professors, grades or time, be-cause they have the same problems."

Betty says going back to school after 20 yearsas an Army wife is a recycling process. She finds it

takes her longer to learn the same amount of

material than it did when she was an under-graduate.

Will thinks the pure memory work is more dif-

ficult for someone in his 40s than for the typicalstudent, but the older ones find it easier to graspprinciples and broad views.

Will sees changes in Clemson as well as in him-

self over the past 25 years. When he graduated,Clemson had a student body of 3,000 and the

Page 50: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

only coeds were a few day-students. Enrollmentnow tops 10,000 with women making up morethan one-third of the total.

Although Clemson was a military college whenWill was an undergraduate, he recalls that abouthalf his classmates were veterans who wore civil-

ian clothes.

Will believes the student-professor relationship

is less formal now and considers this a change for

the better. Betty thinks this relaxation is partially

due to a change in American society in the past

20 years.

Will, who retired as a colonel after a military

career in the armor branch, says Gl Bill benefits

make it possible for him to be in school.

He chose to do his graduate work in Clemsonfor several reasons. It's close to his and his wife's

families. He's a native of Greenville and she's anative of Asheville, N. C.

The university has the curriculum he wantedand Clemson gives him a chance to get a newstart in his home state after his wanderings in uni-

form. When he completes his master's degree, hewants to go into vocational-technical schooladministration.

Betty plans to enter secondary school counsel-ing, and Beth wants a job oriented toward print-

ing or graphics after graduation.Betty will graduate in December. She got a

head start on Will by taking courses before theyleft Ft. Bragg, N. C.

Will is to graduate in May, 1977, followed byBeth the next May.Then it will be time for Ellen, 15, and Joanne, 14,

to begin making their post-high school plans.

They may not choose to follow in the footsteps of

their sister and parents, but if they do the path is

well marked.

Page 51: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Ronny Dowdy

UNC

Mike Duffy Johnny Elam Mike Finn P. J. Gay

Craig Funk Mark Griffin Dee Hardison Ronny Johnson Walker Lee

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Page 52: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

WE ARE PROUD TO BE ASSOCIATED WITH CLEMSON UNIVERSITY

For more than 20 years, Ivester electricians have played a majorrole (as circled above) in the growth of the Clemson campus,helping to make it one of the finest in the South.

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Page 53: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

UNC

Bryan Smith Johnny Stratton Mike Voight Brooks Williams Francis Winters

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Page 54: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

The name of the gameis quality.

A quality team welcomes the toughest

challenge to prove how good it is. So does

Pabst. We've been brewing America's

quality beer since 1844, which gives us the

confidence to make this challenge of our

own: taste and compare Pabst Blue Ribbon

quality and flavor with any other beer. Oneglass and you'll know that Blue Ribbon

quality means the best tasting beer

you can get.

PABST. Since 1844. The quality has always come through,

^Copyright, 1975. PABST BREWING COMPANY Milwaukee. Wis., Peoria Heights. Ill.Newark, N.J.. Los Angeles, Call)

.Pabst. Georgia

Page 55: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

ACC Viewpoints: Standouts In Other Sports

ROBBIE PERKINS, Duke Track Star-

Robbie Perkins returns this fall as the

reigning ACC cross country and 10,000

meter outdoor track champion. Ranked

third in the world at 10,000 meters in

high school, Robbie dominated the ACCdistance races during the 1975-76 season.

He went undefeated in cross country,

winning eight straight dual meets, the

State Championship and the ACC crown

before being hit by influenza which

forced him out of the Nationals. Hecapped his indoor track season by win-

ning the ACC two-mile only to be dis-

qualified for lapping a fellow competitor

on the inside. However, he redeemed

himself two weeks later with a strong

finish in the National AAU meet, which

earned him a trip to Moscow as a mem-ber of the United States team for the

USA-USSR Indoor Meet. Outdoors, he

won the ACC 10,000 meters on Friday

and then came back to place second in

the 5,000 meters on Saturday. Later in

the year, he won the IC4A 10,000 meters

against the best collegiate runners on

the East Coast.

BOB BYMAN, Wake Forest Golfer—Like

a single diamond in a multijeweled ring,

Bob Byman's achievements have served

more to enhance the brilliance of the

Wake Forest golf program than to call

attention to his own luminousness. Withsuperstars Jay Haas and Curtis Strange

limelighting the Deacon team to a pair

of national championships in three years,

Byman has quietly played third fiddle.

What few realize is that he is an A1I-

American in his own right (third teamas a freshman and second team each of

the past two years), having won four

tournaments as a Deac, including sharing

the ACC championship in 1974. He has

also added a quartet of second-place

finishes and innumerable medals in com-petition as an amateur golfer in non-

NCAA events. This summer he won the

Northeast Amateur Championship, giving

adequate warning that he could be the

next Wake Forest golfer to achieve

superstar status. It has taken three years,

but in 1977 Bob Byman will get his

chance to be the crown jewel in WakeForest's ring of champions.

JOHN DAVENPORT, Maryland Track

Star—A senior on the Maryland track

team, John Davenport won three major

long jump titles his junior season. In the

ACC Indoor Games he won the title

with a leap of 25 feet-U/i inches, break-

ing the conference record which stood at

24-4V2. Later in the indoor season, he

finished second to teammate Dennis Ivory

in the IC4A meet. John was unable to

compete in the ACC Outdoor Champion-ships due to an injury, but he returned

to form a few weeks later to capture the

IC4A outdoor crown with a jump of 25-8.

He won his third major title in the

Maryland Track Classic as he led his

teammates to a sweep of the first three

spots with a jump of 24-3 under wetconditions. The best jump of his Mary-land career came his sophomore season

when he soared to a school record of

ROBBIE PERKINS DAVID CALDWELL

BOB BYMAN EARL HASSLER

JOHN DAVENPORT STEVE GREGG

BOBBY LYON

25-9V2 in a dual meet with the Naval

Academy. He has twice competed in the

NCAA Outdoor Championships and

earned All-America honors his sophomoreyear.

DAVID CALDWELL, Clemson Base-

baller—Clemson's 1976 late-season base-

ball drive, which at one time showed 25

victories in 28 games, and included

Atlantic Coast Conference and NCAAAtlantic Regional championships plus a

trip to the College World Series, cameabout because of several factors. Oneimportant one was the hitting of out-

fielder David Caldwell. In that 28-gamestretch, "Teddy Bear", as he is knownto his teammates, batted .351, knockedin 25 runs, hit eight of his 13 doubles

and five of his eight triples, along with

three home runs. For the season, he led

the ACC in triples, total bases, RBI's andslugging, and tied teammate Bill Foleyfor the home run lead. For his accom-plishments, he was named to the All-

ACC and All-State teams. A junior fromKannapolis, N.C., Caldwell will be oneof the key returnees for Coach Bill

Wilhelm in 1977.

EARL HASSLER, North Carolina TennisPlayer—Earl Hassler of Jackson, Miss.,

had a sensational sophomore year on the

tennis courts for North Carolina last

spring. Playing the No. 3 singles for the

Tar Heels, Hassler swept 22 of 23matches and won the Atlantic CoastConference championship at flight three.

He and Dave Oberstein were 21-2 in

doubles at flight two. Hassler won his

ACC title with an easy 6-3, 6-2 victory

over Scott Dillon of N.C. State. Some of

the biggest wins came against Mike Silver

of Tennessee, Eduardo Gentil of Prince-

ton and Ron Myers of Miami. Gettingfine play from Hassler, Carolina posted

a 21-2 regular-season record and sweptits 20th ACC title in 23 years. Hassler's

two-year singles record at Carolina is

now 45-4. He is one of the leading con-tenders to replace graduated All-AmericaBilly Brock as the Tar Heels' number onesingles player.

STEVE GREGG, N.C. State Swimmer—A Silver Medal winner in the SummerOlympic Games as well as a three-timenational champion butterflier, SteveGregg will defend his NCAA 200-yardfly title at the national meet next Marchin Cleveland. Through his first three sea-

sons with the Wolfpack, the senior fromWilmington, Del., represented the UnitedStates on five international trips, in-

cluding the Olympics. He was in the

1975 Pan American Games, the 1975Japanese Outdoor Championships, the1975 New Zealand Games, and 1973World Championships in Belgrade, Yugo-slavia. He won the silver and bronzemedal in the NCAA championships his

first two tries prior to winning the goldas a junior. Constant success in swim-ming requires surmounting some of

sport's greatest pressure and the Wolf-pack's Steve Gregg has proven he canwin at any level.

BOBBY LYON, Virginia Swimmer-Bobby Lyon is unique in the history ofswimming at the University of Virginia.

Although he missed the entire 1975-76season because of mononucleosis, in his

freshman and sophomore year he wonfour ACC gold medals, two each in the100 and 200 yard breaststroke champion-ship events. He is an extremely hardworker and one of the most popularswimmers on the Virginia squad. Hespent the summer recuperating and train-

ing for the 1976-77 season on the WestCoast in the company of Olympic per-

formers. He owns five Virginia schoolrecords, his two specialties and three

relays. A well-rounded student-athlete,

he carries a 3.8 accumulative average in

the School of Engineering.

Page 56: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

ARA-Slater's philosophy is a unique,

systematic approach designed to

achieve our most important goal:

STUDENT SATISFACTION. This concept

is a result of our experience with

millions of students. We have the

flexibility to understand your needs

and the capability to satisfy them.

At Clemson, ARA demonstrates

practical, new methods for providing

nourishing, well-balanced meals to

athletes, students and staff. Our

corporate and regional specialists

give ARA's dining service manager

expert advice in planning menus,

purchasing goods, controlling

waste, utilizing labor. The support

of this team effort is carried out

daily in Schilletter Hall and

Harcombe Commons, and at the Clemson

House Buffeteria. It is our desire

to serve students what they

want and to accommodate themby providing this sameefficient service for special

events or festive holiday meals.

We're here to provide the type

of service that will benefit

the entire school and community.

THA TS WHA T WE THINK A DINING

SERVICE IS ALL ABOUT.

your campus d,n,ng service

A R A-SLATERSCHOOL b COLIEGE

SERVICESr ,

hefiquarters at

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Page 57: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)
Page 58: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

TIGERS in Textiles, Plastics,

Paper and Industrial Machinery

Louis E SCOnomfiany

MANUFACTURERS AND SUPPLIERS OF:

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Cone Base Pads

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Custom Banners

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ShuR-TufF Plastic Parts

Tungsten Carbide Knives & Loopers

for Cut Pile Carpet

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Machinery, Equipment, Supplies, Service and Train-

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BatsonMachinery,

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H. ELLIOTT BATSON, Class of 1951, President • LOUIS P. BATSON. JR., Class of 1949. Vice President

Page 59: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

CLEMSONAlumni Loyalty Fund-

Many Things To Many People

Page 60: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

They are doctors, law yers, teachers,

farmers, businesspersons, military

strategists, public servants. They have a lot

going for them. They have an opportunity to

grow. And their roots are here on this cam-pus. They are former students of this institu-

tion in the foothills of South Carolina.

Clemson University has been involved

in providing one of this nation's most vital

resources since 1893. Yet, the educational

capabilities ofClemson continue to mount,and the University has a vibrant incentive to

demonstrate its ability, and an objective

yardstick to measure it.

As Clemson University continues its

contribution to the de\ elopment ofthis state,

it remains an indispensable part of its future.

Combine capacity, ability and opportunity

and you conclude that potential is virtually

unlimited.

It is, with your help. Graduates, former

students and friends of Clemson are not only a

source of pride for the University but a

monumental strength in undergirding its

educational programs with annual invest-

ments in the institution through the ClemsonAlumni Loyalty Fund and other development

opportunities at the University.

But greater challenges lie ahead. Know -

ledge has multiplied beyond comprehension;

the domestic and world situations have be-

come unwieldy and precarious. To make sure

performance measures up to potential, ( !lem-

son University utilizes wiseh and frugall) ev-

ery source oi aid possible from all sectors of a

free society— private citizens and founda-

tions, business and industrial organizations,

state and federal governments.

Now, more than e\ er before, ( 'lemson

needs you, your interest, and your in\ est-

ment in education. Now, more than ever be-

fore, won't you consider what you can do for

Clemson?

ClemsonAlumni

Association

Page 61: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)
Page 62: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 63: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

1976 Clemson Freshman Football Players

Thirty-six freshmen football candidates reported to Tigertown for the annual Press and Picture Day, a total figure that included both signees andnon-scholarship athletes. They are, from left to right, kneeling, Ronnie Locke, Rick Wyatt, Eric Young, Rex Varn, Chuck McClure, Buddy Hopkins, JohnMulcahy, Rick Basich, and Gary Adkins. Second row, left to right, Marvin Sims, Bill Robbins, James Russell, Carl Mayer, Tony Masone, Howard Callahan,

John Miller, Steve Carr, and Billy Lott. Third row, left to right, Bob Goldberg, Tim Heiman, Joe Brady, Randy Harrell, Mike Allen, Bob McNeely, BobMcPhillips, Chris Dolce, and Marlon Brown. Back row, left to right, Greg Early, Jim Goehring, Chip Pruett, Jim Stuckey, Mike Marzek, Rocky Myrick, KenYeomans, Stuart Donahue, and Lacy Foulks.

FORT HILLFEDERAL SAVINGS %^

College Avenue, Clemson, 654-5574 / Colonial Plaza, Seneca, 882-1925

Page 64: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Saturday afternoon can bring excitement, festivity, and a lot of good food.

Por millions of Americans, the in-

herent pleasure of attending a college

football game is not a total experience

unless it includes a Tailgate Party, here-

inafter referred to as a TP. Things hap-

pen at TPs that don't happen at games.It has often been said that if the NCAAwere to investigate TPs, dozens of

football stadium parking lots would beplaced on probation for minimumfive-year periods. The TP has, in recent

years, become such an integral part of

the collegiate football scene in the

United States and the subject of so

many theses for doctoral candidates

in sociology that the layman should

now be fully informed of the deriva-

tion and current status of this mostAmerican of gala fetes. Thus, what fol-

lows (a complete history of the TP)

is but another slice of the native mem-orabilia in this, our Bicentennial year.

THE NAME: From that of AmosQuincy Tailgate, a 19th Century lowan

who enjoyed picnics and invited most

of the townspeople to them. On any

given nice day in Ames, Iowa, onecould hear the jnquiry, "Coin' to a

Tailgate party?"

COINAGE: Tailgate was a noun un-

til one day in 1952 a sedan was follow-

ing a station wagon too closely just

outside Fort Smith, Arkansas. "He's

right on our tailgate," said the wife

of the driver of the station wagon, at

which point the driver replied, "Yes,

dear, he's tailgating us," at which

point the word became either a parti-

ciple or gerund, depending on where

one was driving.

Then in 1957, tailgate passed into

adjectival form in the parking lot of

Stanford University Stadium in Palo

Alto, Ca. A catering truck struck the

rear of a nine-passenger station wagon

as both vehicles contended for the

same parking spot. Contents of the

truck were spilled onto the lot's turf.

Because the driver of the truck hadsustained a whiplash and was too

woozy to protect his goods, wrappedsandwiches and soft drinks were pil-

fered and eaten stealthily in the backs

of station wagons. The occupants of

one station wagon had grabbed so

much of the food, they had to let

down their tailgate to support the

booty. They pulled over to a remote

area of the parking lot and invited

a few friends to help them devour

the largesse on the premise bologna

sandwiches are not good the next

day. And so 13 people gathered

around the rear of the station wagonand giggled merrily, telling eachother they were having a "tail-

gate party" and should do this moreoften. Which is precisely what oc-

curred every Autumn Saturday there-

after. When one of the partying

couples moved East to Princeton, N.J.,

in 1961, the phenomenon spread. It

was only a question of time until the

TP reached every campus football

stadium parking lot in the land and

by 1965 it had.

WHAT IS THE RIGHT TAILGATE FORA TP'. There is, of course, no perfect

tailgate. Choose one most comfort-

able for you whatever the size, shape

or opening apparatus. The recent trend

toward station wagon tailgates that

swing out horizontally is to be ignored.

WHO TO INVITE TO YOUR TP:

Anyone with a small, foreign car

clearly doesn't belong— unless they

bring all the food. Anyone with chil-

dren is questionable, especially anyonewith small children because small chil-

dren tend to jump on tailgates. Any-one with a van or motor home is de-

batable, for van and motor homeowners tend to get pretentious and

showy in a sea of station wagons. It is

best that van and motor home peoplecontinued on 15t

• • • a big part of Saturday afternoon

Page 65: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

The Statue of Liberty Play. The Single Wing. The A Formation. This Fall,

we're bringing you the greatest plays in the history of football. And the

greatest players.

You'll see it all on the Fireman's Fund Flashbacks, a fantastic half-time

show on every NCAA Game of the Week on ABC. Every week, we'll look at the

teams that are playing, and play back some of the most incredible momentsin their history. As far back as 25 years ago.

We're bringing you these games and these Flashbacks so we can tell youall about your local Independent Insurance Agent. He's a man who represents

many fine insurance companies. So he can choose the coverage that's best for

you. And when he chooses us, we want you to know he's done the right thing.

So much for the commercial. Here's the schedule* of games for this Fall:

Tuesday - Sept. 7

Saturday - Sept. 1

1

Saturday - Sept. 18

Saturday - Sept 25

Saturday - Oct. 2

Saturday - Oct. 9

Saturday - Oct 16

UCLA at Arizona State

Pittsburgh at Notre DameTulsa at Oklahoma State

South Carolina at

Georgia Tech.

Houston at Baylor

Ohio State at Penn State

Georgia at ClemsonColorado at

WashingtonYale at BrownTennessee at AuburnSan lose State at StanfordMassachusetts at Harvard

To be announced.

Oklahoma at Texas (Dallas)

To be announced.

Saturday - Oct 23

Saturday - Oct. 30

Saturday - Nov. 6

Saturday - Nov 13

Saturday • Nov 20

To be announced.

To be announced.

To be announced

Alabama at Notre Dame2nd game to be announced.

Michigan at Ohio State

USC at UCLAThursday - Nov. 25 To be announced.

Friday - Nov. 26 Oklahoma at NebraskaPenn State at Pittsburgh

Saturday - Nov 27 Army-Navy (Philadelphia)

Notre Dame at USCSaturday - Dec. 4 Arkansas at Texas

Monday - Dec 27 Gator Bowl

Saturday - Jan. 1 Sugar Bowl

*Schedule may vary in your area. Check your local newspaper.

FIREMAN'S FUND FLASHBACKS ON ABC-TV.Fireman s Fund Insurance Companies. Home office: San Francisco. Look for your Firemans Fund Agent in the Yellow Pages.

Page 66: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

TAiLGATING continued from 1 3t

have a TP with their own kind in a far

corner of the parking lot. Many of

these larger vehicles stay there for

days anyway, and it is reported that

some stadium lots are now accruing

extra revenue as mobile home camp-grounds.

Every TP should include at least

four people who know somethingabout the football game that will fol-

low the TP. Plus six other people whoknow something about football. Their

presence will add a sense of relevance

to the TP, give the TP meaning beyondthe scope of being a mere social func-

tion. Also, it is wise to include on the

guest list at least one person whoknows how to get from the parking

lot to the stadium following the TP;

this guest, referred to at most TPs as

The Pathfinder, preferably should bea person with limited drinking ca-

pacity. Elsewise, trouble looms andyour guests may not reach their seats

until well after halftime. Of the fol-

lowing week's game.CASING THE PARKING LOT: The

prudent, savvy TP giver leaves nothing

to chance—especially site location.

Choice sites are available through twobasic methods: bribery and cunning.

Bribery: Know your parking lot at-

tendant. Know his needs. After yougive him money, give him a rope. Hewill then rope off an area for youand protect it with his life. Should

he be run over by a van or mobile

home while protecting your area, it

will be necessary to give his widowmoney. Necessary, and proper. Also

give him your leftover beverages.

Many parking lot attendants—especi-

ally those who move cars—do their

best work shortly after consuming left-

over beverages. And always compli-

ment them on their ability to "burn

rubber." They are prideful people.

Cultivate them in the off-season, for

they will pretend to forget you other-

wise.

Cunning: This requires an advance

scouting party and signmakers. Nolater than two days before a game,this party must reconnoiter the lot and

drive stakes into the ground at a choice

site. Signs on these stakes will read:

"Reserved for the Chancellor" or "The

Coach Parks Here" or "Quarterback's

Limousine Only; All Others Will Be

Towed" or, in the case of a state uni-

versity parking lot, "The Governor (and

His 12 Weil-Armed Security Officers)

Use This Space; They Are Authorized

To Fire Upon Other Vehicles." That

should do it, depending on the sten-

cilling ability of your signmakers. Bearin mind that some parking lot attend-

ants pay no heed to any signs, so a

bit of bribery may still have to comeinto play.

THE RIGHT PARKING SPOT: For

practical TPers, as near to the stadiumgates as possible. However, most TPers

are not practical. (Otherwise, they'd

eat at home and THEN go to the

game.) And so spots nearest "aisles"

are the most preferred, permitting

TPers to see and be seen. A proper

TP must include elements of ostenta-

tion, although on sunny Autumn days

one risks the spewing of dust ontoone's tailgate. Still, dust—according to

TP hosts— is looked upon as "part of

the charm and tradition" of TPing.

Guests soon learn to enjoy dust; the

good guest will bring his or her ownbag of dust. Most supermarkets sell

dust bags on the same shelves as dust

cloths.

ADVISORY: Turn off all motors be-

fore beginning a TP . . . unless your

menu includes carbon monoxidefumes. Some do find them tasty.

WHAT TO SERVE: In early days,

TPs featured simple fare: potato chips,

pretzels, olives, pickles, radishes, eggsalad sandwiches with or withoutsliced tomatoes, large jugs of root

beer and butterscotch cupcakes. Even-

tually, that basic menu underwent se-

vere changes on the premise that any-

body can make a halfway decent eggsalad sandwich. It became pointless

to have a TP if your TP was just like

everybody else's TP.

The evolution of the TP menu passed

through the stages of turkey dinners

(for games played during Thanksgiving

week) to cold buffets (which included

an assortment of 38 types of cold cuts,

12 varieties of cheeses and four types

of bread) to "bring your own pointed

sticks and let's have a shish-ke-bab

bash" bill of fare.

Currently, the best TPs fall into twocategories: on-site cooking and cater-

ing.

On-site cooking: Double, self-clean-

ing ovens with transistorized batteries

and nuclear-powered rotisseries are

now on the market for purchase or

rental or lease/option. At good terms.

These ovens reject all food save filets

and Chateaubriand. Salads are mixedin tailgate-sized tureens while the TPis in progress. After your guests finish

their liquid refreshments, suggest they

"help themselves to the salad bar andthen let me know when you're ready

for your filet." The smart host will pass

among his guests with a pepper grind-

er. The smart guest will tell his host

what to do with the pepper grinder.

Catering: Special TP catering ser-

vices have popped up all over the

country in the past two seasons. Hereis how they operate: TP guests remain

in their vehicles. The caterer walks upto the vehicle and politely asks the oc-

cupants to roll down their windows.He then attaches to the windows a

small metal tray holding a cheese-

burger, french fried potatoes and a

chocolate milk shake. There are nomenu variations, although the caterer

will bring more catsup if asked. Whenthe occupants have finished dining,

they are instructed to turn on their

headlights. The caterer then removesthe tray and gives his bill to the TPhost. In some cases, the caterer places

trays on the tailgates; this is termedal fresco catering and is popular in

warmer sections of the country or in

sections of the country where peoplecontinued on 18t

The parking lots—the scene of much pre-game activity

flip %&»mttt,i

Page 67: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

p

44 YEARSOFCOACHINGCOLLEGEFOOTBALL

reoccupation with numberscauses us to remember coaches morefor their records than for their overall

contributions to the game. Too often,

success is determined by the wins and

losses which make or break a season.

The figures who escape such scrutiny,

the coaches, admired by their peers

for their approach and styles, perhaps

are to be the most appreciated. Such a

man was Glenn S. "Pop" Warner, the

legendary football coach who not only

was successful in the record book, but

who also devised many of the basic

approaches in effect today.

An opinionated soul who often

wrote about his theories for maga -

zines, Warner died in 1954 at theageof

83. But his methods, created whensome of his ideas were not fashiona-

ble, remain with the game. It wasWarner who realized that starting a

play from a crouched position might

facilitate blocking and running. Heonce commented about the forward

pass after it was legalized in 1906: "It

may be basketball, but it's in the rules,

so let's use it."

Far ahead of his time, Warner wouldfit the mold of today's college athletic

director—concerned about costs and

the bigness of college football. He waswell-known for being the coach of Jim

Thorpe, but Warner called Stanford's

Ernie Nevers the best player he ever

coached.

For all his abilities as a motivator andan originator of everything fromgadgets to equipment, Pop was an

outstanding field general, too. "Thedeath of Andy Smith (coach of the

Wonder Teams at California from1916-1925) left Warner as the acknowl-

edged kingpin of the Coast and the

coaches," wrote Howard Jones andBraven Dyer in 1933, when Warner wasat Stanford. "Knute Rockne was only

beginning to come to the front with

his famous Notre Dame elevens.

Warner not only outstripped us all in

the matter of coaching experience, but

his countless contributions to the

game in the way of new plays andformations stamped him as the out-

standing genius of the gridiron."

Warner attended Cornell and origi-

nally sought a career in law, but after

graduation in 1894, he left law for

coaching, setting out to prove brains

were as important as brawn for win-

ning games. He secured his nicknamebecause he was older than most of his

classmates. "I didn't have any idea of

coaching when I left college," he re-

called in 1927. "I graduated in law, andhad started to practice, when theSuperintendent of the (Carlisle) Indian

School sent to my old coach a request

for a part time man to coach their

team. The letter was sent on to me,and I thought three months of football

might help out a struggling young law

business, so I went down there. And I

just stayed on."

In 1895-96, he coached at Georgia.

In 1897-98, he was at Cornell. In 1899-

1903 he coached at Carlisle, then re-

turned to Cornell in 1904 and served

three years. From 1907-1914, Carlisle

was his employer. Pittsburgh was his

next stop from 1915-23. Then hemoved west to Stanford, coachingfrom 1924-32—the Indians were na-

tional champions in 1926. He finished

his active coaching career at Templefrom 1933-38, though he was an advi-

sory coach at San Jose State in 1939-40.

Though records are not consistent,

most sources place Warner's record at

313-108-32 in 44 years, a winning per-

centage of .726. Only Amos AlonzoStagg had more wins (314) in a career.

Next to Stagg, Warner had the longest

continuous coaching career in Ameri-can football. Yet it was not his record

nor his length of service for whichWarner is most appreciated.

By today's standards, it is most un-

usual to find a successful head coachwho has not had extensive experience

in the game of football. Warner was an

exception. Though he was theheavyweight boxing champion oneyear at Cornell and though he was onthe track team for two years, his

knowledge of football was limited.

"I was fortunate to be coaching in

the early days when football was hav-

ing growing pains and it was not then

difficult to see how the game and the

equipment could be improved,"Warner wrote in 1951.

By comparison, Rockne contributed

<WAP

little that was new to football. Pop,meanwhile, sought wider avenues of

attack—concentrating on puttingfinesse and mobility into the game. Hedeveloped the single wing and doublewing attacks, the latter featuring re-

verses, fakes and spinners. That of-

fense put a premium on a big, power-ful, hard-running quarterback andfullback.

Warner would fit into the mind of a

recreation quarterback today becausehe loved trick plays. While coaching at

Carlisle in 1903, Pop—whose teamsthere never averaged over 170pounds—decided it was time for de-

ception. Jimmie Johnson caught the

continued on 21t

by Steve Kennedy, Richmond INDEPENDENT

1

Page 68: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Years ago, Papa Cribari

made awine just forwhenfamily& friends sat down together.

Nothing's changed.

humAfter 80 years, the same reason people still go to a football game

is the same reason people still gather over a jug of Cribari wine...

to sit down together and enjoy!

Enjoy Cribari red, white, rose and — if your side won — champagne.

Before the game, at home watching the game on TV, in the post game celebration.

And in the Old-fashioned jug. B.Cnban&, Sons. San Francisco. California

Page 69: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

OF HYATT...it'swritten

all overour face.

Meet Irving D. Appleberry, your doorman at one of our Hyatt Hotels. The smileon Irving's face says what all of us at Hyatt feel. Welcome. Expect more from us.

More individual attention. More that is new and different. More specialtouches, all uniquely Hyatt.

In big things like the design of our atrium lobbies. In little things like a

Passport Book for no-wait-check-out.

A Touch of Hyatt. It means we're doing whatever it takes to make youwant to stay with us . . . again.

HYATT HOTELS ©*We're looking forward lor you.

800-228-9000 Gets you Hyatt.Worldwide.Toll Free, zur travel agent

18.

TAILGATINGcontinued from 1 5t

know what al fresco means. The useof a caterer also is popular amongthose who like to give TPs but don'twish to mingle with their guests.

LIQUID REFRESHMENTS: Condi-tioned by the applicability of state

laws and the knack of sequestering

oddly-shaped thermoses. The safest

TPs are preceded by house parties,

known as HPs.

ADVISORY: Pre-TP HPs are inadvis-

able in connection with Army, Navyand Air Force Academy games unless

one wishes to risk the wrath of MPs,SPs and APs.

THE FUTURE: Where is the TP go-ing? And how will it get there?Many sociologists, including conces-

sion stand operators and vendors hold-

ing degrees, are inclined to believe

the TP is faddish, a mere symbol of

these easy, carefree times, a boredom-reliever that is bound to be replaced

by a hot dog and a beer once the

austere 1980s arrive. A further hin-

drance to TP growth is the fact manycampuses are now replacing parking

lots with classroom buildings, a totally

innovative academic enterprise.

On the other hand, culinary de-

votees believe the TP has yet to see

its finest hour. In fact, some gastro-

nomes are convinced that by 1987 TPs

will take place inside the stadium andthe games themselves in the parking

lot.

There has been talk in NFL circles

that the best TPs will be drafted to adda touch of class to the professional

genre. NFL TPs, as they are now con-

stituted, consist only of orange or to-

mato juice and Russian spirits.

Some college athletic directors are

taking the middle course (no, not the

salad). They see TPs as a means of

subsidizing their hard-hit budgets or

as a vehicle for financing womenper-son varsity sports.

This subsidization would take the

form—according to one athletic di-

rector—of putting a per-plate tax oneach TP. Athletes would make the col-

lections at the start of each TP, thus

adding a touch of celebrity to the TP.

"What's a party anyway without

names?" said this athletic director.

The TP, in sum, seems to be a per-

manent part of the American college

football scene, much as the Americancollege football scene has managed to

become a permanent part of the TP.

The TP, then, is here to stay. Nowif you will turn on your headlights, wewill remove the tray. (£

Page 70: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

¥HECOLLEGIATEHALLOEFANEU

headquartered in New York

National Football Hall of Fame strives

to honor the great men of college

football and inspire the nation's youthto excel on the athletic field and in

the classroom. To achieve its aims,

the Foundation seeks to establish the

true concept of football and gain re-

cognition of its significant role in the

preservation and advancement of ourway of life.

As part of the Foundation's honorsprogram, the Hall of Fame enshrines

those college players and coacheswhose deeds and lives during and af-

ter their playing days have been ex-

emplary and inspiring. Each year,

through a national referral network,

new members to the Hall are inducted

and the list grows.

Below are the plavers in the Hall of

Fame as of July, 1976.

continued on 22t

ALABAMA1925 John Mack Brown*1925 Allison Hubert1930 Frederick W. Sington1932 John Lewis Cain1934 Donald Hutson1935 Millard F. 'Dixie" Howell*

AMHERST1906 John (Jack) Houghton Hubbard

ARKANSAS1929 Wear K. Schoonover1949 Clyde Scott

ARMY (HARVARD)1902 Charles D. Daly*

ARMY (PURDUE)1917 Elmer Oliphant*

ARMY1902 Paul B. Bunker*1915 Alexander (Babe) Weyand1916 John J. McEwan*1923 Harry Wilson (Penn State)1924 Edgar W. Garbisch1929 Christian K. Cagle*1929 Mortimer 'Bud' Sprague (Texas)*1946 Felix (Doc) Blanchard1946 Glenn Davis1959 Pete Dawkins

AUBURN1932 James Hitchcock*1936 Walter Gilbert

BAYLOR1931 Barton Koch*

BOSTON COLLEGE1940 Charles O'Rourke1940 Chester S. Gladchuk

BOSTON UNIVERSITY1952 Harry Agganis*

BROWN1911 William E. Sprackling1916 Frederick D. (Fritz) Pollard

BUCKNELL1932 Clark Hinkle

What omniscient football fan could denythe immortality and greatness of oneErnie Nevers of Stanford.

CALIFORNIA1921 Stanley N. Barnes1922 Dan McMillan (Southern Cal.)*1922 Harold (Brick) Muller*1925 Edwin (Babe) Horrell1937 Robert Herwig*

CARLISLE1904 James Johnson*1908 Albert Exendine*1912 James Thorpe*

CARNEGIE TECH1928 Howard Harpster

CENTENARY (GENEVA)1926 Robert C. (Cal) Hubbard

CENTRE1921 Alvin (Bo) McMillin*

CHICAGO (BUCKNELL)1894 Andrew R. E. Wyant*

CHICAGO1899 Clarence Herschberger*1906 Walter H. Eckersall*1908 Walter P. Steffen*1914 Paul R. Desjardien*1935 John J. Berwanger

CLEMSON1939 James Banks McFadden

COLGATE1914 Ellery Huntington1915 Earl Abell*1919 D. Bedford West*1925 J. Edward Tryon

COLORADO COLLEGE1929 Earl (Dutch) Clark

COLORADO UNIVERSITY1937 Byron R. White

COLUMBIA1902 Harold H. Weekes*1903 William Warner*1933 Cliff Montgomery1938 Sid Luckman

CORNELL1896 Clinton Wyckoff*1903 William Morley*1915 Charles Barrett*1915 John E. O'Hearn1915 Murray Shelton1922 Edgar L. Kaw1923 George Pfann1938 Jerome (Brud) Holland

DARTMOUTH1915 Clarence W. Spears*1916 Ed Healey1925 Andrew J. Oberlander*1928 Myles Joseph Lane1931 William H. Morton

DUKE1933 Fred Crawford*1936 Clarence (Ace) Parker1938 Dan Winfield Hill

1938 Eric Tipton1939 George Anderson McAfee

FORDHAM1936 Alexander Wojiechowicz

GEORGIA1913 Robert McWhorter*1942 Frank Sinkwich1946 Charles Trippi

GEORGIA TECH1917 George E. Strupper*1919 Joseph Guyon*1920 Bill Fincher1920 A. R. (Bucks) Flowers1928 Henry R. (Peter) Pund

HARVARD1893 Marshall Newell*1895 Charles Brewer*1900 William Reid1901 David C. Campbell*1909 Hamilton Fish1911 Robert Fisher*1913 Percy Langdon Wendell*1914 H. R. (Tack) Hardwick*1914 Stanley B. Pennock*1915 Edward W. Mahan*1919 Edward L. Casey*1930 Benjamin H. Ticknor1941 Endicott Peabody

HOBART (TOLEDO)1929 Merle Gulick

HOLY CROSS1938 William Osmanski

ILLINOIS1915 Bart Macomber*1921 Charles (Chuck) Carney1925 Harold E. (Red) Grange1946 Alex Agase1946 Claude (Buddy) Young

INDIANA1903 Zora Clevenger*1946 Pete Pihos

IOWA1921 Aubrey Devine1921 F. F. (Duke) Slater*1922 Gordon C. Locke*1939 Nil Kinnick*

IOWA STATE1939 Edward (Ed) John Bock

KANSAS1930 James Bausch1947 Ray Evans

LAFAYETTE1897 Charles Rinehart*1922 Frank John (Dutch) Schwab*

LEHIGH (WESLEYAN)1912 Vincent Joseph (Pat) Pazzetti*

LOUISIANA STATE1910 G. E. (Doc) Fenton*1935 Dr. Abe Mickal1936 Gaynell Tinsley1939 Ken Kavanaugh

MICHIGAN1901 Neil Worthington Snow*1904 William M. Heston*1908 Adolf (Germany) Schulz*1911 Albert Benbrook*1914 John Maulbetsch*1923 Harry Kipke*1926 Benjamin Friedman1927 Benjamin G. Oosterbaan1933 Francis M. "Whitey" Wistert1940 Thomas D. Harmon1942 Albert A. Wistert1943 Elroy Hirsch (Wisconsin)

MICHIGAN STATE1938 John Pingel1951 Don Coleman

MINNESOTA1903 Edward L. Rogers*1907 Robert Marshall*

Page 71: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)
Page 72: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

POP WARNER continued from 16t

kickoff on the five-yard line. Im-mediately the Indians gathered in a

huddle facing outward. Johnson slip-

ped the ball under the back of Charlie

Dillon's jersey. Dillon was a guard whocould run a 10-flat 100, but still nobodyexpected him to be carrying the ball.

"Co!" yelled Johnson and players

scattered toward the sidelines at the

quarterback's command. Every backclutched his helmet to his chest as if

he had the ball. Meanwhile, Dillon

was running straight downfield, both

arms free. When he neared safetyman

Carl Marshall, the Harvard captain ac-

tually sidestepped the ballcarrier. Thefans had seen the bulge in Dillon's

might get him into trouble today.Magazines asked him about somebodyelse's system and, after evaluating it

for its worth, he would criticize the

system openly with elaborate reason-

ing. Today his remarks would appearon the opponent's bulletin board, but

in yesteryear he would expound onthe lack of virtues in the Notre Dameoffense, for instance, and why it wasslipping.

"With Rockne at the helm, the

Notre Dame system was superhuman,a football system with a fifth dimen-sion," he wrote in 1934. "Without him,

there is a good system, but after all,

just another way of playing football

Pop Warner poses on the Stanford Farm, circa 1930.

back, but not the Harvard players.

"We never considered it a strictly

legitimate play and only employed it

against Harvard as a joke on the

haughty Crimson players," Warnerwould write years later. Alas, Carlisle

lost the game, 12-11.

For all Warner's devious trends, he

had a brilliant mind for the game, an

unexplained source of inner strength

which placed him far ahead of his

peers. "He was one of the more intel-

ligent and visionary minds that helped

bring about the evolution of football

from a mere physical test of unimagi-

native brute strength to a contest of

skill in which the college youth was

given the chance to show that there

was something underneath his long

hair besides his skull," noted historian

Allison Danzig.

Pop's passion for the written word

. . . The Notre Dame system gambles

on wide end runs and open spectacu-

lar play. It is axiomatic that a gambling

attack must be inconsistent. With luck

it goes to town. When things don't

click, it looks very bad. Personally, I

would rather bank on a steady, well-

rounded, consistent attack. My moneywould go down on such an attack to

win the majority of games.

"I teach my teams to shoot for a

steady succession of first downs rather

than to gamble on the spectacular.

The gambler may go for 40 yards. Hemay go for a touchdown. Or he maybe thrown for a healthy loss.

"I would rather be reasonably sure

of a small gain every time than to

gamble for big gains on plays which

frequently result in big losses."

Conservative in his approach?Maybe. But in a concluding statement

which would have him battling with

the nation's top recruiters today,

Warner conceded: "In the last

analysis, other things being equal, the

team having the best individual players

will win, regardless of the systemused."

Like all coaches, Warner would dopractically anything to win. His use of

trick plays, new methods which werecopied soon and his adaptability to dif-

ferent teams made him the talk of

football. And yet, with all the publicity

which came his way, the man sawthrough its importance— as early as

1933.

"The time has come to deflate foot-

ball down to normal," he wrote then.

Little did he know that in the '70s,

coaches from other sports on campuswould be echoing the thoughts of the

well-rounded Warner. "Like manyanother business, football was over-

inflated during the boom days," headded. "As in many industries, ex-

travagant practices and the urge to get

rich quick have injected evils into

amateur sports. What we need is a

new-deal code to restore normal, sane

conditions to college and school ath-

letics, and to football in particular.

".. . The various athletic confer-

ences have for years maintained strict

codes to curtail professionalism on the

part of the individual athletes," he

continued. "But so far, no conference

has given any great thought to control-

ling the earning power of teams. There

is no control over the competition for

the 'big gates' which, directly or indi-

rectly, are responsible for many of the

unsavory angles of athletics.

That was the way of Pop Warner.Brilliant, perceptive, intense—yet cau-

tious. He didn't want sport ruined by

money. He didn't need a big coaching

staff— in fact, he spoke of the financial

dangers of too many aides. He saw noreason to take hordes of players to

"exhibition games," as he called them.

"These junkets may be justified as re-

wards to the football squad, but they

are not necessary from a strictly ath-

letic viewpoint," he noted. He advo-

cated reduction in ticket prices be-

cause he didn't think it was right to

make a gold mine out of the bigger

games."In most schools and colleges, I ex-

pect to see football deflated to a saner

status," Warner wrote 43 years ago.

On that particular point, he waswrong.

II was a rare misfortune. ^

21,

Page 73: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

HALLOFFAME continued from 19t

1910 John Francis McGovern*1916 Bert Baston1927 Herbert Joestring*1929 Bronko Nagurski1934 J. L. (Pug) Lund1936 Edwin Widseth1941 Bruce Smith*1942 Richard Wildung1953 Paul R. Geil

MISSISSIPPI1937 Frank (Bruiser) Kinard1947 George (Barney) Poole

(North Carolina, Army)1948 Charles (Chuck) Conerly

MISSISSIPPI COLLEGE1921 Edwin (Goat) Hale

MISSOURI1920 Ed Travis (Tarkio)1940 Paul Christman*1943 Robert Steuber

MONTANA1927 William Kelly*

NAVY1906 Jonas H. Ingram*1912 John Patrick Dalton*1913 John H. (Babe) Brown, Jr.*

1926 Thomas J. Hamilton1927 Frank 'Wick' Henry Wickhorst*1934 Fred Borries, Jr.

1934 Slade Cutter

NAVY (ALABAMA)1944 Donald Whitmire

NEBRASKA1915 Guy B. Chamberlin1921 Clarence Swanson*1925 Ed Weir1933 George H. Sauer

NEW YORK UNIVERSITY1928 Kenneth Strong

UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA1949 Charles (Choo Choo) Justice

NORTHWESTERN1917 John (Paddy) Driscoll*

(Great Lakes Naval Station)1943 Otto Graham

NOTRE19131904192019211924192419241924192419251929193019311943194719471949

DAMERay Eichenlaub*Louis (Red) Salmon*George Gipp*Heartly (Hunk) AndersonJames CrowleyElmer F. Layden*Edgar (Rip) MillerHarry Stuhldreher*Adam WalshDon C. MillerJack Cannon*Frank CarideoMarchmont SchwartzAngelo BertelliGeorge ConnorJohn LujackLeon Hart

OHIO STATE1919 Charles W. (Chick) Harley*1920 Gaylord Stinchcomb*1930 Wesley E. Fesler1937 Gust C. Zarnas1945 Les Horvath1945 William Willis1956 James Parker

OKLAHOMA1913 Claude Reeds*1915 Forest Geyer*1952 Billy Vessels

OKLAHOMA STATE1947 Robert Fenimore

OREGON1913 John W. Beckett1930 John Kitzmiller1948 Norman VanBrocklin

PENNSYLVANIA1895 Winchester D. Osgood*

(Cornell)1896 George H. Brooke* (Swarthmore)1896 Charles Gelbert*1896 Charles (Buck) Wharton*1897 John H. Minds*1900 T. Truxton Hare*1905 Vincent Stevenson*1906 Robert Torrey*1908 William M. Hollenback*1S09 Hunter Scarlett*1912 Leroy E. Mercer*1949 Charles (Chuck) Bednarik

PENN STATE1912 J. L. (Pete) Mauthe*1513 Eugene (Shorty) Miller*1922 William Glen Killinger

PITTSBURGH1907 Joseph Thompson (Geneva)*1913 Huber Wagner1916 Robert Peck*1918 George McLaren*1920 Herb Stein1922 Tom Davies*1936 Averell Daniell1938 Marshall Goldberg

PRINCETON1884 Alexander Moffat*1890 Hector W. Cowan*1890 Knowlton L. Ames*1893 Phillip King*1895 Langdon Lea*1895 Arthur Wheeler*1895 Gary Cochran*1900 William Edwards*1900 A. R. T. (Doc) Hillebrand*1900 Arthur Poe*1903 John R. DeWitt*1907 James B. McCormick*1911 Edward J. Hart*1914 Harold Ballin1921 James Stanton Keck*1921 Donold Lourie1935 John A. C. Weller1951 Richard Kazmaier

PURDUE1937 Cecil F. (Cece) Isbell

RICE1946 Weldon Gaston Humble1949 James (Froggy) Williams

RUTGERS1924 Homer H. Hazel*

UNIVERSITY OF THE SOUTH1904 Henry Disbrow Phillips*1910 Frank Alexander Juhan*

ST. MARY'S1927 Larry Bettencourt

SANTA CLARA1937 Nello Falaschi

SEWANEE1899 Henry Seibels*

SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA1926 Morton Kaer1927 Morley Drury1931 Ernie Pinckert1933 Aaron Rosenberg1933 Ernest "Ernie" Frederick Smith1939 Harry Smith1947 John Ferraro1951 Frank Gifford

SOUTHERN METHODIST1928 Gerald Mann1935 Robert Wilson1949 Ewell (Doak) Walker1950 Kyle Rote

STANFORD1925 Ernest A. Nevers1933 William Corbus1935 Robert H. Grayson1935 Robert (Bones) Hamilton*1935 Robert Odell (Horse) Reynolds1941 Frank Albert1951 William F. McColl

Before his movie days, Johnny MackBrown was a star for Alabama.

SWARTHMORE1906 Robert (Tiny) Maxwell* (Chicago)

SYRACUSE1920 Joseph Alexander*1926 Victor Hanson

TENNESSEE1909 Nathan W. Dougherty1930 Robert Lee (Bobby) Dodd1931 Herman Michael Hickman*1931 Eugene T. McEver1933 William Beattie Feathers1938 Bowden Wyatt*1940 Robert Lee Suffridge*1940 George Cafego

TEXAS1942 Malcolm Kutner1947 Bobby Layne

TEXAS A & M1907 Joe Utay1927 Joel Hunt1937 Joseph Routt*1940 John C. Kimbrough

TEXAS CHRISTIAN1928 Raymond (Rags) Matthews1936 Samuel Baugh1938 Charles (Ki) Aldrich1938 Robert David O'Brien

TULANE1931 Gerald Dalrymple*1934 Claude Simons*

UCLA1939 Kenneth Washington*1952 Donn Moomaw

VANDERBILT1904 John J. Tigert*

1920 Josh Cody*1924 Lynn Bomar*1927 William D. Spears1937 Carl Hinkle

VIRGINIA1941 William M. Dudley

VIRGINIA MILITARY INSTITUTE1920 James Leech*

VIRGINIA POLYTECHNIC INSTITUTE1905 C. Hunter Carpenter*

WASHINGTON1925 George Wilson*1928 Charles Carroll1931 Paul "Schweg" Schwegler

WASHINGTON & JEFFERSON1919 Wilbur F. (Fats) Henry*

WASHINGTON & LEE1916 Harry Killinger (Cy) Young

WASHINGTON STATE1930 Melvin J. Hein

WESLEYAN UNIVERSITY1905 Henderson 'Dutch' Van Surdam1912 C. Everett Bacon

WEST VIRGINIA1919 Ira E. Rodgers*1935 Joseph L. Stydahar

WEST VIRGINIA WESLEYAN1931 Clifford F. Battles

WILLIAMS1920 Ben Lee Boynton*

WISCONSIN1899 Patrick J. O'Dea*1912 Robert (Butts) Butler*1942 David N. Schreiner*1954 Alan Ameche

YALE1889 William (Pa) Corbin*1889 Amos Alonzo Stagg*1891 W. W. (Pudge) Heffelfinger*1891 Thomas L. (Bum) McClung*1894 Frank A. Hinkey*1895 William Hickok*1896 Samuel B. Thorne*1900 Gordon F. Brown*1904 James J. Hogan*1905 Thomas L. Shevlin*1909 Edward H. (Ted) Coy*1910 John Reed Kilpatrick1911 Arthur Howe*1913 Douglas (Bo) Bomeisler*1913 Henry H. Ketcham1921 Malcolm Aldrich1923 William N. Mallory*1923 Marvin (Mai) Stevens (Washburn)1931 Albert (Albie) Booth*1937 Clinton E. Frank1937 Lawrence (Larry) Kelly

Year indicated is final season

* Indicates deceased

Page 74: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

FOR MORE THAN130PLACES TO GET

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Dean Witter knows people. And people know Dean Witter. Morethan half a million people now come to Dean Witter for ideas on invest-

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ciency For 130 locations to get sound ideas on investments from stocks

to options to municipal bonds, see Dean Witter.

This year, you'll also see Dean Witter onTY We're helping to sponsor

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ill DEAN WITTER& CO.INCORPORATED

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Page 75: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

PEHMZOIL

PZ-1OIL FILTER

Quality.

PennzoiFsOil Filter

is builton it.

When your car is worth caring for, Pennzoil is worth asking for.

Page 76: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Ben SatcherBen Satcher Ford Co., Inc

Lexington, S. C.

Louie WilliamsonFairway Ford, Inc.

Greenville, S. C.

George Coleman, Jr.

George Coleman MotorsTravelers Rest. S. C.

George CampbellJohn Foster Motors

Easley. S. C.

J. H. SatcherSatcher Motor Co

Aiken. S. C.

Don ShevyDodge City

Greenville, S. C.

Jim Connell

Connell Chevrolet, Inc.

Anderson, S. C.

Jim Flynt (seated). Pres.

Jim Hays (standing), V P.

Triangle Pontiac-GMC Inc.

Aiken, S. C.

Joe B. Feagle, Jr.

Feagle Motor Co.Johnston. S. C.

Edsel HemingwayHemingway Motor Co.

Andrews, S. C.

Superior Motors Inc.

Orangeburg, S. C.

Jim Guthrie

George Ballentine

George Ballentine Motor Co.Greenwood. S. C.

OUR DEEP APPRECIATION. . .

To the automobile dealers shown and listed on this page whohave donated cars to the Clemson Athletic Department for use in

travel by members of the staff.

Clemson Athletic Department.

Niles Caldwell (seated),

Leslie Caldwell (right)

Karen Harlan (left)

Cross Country Ford

Woodruff, S. C.

D. E. Mosteller

Guy Motor Co.Anderson, S. C.

Marion Burnside

Marion Burnside MotorsColumbia, S. C.

Al SmithJudson T. Minyard.

Greenville, S. C.

nc

Charles Z. YonceYonce Ford-Mercury

Edgefield, S. C.

John Sullivan

Sullivan Motor Co .

Anderson, S. C.

nr.

Jack Tinsley

Tinsley-Crane Chevrolet

Pickens, S. C.

Forrest HughesWinnsboro Motor Sales Co., Inc.

Winnsboro, S. C.

Steve ChappelS-J Chevrolet-Buick Inc.

Camden. S C

Page 77: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Richard MooseDrum Major

Debbie Rowell

Tigerette Captain

Keith Snelgrove

Commander

STAFF

Bruce CookDirector

Vice-Commander . .

.

Assistant Drum Major

Sergeant Major

Supply Officer

Assistant Supply Officers

Librarian

Assistant Librarians

Flag Corps Captain

Percussion Coordinator

Carolane Bagnal

Carolyn HelenaBrenda Huff

Stephenie McCoy

. . . Ben HoldenLaura Boatright

. . Dean Norton

, . . .Dale Walsh

QJ^oody, Stewart Kidd, Steve MaysDave Griffith

McMillan, Cynthia Sams, Myssi Haven

jp] Vicki Harley

Mike DelCampo

Paula Peeler

Katie Pickett

Mary Roberts

Leilani Shannon

Page 78: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

atMORELAND,we,make tracks,too!

(all over the Southeast)

From our 12 centrally located plant sites throughout the Southeast, Moreland ChemicalCo. makes tracks on every highway and biway—delivering a multitude of vital chemical

products to our customers. Call Moreland for every chemical need when you need it fast,

correctly, and economically.—Spartanburg, S. C.— Florence, S. C.—Greenville,

S. C.—Chattanooga, Tenn.—Kingsport, Tenn.—Nashville, Tenn.—Atlanta, Ga.

Augusta, Ga.—Charlotte, N. C.—Greensboro, N. C—Tampa, Fla.—Richmond, Va.

MORELAND

MAIN PLANT AND GENERAL OFFICES: Camp Croft. Spartanburg. S. C 29302

P. O. Box 2 169/Telephone 803/585-4321

Page 79: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

CLEMSON IPTAY OFFICERS & REPRESENTATIVES

George G Poole, Jr., IPTAY Pres

Director, District VI

B. K ChreitzbergDirector, District I

Grover HenryDirector, District II

Dr. John H. TimmermanDirector, District III

Bill M ReavesDirector, District IV

J Garner BagnalDirector, At-Large

A U Priester, Jr.

Director, At-Large

IPTAY ORGANIZATION—DISTRICT I

B. K, Chreitzberg. Director—District I

304 Whitehall RoadAnderson, S. C. 29621

ABBEVILLE COUNTYPhil Rosenberg, ChairmanCharles B MurphyM Earle Williamson

ANDERSON COUNTYS T King, ChairmanRandy Bell

Victor G ChapmanR Carol CookWalter T Cox, Jr

Joe B DavenportDr James P HentzRobert Lee Hill

Gregory Alan JonesDr C Patrick Killen

Ralph King, Jr.

Percy C Osteen, Jr

A R RamseurRobert G. Sharpe

GREENWOOD COUNTYRobert L McCord. ChairmanDr F Erwin Abell, Jr.

William E. Burnett

Johnson CraigRobert M Erwin, Jr

W. K Fooshe, Jr.

Nevit Y JohnsonW M. Self

Mccormick countyT C Faulkner. Jr

John L Bracknell

OCONEE COUNTYArthur Nuttall, Jr.

McCurry Neville

W. C. Harper, Jr.

PICKENS COUNTYJames V. Patterson, ChairmanGaston Gage, Jr

M Riggs GoodmanDr. Tom C. Lynch. Jr.

Joseph A. WestJ. Eddie Burrell

Jerry R. ByrdRoddey E Gertys. Ill

Gil RushtonFloyd M. HuntW. E. "Doc" VaughanCharles E. DaltonWilliam C Singleton

Robert M. Guerreri

F. Reeves Gressette, Jr., IPTAY Vice Pres.

Director, District V

T C. Atkinson, Jr., Director

W G. DesChamps, Jr., Director

Dr. R C Edwards, Director

Harper Gault, Director

Lewis F. Holmes, Director

Coach Frank Howard, Director

Dr. G. J. Lawhon, Jr., Director

Calhoun Lemon, Director

Chris Suber, Director

LAURENS COUNTYJoseph R. Adair, ChairmanT Heath CopelandW Brooks OwensDr. N. Carl WessengerRalph C. Prater

H. M Faris

Charles J. GlennGray Hipp, Jr.

Hugh F. Morgan, Jr.

Cecil P. Roper

SPARTANBURG COUNTYW M. Manning, Jr., ChairmanAndy N Beiers

Cecil W ComerWilbur K HammettArthur W O Shields

T R Adams, Jr.

John BradyA B. Bullington, Jr.

William M. CooperJohn B. Cornwell, Jr.

Jack CribbKenneth Cribb

John Easterlmg, Jr.

W. Gerald EmoryJudge Bruce Foster

IPTAY ORGANIZATION—DISTRICT II

Grover Henry, Director—District II

715 Dupree Drive

Spartanburg, S. C 29302

CHEROKEE COUNTYJohn M. Hamrick. Jr., ChairmanVan Stephen MossDr. W. Ronald Barrett

R. S. CampbellWiley HamrickE. Raymond ParkerJames R. Sanders, Jr.

GREENVILLE COUNTYKermit Watson, ChairmanMiles E Bruce, Vice ChairmanFloyd S. Long, Vice ChairmanC. Evans Putman, Vice ChairmanPhillip H. BurnettCharles A Bryan, Jr.

Gordon S. DavisHenry ElrodClark Gaston, Jr.

Joe D. GibsonJoel W. Gray, III

Charles D. HuntRichard H. Ivester

Z. K, Kelley

Henry M. LeeSeabrook L. MarchantG. D. "Doc" MorganWilliam J. Neely, Jr.

William H. OrdersJohn F PalmerI N. Patterson, Jr.

George M Plyler

John G. Slattery

J Harold Townes, Jr.

S. Gray WalshDavid Wilkins

Alonzo M. DeBruhlW. Lem Dillard

E Richard Taylor, Jr.

Terry L. LongPeter H. BryanThomas K. Norris

James E. SmallwoodCalvin H. Garrett

Charlie Bussey, IPTAY Sec -Treas.

Director, At-Large

W, H. Taylor, Director

Marshall Walker, Director

Lawrence Starkey, Alumni Past PresEx-Officio Director

Bill McLellanAthletic Director

George BennettAssistant Athletic Director

Gene WillimonIPTAY Executive Secretary

Harry H. GibsonL. J. Hendrix, Jr

W. A. HudsonA. P. KerchmarPhil Prince

Marvin C Robinson, Jr.

Robert L Stoddard

UNION COUNTYHarold E Blackwell, ChairmanHunter S. Harris, Jr.

B. E. Kirby, Jr.

W B Shedd

IPTAY ORGANIZATION—DISTRICT III

Dr. John H. Timmerman, Director—District III

1513 Morninghill Drive

Columbia. S. C. 29210

AIKEN COUNTYH. O Weeks, ChairmanWilliam R. AlexanderWilliam J. ColemanE Hines HamiltonJames W PadgettAlan M Tewkesbury, III

Dr Charlie W TimmermanF A Townsend, Jr

J Lester ThompsonCarol H. Warner0. C BatchelorAlan J ColemanJames L. Walpole

EDGEFIELD COUNTYE O Dukes, Jr., ChairmanJ. B. Herlong, Vice ChairmanJoe F. AndersonJ. W Gilliam, Jr

Henry M. HerlongClyde M. SmithThomas H. Ryan

LEXINGTON COUNTYDave H. Caughman, ChairmanJames Tracy ChildersCharles M. StuckT A, HenryH Ralph CorleyJohnny L. CagleBen G. ComptonJames A. ComptonW. Craig Jumper

NEWBERRY COUNTYEarle Bedenbaugh, ChairmanClifford T Smith, Vice ChairmanW. Wade SmithLouie C. Derrick

Melvin Larry LongshoreC. H. "Pete" Ragsdale, III

Terry C. Shaver

C. Gurnie StuckLyon C. Fellers

Dave C. Waldrop. Jr.

J. H. Simpson, Jr

RICHLAND COUNTYCarl M. Lewis, Jr., ChairmanGeorge I. Alley

Thomas R Bailey

Jack W BrunsonWilliam B. Clinton, Jr.

Ralph E CooperDon E Golightly

William E Hair

Col. George B. HerndonHarry J JohnsonJames P. McKeown, III

W Dave Merry, III

Henry M Simons, Jr.

Davis O SmithJohn B Smith, Jr

Frederic W. "Buddy" WenckE Ralph WessingerVirgil F. Linder, Jr.

John W. McLureErnest Jamerson Corley, Jr.

SALUDA COUNTYJ W Riser, ChairmanBernard L BlackJames A Derrick

Alfred B ColemanTed ColemanBenjamin H HerlongKenneth YarbroughTom C. Wright

Page 80: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

IPTAY ORGANIZATION—DISTRICT IVBill M. Reaves, Director, District IV515 Richardson Circle. EHartsville, S. C 29550

IPTAY ORGANIZATION—DISTRICT VI' *S George G Poole. Jr.. Director—District VI^ P O Box 541

I Mullins, S C 29574

CHESTER COUNTYJ B Bankhead. ChairmanEdward C Abell

F, E. Abell

Richard A. ColemanCurtis A. FennellGeorge R FlemingEd Lindsay

CHESTERFIELD COUNTYJames H Hoover, ChairmanJohn R ThomasFred C Craft, Jr.

Claude B Her. Jr

James C SionePatrick K. White

DARLINGTON COUNTYDr W Phil Kennedy, ChairmanWilliam B. McCown, III

Dr Thomas James Bell. Jr

Dr. G. J Lawhon, Jr.

Harry McDonaldDr M B. Nickles. Jr

J. Wilton Carter

Dennis Yarborough

FAIRFIELD COUNTYF E. Hughes. Jr , ChairmanBruce Finley

Louis M. BoulwareJ. K. ColemanEdward M. CrawfordHarold R. Jones

KERSHAW COUNTYJ. F. Watson. ChairmanCrawford E Sanders, III

Ronald SmallG. P. Lachicotte

LANCASTER COUNTYGarrett J MobleyJames Alton Mobley, Jr

W. P. ClyburnMarion D. LeverW Olin Small

LEE COUNTYDon R McDaniel, Sr.

MARLBORO COUNTYC. E. Calhoun. ChairmanRay C. SmithF. A. Spencer

YORK COUNTYAquille M. Hand, Jr., ChairmanJames G. Bagnal. Ill

Alford HaseldenJames D. ArmourJ. C. PearceDavid E AngelS. L. CampbellE. M. "Buck" GeorgeThomas E. Grimes, III

W. T. Jenkins. Jr.

J. C. Rhea, Jr.

William R. SandersJohn K. Benfield, Jr.

W. F. HarperFloyd D. Johnson

IPTAY ORGANIZATION—DISTRICT VF. Reeves Gressette. Jr.. Director—District VP. O Box 614Orangeburg, S. C. 29115

ALLENDALE COUNTYWiley D. Crum

BAMBERG COUNTYClaude McCain, ChairmanR Herman Rice

BARNWELL COUNTYWalter A, HolcombeT. E. RichardsonGrover C Kennedy. Jr.

Norman M Smith, II

BEAUFORT COUNTYCharles T. BrownRobert H. Fellers

James S. Gibson, Jr.

Bryan LoadholtHenry ChambersHarry J. Tarrance

BERKELEY COUNTYW Henry Thornley

CALHOUN COUNTYWilliam H Bull

Lawrence M. Gressette. Jr

CHARLESTON COUNTYColeman Glaze. ChairmanW R Bailey

Archie E. BakerGeorge Bullwinkel, Jr.

W. S "Bill" Daniel. Jr.

Dreher GaskinMiss Beverly HafersMac R. HarleyWilliam C. KennedySamuel W. McConnellHans F. PaulCarl S PulkinenPaul Quattlebaum, Jr.

Walter A Renken, Jr.

A B Schirmer. Jr

Van Noy Thornhill

H. L. Dukes. Jr.

William A GrantKeith H Waters

COLLETON COUNTYJ. Ryan White. Jr., ChairmanW. R. CarterWilliam T. Howell, Jr.

B. George Price, III

Marion W. Sams, Jr.

DORCHESTER COUNTYGene W. DukesDexter RickenbakerH. D. ByrdClifford Monroe HenleyTom Salisbury

HAMPTON COUNTYDavid B. GohaganW. A. LawtonDr. Jerry Frank CrewsWilliam F. Speights

JASPER COUNTYWeldon E. Wall

ORANGEBURG COUNTYF. Reeves Gressette, Jr.. ChairmanJack G. Vallenline

William B. Bookhart, Jr.

J M Russell. Jr.

James C. Williams, Jr.

W. C. Higginbotham, Jr.

Russell S Wolfe, II

David L. Glenn

IPTAY REPRESENTATIVES AT-LARGECapt. Frank J. Jervey, ClemsonR. R. "Red" Ritchie. ClemsonHoke Sloan. ClemsonC. M. Shook. PiedmontGarry C. "Flip" Phillips. SenecaRobert Cathey. Houston, Texas

iS4CLARENDON COUNTYTheodore B Gardner, ChairmanG. H. Furse, Jr

Lawrence I. GibbonsDr. Robert E. JacksonH B RickenbakerH. F Swilley

D. H. Atkinson

DILLON COUNTYW. Gordon Lynn, ChairmanCharles F. CarmichaelCharles G. Lucius, Jr.

Robert Martin, Jr.

Joseph Powell

FLORENCE COUNTYRufus M. Brown. ChairmanMrs. Rufus M BrownMarvin CockfieldHarold B. HaynesL. Chappell JonesJohn LunnJohn F PooleWilbur O PowersEdward L. YoungJames W KingL M Coleman, Jr.

Frank A. Douglass. Jr.

Dr William L. ColemanLeland Finklea, Jr.

Dr H. A. JordanJohn G Rose

GEORGETOWN COUNTYYank Barrineau, ChairmanSam M. HarperJohn C HememannJames P JayroeGlenn A. CoxA. H. Lachicotte, Jr.

HORRY COUNTYR. G. Horton, ChairmanF. L. BradhamBuddy GoreS. F. HortonWilliam D. Anderson. Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. James P. CreelJohn H. Holcombe. Jr.

Bob Spann

MARION COUNTYT. C. Atkinson, III, ChairmanRobert G. MaceT. C. Atkinson, Jr.

Duncan C MclntyreJohn H. Holt

SUMTER COUNTYW. T, Fort, Jr., ChairmanE Mac DuBoseSen. T. O. Bowen, SrWilliam B. BoyleDr Wyman L. Morris

R. L. Wilder. Jr.

WILLIAMSBURG COUNTYJohn J. Snow. Jr., ChairmanDr. W. C. CottinghamW. H. CoxFred T Guerry, Jr.

James M Kennedy

GEORGIAMickey Earle Reeves, AthensDouglas C Edwards, Atlanta

Howard E Hord, AtlantaThomas W. Eiserhardt. AugustaJohn L. Murray, AugustaEdwin Presnell, AugustaThomas E Peterson, ConyersEugene P. Willimon. Jr.. LaGrangeJerry A. Brannon. Lilburn

Andrew P Calhoun. Savannah

NORTH CAROLINAJames H. Spencer, Jr.. AsheboroEddie N. Dalton, AshevilleManiy E. Wright, AshevilleW B Croxton, BurlingtonW W. Allen. CaryJohn B. Comwell. Ill, CharlotteJames B Foster, CharlotteEdgar L Miller. Jr.. CharlotteGeorge A Hutto. Jr.. CramertonDr. Joe B. Godfrey, Forest City

Col J L. Edmonds, GreensboroWaller M Nash, III. GreensboroJoseph B Bright. HendersonvillePete Folsom, HendersonvilleTom R. Morris. Jr., HickoryW D Moss, Jr., MooresvilleDr. T, G. Westmoreland, ShelbyDr. C. R Sweanngen. Jr., SmilhfieldWilliam T. Worth, Southern PinesRobert S. Bonds, Statesville

John R. Longshore, WilmingtonJ. H. Abrams. Winston-SalemDon Kirkpatrick. Winston-SalemArthur Thomas, Winston-Salem

OTHER STATESJ. V. RobertsAlbertville. Ala

William Lindsay WylieMiddlebury, Conn.

Frank H. Inabnit, Jr.

Jacksonville, Fla.

Lawrence D. Sherer. Jr.

Ormond Beach, Fla.

J. Tom ShellOrange Park, Fla.

Leon R YoungWinter Park, Fla.

Carl F BessentBaltimore, Md.

Emerson E AndrishokSummit, N. J.

Alvin J. Hurt, Jr.

Cincinnati. Ohio

A Wayne WardStillwater. Okla.

James C. FurmanBrentwood. Tenn.

Benjamin K. SharpCleveland, Tenn.

Johnny L. OsteenGermantown. Tenn.

Harry W SmithKingsport, Tenn.

Thomas C. Breazeale, Jr

Knoxville, Tenn.

Robert P. CorkerSignal Mountain. Tenn.

Davis T. MoorheadAnnandale, Va.

Col. D?vid C. RogersVienna. Va.

Starkey Priester Bagnal Atkinson DesCharnps Edwards

Gault Lawhon Lemon Suber Taylor Walker Hughes Holmes Howard McLellan Willimon

Page 81: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

QUANTITY tt DESCRIBE ITEMprice total ORDER FORMEACH PRICE

Make Check or Money order payable to: Add 4% S. C. Sales Tax to all

Clemson Canteen Giftshop shipments plus $1.50 to cover

postage and handling. For three

Prices are subject to change or more ltems add $2 00 t0

cover shipping. total

Ordered By.

Ship to:

Regardless of the occasion or person, the

CLEMSON CANTEEN GIFTSHOP hasmade gift shopping easy. Merely select

the product(s) you so desire, complete the

coupon and forward with check to

CLEMSON CANTEEN GIFTSHOP,Clemson University, Clemson, S. C.

29631.

#1 —Rubber baby pants with Tiger Sizes

S (to 12 lbs.), M (12 to 18 lbs ), L (24 to

30 lbs.) $1.79

#2—Baby bib with Tiger (Plastic with terry

cloth lining) $1 79#3—Purple and orange STOCKING CAPwith CLEMSON on front (one size fits

all) $3.98#4—Adult gym shorts CLEMSON white

W/navy stripe. Sizes S (28-30), M (32-

34), L (36-38), XL (40-42) $3.49

#5—Child's SWEAT SHIRT in orange or

white. Sizes XS (2-4). S (6-8), M (10-

12). L (14-16) $4.98

#6—Child's T-Shirt white with navy trim.

Tiger socking Gamecock. XS (2-4), S(6-8), M (10-12), L (14-16) $2.98

#7—Child's navy and orange T-Shirt.

Sizes XS (2-4), S (6-8), M (10-12). L

(14-16) (Orange not available in

XS) $2.98

#8—Child's T-Shirt white with orangetrim Sizes XS (2-4), S (6-8), M (10-12),

L (14-16) $2.98

#9A—Adult navy unlined jacket with

PAW in Sizes S, M, L, XL .... $1 1 .98

9B—Children's unlined jacket available

in Sizes S (6-8), M (10-12), L (14-

16) $10.98#10—Adult orange unlined jacket with

white PAW. Sizes S, M, L, XL. $11.98

10B—Children's unlined jacket avail-

able in Sizes S (6-8), M (10-12), L (14-

16) $10.98

10C—Adult orange light lined jacket

with PAW. Sizes S, M, L, XL. . $16.98

#11 A—Adult navy light lined jacket with

CLEMSON UNIVERSITY. Sizes S, M,

L, XL $16.981 1B—Adult navy also available in pile

lining. Sizes S, M, L, XL $20.98

1 1C—Child s navy light lined jacket.

Sizes S (6-8). M (10-12), L (14-

16) $15.98#12—Roll up nylon rain hat. Sizes 6 7

/s, 7,

714, 7V4, 73/s, 7'/2, 7% $4.95

#13—Adult short sleeve orange football

jersey. 100% cotton. Sizes S, M, L,

XL $6.98

#14A—Adult natural football jersey,

100% cotton. Sizes S, M, L, XL $7.50

14B—Children's natural football |ersey.

100% cotton. Sizes XS (2-4), S (6-8), M(10-12), L (14-16) $6.50

# 1 5A—Adult orange football jersey, 50%cotton, 50% polyester. Sizes S, M, L,

XL $7.50]15B—Youth orange football jersey,

50% cotton, 50% polyester. Sizes S(6-8). M (10-12), L (14-16) $6.50

15C—Juvenile orange football jersey,

50% cotton, 50% polyester. Sizes S (2),

M (4), L (6) $5.98

# 16—Adult nylon mesh golf or tennis shirt

available in white or navy. Sizes S. M, L,

XL $9.98

# 1 7—Orange golf hat with TIGER PAW &adjustable strap $4,98

#18A—Old fashioned glasses with

TIGER PAW. Set of 8 $13.50

1 8B—Old fashioned glasses with COL-LEGE SEAL done in silver. Set of

8 $14.50

#19A—Highball glasses with TIGERPAW. Set of 8 $12.50

19B—Highball glasses with COLLEGESEAL done in silver. Set of 8 . $13.50

#20—Small mug CLEMSON/PAW crest

metal tankard. 10 oz $5.98

#21 —Ash tray 5 in. diameter metal

W/PAW $3.98

#22—Large mug CLEMSON/PAW crest

metal tankard. 16 oz $7 98

#23—Adult's golf or tennis shirt, 50%polyester, available in navy or white.

Sizes S, M, L, XL $8.49

#24—Adult's SWEAT SHIRT orange,

navy, or white with TIGER PAW. Sizes

S, M, L, XL $5.98

#25—Adult white T-Shirt with navy trim.

Sizes S, M, L, XL $3.49

#26—Adult navy or orange T-Shirt with

CLEMSON & PAW. Sizes S, M, L,

XL $3.25

#27—Adult SWEAT SHIRT with SEAL:orange only. Sizes S, M, L, XL . $5 98

#28—Adult T-SHIRT with CLEMSON;navy or orange. Sizes S, M, L,

XL $3.25

Page 82: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

IPTAY— Special RecognitionDuring the fiscal year of 1 975-76, contributions made to

the Clemson IPTAY Club showed an increase over the

previous 12 months. This was the 12th consecutive year

that an increase had been noted.

Altogether, $915,630 were contributed by some 8,977

individuals. This represented over 1 01 per cent of the goal

originally set. South Carolina raised 1 01 percent of its goal,

North Carolina 102 and Georgia 104.

This was the first time that over $900,000 were realized,

but it was the fifth straight year that over a half million

dollars came in. Every penny received through IPTAYsince its beginning in 1934 has been used for athletic

scholarships only. Sixteen men's and women's sports nowbenefit from IPTAY.

On the following pages we have listed those people and

business organizations, who are being recognized by their

permission, for their interest and continued support of

IPTAY.

$2000 IPTAY SCHOLARSHIP DONORS

Abney Mills m$m m&m m$mJ R Fulp Jr

Pepsi Cola Bottlin 9 Co Dr William P. Kay. Jr. Calhoun Lemon

Anderson S CAnderson, S. C. Belton, S. C. Barnwell, S. C.

^Jflb jttto tdfltb

Wilbur 0. PowersMr &

.f![

S

G

"Y^unter Mr ant

|

MrSM

F'Hayes

Ellison S McKissick, Jr. C. H MorganLife Member Life Member „ ... D „ „ ... " „

„ .„ e. L n -ii o r Greenville, S. C. Greenville, S. CGreenville. S. C Greenville, S. C

Kfjr

Bankers Trust

of Sooth Carolina

T. Donald Sherard

Greenwood, S. C.

Mr & Mrs. E. 0s

Hampto

d Lightsey A. 0. Amick Memorial

Batesbury , S. C

Mr. & Mrs George Ii. Alley Mr. & Mrs. George G. Poole, Jr.

Mullins, S.

Bill Folk, Jr.. Memorial

(Lite Member)

Newberry, S. C

Coach Frank J. Howard

(Honorary Lile Member)

Clemson. S.

Mr & Mrs. Hotake Sloan

(Lile Member)

Clemson, S. C

The R. L. Bryan CompanyEd O'Cain, E. P. Wylie

and Robert S. Davis

Columbia, S. C

Ralph E. Cooper

Columbia. S. C

James P. McKeown, III Thomas B. McTeer, Jr. Davis 0. Smith Jack M. Blasius MGR., Inc

Columbia. S. C. Columbia S. C. Columbia. S. C. Spartanburg, S. C Spartanburg, S. C.

ft ft WJerome J. R,chardson

c

Clar

(

e

h

nce tester President ^ *^ ^ ^_ . . . _ Southern Area ARA Services .. .. M„„ . ct-.Do„in D m rSpartanburg, S. C

Atlanta. Ga

Page 83: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

$1000 TIGER SCHOLARSHIP DONORS

irst National Bank

or South Carolina

Anderson and Clemson Offices

00*Frank Distributing Co.

Anderson, S. C

R. B. Pond

Construction Co Inc.

William M. Boyce

Darlington, S C.

R. A. Westbrook &

A. H. McMeekin, Jr.

Monticello S. C

if,Yank Barrineau

Andrews, S. C.

Harrison Electrical

Constructors,

Greenville, S. C.

Chemsize, Inc

Roger G. Perry

Greenville, S. C

kino PIGreenwood Packing Plant

Henderson Barnette

Greenwood. S. C

Mr. & Mr*.

V. F. Under, Jr.

Irmo, S. C.

^b0b\^S&£0^Cogburn Dairy, Inc

Frank S. Hankel, Jr.

Charleston, S. C

Dr. Paul A. Coward

Hartsville, S. C.

Fairfield Spreader Service

J. K. Coleman

Winnsboro, S. C

0*1C. L. Cribb,

Georgetown, S.

Dick Hendley

Sanitation, Inc.

Greenville, S. C

C. Evans Putman

Greenville, S. C.

Nosredna, Inc.

Myrtle Beach, S. C

m0mSouth Carolina

Seating Co.. Inc.

Chuck Hawkins

Irmo, S. C

00mWare Brothers

Construction Company

Moncks Corner, S. C.

Ed & Red Phillips

Chicken Farm

loncks Corner, S C.

Dr. F, k, Jr.00L

Peeler Jersey Fa

Gaffney

W. M. Umphlett Memorial

By: Clyde D. Umphlett

& Calhoun W. Umphlett

Moncks Corner, S. C.

0*0Sanders Brothers, Inc.

Gaffney, S. C.

Dr. M. B. Nickles, Jr.

Hartsville, S. C.

Lewi:

0mwis F. Holmes

Trenton, S. C.

Winnsboro, S.

R. W. Da

Dr. John M. &

Martha B. Thomason

Florence, S. C.

M0iDalton & Neves

Engineers

s. c.Gre

Daniel International Corporation

Currie B. Spivey, Jr.

Greenville, S. C.

Johnsonville, S. C.

-™Greenville, S. C.

^^i^k^^jjjjjt^ ^^to^tf^tf^ ^ii^i^S^^t^ ^itfc^t^jttfrDick Hendley Intex Products, Inc.

Joe A. Hewell

Greenville, S. C

J P. Southerland

Greenville, S C.

§±<LG. P. Lachicotte

Lugoff, S. C.

Joel Wells

Greenville, S. C.

00mUnited Investors

Louis G. Manios

Greenville, S. C

A Friend of Clemson

Greenville, S. C.

iff.C. M. Shook

Piedmont, S. C.

m0ACharles W. Bussey, Jr.

Laurens, S. C.

I ±W. G. DesChamps, Jr.

Bishopville. S. C.

000 000 000C. Atkinson, Jr. „

Eskr 'd9_? !

* L„on

? Frank J. McGeeT. C. Atkinson, Jr.

Marion, S. C.Construction Corp.

Marion, S C.Seneca, S. C.

Page 84: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

$1000 TIGER SCHOLARSHIP DONORS

n Memoiv ol

Capt. & MFrank J. Je

(Life MembeClemson. S. C

Or. Harry B. Arant, Jr.

r^b^ Tom C. Lynch.

jer) Clemson, S C.

Mrs Dorothy J Crews

:o,u-,S.C

#^: rank Durha

airtorest, S

am, Jr.

,c.

Ann

Sp

Je tt Hunt Machinery Company

0*0lartanburg, S. C

Norman Frederick Puiliam

Spartanburg, S. C. Sp3&Temple-Watts-Cordell-Jiles D. William Brosnan

Atlanta, Georgia

0*0Laurie Edward BennettSMM s. C.

0*0Dr Robert C. Edward*

Clemscn. S C. 4*Jamas V. Patterson

C^nson, S

0*0Gil Rushton John H. Bailey

Columbia, S

0*0Robert H. Russell, Jr.

Ct^mbia, S. (pr

0*0SlT. State Fag^.

^|In Honor of

Mr & Mrs. W. P (Pap) Timmerman

By Dr & Mrs John H Timmerman

& Family

Mr & Mrs W. P. (Tim) Timmerman

& Family

Mr. & Mrs.

Lachlan L. Hyatt

Spartanburg, S. C

Plastic Injectors, inc.

Spartanburg, S. C.

Phil H. Prince

Spartanburg, S. C.

0*0.Erwin C. Thornton

Spafanburg, S.^ illJacksonville, Florida

Piedmont Paper Co. Inc

Asfville. N ^0*0R. 0. Benson

0*0Bennett

Bp & Tile

Kings

0*9Gordon L. Goodson

Lincolnton, N. C.

0UT C. Breazeal

0*0Libby and Bill Holcomb

McLean, Virginia

CLEMSON'S 15 LARGEST CROWDSAttendance Season Opponent Site Score

82,000 1958 Louisiana State Sugar Bow 1 0-7

78.161 1976 Tennessee Knoxville 19-21

72,552 1956 Colorado Orange Bowl 21-27

66.334 1974 Tennessee Knoxville 28-29

65,000 1950 Miami (Fla.) Orange Bowl 15-14

62,0.34 1963 ( Iklahoma Norman 14-31

61.826 1972 ( >klai) cm i i.i Norman 3-52

59,588 1967 Georgia Tech Atlanta 0-10

59.008 1968 Georgia Athens 13-31

58,383 1975 Alabama Tuscaloosa 0-56

57 Ml) 1975 Georgia Athens 7-35

57,242 1971 South Carolina ( olumbia 17-7

57, 197 1975 South Carolina Columbia 20-56

56,116 1968 Georgia Tech Atlanta 21-24

55,682 1970 Georgia Athens 0-38

11 LARGEST HOME CROWDSAttendance Season Opponent Date Score

53,247 1968 South Carolina Nov. 22 3-7

52,677 1974 South Carolina Nov. 23 39-21

51,608 1972 South Carolina Nov. 25 7-6

50,949 1970 South Carolina Nov. 21 32-38

49,596 1967 Alabama Oct. 28 10-13

47,237 1966 South Carolina Nov. 26 35-10

47,074 1967 N. C. State Nov. 18 14-6

46,362 1967 Georgia Sept. 30 17-24

45,600 1976 The Citadel Sept. 11 10-7

45,080 1960 South Carolina Nov. 12 12-2

45,000 1962 South Carolina Nov. 24 20-17

Page 85: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

ABBEVILLE COUNTY

Mr. & Mrs. William C. DuPre

Abbeville

C. L. Huggins

Donalds

AIKEN COUNTY

Aiken

Houndslake Corporation

Richard L. Meyer

Alan M. Tewkesbury, III

F. A. Townsend, Jr.

Frank T. Gibbs

North Augusta

Carrol H. WarnerWagener

ANDERSON COUNTY

Anderson

Proceeds From IPTAYTournamentAnderson County Clemson Club

Anderson Orthodontic Assoc.

Doctors Croxton & McConnell

James H. Boulware

Nathan W. Childs

B. K. Chreitzberg

Robert F. Coble, Jr. and

Charles C. Allen, Jr.

Ronald D. CromerWometco Vend-A-Matic

J. Tom Forrester, Jr.

Dr. Walter L. Gaillard

Robert V. Harrell

Doctors Hentz & Hentz, P. A.

Dr. Charles W. Hinnant

King Oil Company

In Memory of Max B. King

G. Eugene MaddenElectric City Printing Co.

Steven E. MaddenElectric City Printing Co.

P. C. Osteen, Jr.

Piedmont Candy & Cigar Co.

Dr. Donald C. Roberts &Dr. Joseph C. Yarbrough, Jr.

James A. Smith, Jr.

Tag & Label Corp.

T. Barney Smith

Dr. A. Fred Stringer, Jr.

Jack J. Terry

Harry McLean Wilson

Windsor Associates

Belton

Capital Bank & Trust

James R. Fowler, Pres.

Linwood Cheatham

James F. Little

Dr. J. Clayton Richardson &Dr. C. Eric Richardson

$500 GOLD CARD

j

The Peoples Bank of Iva

Iva

Boscobel Golf & Country Club

E. Buckley HancockPendleton

Dr. Jim Hellams

Pendleton

BARNWELL COUNTY

Dr. Gary L. Mullins

Blackville

Norman M. Smith, II

Williston

BEAUFORT COUNTY

Charles L. JohnsonBurton

BERKELEY COUNTY

Dr. Peter E. Myers, IV

Moncks Corner

ers, iv

! AT. W. Salisbury,

Moncks Corner

CHARLESTON COUNTY

Charleston

Ashley River Animal Hospital

Bill Daniel

O. R. Lever

Aaron A. Nettles, Jr

DARLINGTON COUNTY

Hartsville

Dr. T. James Bell, Jr.

Dr. G. J. Lawhon, Jr.

Harry M. McDonald

Bill M. Reaves

Dennis Yarborough

Lamar

DILLON COUNTYCharles F. Carmichael

Dillon

W. G. LynnDillon

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph L. Powell

Latta

Albert J. Rogers & SonFork

DORCHESTER COl

Gene W. DukesSt. George MPBailey & Associates

Summerville

EDGEFIELD COUNTY

Mr. & Mrs. Robert H. Herlong

Johnston

Russell & Bryant Realty Corp. Mr. & Mrs John A. Hughes

a ^^mk JohnstonWilliam A. Grant

Tri-County Concrete Corp.

E. M. Seabrook, Jr.

Mt. Pleasant

Doctors J. O. and K. C. Shuler

Mt. Pleasant Hospital, Inc.

Mt. Pleasant

CHEROKEE COUNTY

Dr. Ronald Barrett, DMD, PAGaffney

R. S. Campbell, Jr.

Gaffney

CHESTER COUNT"

J. B. Pressley, Jr.

Chester

W. T. WrennChester

CHESTERFIELD COUNTY

Bill Henley

Cheraw

Dr. Billy Blakeney

Pageland

CLARENDON COUNTY

John William GreenTurbeville

J. W. Green Company, Inc.

Turbeville

COLLETON COUNTY

Diversified

Trenton

id Industri

wFAIRFIELD COUNTY

John J. Hood, J

Ridgeway

Winnsboro

Edward M. Cra

W. M. Estes, Jr

Harold R. Jones

James Ray CookWalterboro Pole Co.

Walterboro

Inc.

FLORENCE COU

Florence

Mr. & Mrs. Rufus M. Brown

L. Chappell Jones

Tom M. Robertson

King FarmsJoe W. King

Johnsonville

Stephen H. MudgeJohnsonville

F. A. Douglass, Jr.

Lake City

Troy H. LambLake City

W. G. Moorer

Olanta

Pamplico

B & C Fuel

Joe L. Bostick

Dr. William L. Coleman

Howard H. Thomas

NTYJ„D

.-

GEORGETOWN COUNTY

Andrews

H. E. Hemingway

Thomas O. Morris

W. L. Ragland

Glenn A. CoxPawleys Island Apothecary

Pawleys Island

A. H. Lachicotte, Jr.

Pawleys Island

GREENVILLE COUNTY

Greenville

Allied Textile Sales, Inc.

David Terry Tallon

Allstate Food Brokers, Inc.

T. L. Ayers, Jr.

Davis Electrical Constructors, Inc.

AARO Rents, Inc.

Lewis L. Bates, Jr.

Mr. & Mrs. Harry G. Batson

The Beer Shoppe Ltd.

^Oyj^4 Bryan, Jr.

Cooper Motor Lines, Inc.

Richard L. Few

Walter B. Crawford

Elliott Technical Services

W. L. Walker

Dr. William Evins

J. M. -Farmer

Raleigh J. Farr

^Hlnfederate Textile Machinery

Thomas M- Floyd, Jr.

Harrison S. Forrester

Francis Realty CoJamile J. Francis

J. M. Gilfillin

Elmer C. Goodwin

C. L. Greene

Jack & Patsy Greene

Dr. Fbyd F. Griffin, Jr.

arwood Mfg. Co., Inc. #1

Harrison

Davis Electrical Constructors, Inc.

Francis K. Hinnant

W. M. Hooks

Willie R. HudsonTires, Incorporated

Grady R. Jones

Dr. Roland M. Knight

W. Gordon McCabe, Jr.

Fred J. Mappus, Jr.

C. B. Martin

William E. Mathews

Daniel International Corp.

Earl B. Mills

Yeargin Construction Company,Inc.

Palmetto Loom Reed Company

I. N. Patterson, Jr.

John Perkins

Page 86: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

Jack Pittman

Pittman's Textile Machinery &Supply Co., Inc.

James Rochester Company, Inc.

J. D Rudder

Shealy Electrical Wholesalers, Inc.

W. E. DeLoache

Truman W. Shirley, Jr.

Sloan Construction Company, Inc.

Dr. Robert S. Small

Snyder's Auto Sales

J. W. Snyder

James B. Stephens

Davis Electrical Constructors, Inc.

Murray M. Stokely

Dr. Edwin L. Stroud

William B. Sturgis

Fred M. Thompson

J. P. Thompson, Jr.

Clarence R. Turner, Jr.

J. D. Wells. Jr.

Max Whatley

Greer

Alonzo M. DeBruhl

James G. Hayes

Charles F. Rhem, Jr.

Ralph W. Blakely

Piedmont

R. E. Riddle

Piedmont

Taylors

Edwin W. Evans

W. Joe Henson

Mr. & Mrs. Harold L. Hix

GREENWOOD COUNTY

Greenwood

Dr. F. Erwin Abell, Jr.

G & P Trucking Company, Inc.

Dr. Edwin C. Hentz

Edward A. Hood, Jr.

Roy E. Long

George F. Smith, Jr.

A. M. Tuck, Inc.

W. K. BrownHodges

HAMPTON COUNTY

Lawton Oil Company, Inc.

Estill

Mr. & Mrs. W. H. Mauldin

Hampton

HORRY COUNTY

Leon CannonConway

Thurmon W. McLambLittle River

Paul Patrick

Garden City Beach

Myrtle Beach

Jimmy Benton

$500 GOLD CARDGeorge J. Bishop, III

A. S. DarganDargan Construction Co., Inc.

John P. '•Pat" Gore

Holcombe Motor Company

John L. Humphries

KERSHAW COUNTY

CamdenDr. C. F. Higgins

Joseph C. Jackson

T. F. McNamara, Jr.

George Singleton, Jr.

J. F. Watson

LANCASTER COUNTY

James A. AdamsAl Adams^^Lancaster

W. Olin Small

Lancaster

LAURENS COUNTY

T. Heath CopelandClinton

J. T. Hollingsworth

Cross HillWW. W. Niver,

Joanna

Ronald L. CaLaurens^A^

P. W. McAlister

Laurens

LEE COUNTY

Don R. McDaniel, Sr.

Bishopville

LEXINGTON COUNTY

George M. Shealy

Batesburg

Woodrow H. Taylor

Batesburg

Raymond S. CaughmanThe Lexington State BankLexington

Mr. & Mrs. Jack E. Nettles

Lexington

Lee Harold Witt, Jr.

Swansea

Warren Craig JumperWest Columbia

MARION COUNTY

Marion

Dewey Alford

T. C Atkinson, III &James L. Skipper

Joe Bethea

John O. Lewis, Jr., &Lewis B. Smith

Duncan C. Mclntyre &William F. Thompson

John H. Holt

Mullins

O K. McKenzieMullins

MARLBORO COUNTY

John F. McLaurin, Jr.

Bennettsville

Drake H RogersBennettsville

NEWBERRY COUNTY

Clifford T. Smith

Kmards

is &

Gordon S. Leslie. Jr

Newberry A*Earle Joiner BedenProsperity

David Waldrop, Jr

Silverstreet

ugh

PI

OCONEE COUNTYrY mMarshall J. Pari

Oconee Dairies

Seneca

Ward Smith Chcvrolet-Buick

Seneca

Joseph™. RuWalhalla

kat, Jr.

ORANGEBURG COUNTY

J. M. Russell, Jr

Holly Hill

Orangeburg

W. A. Cartwright. Jr

F. Reeves Gressette, Jr.

Gressette Pest Control Co.

D. A. Kennerly

Dr. L. P. Varn

PICKENS COUNTYCentral Concrete & Plaster, Inc

Central

Clemson

Norman Canoy

E. E Clayton

Kelly J- DuBose

Dr & Mrs William E Dukes

Dr. Benjamin C. Dysart, III

Col. & Mrs. Marvin C. Ellison

Byron and Mickey Harder

Coach Frank J. Howard

Thomas M. Hunter

Lanford Co.

Littlejohn Memorial IPTAYScholarship FundMiss Mary Katherine Littlejohn

Jerry A. Meehan

Dr. Sam L. Moore

Lt. Col. Richard C. Robbins

McDonalds of ClemsonWalt Mergner, Owner

Easley

A & A Builders

James E. Burrell

R. A. Jones

Liberty

R. Frank Kolb, II

William C. Peek

W. E. Vaughan

Dalton s Furniture & Carpets

Clemson and Pickens

RICHLAND COUNTY

Columbia

Bearing Distributors. Inc

S. J DeBorde, Sr.

Jackson O Byers

Carolina Ceramics, Inc.

Jon M. Whitaker

Carolina Ceramics. Inc.

W. L. Harrington, Jr.

Terris L. Eller

James W. Engram

irst National Bank of S. C.

Sam B. Hutto Jr

Larry W. Flynn

Mr. & Mrs. Donald R Fugate

Don E. Golirjhtly

Robert I. Grigsby, Jr.

DavidJ. Jeter

Maj. & Mrs J J Kirby. Jr. (Ret.)

In Memory of S C McMeekin

Col. John^^Mack, Sr.

Dr. L. Emmett Madden

W. L. Mouts, Sr.

Patrick Construction Co Inc

John C. Rivers

Edward T. Strom

Roy N. Taylor

Buddy Wenck

SALUDA COUNTY

A Friend—Saluda County

P^idge Spring

S & S Farm Supply

Ridge Spring

SPARTANBURG COUNTY

Dr. Henry S. AndersonLandrum

Wendell Christopher

Roebuck

Spartanburg

Y. C. Ballenger

Electrical Contractor

J. B. Garvan

Harry H. Gibson

Dr. Robert J. Haas

L. J. Hendrix, Jr.

Grover C. Henry

Dr. Paul Holcomb

Leigh Textile Co.

Herbert Long

Raymond S Waters

Boyd West

Page 87: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

SUMTER COUNTY

E. M. DuBoseOswego

Sumter

Booth-Boyle Livestock Co.

John J. Britton, Jr.

W. T. Fort, Jr.

J. T. James, Jr.

Sumter Casket Co.

Jasper T. James, III

Sumter Casket Co.

Korn Industries, Inc.

Dr. Wyman L. Morris &Sammie Morris

The National Bank of S. C.

J. M. Sprott, Sr. V-Pres.

Charles A. Segars

UNION COUNTY

Jack & Jean Burch

Union

Dr. H. Russell Caston, Jr.

Union

WILLIAMSBURG COUNTY

Bubba SnowHemingway

F. E. Huggins, Jr. &D. I. Wilson, III

Hemingway

$500 GOLD CARDJoseph L. HuckabeeRock Hill

Marshall E. Walker

Rock Hill

John K. Benfield, Jr.

York

OTHER STATI

J. G. MoxonOcala, Fla.

William D. Andersoi

Atlanta, Ga.

Edwin S. Presnell

Augusta, Ga.

Mr. & Mrs. Bob Forest

Carnesville, Ga.

R

Joe B. Maffett

alton, Ga.

A. Bowen, Jr.

Macon, Ga.

Joseph D. SwannStone Mountain, Ga.

Emreson E. Andrishok

Summitt, N. J.

Joseph Bailey Bright

Hendersonville, N. C.

J. O. Buck" BuchananAsheville. N. C,

John B. Cornwell, III

Charlotte, N. C.

W. E. Holland

oren Clay Products Companyharlotte, N C.

James S. Hunter

Charlotte, N. C.

Jeff KaneCharlotte. N. C

Superior Synthi

H. Tate BowersCharlotte, N. C.

W. A. Woodharlotte, N. C.

Hugh D. Putnam, Sr.

Cherryville, N. C.

Christian Harward Fi

Curtis C. KimbrWr.JrDurham, N. C

William H. Lewis

Fairmont, N. C.

Dr. Joe B. Godfrey

Forest City, N. C.

£3L

A. J. Rigby, Jr.

Kingstree

YORK COUNTY

Claud H. Morrow &Calvin B. MorrowClover

Don Tomberlin

Ellis-Tomberlin, Inc.

Asheville, N. C.

J. P. Swails

Burlington, N. C.

John C. Boesch, Jr.

Charlotte, N. C.

M. Bryant

nia. N. C.

John S. Jenkin

Gastonia, N

Atlantic Chemical Corporation

^e Clendonnsboro, N. C.

Roland Lee Connelly, Sr.

Greensboro, N. C.

Lloyd W. Purser

Greensboro, N. C.

J. Henry DowdyHigh Point, N. C.

Gary J. Gosztonyi

Kernersville, N. C.

Pierson & Whitman, Inc.

Raleigh, N. C.

James M. Perry

Rutherfordton, N. C.

W. T. Vick

Salisbury, N. C.

Dr. James Sam Seastrunk

Shelby, N. C.

Dr. T. G. WestmorelandShelby, N. C.

Dr. C. R. Swearingen, Jr.

Smithfield, N. C.

'J. Garner Bagnal

Statesville, N. C.

Garrison Machinery Co.

Statesville, N. C.

J. E.' Bo" Chinners, Jr.

Bay Village, Ohio

les N. Wyatt, Jr.

Iitain Top, Pa.

P. V. GuytonPhiladelphia, Pa.

rry W. Smith

ingsport, Tenn.

Mrs. Harry W. Smith

Kingsport, Tenn.

Charles Richard WoodFort Worth, Texas

Dr. James E. Bostic, Jr.

Arlington, Va.

W. J. Erwin

Danville, Va.

J. B. MontgomeryMartinsville, Va.

David L. PeeblesNewport News, Va.

Clemson and Stevens...Partners in textiles.Clemson alumni, students, andfaculty are important to Stevens.

Tiger alumni continue to help keepStevens a recognized leader in the

international textile market place.

Clemson students help Stevensplants near the campus maintain

high levels of productivity. Stevensand the textile industry at large

benefit each year from the research

and recommendations of Clemsonfaculty and graduate assistants.

Clemson and Stevens . . . partners

on the campus and in the plants.

J.PStevens&Co. , Inc.

An Equal Opportunity Employer

Page 88: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

$250 GOLD CARDABBEVILLE COUNTYOr John L GuyAbbeville

Charles B MurphyAbbeville

M Earle WilliamsonDonalds

AIKEN COUNTYAiken

Alexander-Moormann & Associates

William R Alexander

John G Calhoun

H C Coward & Son

Donald L. Fulmer

Elbert Hines Hamilton

John G Malony &William W. Malony, Jr

A H Peters. Jr.

T. Clifton WeeksMr & Mrs. Clayson J White

James L. WalpoleNodh Augusta

Dr. W G WatsonNorth Augusta

ALLENDALE COUNTYW Ross BrewerAllendale

John F BrunsonAllendale

ANDERSON COUNTYAndersonAnderson Orthopedic Clinic, P AR. H. Anderson

BaychemWilliam R Aiken

Dr Robert B Belk

The C & S National BankR. W. Wilkes

Jerry O ChapmanCoca-Cola Bottling Companyof Anderson

R. Carol Cook

John A Davenport

W. M. Dillard

Dillard Marine & Sport Center

Dr. Claude Dixon

Tom W Dunaway, Jr.

Larry EarwoodSinger CompanyMarshall A. Fant

Robert Lee Hill

Gregory Alan Jones

Wallace Jones

S T. King

William L. Lyles &Stonewall J Watson. Ill

Virgil P. McCormick &Douglas Farrell Clements

Kenneth M. Mattison &Christopher G Olson

Dr. Vernon Merchant, Jr.

Dr H L Murray

D. K. Oglesby, Jr.

J. Leonard Patterson

J Roy Pennell. Jr

Dr. James E Pennell

A. R. Ramseur

Red Circle, Inc.—Clemson Store

Rhodes Development Co., Inc.

Horace C. Rhodes

Allan P Sloan. Jr.

Jim Stathakis &Pete J Stathakis

Chris Suber

Lawrence A. Sutherland

George M Taylor

Preston O. Toole

Welborn Tire Service. Inc.

W. Gerald Welborn

Mr. & Mrs Rick Whatley

P Louis Whitworth

Wholesale Electrical SupplyCompany, Inc.

Billy Joe Durham

Williams Plastering, Inc

Chester C Williams

Kenneth S. Wohllord

John W Wood, Jr.

Belton

Baylis E. Anderson

Mr & Mrs Samuel Ashley

Dr. Leonard W. Douglas

George L. Graham

William P. Kay. Sr.

Dr. William P. Kay. Jr.

Mr & Mrs. Raymond A. King

Dr Malcombe A McAlisler

Steve Pearce

Donald L BuntonPelzer

Dr. Charles R. Griflin

Pendleton

C H LomasPendleton

Williamston

Leon B Allen

George H. Durham. Jr

Lamar Gaillard

Harper Builders. Inc.

John M Harper. Jr.

Harry Ma|or

BAMBERG COUNTYClaude McCainDenmark

Victor Whetstone, Jr,

Denmark

J E Brown. Jr.

Ehrhardt

John M Hamrick. Jr.

Wylie Hamrick

B R Kernels

E. Raymond Parker

CHESTER COUNTYJames W. BankheadBlackstock

Chester

J. B. Bankhead

In Memory of Joe W. Collins

Steven Epps

George R Fleming

Mrs S W. Gough

Sammy Worthy Gough

Johnson-Laura Mae. Inc.

Dr. Halsted M StoneChurch Street Clinic

Fred A Tripled. Jr.

J. A. White Memorial

W. C, Childers

Great Falls

W. E. LindjayGrtMi l-alls

CLARENDON COUNTY

BARNWELL COUNTYJames M ShulerBarnwell

Ted W. CraigBlack ville

Walter H. JenkinsKline

Robert H. Birt

Williston

BEAUFORT COUNTYT. R. Garrett

Beaufort

Bryan LoadholtBeaufort

Harry Tarrance

JUNTY

Charles Lyman Bates, A.I.AHilton Head Island

BERKELEY COUNTYMoncks CornerWilliam Br nt

Dr Rhetl B. Myers

Dr. John H. Swicord

CALHOUN COUNTYS. H. HouckGeneral Farm Products & DairyCameron

Eldon V. Haigler. Jr.

Cameron

CHARLESTON COUNTYCharleston

Charleston Oil Co.

W. M. Cornwell

Peter D. Dorn. Jr.

John William Felder

Coleman O. Glaze. Vice PresFirst Citizens Bank & Trust Co.

Mac R. Harley

Willianjjc

Frank E. Luca

Charles F. McCrai

Hans F. Paul

Gayle RossThe Noland Co.

A. B. Schirmer, Jr.

Dan H. Swanger

Richard E. WheelerNorth Charleston

Tom B. YoungNorth Charleston

David M Murray, Jr.

Hannahan

In Memory of S. V. Sotille

Isle Of Palms

W C MastersMt, Pleasant

CHEROKEE COUNTYIn Memory of Dr T. A CampbellBlacksburg

Mr & Mrs. W. A HambnghtBlacksburg

Gatfney

Lawrence E. ChildersSouthern Loom Reed Mfg. Co.

• ~ - * Hart!i^Edw£

L. ru

Darlington

Hartsville

Edward B. Crawford

s Hicks

yjer Howie

Dr William p Kennedy

McKoit'll Brothers^^^

JohnC Walker

J.W Carter

Lamer

Edwi' ( , , , Bass. Jr.

Lydia

Peter l r.v Call. Jr.

Society Higfl

DILLON COUNTY WLaurens W. Floyd Bill

Dillon Dar

DORCHESTER COUNTY F

Eari R DuPriest. Jr Joe

Summerville^B Joh

Berlin G Myers EdwSumm^ille ^^^^ Haf|

EDGEFIELD COUNTY Cak

DORCHESTEREari R DuPriest,

Summer'

Berlin <s Myr*Summerviiie

EDGEFIELDJoe F. AndersonEdgefield

Holmes, Jr.

hnston

FAIRFIELD COUNTYWinnsboroLouis M. Boulware

J. P. Brooks

Warren R. Herndon

James W. Stephenson, III

William H. Wylie

FLORENCE COUNTYMrs. Doris Frick

Coward

J. J. Frick Sawmill, Inc.

Coward

Florence

B. M. Brodie

Memorial to G. Wilson BryceBy Bryce Mechanical Contractors.inc.

William C. Dailey

Clyde S. Bryce, Jr., P. E.

Engineering Consultants

Tom Gressefte Pest Control

Laddie Green Hitler

John E. Lunn

Julian H. Price

J W. Truluck. Jr.

O L TurnerTurner's Market

Bobby J Watford

Edward L Young

Lake City

L M Coleman, Jr

Howard F. Godwin

Robert Welch

L. B. Finklea. Jr

Pamplico

GEORGETOWN COUNTYLoyd C Morris

Rosemary Amusement CompanyAndrews

Julian A. ReynoldsAndrews

GeorgetownLt. Col. John C. Heinemann

Larry E. Holliday

Threatt-Maxwell Contractors, Inc.

GREENVILLE COUNTYDavid A. BagwellFountain Inn

Greenville

Dwight F. Allen

United Merchants & Mfgrs., Inc.

American Security of

Greenville, Inc.

ive Small

L. Atkinson

David W Balentine

Grady Ballard

Ballard Concrete CompanyC. P. Ballenger. Jr.

H Elliott Batson, II

John H Beckroge, Jr.

Sifes H. Brown, Jr.

arolina Industrial Insulating Co.'" G West. Pres.

Thomas Carter

Chemloid, Inc.

Chemurgy Products, Inc

John M. Chewning. Jr.

Clary

Inc

rtSftiavis. Jr.

C F Dawe'

Dean Constrm tion Co.Inc

I. L. Donkle i

Charles F Gentry. Jr

W. N Girin, III

^BPsosnelln Gosnell

P. Gray

Joel W. Gray. Ill

John F. Guest

Edward D. Guy, Jr.

Harper Brothers. Inc.

Caldwell Harper

Donald L. Harrison

Robert T. Harrison

C. W. Hinton

Bobby Hudson

Richard H. Ivester

Dale Johnson

Fred A. Johnson

William R. Jolly. Jr.

Ernest G. Jones

W. J. Jordan. Jr.

Dr. Willis A. King, Jr.

Julian M. Langston, Jr

Langston Construction Co., Inc.

Frank S. Leake. Jr.

Dr James P McNamaraNorth Hills Medical Clinic

Seabrook L. Marchant

Keith J. Marquis

Moore-Tinsley Supply Co.Joe E Long

Mount Vernon Dryer Felt CompanyR. Ligon King

William J Neely. Jr.

Orders Mattress Co . Inc.

Orders Tile & Dist. Co., Inc

Jerry L PaceCarolina Tool Industries. Inc.

Page 89: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

$250 GOLD CARDJohn F. Palmer

Russell Hunter Park

George M. Plyler

William M. Poe

D. C. Poole

Raymond E. Putman

Ken W. Reed

B. D. Robbins

E. R. Roper

James L Sanderson

Leon A. ShamLeon Shain Company

Sloan Construction Co., Inc.

Bob Longmeyer

Suitt Construction Co., Inc.

James A. Taylor

John Russell Terry, Jr.

Charles C. Thompson

Jim Thrailkill &Dr. Ben Thrailkill

W. E. Thrailkill

Threatt-Maxwell Construction Co.

Gerald S. Tompkins. Jr.

J. Harold Townes, Jr. A I A

Vissage Auto Parts Co., Inc.

R. H. Walker

Clyde H. White

James D Whiteside

Edward Wilhoit

David H. Wilkins

Willson Riggins Landscape, Inc.

Willson & Linda

Charles C. Withington. Jr.

Yeargin Construction Co , Inc.

Greer

W. B. Coxe, Jr.

William Lem Dillard

C V. Elrod

William H. Moody

Spartan Express, Inc.

Roy F. Dooley

MauldinBilly Bullock

The Pantry Rest

Floyd S. Long

Calvin SummeyMajor L. HigginsPiedmont

Thomas P. Lane, Jr.

Simpsonville

Taylors

Peter H. Bryan

Richard A. Curtis

Curtis-Carolina Corp.

William S. "Billy" Delk

Sahara Stone of South Carolina

Sandlapper Chem. & Equip. Co., Inc.

GREENWOOD COUNTYGreenwoodNick P Anagnost

William T. Barnett

Clarence L Beaudrot

Wayne Bell &Randy Bell

Robert L. Crawford, Jr

W. K. Fooshe. Jr.

Coy Jefferson Gray

Nevit Y. Johnson

Charles E. Key

Marshall Long

P. R. Nickles

B. F. Scott

Joe H. Seal

James C. Self

W. R. Swearingen

Howard Tolbert

HAMPTON COUNTYJ. F. Wyman, Jr.

J. F. Wyman, Inc.

Estill

HamptonDr. Jerry Frank Crews, Jr.

Hampton Gas Co., Inc.

George M. Thomas, Pres.

William F. Speights

W. Norris LightseyVamville

HORRY COUNTYOscar L. HodgeAynor

i

ConwayIn Memory of John J. AvingerJohn J. Avinger Family

James W Barnette, Jr.

F. L. Bradham

Robert C Crenshaw

R. G. Horton

Mr. & Mrs. Mitchell Merritt

Dr. Murray T. Jackson

R. S. Winfield

Loris

W. C. Ted" Dozier

Arthur R. Hardee

Davis Heniford, Jr.

S. F. Horton

E. W Prince, Jr.

Myrtle BeachMarion T. Bellamy

E. M. Bost

Frederick C. Gore

LaBruce Nursery

Harold Riddle, A.I.

A

Gene C. Wilkes

KERSHAW COUjNBW L JacksonCamdenCrawford E. Sanders.CamdenDonald H. Kelly &Lawrence Steedly

Elgin

Lester P. Branham, SrLugoff

LANCASTER COUNTYW. H. BridgesHeath Springs

Lancaster

R. H. Collins

Grady P. Robinson

L. S. Stewman

UHENS COUNTYD H. Robert^JHClinton^**

LaurensJames G. Bowling

Mrs. R. M. Erwin

Charles Jeter Glenn

J. P. Faris

Walter S. Ramage

LEE COUNTYBishopville

W. Ray Alexander, Jr.

Carroll Green DesChamps.

In Memory of C. B. Player

by C. B. Player, Jr. & III

Hughey Tindal, Jr.

G. H. McCutchenSt. Charles

LEXINGTON COUNTYBatesburgBilly Amick

Mr & Mrs Tyrone

Leland A. Jackson

Harry W. Mims &James L. EstesCayce

T A HenryGaston

B M CassadyIrmo

Lexington

Alvin N. Berry

D H Caughman

F. U Black

John T Drafts

Stuart & Stan Miller

Lexington Supply Co.

Wrenn Machine Tools, Inc

West Columbia

McCORMICK COUNTYDr. James W Gilbert

McCormick

MARION COUNTYMarionDr. William L. Cheezem, Jr.

Lacy Edwards, Jr.

Robert N. Johnson, Jr.

Gerald C. Wallace, Jr.

Frank T. West

Thomas M West

Howard ThomasMullins

Bryan HugginsNichols

NEWBERRY COUNTYNewberryWalter B Cousins

Buddy Neel

Terry C. Shaver

Ferd J SummerStanley Griffin

Pomaria

David C. Waldrop, Sr.

Silverstreet

Harry S. YoungWhitmire

Ted PlemonsWhitmire A *OCONEE COUNTDr. Harry B. MaysFair Play

SenecaW. A. Chase, Sr

Robert H. Cureton

Daniel Hallford

Deryl C. KeeseKeese Realty

Dr. Lane E. Mays

Arthur Nuttall, Jr.

Oxford Oil Company, Inc

Gary "Flip" Phillips

Dr. James R. Pruitt

Dr. Don A. Richardson

Sorrells Refrigeration

& Electric CoCharles L Sorrells

•Dr. John P BookerWalhalla

Bill McLeesWalhalla

Louis C. HollemanWestminster

ORANGEBURG COUNTYEiloree

William B. Bookhart. J

Dr. & Mrs. L. Ray Oliver

Ted Shuler

J. C. Ulmer, Jr.

H. D. Folk

Holly Hill

Robert H. CauthenHolly Hill MThomas J. Etheredge.North

George L. Binnicker, J

Norway

James C. Williams, Jr

Norway

OrangeburgE. R. Bair, Jr. VLeland M. Bradshaw

William W. Cope &H. D. Smoak, Jr.

Charles Parker Dempsey

W W. Dukes, Jr

C Farnum

W. C. Higginbotham, Jr.

Al M. HughesLighting Creations, Inc.

H A McGee, Jr.

Harry M Mims, Jr. &George S. Hill

J. F. Cleckley & Company

Power Oil Co.

Raymond L. Strock

W E VerderyOrangeburg Redi-MixConcrete, Inc.

John T Zeigler, Jr

Maynard D. FunchessRowesville

W. Z. Dantzler & SonSantee

Starr C BusbeeSpringfield

PICKENS COUNTYErnest Jones Washington. Jr

Cateechee

Mr & Mrs. Neil E Byerley

Central

ClemsonMr & Mrs George U. Bennett

Doyle C. Burton

Clemson Service Station, Inc.

Robert W Higby, Pres.

Mr & Mrs John A. Connell

Mr. & Mrs. Joseph B. Cocke

Mrs. Irene Todd Cox

Ernest O DeFore

Educational & Counseling Clinic

Alan R. Franklin

Steven C. Gibert

M. Riggs GoodmanRandolph D. J. Jackson

W. Joe Lanham

C. V Marchbanks, Jr.

Paul Miller

Cantey M. Richardson

R. R. Ritchie

Robert W. Robinson, Jr

David E. Simons, Jr.

Drewry N. Simpson

Dr. & Mrs. Thomas E. Skelton

Dr. B. R. Skelton

Col. & Mrs. E. N. Tyndall

H. Berts Wilson

Easley

Harold Albertson

Dr. C. S. Boland

Paul E. Bowie. Ill &Stephen A. Bowie

Jerry R. Byrd

Roddey E. Gettys, III

Dr. J. H. Jameson

Ralph Kirk

J. J. Lynn, D M D

Gene & Bob Merritt

George B (Bud) Nalley, Jr.

Easley Lumber Company

W J. Ragsdale

Shealy, Smith and Welborn, P.A.

In Memory of Paul E. Bowie, Jr.

Liberty

Mr. & Mrs. Gary Ellenburg

Liberty

Joe Board &Redmond CoylePickens

Roy S. DaltonPickens

Six Mile BWWilliam Ansel Deadwyler

Robert M. Guerren

Jimmy R. Holliday

RICHLAND COUNTYColumbiaMr. S Mrs Sims Bailey &Walton G Snow

TOr & Mrs. D. W. Baxter

Thomas B Boyle

Nash Broyles

Jack W Brunson

Henry Parrott Byrd

Ray O'Brian Carter

Dr. Robert M. Clark

Ike Cogburn

Charles W. Cooper

Dr. Charles Edward Corley, III

Robert W. Cowsert, Jr.

Dr James W Culclasure

The Darnell Co.B. L. Darnell &Randolph M. Tiller, Jr.

Dreher Packing Co., Inc

J. T. Dukes

Joe W Dunn, Jr.

George W. Eleazer, Jr.

Dr. George H, Fann

Bruce Finley

Dr. Larry Frick

Giant Portland Cement CompanyRichard W. Frick

T. E. Grimes, Jr

James W. Hancock, Jr.

R. D. Huffman

M. C. Johnson

Charles M. Joye

H. Michael Kaylor

C. M. "Buddy" Lewis

James T. McCabe

David A. McLellan

Market Restaurant

I Ellenbu

i

Page 90: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

$250 GOLD CARDJohn Capilos

George G Matthews. SrModern Exterminating Co . Inc

George G Matthews. Jr.

Modern Exterminating Co.. Inc

W I. MayMiner Saw Works

Dr Henry W Moore

Richard S. Newton

Jettery A O Cain

Eugene R Patterson

Maurice G Pearson. Jr.

Bob Robinson

David W Root

Seaman Electric Supply. Inc

Pelham W. Simmons

George Z Siokos

Frank W Smith

Arthur M. Suggs

Ames H Wells

Dr. John A. Wells, Jr.

William B Wells

Charles E Whitener

A. N. Whiteside, Jr., C.L U.

Equitable Lite Assurance Society

Mrs Frances L ChappellHopkins

Joe Ben WeeksHopkins

SALUDA COUNTYArthur R NicholsSaluda

SPARTANBURG COUNTYMiss Margaret LeeChesnee

James Vincent CaggianoCowpensMarvin B. BantonDuncan

J. W. Gaston. Jr.

Duncan

A. Courtney CobbFairlorest

Spartanburg Sheet Metal &Fabricators, Inc

Fairforest

InmanGeorge Fox Bolen. Jr..

L E Anderson &M. F. Mickelson

Timothy M Drake

^^^^^te^Sthenes, McCreightEj^KIucrii'

'

in ^hanio^H

)wn^H

SpartanrtlS

"Jted Shaw

"^'9man. Jr. ^BT Jo

burg

Mr & Mrs Wilbur K. Hammett

Arthur W O ShieldsLyman

Earl F Blair

Moore

SpartanburgAcme Distributing Coof Spartanburg. Inc

T. R. Adams, Jr.

R L Alexander, Jr.

First National Bank o

H. J BowmanR. J. R. Mechan

Walter J Browi

Buckeye Corp^

BudweiserGene E. WilderM

Cecils Incorpcfi

J. P Cecil

Hasell Legare i

Michael H. Cornwi

Albert T. Correll

Correll. Willis^toitru& Assoc^^Tro\ H ( um& Suns. Inc.

Biiiv W Davis

in Mi'iiiory ot W. P Dobson

R A yjJmhardt

C E^rayB rij.dnin O Johnson

FrannW. Lee. Jr

W M Manning, Jr

Morgan Bank and Trust

E. Fori

Robert V.I

Marvin C Rod

A. W. ShoolbreS

J. Clyde Simmon!In Memory ot NathJ

Rupert P. Smith

Southers Construction, Inc7

Brooks V. Southers

Dr. Harold S Vigodsky

Ted Wilson. William D. West& Belton L. Mims

George Spence Wise. Jr

Edwin W StroudWoodruff

'

SUMTER COUNTYCurtis Edens

Dalzell

O D. HarvinPinewood

D Leslie Tindal

Pinewood

SumterHarold S. Boozer

Charles R. Boyle, Jr.

Dr W*wgB J Lnvve: .1

A Friend

Sumter i inly

Manufacturing^fl

John W* ShawWilder, W

Dr Barney L

UNION COUNTYE. E. FowlerUnion

Harold R HokeUnion

WILLIAMSBURGBethel C DuRantHemingway

Klngsti

Dr W C Cortingham

W H. Cox

Fred P. Guerry. Ji

YORK COUNTYClover

Joseph W Barnei

Lewis W Hicks

J M Peek

Culp Brothers, Inc

Fort Mill

Rock Hill

'I(JoWBWOftCo.. Inc

Robert H. Flint. Pres.

D P Herlong

C. C. Jenkins, Jr

W. Bennett Kirkpatnck

John N. Warren, Jr. &J Norman Warren

I COUNTY

I

William Frampton HarperYork

OUTSIDE OFSOUTH CAROLINALoyd B. ChapmanHuntsville. Ala

Dr Robert C McDanielLittle Rock, Ark.

BarrentineBarrentine CompanyHow. Calif.

^fcAfsey WylieSouthbury

arabow, Jr

Washington, D. C.

Hinesdo. Fla.

E. WebbTampa^U|J_^^Hubert A King

ibus. Gaharles T Kirkley

Decatur. GaManuel FernandezLandmark Granite Co .

Ii

Elberton. GaBill BarbaryGainesville. Ga.

Louis S PhilhowerMacon, GaParks WmqM.irhMfa

Houert AndriMarietta. Gab.-n G CroslandToccoa, GaClaud SmithToccoa, GaCarl F. BessentBaltimore, MdRobert B. EhlenFederal Cartridge ('

Anoka. Minn.

Robert A. G. n. Jr

Arde;>, rTtTchard E. Burdette

Asheville, N. C.

Robert W. Srstrunk

Burlington. N. C.

Charlotte, N. C.

James E. Brennan

In Memory of Patrick N. Calhoun

Robert L. Carlson

Kenneth L. Flint

Thomas W. Glenn. Ill

Steve C Griffith. Jr.

Edgar L Miller. Jr

Don V Whelchel

Marion B BeasonForest City, N C.

Carlos H MiyaresGastonia, N CGreensboro. N. C.

Lawrence H Buchanan

Jackie W Calvert

Col. J. L. EdmondsMr & Mrs E T Mcllwain(Life Member)

Walter M Nash. Ill

Vernon W KenningtonLaunnburg, N. C.

Donald A. FowlerMarion. N. C.

Dr Robert F Poole. Jr.

Raleigh. N. C.

J B LipscombSanford. N. C.

Mr & Mrs. Charles T Sutherland, Jr.

Stoneville, N. C.

Joseph Crosby JonesWilkesboro. N. C.

Francis A YarboroughWilmington. N. C.

J H AbramsWinston-Salem, N. CArthur E. ThomasWinston-Salem, N. C.

In Memory of Albert Pavlik, Sr.

Euclid, Ohio

G H. GreeneJohnstown, Pa.

Nevon F, JeffcoatYardley, Pa.

Jerry E. DempseyYork, Pa

William C KeeseGermantown, Tenn.

Donald L. Harris

Hermitage, Tenn.

James D. FisherHixon, Tenn.

James R. McLaneHouston. Texas

Oliver I. Snapp. Jr.

Houston, Texas

James C. AttawayFredericksburg. Va.

J H JonesSpringfield, Va.

We also express our appreciation to those IPTAY members in the above categories for their support, but who prefer to have their names omitted.

The student managers play a vital role in Clemson s football program. Len Gough's student staff includes,

kneeling, left to right, Jack Griffin, Sam Gough, Henry Allen, Randy Templeton, and Hal Hanvey. Standing, left to

right, Henry Blalock. Donnie Kinard, Paul Wessinger, Dennis McElhannon, and Randy Steen.

Page 91: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

ACC Football Officials

REFEREES:1. Robert R. Carpenter (Duke), Belmont, N. C.

3. Robert H. Cooper, Jr. (Johns Hopkins), Baltimore, Md.

4. Carl Deane (Duke), Charlottesville, Va.

5. Ernest Hackney (North Carolina), Wilson, N. C.

56. Joe Long (Clemson), Greenville, S. C.

7. Vincent Price (Charleston), Gaffney, S. C.

8. Donald B. Safrit (Lenoir Rhyne), Raleigh, N. C.

9. Robert C. Wood (Washington & Lee), Lynchburg, Va.

UMPIRES:46. Rosario Amato (N. C. State), Bethlehem, Pa.

40. V. E. Baugh (Clemson), Orangeburg, S. C.

44. Tom Chambers (Duke), Winston-Salem, N. C.

43. Bradley Faircloth (Duke), Greensboro, N. C.

45. Clark Gaston (Clemson), Greenville, S. C.

41. Milton Hines (Guilford), Winston-Salem, N. C.

47. Ray Moore (U. S. Maritime), Columbia, S. C.

48. Clifton Noble (East Carolina), Bristol, Va.

42. Bobby A. Rimer (North Carolina), Waxhaw, N. C.

LINESMEN:12. Richard Carrington (Virginia), Lynchburg, Va.

13. W. R. Cummings (Unattached), Columbia, S. C.

14. Hugh Currin (Wake Forest), Oxford, N. C.

15. A. B. Elliott (Virginia Tech), Springfield, Va.

20. Gene Gilstrap (Federal City), Washington, D. C.

16. Tom Harris (Duke), Charlotte, N. C.

17. William Jamerson (Virginia Tech), Appomattox, Va.

18. George Manning (Georgia Tech), Gastonia, N. C.

19. Richard Tyndall (North Carolina), Chapel Hill, N. C.

LINE JUDGES:21. Ernest Benson (Evansville), Albany, Ga.

22. Nelvin Cooper (Elon), Cary, N. C.

23. Bill Davis (Duke), Wilson, N. C.

24. Ronald DeSouza (Morgan State), Baltimore, Md.25. Mark Kane (Clemson), Charlotte, N. C.

26. William Luper (Guilford), Greensboro, N. C.

27. Raymond Menton (Loyola), Ellicott City, Md.29. Donald Robertson (William & Mary), Barboursville, Va.

28. Jimmy Rosser (Auburn), Martinsville, Va.

BACK JUDGES:3. Earl Barnett (Virginia), Charlottesville, Va.

37. Lawrence Hill (Bradley), Landover, Md.32. Thomas Hunt (North Carolina), Durham, N. C.

37. William Lovett (Maryland), Rockville, Md.

34. Gil Rushton (Clemson), Easley, S. C.

35. Robert Sandell (Johns Hopkins), Charlottesville, Va.

60. Maynard Strickler (East Tenn. State), Crozet, Va.

36. Weldon Waites (South Carolina), Columbia, S. C.

FIELD JUDGES:50. Gerald Austin (Western Carolina), Summerfield, N. C.

51. Ernest Cage (Southeastern), Lanham, Md.53. C. C. Dailey (Unattached), Greenville, S. C.

52. John Godbold (South Carolina), Gaffney, S. C.

54. Carl Herakovich (Rose-Hulman), Blacksburg, Va.

55. James Knight (Wake Forest), Matthews, N. C.

57. Courtney Mauzy (Washington & Lee), Raleigh, N. C.

58. Arthur Rhoads (Ohio Univ.), Winston-Salem, N. C.

59. James Robertson (Emory), Blacksburg, Va.

CLEMSON ALMA MATER

Where the Blue Ridge yawns its greatness

Where the Tigers play;

Here the sons of dear old Clemson,

Reign supreme ahvay.

CHORUS

Dear old Clemson, we will triumph

And with all our might

That the Tigers roar may echo

O'er the mountain height.

Words by A. C. Corcoran, 19

Music by Dr. Hugh McGarity

CONCESSION PRICES

Cigarettes 550

Matches 010

Candy 200

Crackers 200

Sandwiches 500

Drinks 300

Drinks in Souvenir Cup 500

Potato Chips 250

Aspirin 450

Cups of Ice 150

Gum 200

SOUVENIR PRICES

Buttons $1 .50

Buttons with Dangles 2.00

Pennants 2.00

Plush Tigers 3.00 & 5.00

Hats 5.00

Shakers 1 .00

Rain Coats 5.00

Sun Visors 50

Footballs 2.00

Balloons 1.00

Party Pops 25Posters 1 .00 & 2.00

Inflates 2.00

Page 92: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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Page 93: North Carolina vs Clemson (11/6/1976)

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