Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 22, 1959, edition 1 / Page 4
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THE DAILY TAR HlfL SUNDAY, MASCH , 1W i 1 1 yes Beat Whites 32-51 n I 4th Tatum: Twice As Good As We Played Last Year Vy Kij.it rT coori:u "lh.il was tia tlie calibre of I ill wo iibjctl Ut rins" With t!. . words Coach Jim Tatum sum mi up his f-prin;; practice arxl the r.!;:r White game in particular. The annual climax to prins prac t (t, this time won by the more ex ptitiur! r.Iucs 32 21 in an offen mc liplay, featured what the truth ileMrilnl as, "a lot of rw'A V'l hitting." Tatum Mcnu'd especially please J w,:ii t In prore.s.s made y mem-1 t is f the hackfieUI. In this regard hr nu tit LMitxl the extra punch Wade ,Vn :h had thanks to a Rain in vr-Jit. the improve! running of ioi.r.v I'oU komcr, anU the develop n.' ut (d fullbacks Joe Duties and I...; riiu.tt. Al'houh bi Don Klochuk was crnlained fairly well with the ex cept mn of hus 10 yard touchdown I urt. the head coach said that he is not mast effective on straiht ;ihe,Hl plune.s. "Klochak runs bet-t- r around the end, but we were rot xoin to let him run at any of i ur hallbucks." Co captain Wade Smith, who turn ed out to be the goat of the game, said after the contest, was over that he was, "looking forward to next year.' Commenting on the game itself, he .Mated tlut despite win ning he thought his Blue team was a little .sloppy at times. Smith's boner occurred on the ( pening play of the .second half when he allowed Nelson Lowe's kick olf to roll past him into the end one where sophomore guard Frank Kiggs fell on it for a White touch down. "That was all my 1.11111," the halfback .said, "and I accept the responsibility for it. It was pretty embarrassing." P.luo quarterback Skip Clement echoed the dressing-room opinions o! his teammates with the statement that the twenty workouts had been. "; tough spring practice." On the u.se of the lonesome end he ex pressed a feeling that it was de fir.itely effective in opening up the defense and will alio A' the Tar Heels to make the best use of their personnel. ";, f h . A 5 Ay v .A, 1 '"l ti V , v.- B i h 1 f 4 CHUCK WAGON SPECIAL OF THE DAY! TURKEY DINNER Turkey twul Dressing Oiinberry Suce G'een f'eos Snovflnku f'ofutoes lire.i'l diui Butter Te.i or Coffee Ncopolitan Pudding Children under 12 65 $1.00 . S. I V : -.:::.. II i w- I ,.-.s . T. " V i 1 '" : v . ''' v.. . Big Offensive Show; Quarterbacks Shine WATCH IT! HERE COMES THE REF Who has th ball? Som where in this pile of players is a football, the objct of tho gamt. Fhoto by Tctcr Ness Baseball Squad Opens Wiiih Dartmouth Here Monday At 3 By RUSTY HAMMOND Carolina's football Tar Heels un veiled a crushing offensive attack, a whole stable of explosive backs, and a pair of sure-armed quarter backs here yesterday as the Blues beat the Whites 32-21. The Smith boys, Moe and Wade, scored three of the Blue touch downs, with Skip Clement and Big Don Klochack getting one each. Wade Smith scored 2. The accent was on offense all afternoon, and the Blue's superiori ty came out in the statistics. The Blues had 28 first downs to the White's 10; 296 rushing yards to 100 for the white, and 151 to 106 in passing yardage. The big star for the losing Whites was slick soph Ray Farris who com pleted 7 of 12 passes for 99 yards. Farris scored one White touchdown, with Frank Riggs and Joe Davics getting the other two. The Blues took the opening kick- off and marched 72 yards in 12 plays for the score. Wade Smith dived in from 1 yard out but the try for two failed. inc wnucs took the ensuing kick-off and pulled a march of Carolina's baseball Tar Heels open the season here tomorrow after- HOTEL FOR CHARTER 20 bedroom holtl fbr charter for weekends or any time un til June. Lobby, dining room, kitchen, fifteen baths, tele vision all for exclusive use of chartering group. Hotel lo cated Wrightsville Beach. For details, wire, write or call Allen Darbee, 300 1 or 320 6. Spring Hope, N. C. their own, hitting paydirt 49 yards in 12 plays. It was rising soph full back Joe Davies who carried the mail into the end zone from four yards out, and Davies carried on 7 of the 12 plays. Nelson Lowe con verted to make it 7-6, White. The first half was almost over be fore the Blues got another offen sive drive going and drove 50 yards in 11 plays, with Clement diving over from the 1. The try for two was no good again and the Blues led 12-7 at halftime. The Whites kicked off to begin the first half, the ball rolled into the end zone, nobody touched it, and the Whites' Frank Riggs fell on it for a touchdown. Lowe con verted again and the Whites led for the last time at 14-12. The Blues surged back as Moe Smith, cracked around right end for eight yards and another score. Bob Shupin kicked the point to make it Blue 19-White 14. The other Smith, Wade, got his second TT) of the day as he hit off left tackle from four yards out and went for the Blues' fourth touchdown. Shupin kicked again and it was 26-14, Blue. The last Blue score came with 7:37 left in the game as big Don Klochack barreled over from the 10. Klochack's attempted point was blocked. The Whites got a little revenge as Farris dived over from the 1 with only 1:06 left in the game to make it 32-21, Blue and that was the way it stayed. Three starters from last year's squad did not see action today on doctor's orders. Quarterback Jack Cummings, and ends John Schroed- cr and Al Goldstein were all miss ing yesterday. Rising junior quarterback Skip Clements was easily the day's in dividual star as he completed 8 T BELK - LEGGETT - HORTON CO. FOR SPRING HOLIDAY AND EASTER SHOPPERS- t 1 y -4 A Lru an w J U ill 11 ALL CHARGE PURCHASES MADE THIS WEEK oiin nn a noon at 3 against Dartmouth's I diens. Not much is known about 4he Ivy League .school except that they are a traditional college baseball5 power and were in the NCAA District I play-offs last season. Carolina has experience and depth Last year the Tar Heels compiled an lt-4 ACC record and a 19-8-overall mark. They wound Up in , lie for cJemson then lost ,4-1 in a play-off game. The entire starting outfield, plus a host of good pitchers and 'catch ors headlines Wall Katu s , crew. The main losses suffered were in I ho infield, where three starters graduated. Ilabb is expected to Hidow his meal ticket. Wayne Young, at the Indians today. Young had a "fine 7-3 record and a fantastic 0 9 ; earned mn average la.st year. Another pos sible starter is Ben Hardmg who was the ACC's loading percentage pitcher with a 1 mark la: A sea son. The other Tar Heels starters, with lat year's batting averages lifted in narenthei e.s. are: left field - Tom my Saintsing .ir() or Ituss Hoi lira frosh (.333). center field-Gerald Griffin (.337). right field - John Burgwyn (.253) or Bruce Crump (.L'()3). First base - Vaughn Bryson (.253), second ba.se - Larry Craver (.222), shortstop - Harold Workman, tlurd base - Jerry Nestor, and catcher - Al Baldwin (.233). PATROUIZE YOUR ADVERTISERS A SHOP AND SAVE f I) IX!" V- OPEN FRIDAY MIGHT TILL 8:30 v Bring The i Biddy Browsing We close At 10 to Allow plenty of Time For the walk Back to the Dorms.... The Intimate Bookshop 205 East Franklin Strict Open Till 10 PJA. i v. 3 " v t IHti mtl AmlD THE STRANGE, EXCITING GLAMOUR AND GLARE Mtwm ?sbsi II r Knoxt how to coD your firo dcicrtmcni tan a a i psk b &rtl of 13 plays for 81 yards and ran 7 times for 55 yards. The soph fullback;;, Joe Davics gained 51 yards in ID carries ana Elliott picked up 36 yds. in nine runs . Don Klochack blasted out 44 yards in 15 attempts. A scrimmage was held after the regulation game for those players that didn't see action. YUL ... JOANNE . MARGARET BRYNNER-WOODWARD LEIGHTOH NOW PLAYING it " Jii w ;1 t S A "Sayonara". -I - --it , style affair-in "f yf the Orient's neon- A. 1 V J uiQfl K0BI-R1CHARD 10NGNCE DOBKW-WII DUBOVTERU SHIMADA )Tt4rfi h, mm i mm w mm spi ihmi mm vmm NOW PLAYING "-CaXw wvs. JUutOvu EST p Lightly turn his thoughts with -SHDK ffilff by PRINCE MATCHABELLI You'll love this charming light-hearted oou quet of 17 Spring flowers... in Cologne, Per fu me Creme Sachet, Cologne Spray Mist, and Dusting Powder ... each in a delightful new gift package as fresh as Spring itself I SPRING FANCY ... AN EXCELLENT EASTER GIFT! 4 ez. COLOGNE $50 pfirttex t imffOSmJ 1 'I ' CHAPtl MTZ7m.C- WW , ' usess i --x "Lf t.r.- -i. Jt bmfi English: SLOW-WITTED BASEBALL PLAYER Thlnkllsh translation: 'Hie guys who patrol the fences on this man's team include a slugger cloutficldcr), a braggart shou (fielder) and a sorehead (pout fielder) reading from left field to right. The clod in question a louffielder rarely breaks into the line-up. He thinks RBI is the second line of an eye chart. But he's no doubt fielder when it comes to smoking. He goes all out for the honest taste of fine tobacco . . . the unforgettable taste of a Lucky Strike! Cn9tish: pOLlCE IstniKii IMMM CIGARETTES I WO Take a word institution, for example. With it, you can make an aquarium (finstitution), a bowling alley (pinstitu tion), a fireworks factory (dinstitutwn) or a saloon (ginslitulion). That's Tliink lish and it's that easy! We're paying $25 for the Thinklish words judged b?3t your check's i telling to go! Send your words to Lucky Strike, Box 67A, Mt. Vernon, N.Y. Enclose your name, ad dress, university and class. Thinklish: COPITAUSM 3N. OHIO btn- .ARCI HOIITOh f"SA: DANCING STEIIIJ Get the genuine article ; at the hoGiest tas ' of a LUCKY STROEC English: STINGING VEIN English: COED DULL SESSION Thwfelish: BULLER1NA JOHN WILUS. SEORGI TECH. TbinMnh: SMARTERY ANTHONY NOVCH, WISCONSIN STATE COLL. Thinklish: FEMINAR ) A. T- Co. product of ,vtcuUw Ju&uxonyuy kJv&iucv is our middle namt ti , WA' J Jfc JK- r
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 22, 1959, edition 1
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