Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 11, 1959, edition 1 / Page 4
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fACE FOUR SATURDAY, APRIL II, 195? THE DAILY TAR HEEL Carolina And Wake Forest Fight It Out In ACC Game Here This Afternoon At 3 Wy RUSTY HAMMOND A pair of possible ACC pennant lontcndrrs. Carolina and Wake For est, lock horns here this afternoon in Emerson Stadium at 3 as the Tar Heel open their Big Four season. ti e season succeeded in completely scrambling the ACC pennant race. The Tar Heels knocked off top-dog Clcmson in their first conference game, then played dead while South Carolina had a field day, winning These two hopefuls have so far in 8-3. Tar Babies Journey To Meet Wake Forest ly V. J. UNDERWOOD C.trol.n.i's freshman Tar Heels journey to Wake Forest today for Fetchick Holds GGO Golf Lead By KEN ALYTA C.KKlINSBOnO .fi Mike Fet chick. who says he's getting too old for the pressures of tourna ment golf, added a second round of f7 Friday to his opening 6(5 for a 133 total and a three-stroke lead at the halfway mark of thr $15.(KK) Greater Greensboro Open Tournament. The 3f-ycar-old Yonkers. N. Y., professional, birdied three of the la.t five holes to add two strokes to the lead he carried into the round. Sharing second place at 136, three shots away, were Art Wall, 'Tennis' Team Whitewashes Wildcats, 9-0 Carolina's tennis team achieved its first shutout of the season here yesterday at the expense of David son College. For the Tar Heel netters the 9-0 victory marks their fourth straight win and their fifth of the season against three defeats. The loss left the Wildcats with a 5-3 mark for the year. Don Skakle's courtmen were in complete charge of the match as overall record, the Tar Heels are the visitors could take but one set 7 off the winners. The only match to i go the three set limit was the num ber three doubles which Phil Cau- facc, whipping South Carolina easily. The Deacs did an exact about but bowing to Clcmson. To further complicate matters, N.C. State went down south ana blasted the Tigers once more. Wake Forest smashed Duke 4-1 Thursday with soph Roger Plem- mons chalking up the win in going the route. The Deacons have a 5-3 their first conference battle of the young campaign. The 3 o'clock con tent will pit two rather evenly rr etched squads against each other, according to Tar Baby Coach Pat Farcy. His only knowledge of the Wake frosh is that they possess a "terrific left-handed pitcher and a hot shortstop." Due to a shortage of uniforms, Coach Earey will carry a squad of 21 players on the trip in this effort to raise the frosh record above the St()0 mark. The freshmen split their two previous games, losing to a strong Presbyterian Junior College outfit 9-4. and defeating Oak Ridge Military Academy by the score of 7-5. Probable starting lineup for Car olina will be Larry Neal at third base, Paul Swing at second, Leonard Delloiio at shortstop, Pete Farrior on first, and Pug Hall or Whitey Wade catching to round out the in field. Ronnie Miller, James Helton and E. C. Haithcock are expected the still sharp Masters champion to hold down the outfield Dositions. from pocono Manor, Pa.; Stan Leo- But the records do not tell the siory at all.' for Wake has a big S(y and Ben Keys won 3.6f 6-3 edce in the statistics department RpfnrP fhP nnko rnntrst the Deac The best individual performance team battinz averaee was .304 com- of the day was turned in by Caro n,ri m Parniina' mpaPer .248. Una's Geoff Black who whipped The Wake pitchers allowed only Semi Mintz 6-0, 6-1 Black turned nard of Vancouver, and PGA champion Dow Finstrrwald of To quosta. Ha. Wall shot a four under par H7. !ronard and Finstrrwald each post ed In fifth place, five shots down at 13ft. were Billy Maxwell of Odessa. T x.. and Tony l,ema of San I.ean Mrn. Calif. Maxwell, in second place om shot back of Fetchick to start the round, shot a par 71. I.ema had a 70 MuMlirm into the picture with 13D total-, for a seventh place tie were Dirk Kn:ht of San Diego, Calif ; Thorne Wood of nearby Ashrboro; and Dave Thomas, young husky from Iondon. Wood, Carolina PGA champion and a southpaw swinger, and Knight each shot Cfi, the day's best score. Thomas closed with a five-under par 31 for a 70. As in the previous two games, sev eral pitchers probably will be used, with right-hander Nick Warren the starter. Commenting on his team after soing them play two games. Coach I'ary says that his boys have "good size ami physical potential," and that ".several of them whip that bat very well." He added, however, that the club lacks the "experience and savvy" of last year's freshmen and doesn't have "nearly the speed" of luat team. three runs per game while Tar Heel moundsmen were giving up four per try. The expected starting pitchers to day are a couple of sleepers with mediocre records who could blossom into two of the league's best. Cap tain Ben Harding, a lefthander, is expected to get the call for Caro lina. Harding has as 1-1 record. For Wake it should be Bobby Lawrence, another southpaw, who has a poor 0-1 record but a fine 2.7 earned run average. Other starters for the Heels, with batting averages in parentheses are: Dave Dale (.300) at first, Larry Crayer (.235) at second, Ferg Nor ten (.294) at third, Harold Workman (.250) at shortstop, John Burgwyn (.409), Russ Hollers (.316) and Ger ald Griffin (.189) in the outfield and Carroll Bolick (.304) behind the plate. Wake Forest will probably go with lion Guthrie (.500) at first, Bobby Brown (.265) at second. Charlie Forte (.2) at third. Bill Barr (.286) at short, Jay Franklin (.478), Byron Eullard (.300) and Buster Ledford (.259) in the outfield, and John Ty ner (.303) catching. Last year the Deacs finished fourth in the ACC with a 7-6 league record and a 12-9 overall mark. Carolina will be gunning for its ICth consecutive win at home. The Tar Heels haven't last in Emerson Stadium in over two years. 7 racksters Fqcq n amecocKs lina, South Carolina, and N. C. State. , miler Dave Peltz, both of whom This year's Tar Babies are one of should break the standards in those A blond and boyish miler named King Dixon and Jim Cathcart his big service to his own advan tage as he repeatedly followed it to the net and put away Mintz's re turn on the volley. In the longest match of the after noon Marsnaii Mapper ana dick Hodez played 26 games in the open ing set before the Carolina junior pulled it out 14-12. Once this was over, however, Happer made quick work of hi? opponent in the second set as he won 6-1. Monday afternoon the Carolina courtmen take on Clemson in what figures to be the Tar Heels' tough est conference battle. Coach Leslie Longshore's Tigers will be led by returning veterans Sunny Sumner and Mohammad Nasim. A year ago when the Tar Heels beat Clemson 3-1 Nasim defeated Steve Bank in the only match which a Carolina player lost in conference competi tion. Billy Latham and a hulking shot putter named Dave Coates lead the Gamecocks of South Carolina in a dual track meet against Carolina this afternoon at Fetzer Field with the field events beginning at 2:00 p.m. and the running events getting under way at 3. The Tar Heels will be after their third straight win, having previously defeated N. C. State and Clemson. Latham, winner of the ACC Indoor Mile and the Florida Relays two mile, will be set to continue his dis tance feud with Tar Heel ace Wayne Bishop, who at present holds a 6-3 advantage over him. Both runners are expected to go both the mile and the two mile. Coates, who has heaved the 16 pound weight over 54 feet on oc casion, is the ACC indoor champion and should completely dominate that event this year. Others on the South Carolina (edged Dave Sime in a 220 last year) and quarter-miler Buddy Mayfield. Tar Heels to watch other than Bishop are, of course, that big, gangling half miler named Scurlock who likes to fool around with the 440 and who last week chalked up a new school record in that event vith a rather rapid 47.9; Ray Stan- icy, who will .try anything, but real ly shines in the broad jump and the javelin; and workhorse F r a s e r Smith, who is throwing the discus just a little further every day and niay just become the best in the conference. Five others to keep tab on arc Cowles Liipfert in the mile, John Sylvester in the quarter, Bob Sher rill in the high jump, Ward Sims in the pole vault, and Lyndon Dc- Borde in the hurdles. Running along simultaneously with the varsity meet will be a freshman the strongest, deepest freshmen squads that UNC has ever had. They have previously slaughtered State 102-29 at Raleigh and their, sprint medley and mile relay teams took gold medals at the Florida Relays at Gainesville iwo weeks ago. They will be led by pole vaulter Barry Tiedemann. who has already broken the 13 foot freshman record; quarter-miler Dennis Rash and half- events; and high jumper J. Whick er, who has surpassed the existing frosh record in practice, but is yet to do it in a meet. Sprinters Ward Purrington and Ttm Leffler, hurdler Wilfred Tur ner, hdf-miler Scott Brent, two miler Rett Everett, and shot putter Harvey Henry are but six of over a dozen more who should place ,high in their events. squad bearing mention are sprinters triangular encounter between Caro- 3 v . is u.s Dance? Dine? Refresh? Try THl: DUCHESS 70, Vi mile beyond Ice Arena Durham The Largest Darvce Floor Your Favorite Beer Tnformal Atmosphere 'Madison Ave. Food at Joe College Prices' TRY US YOU'LL BE BACK! THE SUMMARY Singles 1. Black (C) defeated Mintz 6-0, 6-1. 2. Sylvia (C) defeated Poindexter 6-2, 6-3. 3. Keys (C) de feated McCutchen 6-2, 6-4. 4. Happer (C) defeated Hodez 14-12. 6-1. 5. Lockett (C) defeated Orr 6-4. 6-0. 6. Ricks (C) defeated Broome 6-3. 6-3. Doubles 1. Sylvia and Happer (C) defeated Mintz and Poindexter 6 4, 6-1. 2. Black and Lockett (C) defeated Broome and McCutchen 6-1. 6 0. 3. Keys and Causey (C) de i feated Hodez and Orr 3-6. 6-2, 6-3. LA PIZZA WELCOMES Braves Blank Pirates PITTSBURGH W Pitching and power, the tin keys to a pennant ta.tt ye.ir. Rot the Milwaukee Braves rff to a running start Friday with a R0 victory over the Pittsburgh Pirates in thnr National League opener. L ft h.irvlcr Warren Spahn choked if Uo early Pittsburgh threats and breezed to the finish with his 44th nvjor league shutout. In the second, the Pirates loaded the bases but Spahn got Bob Friend on a fly to .short center and then fanned Bill Virdon. In the third. Bob Clemcnte Ld off with a double, but was un ahlc to score when Ed Mathews made a great stop on a single by Don Hoak and Spahn struck out Bill Maztro.ski. Big Eddie Mathews was the pow er man, booming a solid homer into Ihv upper risht field stands for two runs that broke a scoreless dead lock in the sixth. From that point the Braves won handily, adding two more runs in the seventh, four in a Icng eighth inning rally. STAN KENTON AND THE FOUR FRESHMEN Indians Nick A's KANSAS CITY W - Fireman Dick Hrodowski came to the ninth inning rescue of young Gary Bell and vet eran Herb Score Friday and Cleve land defcaUd Kansas City 6-4 in an American League opener before 22,630 top-coated fans. Bell, who had suffered only 1 bad inning, went into the 0th with a 4 run lead. With one out he gave up three straight singles and one run before being relieved bv Senre The left hander, n whose corn back this season the Indians are pin ning their hopes, walked the first man he faced on four straight balls, a'lowed a run on a wild pitch, walk ed his second batter and was re moved in favor of Brodowski after the first two pitches to the third man Score faced also were called bills. Brodowski forced Bill Tuttle to pop up and ttogrr Maris to line out to jlwt to end the game, TO UNC COME OUT TO LA PIZZA DURING GERMAN'S WEEKEND AND ENJOY THE "FINEST PIZZA IN THE WORLD" OPEN FRIDAY FROM 5 P.M. - 2 A.M. SATURDAY OPEN SATURDAY FROM 5 P.M. - 3 A.M. SUNDAY Phono 7-1451 406 W. Main St. Phone 7-1451 Carrboro D X u y en .Ik... : :, , mma(toikinmMii vL I i ..... ,, .., ,.,..,-Ji. , ,, ...,. e ' . i i V 1 A 1 i I V, I if Y ' 'v T"' ruiimmmi.T - ? '' ! I . . V- Hint ' " - jPyy v i JJL Ak. fi"' -i " i ? v-. y li s - ' : -V I" 'Ati - U J V v -i - yiA- fi t J? ; M 'Q y k v:-.:. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 11, 1959, edition 1
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