Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 23, 1962, edition 1 / Page 4
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f r UNC Nine Defeats Florida In Opener Golfers Drab DUPREE'S Si , Colorful Alumni Game The Alumni-Varsity football game is 15 days away and Coach Jim Hickey's men are past the midway point in their spring drills. On April 7 the rising sophomores, juniors, and seniors will take the field against the graduating seniors and a large number of alumni in what should be one of the most colorful spring games ever staged in Kenan Stadium. in addition to 1961 All-Conference footballers Jim LeCompte, Ray Farris, and Bob Elliott, a number of pros and former UNC All-Americans will play against the 1962 version of Jim Hickey's Tar Heels.. Charlie Justice, the greatest of UNC backs, will play as. will recent graduates Jack Cummings, Rip Hawkins, Ronnie Koes, Al Goldstein, Ed Sutton, Ed Lipski, Andy tMiketa, and Art Weiner. Wade Smith and John Schroeder, assistant frosh football coaches and UNC stars only two seasons back will perform. And the Chapel Hill merchants have their say in Bob Cox of Town and Campus and Joe Augustine of Stevens-Shepherd, ex-UNC footballers. Kortner Biggest Surprise; Including today, there are only nine days of practice remaining for the football players. Four practice sessions in each of the next two weeks precede the Alumni game. The Hickey's biggest surprise during the first half of the spring drills has been Cole Kortner who curently holds down the number two left tackle position behind Jim Alderman. Kortner was a heavyweight wrestler last year for Coach Sam (Barnes, but missed half of that sea son and all of this year because of ior, he's playing football at UNC for with what he's seen. Designating players as first, second, or third string is hardly fair since Coach Hickey and his staff tern next season. The first team or Blues, the second team or offensive the defensive specialists wil be tagged Tar Heels. The coaches are looking forward fall and it would certainly be a pleasant autumn in Chapel Hill if the results are similar to Paul Dietzel's White, Go, and Chinese Bandit units. When the week began Hickev's end, John Runco, a starter during ior; left tackle, Jim Alderman, switched from guard and a starter as a sophomore last fall; left guard, Jack Tillery, a rising senior and fre quent starter during the past two tain and a rising senior who made right guard, Duff Greene, rising senior who started frequently at left guard last season; right tackle, Vic last year; and right end, John Hammett, a rising junior. In the backfield Sandy Kinney, red shirted in 1961, is running the Blue unit at quarterback. An excellent passer, Kinney has three years of eligibility remaining. At running ster Ronnie Jackson and Joe McLamb are the top men, while at wing back, or right half, Ward Marslender Marslender will co-captain the 1962 fullback. ' i Runco, Bob Lacey and Jim Ray have all looked good at left end. Steve Yates, a starter last season, has' been bothered by a knee injury At the other end Bruce Greene- switched front guard,' is' the number two man behind Hammett. Frank tian Hanburger have looked sharp At left tackle, Alderman and Kortner are the top two. Gene Sigmon is number three man, but he too has been plagued by knee trouble. Rich Fellman has had a good spring. The play of Esposito, freshman John Hill, Rusty Hodges, and Jim Naughton has impressed the' UNC men tor. The tackle positions, where John Hegarty and Jim Shumate played in 1961, present one of the biggest problems to the staff. Also there is the possibility that big Tony Hennessey may not be able to play this fall. Green's Best Spring Duff Greene at right guard has had his best spring ever at the position LeCompte filled in last season. Buddy Cozart, switched from fullback to guard, and Clint Eudy, a freshman, are the number two and three men. Tillery and 'Jerry Cabe, both starters at left guard last year, are back. The center position is solid with Craver and Bob Zaback the top men. George Boutselis and rising sophs Gary Black and Jim Gallagher liave turned in fine showings at quarterback behind Kinney. John Flour noy is the top defensive man and may play safety where he starred his sophomore season. Last year John was handicapped with an injury and saw little action. Hickey was pleased with the showing of his halfbacks during the first two weeks. (Marslender and Roger Smith are "seasoned good foot ball players". Frosh quarterback Ron Tuthill has been switched to half back and has looked good. Others are speedsters McLamb and Jackson and Ray Jones, Dave Henry, Dave Braine, Tom Brooks, and Jim Whit mire. Ed Kesler, switched from quarterback, is the number two man behind Westfall at fullback. Sophs Richard Zarro, Jim Szymaitis, and Pete Kirvan have made good showings thus far. On the injured list, besides Yates, are center Jay Malobicky, left half Hank Barden, and fullback Ken Willard. Willard has resumed prac tice this week and the freshman star should be ready for the Alumni contest. Azalea Toumey Starts Today CHARLESTON, S. C. (UPD The 17th annual Azalea Amateur Golf Tournament opened here to day with a field of 186 contenders for the title. The 72-hole tourney is being played over the par-71 Wappoo course in mild weather and winds up to 30 miles per hour. Regarded as the men to beat are former champ Dave Morey, who carded 70 in a practice round Wednesday and the brothers from Gastonia, N. C Charlie and Dave Smith. Morey is the 1960 Azalea champ, Charlie Smith is the 1958 winner who lost out in sudden death last year to Bill Joe Pat ton, and brother Dave is the 1959 Azalea champion. Charlie Smith carded a sizzling 63 Wednesday to lead practice round golfers. Dave Smith card ed a 70. , Cardboard Banquet The UNC Cardboard will hold its annual banquet tonight at 6:30 in the rear room upstairs in Lenoir Hall. The banquet will be catered, and all Cardboard members have been invited. Awards will be pre sented after the banquet. Sportscope ACC limits offseason drills to 20 a shoulder injury. A scholastic jun the first time and Hickey is pleased plan to employ the three-platoon sys starting unit will be known as the unit will be called the Rams, while to putting this system to use next successful program at LSU with his Blue unit shaped ud like this: left part of last season and a rising sen seasons; center, Joe Craver, co-cap second team All-Conference in 1961; Esposito, played frequently in line back, or left half, freshman speed holds down the number one spot. squad. Barry Westfall is Blue team Gallagher, Joe Robinson, 'and Chris at the tight end !post. ' u FRIDAY and SATURDAY SPECIALS Pit Cooked Barbecue wslaw Brunswick Stew wslaw Fried C$iickeu TODAY fmin.j mmf y , , y y,,, iM m in n..i w. ir .... s . Indians Again . By CURRY. KIRKPATRICK Coach Ed Kennedy's UNC golf team completely dominated play for, the second straight day, Wed nesday, as the Tar Heels downed Dartmouth 38-1, on Finley Goli Course. For the Carolina linksmen, who had routed the' Indians; '42-22 in the first of their dual matches on Tuesday, the victory was a prep for two tough meets today and to morrow with visiting Michigan State. Jay Harris, a junior , from Meb ane, N. C, came away with meda list honors Wednesday as he shot a four-under-par 68 in downing Ace Eaten, 3-0. Greensboro sophomore Sam McNairy also broke r par for i . - -.is- - ' -it ' t " A ' i Si -r ::- ;:rt s - V COLE KORTNER Wrestler turned football play erY A wrestler last year for Coach Sam Barnes, Kortner is now holding down the number two left tackle spot for Jim Hickey in spring football practice. - Coed Intramural Basketball After a month of cage compe tition. Alderman and Whitehead have emerged as finalists in the W.A.A. basketball intramural tour nament. The two teams met Thursday night for the champion ship trophy. In the semifinals Tuesday night, Alderman defeated Spencer II, 81- 46, and Whitehead won over Delta Delta Delta, 59-33. Spencer had won the League I Dr. William E. Beel OPTOMETRIST VJSION ANALYSIS CONTACT LENS ' Above Ledbetter-Pickard GLASSES FITTED Phone 942-5260 ONLY GAFET-ED a - ----- - - -n r-4 UNC with a 71 in his 3-0 victory over Joe Shannon. Dartmouth's Dave McCollum won the Indian's only point when he dropped a 2-1 decision to UNC captain Pete Green. iMCollum with a 79, was the only Dartmouth golf er to break 80. Sophomores Harvie Hill, who shot a medal-winning 70 on open ing day, and Jere Ayers, both came in with 73 while senior John! Brabson fired a 74. At 77 were George Murphy, Sam Duckett, and Green, while . Mike Dore finished with a 78. Carolina's match with the Soar- tans will start on Finley at 1;30 this afternoon. fi o. ' u tvv if Ji t title by beating Chi Omega and Alpha Gamma Delta. Whitehead had to top the Nurses, Pi Beta Phi ana ivappa Kappa Gamma in League II. Alderman beat out Kappa Delta II and Mclver' easily m League III. and the Tri Delts defeated Spencer I and Kappa Delta I for the Leaeue IV cham pionship. The sorority and dormitory with the greatest number of participa tion points during tne year will each receive all-sports trophies. DOUBLE EDGE RAZOR BLAD es. Finest Surgical Steel, honed in oil. Full money back guaran tee. 25 30c, 100 85c, 200 $1.50, 500 $3.30, 1000 $5.75. Postpaid. Packed 5 blades to package, 20 packages to carton. C.O.D. orders accepted. Post card brings general merchandise catalog. EMERSON COMPANY, 406 So. Second, Alhambra, Calif. NOW PLAYING The Picture that gives you a front seat to the most jolting- events of tomorrow ...TODAY! g The UNBELIEVABLE becomes True! Features at: 1:00-2:35:10-5:25-7:41-9:30 F I i If 1 Vi i w m m m m St , i,rt.A.VL.A.; ,W-V .'W.-ito'ijtl.. ' - - jUTBHto Page Four .MCAA Semifinals On Tap Tonight Wake , Forest meets Ohio State and Cincinnati plays UCLA in the semi-finals of the NCAA playoffs tonight. , The Wake Forest-Ohio State clash will be televised local ly. Game time is 7:30., The winners of the Eastern and Western championships tonight clash tomorrow night for the NCAA championship. Cincinnati is the defending champion, but Ohio State's Buckeyes were rated the top team during the regular sea son by both press polls. The Bucks won the NCAA title two seasons ago and then lost to their down state neighbors in overtime in McQuire To Coach At Clinic RALEIGH Coach Frank Mc Guire of the Philadelphia Warriors and Frank Ramsey, star of the Boston Celtics, will be guest lectur ers at the - sixth . annual Everett Case Basketball School for Boys this June. , . McGuire,- former University of North Carolina coach, and Ramsey of the world champion Celtics, will join Case and his freshman coach Lou Pucillo, a former all-America guard for the Wolf pack, in the basketball school scheduled for June 3 to June 22 . at the N. C. State Fairgrounds, in Raleigh. All phases of basketball will be covered by this outstanding quartet of basketball personalities. There will be three one-week ses sions, and two two-week sessions. The school ; will, be divided into THE BOOK "The South's Largest and ; .Most Qomplete Bookstore" At Five Points J'J . .-. . FOE EES! mED Madras Shirts by Sero Madras Bermudas by Corbin ' 'Sf '.".'DECEIVED i i : ' Complete lew Stock of Angels, Classical, Opera v SALE noi:os 3.1 1 STEREO !3.50 3 - rtTini tft flP II Friday, March 23, 1962 1961. . Wake Forest comes from the At lantic Coast Conference, the lea gue that boasted the national cham pion in 1957 when UNC's Tar Heels won the title. UCLA is a member of the Big Five, which produced national champion California in 1959. Already this season, Ohio State has defeated Wake Forest, 84-62, and UCLA's surprising Bruins, 105 84. Ohio State boasts the best record, 25-1. Cincinnati is 27-2 and Wake Forest 21-8. UCLA, after winning only four of 11 games, is 18-9. : three age groups: nine to 11, 12 to 14, and 15 through the junior year in high school. No senior in high school is eligible. The entire school will be held on the State Fairgrounds, with three full size courts available in the Co liseum. The boys will be housed and fed in the modern Youth Cen ter. Forty-three boys who have at tended Coach Case's school have received scholarship aid at various colleges and universities on their basketball ability. Single sessions for the 1962 school run from June 3-8; June 10-15; and June 17-22. The two week schools are from June 3-15; and June 10-22. No boy may be en rolled in the school for more than two weeks. BOOKS EXCHANGE Durham, N. C. SSffSS Town and Campus ; 1 j,. . . stive's r t , Timely doubles by Russ Hollers and Larry Neal helped coach Wal ter Rabb's UNC baseball team open its season Wednesday with a 13-9 victory over the University of Florida. Hollers doubled home three run ners in the fifth, when the Tar Heels scored seven runs. Four walks also figured in the frame as Florida sophomore Jimmy El liott weakened after an impressive start. A very A dd ic ts-A T' Win Jamboree Title The Avery Addicts and ATO teamed together to nose out the Stacy-TEP combo by one point Monday night in the Fifth Annual Grail-Mural Sports Jamboree. The champions used a first in half court basketball and second and third finishes in handball and swim ming, respectively, as the big Lejeune Marine Inks Ottawa Pact OTTAWA (UPD The Ottawa Rough Riders today announced the signing of import halfback Mel An derson for the 1962 Eastern Foot ball Conference season. Anderson, a 5-11, 195-pounder, came to the Riders from Camp Lejeune, N. C, where he has been an All-Star in Marine service ball for the past three seasons. This is the all-important start ing point, but to this add the difference-telling details that have enhanced Milton's own "Old School Traditional" model. Namely, soft narrow lapels, rounding of the shoulders, just the right amount of body taper, giving yon added smartness without sacrifice of comfort. Our entire collection of warm weather selections are in this smart, flattering model Dacron PolyesterPima cotton Patrician Poplins $42.50. Featherweight Dacron Polyest ertropical worsted wools $56.95 At Milton's you'll find the ulti mate in traditional with a dedi cated difference """"""" """"" T 8t, tlalural Shoulders A Traditional Suit L Do Hot Hake A n l uvf fltt? -A' OUE VEE OiJLY ALL OTHER LP's 40 or BETTE Neal drove home two runs with his double in the eighth, when car SL2?four runs broke a Ue and hun the loss on veteran C. W. Prfte. Sophomore righthander Bob by Cox relieved in the seventh and got credit for the win. TINC 000 072 04013 10 1 FLORIDA H2 201 200- 9 10 1 Billesdon, Murr (4), .Cox : (7) and Isgett, Brande 5; Elliot Clark (5), Price (6), Biggar (8) and Scheinhoft. boosts in their push for the title. Individual winners were: Helbein and Nislick (Stacy-TEP) in swim ming; Karington and Leftler (Town Touts-PiKA) in archery; Butler and Davis (Alexander-Phi Delt) and Nunnally and West (Old West SAE) tied in foul shooting; Jef ferds and Connor (BVT-Chi Psi) in table tennis; Frye and Stroupe (Alexander-Phi Delt) in badmin ton; and Thompson and Griffin (Everett-DKE) in handball. Lady Linton Scintillating Sophisticate s Wonderful classics for an exciting spring lift! Seersucker stripes with blue, gray, olive, red $16.95 New dacroncotton chambray in faded blue, gray, olive, blue olive, or denim red $16.85 Oxford cloth or broadcloth candy stripes on white grounds $14.95 Imported India Madras plaids at unbelievable $14.95 Large group of interesting cotton prints $14.95 Solid hopsack or hopsack prints $14.95 priced shirtdresses found any Choicest collection . of modestly where. LADY MILTON SHOP nut-- t flu Downtown Chapel Hill s i m il m
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 23, 1962, edition 1
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