1 THE DAILY TAB HEEE Saturday, March" 20, 10C5 Page 4 if no .Battle Heel r 10 CD z alker AndTulbott r r .Devils 10 Shins For 9 Carolina By PETE GAMMONS - Assistant Snorts Editor ' 't I t 'IP'S ' f ' 1 IV- 7 v S:jS :::i?JS GARY BLACK CONNECTS for a standing triple against the Blue Devils here yesterday. The UNC outfielder got one. hit and scored f-' x I love a man in Van Heusen "41 7' . It's wild, the way his long, lean good looks come on strong in that "V-Tapered" fit. Anyone can tell -he's top man on my scene when he steps out in the stepped-up styling of authentic Button-Downs or smooth Snap-Tabs. And the added , attraction of Van Heusen spring fabrics and colors make him my favorite distraction. VAN V -Taper van HJferm; e r s f THE WITH BUILT-IN APPEAL When a man means business he counts on a Van Heusen to spell it out. He takes on the tumed-on authority of its authentic Styling, with its great soft collar roll . . . slim, nimble "V-Taper fit, fastback pleat, collar button and locker loop. Plus the spring swagger cf cool short sleeves. Cool price, too! of Gfjapcl Jill CHAPEL HILL N.C -At"' - f ::::-:::::;:::::;:;::::x::-: :::::::::-S:yj::::: ::::ii::J:J::::: Si:55:xx:SHm g:iWi lliiilllllllKlii giw&S 'S3:.:;;5 two runs in three times at bat. Photo by Jock Lauterer. V 1 Ay i ft ,Sv.' iJ- s i rfffllK-iiifrlfft ir n in -Wn"J-"f HEUSEN for the lean trim look,' if BUTTON - DOWN t ' ' 1 ... . ' :;:xS :V:.:.. M -v.:: v.. i if 1 J- 'President's Panacea9 "Selma, Alabama and the President's Panacea" will be debated in an open meeting of the Carolina Political Union to morrow night at 9 in the Grail Room of Graham Memorial. Next year's officers will be elected at the meeting. ; v TONIGHT THE VENTURES Balaii Lounge Open Til 2 a.m. NO COVER Next to Eastgate ! Don't stumble through the literary classics. CLIFF'S, NOTES will help you" make better -grades! These study aids give you a clear, concise summary and. explanation, chapter by chapter.CLIFF'SNOTES are now being used by . high school and college students throughout the .United States. There are over 100 different CLIFFS NOTES cover ing the literary classics. US i $ at your i rp) ft I favorite - ' f bookstore i or write: - 8 ETHAN Y STATION - . UNCOIH,NIBRASKAS8505 1 sVsX The Tar Heels and Blue Devils yesterday in one of the wildest games in some time. Coasting on a seemingly safe UNC saw the Blue -Devils come Heel pitching wiianess, to score two runs in the eighth and six in the ninth. w ..J UNC did not bat in the bottom of the ninth because of the lateness in time. V ; Duke drew first blood in the top while Dean Helms walked and double to left by bteve Holloway. The Tar Heels then went first and second. In the first Danny Talbott, who was three for four for the afternoon, touched gle, stole second, and rode home Bonzcek's looping triple down the ing's sacrifice fly produced the second run. After a Biff Bracy double off score in the third, the game was all a. matter of. Tar, Heel hits and Blue Devil errors until the eighth. In the third, Gary Black tripled and scored on Talbott's sin gle. Fleming singled to left in error, and scored on Danny Walker's single. They added four more runs in the fifth on only three hits when the Blue Devils made four errors. A walk and a wild pitch .by Duke reliever Jim Liccardo along with another error and a sin gle by Ken Boykin accounted for two more runs in the sixth and a 10-2 lead. However at this juncture Coach Walter Rabb decided to put in his second team. Tommy Kirkman, the third pitcher used by Rabb, had control trouble and after narrowly escaping in the seventh allowed two runs in the eighth on singles by Holloway, Bob Whitely and Carter Hill along with a walk and an , error. Mike McGlaughlin came on in the ninth and Tan into even more control. Two more errors, three errors, and two - run sin gles by Whitely and Helms produced the six runs. Despite the tie, there were many bright spots for the Tar Heels. Leonard and Walker, especially Walker, who did not al low a hit in his three inning stint. Talbott had three hits and looked exceptional around the first base bag, while Boykin and Walker each had two singles. Fleming hit the ball sharply hitting the ball deep to left to through third baseman Mule Mueller for an error. The two teams will meet again Monday at Duke, while this afternoon the varsity will scrimmage against the freshmen. Finley Fires Sheep, Looks To Defense BRADENTON, Fla. (AP) Charlie Finley fired the sheep: retired the shepherd and hireq a Missouri mule to put a kick in the Kansas City Athletics. He also moved back the fences and traded Rocky Colavito's home runs for the gloves of Jim Lan dis and Mike Hershberger. Everything will be up-to-data in Kansas City. The public ad dress system will serenade the retiring pitcher with "Good Night, Sweetheart." Johnny Keane will hear "St. Louis Blues" when he changes a New York Yankee pitcher. Manager Mel McGaha is op timistic but the hard facts of life in the American League in dicate another tail - end finish for the A's. "We are rebuilding," McGa ha said as a starter. Then he changed. "Maybe you'd better make that building. We're go ing with the kids. The Phillies made that decision a few years back and they made a good run last year. Their kids had grown up. We hope ours have, too. "Making the outfield bigger should help our pitching. They were shell - shocked last year. We came within five home runs of setting a record for most home runs hit by the opposi tion in our park. It got to be a psychological thing. "We have a lot more grass to cover now and we have Lan dis and Hershberger to do it. All the fences have been moved back except in right field, be cause we hit more homers there than the opposition. SPRING Tir.iE rV'A--ir. ALL RECORDS ono battled to a 10-10 exhibition tie 10-2 lead after' seven inninffs. storming back, aided by Tar : '14 of the first off Beattie Leonard was knocked, in on a booming ahead 2-1 on solo tallies in the pitcher Charlie Young for a sin on John Shaw's single. Bob right fl-eld line and Dick Flem the center field fence tied the the fourth, went to second on an every time up, lining a single, score Bonzcek and lining a shot Versalles Hurt FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla ( AP) Zoilo Versalles of the Minnesota Twins was struck on the head by a teammate's line drive during batting practice Friday prior to an exhibition baseball game against the New York Yankees. Preliminary reports were the infielder - suffered only a mild concussion, but he was under a doctor's observation. PRE-SEASON DEBACLE UNC AB R H RBI Prindle, 2b 4 0 0 0 Thompson 2b ..10 0 0 Black, cf 3 2 1 0 Gibbs, cf 1 0 0 0 Talbott, lb 4 2 3 1 Knowles, lb 1 0 0 0 Shaw, c 4 21 1 Robbins, c 10 0 0 Boykin, rf 4 12 0 Queen, rf 4 0 0 0 Hume, If 4 0 0 0 Crowson, If 0 0 0 0 Bunczek, 3b ... 3 2 1 0 Peoples,-3b 0 0 0 0 Fleming, ss 2 1 1 1 Taylor 10 1 0 TOTALS 39 10 12 4 DUKE AB R II RBI Helms, cf 4 0 1 1 Mueller, 3b . 5 2 0 0 Bracy, If 3 2 1 0 Hollaway, lb ..5 1 2 0 Hines, ss 5 10 1 Whitely, 2b 4 0 2 3 Hughes, c . 4 0 0 0 Hill, rf - 2 0 0 0 Young, p 2 0 0 0 Liccarde, p 3 111 Stiles, c . 0 1 0 1 TOTALS'..- 37 10 7 7 DUKE 101 000 02610 UNC 111 142 OOx 10 A n A T fMTD TT7,9 Uiiiit aMBaao aaam am wmj ml . "- - V i SAFE AT FIRST! Danny Talbott, UNC first baseman, has a close call in his own territory as a Blue Devil pick-off pitch forces him to jump back to the bag. Photo by Jock Lauterer Redmen Win For NEW YORK (AP) The last one is going to be a tough one for Joe Lapchick, but hardly unusual for the tall, seamy faced man who has spent more than a half - century in the pressure of competitive basket ball. The St. John's coach, bowing out next month due to the uni versity's mandatory retirement age of 65, sends his Redmen against top - seeded Villanova in . the title game of the 23th National Invitation Tournament this afternoon at Madison Square Garden. Lapchick's 20th and last St. John's team is an inspired bunch that makes no bones about its goal winning this last one for the coach. If the Redmen do, it will be a record fourth NIT crown for Lapchick and St. John's. ' . St. John's whipped Boston College, second - seeded New Mexico and Army on its way to the final, for a 20-8 season record. The big triumph prior to the NIT was, of course, the victory over top - ranked Mich igan in the Garden's Holiday Festival. Villanova, 23- 4 and eighth-, ranked nationally, edged Man hattan 73 - 71 in the NIT quar- Blue Devils Scrimmage Saturday DURHAM (AP) Duke winds up off - season football drills with the annual Blue - White game at 3 p.m. Saturday in Duke Stadium. Coach Bill Murray will dis cuss Duke's offense at a clinic at 9 a.m. Saturday. Assistant coaches Ace Parker, Marty Pierson and Mike McGee also will be on the program. The team prepared for the game with a 90 - minute scrim mage last Saturday. Running in the No. 1 back field then were quarterback Scotty Glacken, halfbacks Son ny Odom and Bob Matheson and fullback Jay Calabrese. OFF LIST PRICES STEREO Want Last Lapchich ter - finals but routed New York University 91 - 69 in Thursday night's semis. The Wildcats scored a 52 - 43 home court victory over St. John's during the regular season. Villanova's strength is two fold, tenacity and quickness. The Wildcats on defense keep fheir hands up and moving, gang up on the man with the ball, and make the opposition earn its points. Their pacesetter on attack is Bill Melchionni, a scrappy driver. Jim Washington, 6-foof-7 center, and 6-8 sophomore Bill Soens give them superior re bounding and good close - in scoring. St. John's has been led - by shooter Ken Mclntyre, whose 83 points in three games includes1 29 - for - 29 from the foul line. Over - all, the 6-3 blond gun ner has hit 42 straight, free throws. .Army and NYU meet in the preliminary for third place for the second year m a row. The Cadets won last time, 60-59, and should repeat. Lapchick, who never went to college, was a teen - aged pro fessional anda star with the famed Original Celtics. Between his two stints at St. John's, he coached the pro New York Knicks for nine seasons, 1947- 58. U Lr 1 r-! autfcJUUaU LJ KHJ RCA Portable Stereo Hi-fi Record Player 6 ( 4 2 t is 9-Transistor Radio 5 Kodak Flash ill h -' 1 f f If Here's a contest that's really easy to win! No box.tops to mail! No jingles to write! Just pick up your free Entry Blank at your nearby Burger-Chef... write your name on it... then drop it in the collection box right there on the Burger-Chef counter! That's all you do, and you're entered in the Burger-ChefPepsi "Family Fun Sweepstakes." You get a chance to win valuable pr rs and an opportunity to enjoy icy-bright Pepsi-Cola a.ong with a juicy Burger-Chef burger. Enter often, but hurry! Contest closes March 27' GET FREE ENTRY BLANK AT BURGER-CHEF H ., . - 'J? : "SS ...A U4UJ OAS a toot ojl&ef (and, casually speaking, you find them everywhere.) America's most "wanted "caluaPr Bass Veejuns! Vear them, and how else can you feel but right. You've a choice this season t&o. For men, Weejuns in classic smooth leathers cr dashing Scotch Grains. And for the ladies a striking Scotch Grain col-) lection of wardrobe-sparkinSpnngj colors. At your shoe store! Only Bass Makes Weejuns G. H. BASS & CO., 153 Main St, Wiltonfe i i r i r 26" Columbia Bicycle Fun Cameras 4 "Pepsi" Picnic Coolers . ?.. .if: f - ) f I ".J : j f - I K - 7 K 1c L- t (IN5ERTADDRE55 HERE) 337 W. ROSEMARY VTapsj -. . Saf-10 A.n. Sunday io p.a i p.r.1,-6 p.n. MP'S i i B1-lllliiBII'BI,-,l'11 . ? h p .. r