Sunday, March 13. 1966 THE DAILY TAR HEEL 'I Intramural basketball has entered its most crucial stage, with league and division play offs now under way. Resi dence hall teams are battling it out in residence college leagues to nail down a place in the tournament field. Fra ternity and graduate leagues have already determined their champions and are in the division playoffs. It's sin gle elimination one loss and a team is through for the sea son. A winner will be determ ined in each residence col lege and these eight teams will compete for the residence hall division championship. In the Old Well area, the Old West Studs (4-1) will meet Battle - Vance - Pettigrew (3-1) for the title. In the Con nor area, the Connor Animals (&0) play the Connor Vikings (5-1) for the championship. The Upper Quad king will be decided between the Mangum Mugs (5-0) and the Ruff in Rebels (3-2). The Craige Alkaceltics (5-0) won the Craige College play offs and have a spot among the final eight teams. In the Scott College tournament, two unbeaten teams, the Teague Trojans (5-0) and the Teague Totalers (6-0), will clash for the championship. In Ehring haus College, Ehringhaus B 2 (6-1) battles the Ehringhaus C Superstars (6-1) for all the marbles. The Morehead College tour nament is partially complete. The Graham Bells (6-0) and the Everett Rogah (6-0) each won first-round games and will meet each other in a semi Baseball Countdown Ends This Friday Against ECC By SANDY TREAD WELL DTII Sports Writer It's a countdown that ends on March 18 at 3 p.m. The countdown began last September with fall baseball practice. It has continued since last month in the midst of the basketball season. A lot of concrete steps have UNC Dolphins Place Fourth In Swim Meet North Carolina's Dolphins, led by Phil Hiker's record setting performance, placed fourth in the Eastern Seaboard Championships. Riker, who swam the 200 yard butterfly event in 1:56.9 for a new Eastern Seaboard record, led a North Carolina fhan?e that Diled UD 110 total O m m a points good enougn iw iuiu third Baylan ana watts wiu plagued by lack of control, position behind Yale, Army apparently cover second base, During his college career, and Navy. and Tom Lampman will start McLaughlin has been virtual Fred Lipp was another out- at first . untouched by opposing hit standing Dolphin performer. But a nost of sophomores ters But he's walked plenty. Lipp tinisnea second in w 200 yard freestyle. John Shel- don finished tenth in the same event. Other Tar Heels who placed were: Rick Forum, ninth in the 100 yard breaststroke; Gaye Stratten, seventh in the 100 yard backstroke; and Rick Mercuri, eigntn inineiwj" backstroke. North Carolina's 400 yard freestyle relay team finished fifth. Pete Worthen, Gaye Stratten, J. Henry and R u s s Sleeper composed the lar neei team. Softball Clinic Set For Woollen A softball clinic for officials and prospective officials has been set for Tuesday and Wednesday of this week. The clinic is scheduled for 4:30 each afternoon in 301 Woollen Gym. WHEN ALL ELSE FAILS s$ SEE US for MONET! Senrin the Area as Pawn brokers for over thirty-seven years. Five Points Loan Co. 339 W. Main at Five. Pointa DURHAM .Intramural Cli"oboard. With Bill final contest. The Stacy Studs (5-1) moved into the semi-final round and will play the win ner of the game between the Lewis Browns (4-1) and the Graham Crackers (4-1). The Morrison C Cavaliers (5-0) have advanced to the finals of the Morrison College tournament. They will play the winner of the game pit ting the Morrison I Inebriates (3-1) against the Morrison A Rebels (5-0). All but two of the positions in the second round of the fraternity division tournament have been determined. Games will match the Phi Gam Fi jis (6-0) against Phi Delt Black (5-1), KA Blue I (5-1) against the TEP Tops (4-0) and DKE White (4-1) against Zete I (5-0). Other second round games will have DKE Blue (5-0) against Phi Delt White (4-1), ZBT Zebes (5-1) against Chi Psi Red (4-1) and Pi Kappa Phi No. 3 (5-1) against Chi Phi Blue (3-1). Phi Delt Blue (5-0) will meet the winner of the Sig Ep Bisons (5-0) Sig ma Chi (4-1) game. ATO I (5-) will play the victor of the Sigma Nu A (3-2) Pi Kappa Phi No. 1 (5-0) contest. The graduate division is still unsettled. Four teams have byes and automatically moved into the second round. They are the Peacocks (4-0), Navy Dolphins (4-1), Med School Blue (4-0) and Law III Blue (4-0). Law Blue I (3-0) will play the winner of the . Law II Blue (3-1) and Dental School (3-1) in a first been climbed at a fast pace. A lot of jumping - jacks and sit - ups have worked legs and stomachs into shape. Dozens of baseballs have been thrown and hit and lost. Now, the preparation is al most over. The Tar Heel base ball team opens its long sea son against East Carolina Col in Greenville. What kind of a season will it be for Carolina? Defensively, the 1966 Tar Heels look strong very strong. The infielders have fast hands and strong arms. They'll make the plays and throw out the runners. The same is true of the outfield ers. In John Shaw and Tommy Robbins, Carolina will have ability and experience behind the plate. Both men are as good as any catcher in the ACC. The defense will feature the experienced men on the team in at lpast first few Parries. n9nnv Talhoti will start at 111V11 provide the vital element ot depth t this year's team, L E sayer, Bruce B o 1 i c k, Charley Thomas and Bill Estes will play this year. Be fore the season is over some of them might be starting. In the outfield, Gene Link, Bob Hume, Charley Carr, Bob Bonczek and Larry Aims win be the men hauling in the fly balls But m or(jer to wm games, ere are two essentials to any ball cluD hitting and pitch- ing jn tbese departments, the certainties eiiu uiu begin. Talbott, Link, Hume, Shaw, and Bonczek have proved their ability with the bat in past seasons. These are the men who should break ball Sing-Out '66 Cast of 140 You'll Love It Carmichael Auditorium .larch 21-8 p.m No Adm. Charge Hass round game. The Peacocks will then meet the winner of that game. The Navy Dolphins will play the winner of the game match ing Med School Yellow (4-0) and Med School WThite (3-1). The Med Blues will play the winner of the contest between the Fellowship of Christian Athletes (5-0) and the State Grads (2-1). Law IV will have the winner of Law III Blue (4-0) and an opponent which will either be Law III White (2-2) or the NROTC Neseps (2-2). Most of the teams will play next week and eventually each division will have a champion. The three elites will then meet for the all campus championship. Merrimon Lecture Is Wednesday Night Some of the crucial ethical decisions faced by physicians who bring babies into the world will be related by an internationally prominent ob stetrician in the first Merri mon Lecture here on Wed nesday night. The lecture, at 8 p.m in Hill Hall, will be open to the public. The speaker will be Dr. Nicholson Joseph Eastman professor emeritus of obstet rics at the Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine and consultant to the Ford Foundation. His topic will be "Induced Abortion and Contraception: A Consideration of Ethical Philosophy in Obstetrics." games open with the long ball. If they hit up to their poten tial this year there will be a lot of Tar Heels crossing home plate. Any coach will tell you that the most important position in baseball is the pitcher. No matter how great your team may be defensively and des pite its ability to hit the ball if you don't have strength on the mound, forget it. Beattie Leonard and Dan ny Walker have looked good in practice. Both of them can be counted on for good per formances. Sophomores John Richards and Chip Stone can put the ball over the plate with effective stuff. But the key to the Tar, Heels of '66 lies with two men, co - captain Mike Mc Laughlin and sophomore Mike Flannigan. They possess first rate fast balls. And they're strong enough to work eigh teen of the scheduled 29 games. Both men have been Flannigan came to Carolina after a high school carrer which made him one of the most promising pitchers ever to come to Chapel Hill. But during his freshman year he also had trouble finding the plate. This makes pitching the big gest and most important "if" to consider as the season ap proaches. It could mean a conference championship. , k u III P; iff. One minute they like milk chocolate the next dark chocolate. Good thing for Hollingsworth's assortment 0 V I Nolan Ionard, a transfer from Wingate, gets ACC title two years ago with a spotless 14- in some swing-time as Coach Walter Rabb's record, slumped to 6-8 in 1965 and tied for men battle for starting berths on the 1966 dla- sixth in the league. They play East Carolina's mond nine. Leonard is a shortstop candidate Southern Conference Pirates in Greenville Fri- and is joining his teammates in some serious day afternoon, launching a season in which competition with the season's opener less than pitching seems to hold the key to success or a week away. The Tar Heels, who won the failure. DTH Photo by Jock Lauterer Meade, Janowitz Co-Captain UNC Jim Meade, a two-miler from Ridgewood, N. J., and Bill Janowitz of Cloister, N. J., whose specialty is the 880-yard run, will co-captain the Uni versity of North Carolina track team this spring. Both Janowitz and Meade are winners of two letters. A total of 13 lettermen will be available for Coach Joe Hil ton. The schedule: VARSITY TRACK SCHEDULE 1966 Mar. 19 2:30 p.m. Clemson U. Clemson, S. C. Mar. 22 3:30 p.m. N. C. State Raleigh, N. C. Mar. 26 2:00 p.m. Florida Relays Gainesville, Fla. Apr. 2 2:00 p.m. Carolina Relays Columbia, S. C. Apr. 6 3:30 pun. South Carolina Columbia, S. C. Apr. 16 2:00 p.m. U. Maryland Here Apr. 23 1:30 p.m. U. Virginia Charlottesville, Va. Apr. 30 2:00 p.m. Wake Forest Winston-Salem, N. C. May 7 3:00 p.m. Duke U. Durham, N. C. May 13,14 ACC CHAMPIONSHIPS Columbia, S. C. May 21 INTER-CONFERENCE MEET Athens, Ga. Batlg (Har Women are Schizos IW4XJ2 Famntleroy SO COME ON DOWN. Here I" am ballfans, down amidst the palms, surrounded ties. Aannn. jusi listen to tnat ocean, t eei tne genue salt spray brush across mv forehead. The sand is soft and I think I'll just lie here all week bagging the bennies (beneficial sun i a j j ) . Boy, lunch was really great. Fruit and lots of cooling drink served at my beck and call by desirous damsels. Well, I'm still thinking of you ballfans. Thinking of the cold north and all the classes you're suffering through. Wish you were here. (Stab!) I hate to make you drool at the mouth like this, so I've got to admit it. I'm down here on business. In my profession it's wise to acclimate oneself. My basket ball predicitions are far behind me and thoughts turn sublime ly to baseball. No, don't worry you'll get the NCAA winner on Friday morning. At this time of the year your crystal ball for forthcoming baseball picks? Florida, of. course. Well for the past week I've been the distinguished guest of Major League clubs at their spring training camps. I've been talking to the players, giving advice to the coaches and measuring home runs. I've even taken a few swings myself. I blush to relate it, but relate it I must. I've been hitting the horsehide pretty well and several clubs have been offering me contracts. Sorry boys, no dice. No, 200,000 bucks a season really isn't tempting. You see fellas, I tell them, I've got an obligation to my readers. They've been really loyal. They just laughed at Ed Freakley when that dastardly doer of derring-do had the audacity to call me a cheater. , ... Then they asked me to pick Major League games instead of limiting myself to the college circuits. I explained that if the public knew the outcome of the '66 season the ballparks would be deserted and Ballentine beer would go bankrupt. So here I am. Thinking baseball and whistling "Take Me Out To The Ballpark," "Damn Yankees" and "Meet the Mets." Next week I'll be back home in my Victorian mansion with Jeeves my trusty manservant. So, get ready to discover how the college of your choice is going to do. Place your bets. Tune up on your boos and your jeers. "KILL THE UMP." "THROW THE BUM OUT." Ah, I can hear you new ballfans. And it sound sooooooo good. Post Scripts: I can't resist one last parting shot at Freakley. It's custo mary for a jealous inferior (Freakley) to challenge the good name of a great sports figure (Me). I don't wish the poor con fused underling an eternity stoking the hell fires. I merely ask him for a printed apology. May he cleanse himself with tears. REPENT AND RETURN TO THE FOLD. Fauntleroy UJE1AT A I'JEKHIO! SEND ONE OF OUR CARDS TO PUT THE CHERRY ON TOP STUDIO CARDS "" n i iii... -ft , in sunny Florida. Here I lie by a bevy of bare-busted beau- where do you go to brush up on Disguised Cats 4Bing-oed'; Devils Limp On By BILL ROLLINS DTH Sports Writer St. Joseph's Hawks were "Marin-ated" and the David son Wildcats were "Bing-oed" in the semi-finals of the East ern Regionals at Reynolds Coliseum in Raleigh Friday night. That second form of elimi nation had the most devasta ting effect, but both did the job as Duke's Jack Marin and Syracuse's Dave Bing a pair of Ali-Americans led their teams past each's first obstacle in it's path toward a hoped-for NCAA championship. Duke's left-handed ace pull ed down 15 rebounds to go with his 18 points, and tossed in four straight free throws down the winning stretch to keep the Philadelphia Hawks on the short end of a 76-74 score. And the amazingly quick and coordinated Syracuse guard rocketed his wily 6-3 frame into the air for 12 re bounds to enhance his 20- point scoring effort, and ex- hibited an onselfish display of passing and feeding which shot nis team uiio wnoppmg point lead with eight minutes to play. The Orangemen play- ed reserves most of the rest or me way, ana uaviason was able to cut the final margin Jo an almost respectable 94- In the doubleheader opener. Duke was plagued by incon- game. Syracuse led by 92-60 sistency especially when it with six minutes left, and then managed to pull to eight-or-10 Snyder and center Rod Know point leads and was forced les who also finished with to fall back on some unerring 25 points got hot against foul shooting in the final mm- utes to avert disaster. The Hawks pressed Duke practically throughout t h e game, and were able to cut significant deficits on five oc casions when it seemed that they were going to fall vic- tim to a breeze-away. It was not, however, until after the Dukes had spurted to a 68-58 lead with 6:51 left that the Joeys made full use of their press to register six steals in the next five minutes and almost pull the game out of the fire. Marin's rebound basket was the only Duke score in those five minutes, and with 1:49 re maining, the nationally second ranked Blue Devils looked back and found the clawing Hawks just two points in arrears at 70-68. Then Bob Verga, who led Duke's offense with 22 points, zipped in a pair of free throws in his usual sling-shot motion, but Billy Oakes scored for the Hawks, who trailed, 72-70. It was here that Marin who netted six of Duke's last eight points hit four free throws while St. Joe's All American Matt Guokas Jr., and Marty Ford (from 40 feet at the buzzer) countered for the final 76-74 margin. Davidson's showing in the nightcap of this Eastern Re gionals first round was very similar to Duke's battle against UCLA in the NCAA title bout two years ago. The Wildcats made a game of it for most of the first half, but just like that ill-fated Duke Club, were blitzed in the last few minutes of the opening period and were never able to catch up. In Duke's case two years ago, it ran into a guy named Walt who wreaked havoc in a Hazzard-ous manner. And in Davidson's case Friday night, it ran into a guy named Dave who "Bing-oed" the 'Cats be fore the first half was over. It was 22-all with 9:15 to go in the first half, but Mr. Bing and Jim Boeheim scored eight straight for the Orangement. Then with four minutes left, Davidson quit scoring, and yeilded 11 points in a closing flurry which spelled doom for the team which had come such a long way on an Ail-American, a fellow senior, and six sophomores The Way to Change Flab to -Ay EXERCISE SUITS for MEN and WOMEN Endorsed by Mormon KitWbraw' end too Allison of tn Minnesota Twins end fa mous atfclt, t r a i n r s end coodt vvryww) Trim-Ex is tto sensational nw innovation hi sweat suits that pos itively puts weight in t right places Ua worn coring fma! exercise. Worts like a steam bath. Of rubberixed miracle Krone, with elastic waist ond f mi' vf,m that seal ommended! Sofe. prove way to speed body conditioning. Nationally odvertisedl Trim-Ex is the easy way to a trimmer figure SIZES: S 10 34 M 16-40 142-44 Xl-46-44 PROFESSIONAL MODEL: 2-pc. Suit $9.95 J 151 E. Franklin Davidson's top man, Dick Synder. outscored Bing by 25-20. but had only ten with eight minutes to go and his team almost unbelievably be hind by 84-49. Synder, a top defensive man, tried in vain to contain his first-team A-A counterpart but on Friday night the two were not even in the same league. Bing toyed with the David son backcourt press, waving his teammates on up the court and bringing the ball into the offensive zone alone. Once there, he performed as if no one was defensing him, driv ing at will and passing through the slower Southern Confer ence titlists in an eye-popping performance. The bang-up Syracuse whiz would whirl into the midst of the Davidson defense around the upper part of the foul lane, pick it apart, and shoot the ball to a friend breaking in from the side for an easy lay up. He passed up an untold number of shots which would have certainly pushed his in- dividual scoring total past his 29.4 points per eame averaee Not evPn L m .1 holding its insurmountable lead did he gun for the basket. Then at about the eight-min-utes-to-play mark, Bing and most of the straters left the the Orange s reserves and out- scored the winners 18-2 in the remaining time. Gridder Inks Grant-In-Aid The theme song of the North Carolina freshman football team next fall might be a re play of "Canadian Capers." Saulis M. Zemaitis, regard ed as one of the top football players in Canada, has signed a grant-in-aid here. He is a six-footer who weighs 198 pounds. Home is Hamilton, On tario. "Zemaitis has outstanding moves and power," said As sistant Coach Bob Thalman, who recruited the fullback. "We think he is a blue ribbon prospect." Dick Wesolowski and Mark Mazza, both of Hamilton, starred for the Carolina frosh last season. Wesolowski gain ed almost 600 yards rushing, while Mazza excelled as a blocker and fullback. Asked if Zemaitis could match his running ability, the modest Wesolowski said, "He's a better football player than I am." Both Mazza and Wesolowski are expected to push veter an performers to the limit for jobs on the varsity when spring workouts begin here next week. CTTKOLDSCOLISCUM lion., Mar. 14, 8 p.m. BRATISLAVA SLOVAKIAN FOLKLORIC DANCERS ft SATCHEL PAIGE ADM. $2.00 - $230 - $3.00 Tkfcrfs M Mte: CMittam Mi Offte TMamt Rcerd She. VHUm fconCT Cmm SM 4 Panama's car KatiiaK. Racartf tar la Dwm wm Htl. Firccess heat ml Medically rec a roc Phone 942-4064

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