Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 19, 1969, edition 1 / Page 4
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Page 4 Carolina Record Holder John Jessup . . .Puts Shot For Tracksters Vs. USC Thinclads Travel Carolina's road weary track team is in Columbia this afternoon for a dual meet with South Carolina, a group the Tar Heels have beaten a couple of times already this year. UNC engages in its fifth consecutive test away from home seeking to get back in the win column after an unprofitable venture last weekend at Maryland. The Atlantic Coast Conference powerhouse Terrapins flattened Coach Joe Hilton's thinclads 126-19, by far the worst trouncing the Tar Heels have suffered this year. Carolina and South Carolina were originally scheduled to meet here this afternoon, but work on the new track around Fetzer Field forced the meet to be transferred to the USC campus. Thus it is that the come-back hopeful Tar Heels find themselves on hostile ground again. There hasn't been a meet in Chapel Hill since the ACC indoor games on March 1. Goofballs Explode On Flops,' 23-6 The PiKa Goofballs unleashed an offensive machine which really stunned the TEP Flops, 23-6. PiKa was ahead 12-5 through the first five innings, but exploded for 11 more runs in the sixth inning. Pi Lambda Phi Blue scored 6 runs in the second inning and 1 more in the fourth, and held on to edge Sig Ep Blue 7-6. The TEP Mops pushed 6 runs in the first inning by virtue of 6 errors by the DU Easter Seals and 2 hits by the TEP. The final result: TEP Mops 10, and DU Easter Seals 2. Chi Psi Blue took the lead from SAE Blue in the third inning by a 4-0 score. SAE fought back to tie the score at 4 in the sixth inning but Chi Psi Blue then prodeeded to score the final winning run in the seventh inning. Final score: ROYAL RAM WEEKEND SPECIALS Giant Choice Sirloin Steak Char-broiled to perfection. Along with Salad, Potato, Hot Rolls - butter, Glass of Sparking Wine- $3.60 Homemade Lasagna Salad, Rolls-butter, and Red Italian Wine. 81.75 Regular Hours 5:30-8:30 (By popular demand we will be open til 10 tonite and Saturday nite) DON'T FORGET OUR 3 DIFFERENT DAILY LUNCH & DINNER SPECIALS FOR $1.25 ROYAL RAM 929-4365 Behind the V Since then UNC has stopped - Clemson in Tiger country, taken part in the Florida Relays and the State Record Relays, and last Saturday, of course, tnere was tne jviaryiana loss. Earlier Carolina had handled South Carolina in a double dual meet here in the Tin Can and in the Big Seven meet also here. 440 specialist Terry Sellers leads Hilton's charges into the fray today. The slim junior from Lookout Mountain, Ga., very rarely finishes out of the money. In fact he was the only first place Tar Heel a week ago at College Park. Sellers, who also has relays duties, will lead a strong contigent of UNC runners in the sprints and intermediate events. ( Freshman Mike Canzonieri apparently has rounded into top shape and is a potent Chi Psi, 5 and SAE Blue, 4. Hughes struck out ten Manly softball batters in 4 innings to lead the Ruff in Rebels to a 14-3 romp over Manly. Manly's pitcher walked ten men, and Ruf fin converted 7 of them into runs. Other softball scores: Kappa Psi Blue, 8-Phi Gam Blue 1; Sigma Mu Blue 5 Beta Blue-Sox 3; Phi Kappa Sig Blue 10-Delta Sig Blue 4; ZBT Blue 7-TEP Blue 2; Sig Ep Green Gnats 6 Phi Kappa Sig Green O; Kappa Psi White 4-ZBT Diggits 0. Miss GGO Myrna Freidlander, the unofficial queen of the recent Greater Greensboro Open, is visiting the Carolina campus Post Office Tar Heel Mine Hosts Gamecocks By OWEN DAVIS DTH Sports Writer Carolina Coach Walter Rabb, whose baseball team needs a win against South Carolina to remain afloat in the Atlantic Coast Conference race, has picked senior righthander Tom Buskey to get that victory this afternoon. Gametime for the conference duel is 2:30 at the UNC diamond. Buskey, a strong 6-3, 210-pounder from Harrisburg, Pa., has become the top Tar Heel hurler this season after two years of pitching in the shadows of first Gary Hill, then David Lemonds. He presently holds a 4-2 record and 3.23 earned run average.. He has struck out 34 in 39 frames, allowing only eight walks. Robert Rhodes, who according to Rabb has not pitched much this year because To U threat in the 100 yard dash. Meet time this afternoon is 2 p.m. SC Trevino Apologizes NEW YORK (UPI)-Lee Trevino apologized to the Augusta National Golf Club today for critical remarks made about this year's Masters tournament. The U.S. Open champion and his statements were made in a private conversation, not intended for publication. He said he was rapping his own inability to play the course, not the course itself. Joseph C. Dey, commissioner of professional golf who released Trevino's statement in New York, said no punitive action was contemplated. Trevino said he had made his remarks, including a statement that he did not want to play the Georgia course again, in a discussion with fellow golfers Gary Player, Chi Chi Rodriguez and Charlie Sifford. "The remarks were not intended for publication and must have been overheard by a newspaperman who was eavesdropping," Trevino said. "I have long felt that we players are entitled to privacy in the locker room. "I apologize to the Augusta National Golf Club if my remarks seemed critical of the course. I wasn't really criticizing the course I was just criticizing my own inability to play it well with my type of game. I appreciate what the Augusta National Club has done for golf in putting on the Masters tournament." Dey said the "negative criticism" implied in Trevino's Visits UNC this weekend. Although she does not play the game, Miss Freidlander is an avid golf enthusiast. WOME Beautiful New Clothing at the ROYAL DUCK New Summer Dress Bells Bright White Bells Felt Hats Open 9-5 IVIon.-Sat. Over Sutton's Drugs THE DAILy Buskey Hurls Crucial ACC Ga he is a slow starter, and Eddie Hill will be ready in relief. The UNC coach indicated he has not made a firm decision on a starting shortstop. Danny Denton, who has started most recently, is batting .289 but has committed seven errors in 12 eames. John Rudisill is the other hitting possible starter, mostly He as 545, reserve. Carolina is currently 8-6 Old Mil w I' Ignites ATLANTA (UPI)-The Atlanta Braves seem to be capturing a touch of that old Milwaukee Magic. The first three years the bouncy Braves played in Atlanta after moving from Milwaukee were disappointing. The. excitement wasn't there. The team which moved from Boston and drew nearly six million fans the first three years in Milwaukee drew only four million its first three in private remarks was reported by a newsman the golfer did not know was present. Golfer Record ATLANTA (UPI)-Kathy Whitworth, current queen bee of the touring professional lady golfers, is after a record this week. Miss Whitworth has won the last three LPGA tournaments there have been only four in all this year and needs the lady Car ling Open which began today to match Mickey Wright's streak. Miss Wright, who reigned for a decade before going into partial retirement, won four straight twice, in 1962 and again in 1963. Now comes Kathy Whitworth, who won $59,097 last year, more than any woman golfer had ever won in a year, with a good chance to get into the act. The 20-year-old 5-foot-9, 145 -pound Texan has been battling Miss Wright, 34, for the ladies' golf throne since 1963. Although Mickey still has a 31-victory bulge, 80-49, what with having started winning six years earlier; Kathy is fast matching her money. Miss Wright, who has won more than $250,000 playing golf, started this year less than $30,000 ahead. If Kathy chalks up as wide a margin again this year as in 1968, she'll hove into first place on the career money list. She certainly is off to a fast enough start, earning $8,835 in her first four outings. After the Burdines Invitational at Miami back in January, a tournament the proettes don't like to talk about because an amateur, Jo Anne Carner, beat 'em all there, Kathy Whitworth put together consecutive wins at N TAR HEEL 1.2 in the ACC while the Gamecocks were 0-3 in the conference going, into Friday's doubleheader with N.C. State. For UNC to stay in the thick of the fight for the ACC flag, it must avoid adding to its loss column, all important in this conference because all teams do not necessarily play the same number of games. The winner is picked on a strict percentage basis. "We still think we have a Atlanta Atlanta, although it had 33 more playing dates here. One reason the Milwaukee Braves did better at the gate, of course, was the fact that they were far better on the field. The Braves were second Iwice and third once in their first three years in Milwaukee. They have been fifth twice and seventh once in Atlanta. The past three years in Atlanta fans had the feeling that once the Braves got behind they stayed behind. It mattered not whether statistics supported this theory. The feeling was there. If the Braves trailed in the late innings, the fans left the ball park in droves or turned off their radios and slept. St. Petersburg, Fla., Charlotte. Fla., and Port Port Malabar, Fla. "I'm living on borrowed time," said Miss Whitworth. "I just hope my luck holds out a little longer." But that was only a distant second in '68 since Carol Mann, the 6-foot-3 blonde who has supplanted Mickey Wright as Miss Whitworth's current leading challenger, tore up the course with an LPGA record 16-under-par 200. "I'll keep on playing my own game," Miss Whitworth said. "We'll just have to wait and see whether that's going to be good enough this time." Kathy, born in Monahans, Tex., started playing golf before she was 15 and turned pro at the ripe old age of 19 in . December 1958. She got her first pro win at Phoenix in 1962; won eight tournaments in 1963; after an off year in '64 when illness and injury limited her to one victory, she hasn't won less than eight victories a year since. She has been the top money winner the past lour years tying Miss Wright and the late Babe Zaharias for that distinction, and appears well on her way to a fifth and another record. CHAPEL HILL'S aukee ICE CREAM R SANDWICH E SH0PPES A T I O N S FOR QUALITY YOU CAN TASTE OVER 30 FLAVORS BALL PARK HOT D0G Rifc19c SAVE 20c 45c Reg. 65c ALL FLAVORS DOUBLE-DIP e CONE IVQ Reg. 35c ICE MILK J milk 29c I SHAKE Reg, 45c j me very good chance to do well in this conference," said Rabb. "I don't see why we can't plav with the best. "I realize our pitching has to get better, but I think our boys are capable of doing it. We will get a little tougher at bat with men on base, too. A college team generally is better with men on base from the middle of the season on as the boys get used to the situation." Rabb also says the Tar Heels agic Braves This year the feeling is different. From the opening game you sensed the Braves could come from behind, that they could win the close ball game. They did just that in their first home stand. The only game they lost they lost big, 12-3 to Cincinnati They came from behind in each of their three wins over San Francisco. Two of their three wins over Cincinnati were come-from-behind efforts and the third a 1-0 cliffhanger. I used to call them the "hero-a-day Braves" in Milwaukee. They were that again Sunday when they edged the Reds twice in a double header. Clete Boyer provided the opening game heroics He produced the Braves' one-run lead in the eighth by working the Reds for a bases-loaded walk and then protected it with three brilliant fielding plays in the ninth. Orlando Cepeda, the newest Brave, had driven in a winning run in three of Atlanta's first four victories Sunday he tied the nintcap with an eighth inning home run over the centerfield fence, and Felipe Alou won it in the ninth by knocking in his third RBI of the day. It rained all Sunday morning cutting the doubleheader attendance to 23,064. What the crowd lacked in numbers it made up in enthusiasm. ' Actually, fans may never come to bigger Atlanta like the droves that descended from Wisconsin's forests into Milwaukee. Baseball in general does not hold the monopoly it once held in professional sports. But the excitement from the field is flowing through the fans, multiplying and surging back through the team. Free Car Wash (with $5 Gas Purchase) FREE WASH and WAX (with $6 Gas Purchase) BAY GAS & R0B0 W. Franklin ICE CREAM PARLOR Now Thru April 20 GRAND m TT OPENING NOW 3 LOCATIONS NORTH HILLS RIDGEW00& CHAPEL HILL HAND PACKED ICE CREAM QUARTS PINTS 30c 15c OFF OFF CREATION BURGER SANDWICH Reg. 75c 49c CREATION CLUB SANDWICH Reg. 95c ROAST BEEF SANDWICH Reg. 85c 59c 59c FREE Month of Sundaes (5 Any Flavor) Name -Address Phone J Deposit At Any Ice Cream Creations btore will not be quite as reticent about getting things done as in the past. "We're going to be more aggressive from this point on," he said." We've lacked that so far. I'm looking for some Old Leaguers, and what I call an Old Leaguer is a boy who can make play after play and be consistent." T think we've got boys who can do it." Pizza Ckapel Hill: 208 W. Franklin SL Join the Inn Crowd FetJnrtnf. runout ft I "3 A rr.th Bik.d Y mmt Carry Out or Eat in Opn Mon.-Thur. 11 A.M. 'til 12 P.M. Friday and Saturday 1 1 A.M.ti1. 1 A.M. Sunday 4 P.M. 'til 11 PM. Order by Phone for Fatter Service Durham 2SS-SM7 Chapel H1U MWltt Allow Approximately 20 Minutes I Sold It In II L L For Sale: 1960 Mercedes-Benz, type 190b. Recent major engine work. Maroon with white leather . interior. Call Mike at 929-3567. For Sale: 350 cc Bridgestone Motorcycle. '68 model, 40 horsepower, excellent condition. 3000 miles, new tires, extremely fast. Must sell immediately. Call 489-2750. '63 Ford Galaxie 500, V-8, automatic, power steering and brakes. Recently overhauled. $725. Call 933-4098. 1963 MGB. Engine and transmission just rebuilt. Strong, well-tuned engine. BRG, semperits, oil cooler radio, heater. $1500. Call 929-3159, 3-7 p.m. 1960 220 S Mercedes. All leather interior. Automatic clutch. Becker radio. Good shape. Call 929-1993 after 6. 1962 A-H Sprite, Mk. II. New front suspension, paint, top and engine work. Honda 160, international orange, custom fender and seat, cross-over popes. Call 933-4777. 1965 Austin Healy convertible for sale. Wire wheels, radial tires, abarth mufflers. $1350 or bast offer. 942-5451 between 5 and 9 p.m. For Sale: 1964 Norton 650. Runs strong, looks fair. New sprocket and chain. $450. Jack Rand, 968-9074. Honda Scrambler, '350 cc Webco Conversion, cam, carbs, non-slip clutch, extra parts. 929-4271. 65 Dart GT, black with maroon interior, excellent condition. $800. 929-4271. For sale: Basketball autographed by varsity, purchased at APO auction. Best offer. Call 933-4681 after 12 noon. '68 Corvette Conv. Excellent condition, 4 speed, power steering and brakes, other extras. Low mileage. Call 929-2719 after 5 p.m. 1956 Chevrolet 4-door V-8. Excellent tires, running condition. SI 00 or best offer. Call 967-2865. Sports Car Autocross Sunday at Lake wood Shopping Center, Durham. Register 11-12 noon. Everyone welcome to watch or participate. Y'all come. For more information call Harriet 968-9113. Ann! VX 19C9 .1 v V-rilYroima. NOW PLAYING II f -. Panavision- dfr-r2ii Metrocolor ,' V-VvSjp Shows 12:45-3:25-6:10-9 m The Want-Ac! D U Y Learn to fly. The UNC Flying Club offers low rates in its three clubowned airplanes. Contact fulltime instructor Charles Douthit at the Williams Airport in person or by phone 968-9386. REWARD. Lost: Brown and white male Springer Spaniel, 1 year old. Wearing collar, no tags. Return to Julian Dietche, 35 Rogerson Drive. 929-2843. (5sp Qero 2 bedroom apartments furnished and unfurnished now and for June 1. 1 bedroom apartment furnished. Southern Rental Agency, 121 W. Rosemary Street, 942-5660. LUXURY CHATEAU APARTMENTS -one bedroom, 100 air-conditioned, wall to wall carpets, disposals, dishwashers, 2 pools, tennis and basketball courts, laundromat, club house. Large 800 sq. ft. Model open. Phone 942-6661. ONE OR TWO BEDROOM APART MENT-air-conditioned, wall to wall carpets, dishwashers, disposals, 2 pools, laundromat, convenient location. (No unmarried undergraduates, please.) Phone 942-7010. 4 Air-conditioned two bedroom mobile homes, 10 X 45 and 10 X 50. $80 and $90 per month. Available June 1. Call 929-2854 or 942-1749. Male help: short hours, gjod pay, opportunity for salary increase. Car necessary. Begin now or in June. 8 a.m.-5 p.m. 942-5953. Part-time: Typing, scientific (thesis) background. Arr. hours to suit. Typewriter and 235 call Lou materials furnished. Apply Wilson Hall days or 966-5524 after 6 p.m. DiSalvo. FEAR OF PUBLIC SPEAKING? Dr. Lawrence Van Egeren, Duke University Medical Center, is studying fear of public speaking. Any male having such fears who is interested in participating in this project: pfcast contact Mrs. Cobb at 933-11 07 (Speech Office). You will be paid for approx. 6 hours spent on the project. You will not be asked to give a speech. 17 1 m ITSrf m
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 19, 1969, edition 1
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