Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 22, 1958, edition 1 / Page 4
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SATURDAY, MARCH 22, 195 PAG1 P0U1 THI DAILY TAX KIEL 17! NG S' Corner f ; : 1 By DILL KING DTH Sports Editor i y e White ame hi Aft eroooo 2 (ThW is th third in a Mritt f 4'artitft on Carotin' four senior cagtrs Ed's Nott) 4l 'I'll Nqver Regret My Choice' Roy Searcy Roy Searcy is a friendly, serious minded younp; man who love basLcthall. The Draoer. N. C. native entered Carolina four years ago 'a long with BobbyjCuntiirlgham! Pete Drennan, Tommy Kearny an'd Joe Quig.,.Royuo6 ;wi interested in plavinpr basketball for Frank McGuire. Rov's a senior now and the record boks show that he iwer ot to play a whole lot of the game he loves., Hut he's anything but bitter about it and as he puts it "if 1 had it to do over I'd make the Mine choice." Searcy spent the majority of his time on the bench watch ing his teammates win the glory. That doesn't seem like such a happy way to spend four years, but Roy is sincerely philo sophical about it. "You can never lealie," he says, "how much you can learn just being associated with men like Coach McCuire and others whom I've come in contact with here. I have gained an awful lot of realistic experience here that' I don't believe I would have ever gotten anywhere else. I ve played basketball with a great bunch of fellows and that 'lias meant a great deal," Roy continued. "It has been wonderful lust' beln a small'frtfi of the gToup which won 89 .u)d lost only i.j in the last four years." Roy was referring to his lour senior sidekicks (although Quigg was out this season) who were instrumental in aeheiving such a record for Caro lina basketball. ' , . . 1 Accent A Little Tough To Understand Has tlie fact that most of his teammates here have ieen Northern boys ever really bothered Roy? 'Certainly not," he says. "Oh, for the first year it was a little tough because I had to re-adjust but after that I got along just line. I became very close to the loys and there was never any barrier between us." Searcy recalls back at the beginning of his freshman year nhen he and Brook! 11 lxrn Brennan along with now de puted Charlie Adams of Cary. N. C. went out for lunch to gether "Pete was trying to.be a nice guy," smiles Roy," and while we were sitting at the tabic he said something to us which we couldn't understand. I thought he was speaking to Charlie and Charlie thought he was speaking to me. As it turned out. we just looked 'at each other and laughed like hrtk. 1 couMnlt Understand V-et' accent for a while, he grin ned: "now 1 understand every word he says." By DAVE WIBLE Spring football practice s will come to a close this alternoon ai 2 o'clock in Kenan Stadium when the divided Tar Heels meet head on in the Annual Monogram Club sponsored Blue-White game. The game will be a regulation affair with special half-time cere monies. The Blue-White Queen will be crowned, and Monogram Club President Giles Gaca will present the Carolina Coach of the Year trophy to the year's most outstanding coach. After 19 days of "very success ful" practice. Tar Heel head coach Jim Tatum is looking foreward to today's game and the results it will bring. "This is one game that I'm always confident we will win," Tatum commented. "Come to think of it though, we could tie." Turning to the more serious side Tatum said, "Although we realize the importance of defense, we hope the offense will do a lot of scoring. After touchdowns we won't kick. We want to try for the two points instead of one, and see how it works." ' Tatum's referring to the new rule which gives a team two points if it runs or passes, and only one if it kicks for an extra point. After a touchdown, the ball is now plac- ed on the .three rather than the I two-yard line as before. ! Coaches for the Blues will be Ed Hickey, Pat Preston, and Em mett Cheek. Ed Kinsler, Bud Car son and George Barclay will han dle the Whites., Tatum will use his talent where it is most need ed. , Fans will have an opportunity to preview next season's Tar Heels from every angle. The squads have been divided with care so that all the players will have a chance to show their stuff. Experience leans to the Blues, which has 'last sea Son's starting backfield in its fa vor, althuogh it is spread over - two units. ' ,Jack Cummings, who proved to be one of the conference's top passers last season will be the quarterback for the Blues. Jim Schuler will be His left halfback with Danny Droze toting from the right. Don Coker, a converted halfback will have the fullback chores. The second Blue backfield unit will consist of Henry Clem ents at quarterback, Emil Decan tis and Daley Goff at the halfback posts, and Ed Upski at fullback. Goff, Schuler, and Lipski all start ed with Cummings last season. The Whites will be led by quar terback Nelson Lowe. Tatum wanted to hold Lowe out last sea- f son but the loss of Dave Reed and Curtis Hathaway forced him to be used in the last two games. Lowe will be working with Wade Smith and Sonny Folckomer as halfbacks, and fullback Don Shupin. Russ Hollers will handle the second unit with Lenny Beck, Roy Wall, and Conrad Sloop. Several key players will miss to day's game because of injuries Curtis Hath way, who suffered a broken arm last seasowill be out along with Don Kemper, Jerry Amos, and Jack Lineberger, This valuable auartet will be - ready come next fall. Tar Heels Beat Rollins; Lose To Georgia In Twin Bill The game will televised by WUNC-TV direct irom iv e Stadium beginning at 2 0 ciock. : . fotalltho O This professional phar macy is built on a founda tion of family patronage. We are here to help guard the health and welfare of your household. 'Be' sure to turn to us for anything 1 you ""may need in drugs and sundries'. And don't 'forget that ;we specialize in prescriptions! . ::: :: . Suger Ray Rated Well By Basil'10 By JERRY LISKA CHICAGO CP) Middleweight champion Carmen Basilio does not intend to make a mistake common V) opponents of Sugar Ray Robinson" the socond time around. That's gett ing careless. The stony-faced little guy who makes his first defense against Robinson, the man he dethroned, in the Chicago Stadium Tuesday night commented Friday: 'I know better than anybody else tlat last year Gene Fullmer went the distance and beat Robinson for the title and then got belted out in five in their rematch. "And I know the same guy has never licked Robinson twice. "Nobody can say he won't make mistakes in the heat of a fight, hut all my training for this rematch has been concentrated on not getting careless. Honeycutt's Clutch Single Wins For Heels WINTER PARK, Fla. W The Carolina Tar Heels snapped back from a shutout at the hands of the Georgia Bulldogs to whip host Roll ins College in the second game of a double-header. In the first game, the Tar Heel bats were silent throughout the con THE BOXES First Game ab 4 3 3 2 4 3 2 4 GEORGIA Patchin, 3b Davis, rf Sparrow, ss Defoor, 2b Wiggins, If Allen, cf .. Cabiness, lb Stover, c Payne, p -.. 4 Totals - 27 NORTH CAROLINA ab Oldham, 2b 2 Santzing, rf 4 Honeycutt. ss 4 Crump, c 3 Bryson, lb 2 Nester, lb 2 Pons, If 3 Workman. 3b 3 Griffin, cf 3 Young, p 3 Totals .... -. 30 Georgia . . You Know You Gotta Fall Back Searcy , like the rest of the seniors, considers the NCAA title in t).Vr7 hW biggest thrill in basketball., "I didn't set to play niuch but I think I was just as happy ;is anybody on the" club when we won that championship," Ik- said. " think my greatest moment came when Tommy (Kearns) through the ball up in the air in the final second of the Kansas game. We knew we had it then and the long, long haul to the top was over." Roy paused a moment, then added: "This year was just an example of what I was saying about realistic experience. We went all the way to the top last year and it was a great leeling. We knew we had achieved the ultimate but it was also inevitable that we had to fall back a little bit. That's the way life goes and it's through things like this that you ran lea in a lot whether you're on the court or on the bench." Searcy agrees with llrennan and Cunningham that Wilt Chamberlain is the best college player he saw in his four ears Jure." 1 think Chamberlain is aliout the greatest around today." said Roy. . , .. Plans To Attend Law School 1 Scarry will get his IVS in Industrial Relations in June .tihI would like to go to law school next year. He says he's necr thought much about coaching, although many agree that he'd make a good one. "I want to get that law degree mote than anything else," he said. Basketball is not in Roy Searcy's plans for the future. Undoubtedly he could have played much more at another mIiooI but he's not sorry he chose Carolina. Searcy will be a success in whatever he does because, over the course of the last lour years, he's proven that you don't have to be in the thik of the battle to learn it's been fourgTeat years for him. "I know how hard Robinson can hit. I took some pretty good shots in that September bout in New York. But I learned a few things x0rth Carolina which may hvlp me, depending on the pattern of the fight. Robinson says he learned something about me. too. So. there you are." r h rbi 0 2 0 0 2 1 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 10 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 1 1 2 11 2 r h rbi 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 002 000 0002 000 000 0000 test as Georgia pitcher Bob Payne limited the Heels to but three hits. The Bulldogs scored all their runs in the third on three singles and a double by George Stover. Roger Honeycutt's clutch single in the ninth . inning brought home the winning .run for Carolina in a hard fought, game. The Tar Heels had evened the second game with two runs in the 7th on a double by Johnny Burgwyn and single by Car son Oldham and Alton Pons. In the ninth, Oldham walked and went to second on a fielder's choice. Hon eycutt slammed a booming single to bring him home. Dave Floyd relieved starter Ben Harding in the 7th after Rollins had gone ahead 4-2 and with two men on base. He worked out of trouble and pitched well the rest of the way. Cincy Pitching Better By JACK HAND TAMPA, Fla. JP-C;incinnati lives and dies by the -home run. The Red- eg thumpers knock the ball out of the park. Then the enemy sluggers blast off. That sort of free trading often winds up in scores like 13-10 ana 10-8 and bitter-frustration for a pitching staff,ta,say nothing of a manager. General Magep Gabe Paul de cided to do something about it after watching' Cincinnati trundle home fourth in 1957, beaten 15 lengths. Gabe sacrificed some of his power by trading-Wallfv Post to Philadel phia. In retuWhe got Harvey Had dix, a curming left-lefthander. Bob Purkey was snared from Pittsburgh and the veteran Bill Wight from Baltimore. A careful gleaning of the farm crop brought an assortment of rookies. Willard Schmidt and two other young right handers were acquired from St. Louis. 1 AA ABOUT THE 1 W dHOTEL NEW Y0RKEH? inverts . , 1 1 r I 0J mm 5IANS ft RATES 1 3H8 1 SATE J COLLEGIANS COLLET ATE SINGLE ooueic . COIL 161 ATE ACROSS OM CASH STA.TIr Free Delivery Yji Phone 9 8781 As far back as 1943, Robinson made a practice of learning his lessons well from his rare defeats. Sugar Hay had a record of 40 con secutive victories marred by 1 10 round loss to Jake La Motta. Rob inson" avenged that first defeat of his career a few weeks later with a 10-round verdict over Jake. Second Game ROLLINS ab Toledo, If - 4 Softball Clinic The Intramural Department has announced that its annual clinic for intramural softball of ficials will be held Monday and Tuesday afternoons at 4 o'clock in room 301 -A Woollen Gym. Anyone interested in officiat ing intramural softball is invited by the department to attend. The clinic is designed to orient officials with Carolina intramu ral rules. The officials will be paid for each game they work. THE PATIO PRESENTS JAZZ 2:30 - 5:30 The University of North Carolina Sc hool of Pharmacy was admitted to membership in the American As sociation of College of Pharmacy in 1917. Willis, cf Goudette, c Strange, c Cortese, 2b Brown, ss Ficy'd. rf Johnson, 3b Davis, p Div'c'tes. p Allen, p Totals NORTH CAROLINA Workman, 3b Oldham, 33b Temple, If Pons, If Nester, lb Bryson, lb Honeycutt, ss . . Baldwin, c Griffin, cf Santzing, rf Craver, 2b Floyd, p B'gwyn, rf-cf . .. Harding, p K'patrick. 3b a-Johnson Totals 3 4 0 4 5 3 3 4 0 0 30 ab 2 1 2 2 r 0 1 0 0 2 1 0 0 0 0 0 4 r 1 2 0 1 h rbi 1 0 1 0 1 3 0 1 0 0 0 7 Meet Your Friends AT CHAPEL HILL'S NEWEST AND MOST UNIQUE RESTAURANT AFTER THE GAME Authentic Ranch Breakfast That Every Student Can Afford CHUCK WAGON RESTAURANT Open 7 Days A Week 7 A.M.-2:30 4:30 P.M.-l 1 P.M. YOU DON'T TYPE? V -:Va1L --- Learn Now! Join Our 1 Typewriting Class. - , - -1:30-2:30 March 24 - May 15 Office Hours v .V': "'''W"' K-M ,1:30-4:30 '; (time oufof Spring vacation) .MonThors.' : : - , ; l.? 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 22, 1958, edition 1
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