Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 29, 1962, edition 1 / Page 4
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r i I """"I Yale eel o nine :''f 96 .bs By ED DUPEEE DTH Sports Editor North Carolina's baseball team outhit Yale's visiting Bulldogs, 11- 7, yesterday, but 11 walks helped the Ivy Leaguers outscore the Tar Heels, 9-6. .The loss was the first home game for Coach Walt Rabb's men and evened their record at 2-2. UNC's Paul Swing was the big man at. the plate, collecting four hits in five times at bat "P. W." also stole a base and scored two of the Tar Heels runs. A five-run eighth inning broke win to the Bulldogs who are on a; southern tour in the state. The dis - astrous eighth opened when ruo; Carpenter, son of Bob Carpenter, the owner of the Philadelphia Phil lies, was hit by reliever Bobby Cox's pitch. Carpenter was forced at second on a grounder hit by Mike Halloran, but a throwing er ror committed by Tar Heel short stop Jim Speight put Halloran on second. Chris Clark singled and advanced Halloran to third. UNC second baseman Swing then made a spark ling play on Ed.Kaake's grounder, but threw the ball away trying to force Clark at second. Halloran scored and Clark went to third. Bruce Warner drew a free pass and a walk to Tom Petke forced in the second run. The big : blow of the inning was a two-run . double by Tim O'Con nell, pinch hitting for Chuck Burr. Larry.. Jenkins had relieved Cox with a 3-1 count on' Burr, but Yale coach Ethan Allen sent O'Connell bo the COOLEST Just Arrived Short Sleeve . ires's Shirts Traditional Ivy Blue - Olive - Yellow Snap - Tabs Stripes Solids1 J The HOB of Cliapcl Hill 103 E. Franklin St. Phone 942-1252 0 D D D D D D 0 - 1 i PS ( r' Inn, nl Z 23 p" ti'""i lU SMS apHH The LP J L Albums if zJ On the Following Labels: HGA Victor, Gapitol, LIGL Angel $4 LP's-$2.39, $5 LP's-$2,99, $6LP's-$3.59 Note: 1 coupon required for each LP " AH Oilier Labels . . Our usual 25 0 Coupon Expires Sat., C3 ES3 to the plate and he responded with a base knock through the middle of the diamond. Jenkins walked Jerry Slack and sophomore Andy Billesdon came on to pitch for UNC. The final Yale run of the afternoon crossed the plate when Billesdon walked Carpenter with the bases loaded. Carpenter with two for two, two walks, and the free pass when he was hit on the elbow by Cox was the leading Yale hitter. His hits were a run-producing double in homer to left center in the fifth. m -TT- . 1 il. 1 1 T ' t, , xti ij ul ' i - f - W1"" M?i 7 i v His belt tied the score at 4-4 be fore the roof caved in on Rabb's men. Bob Wacker's wildness gave the Eli a 2-0 lead in the opening in ning. A single by Halloran was sandwiched between four- walks, the last one being a free pass to Kaake with the bases loaded. Carpenter's double in the third I A- . CRACK! Larry Neal finished his swing that sent .the ball over the left field fence in Wednesday's baseball game with Yale. Neal's homer tied the score at 4-4, but Yale erupted for five runs in the eighth inning. Photo by James Wallace., -CLASSIFIED ADS YOUNG M.D. AND FAMILY wish to rent 2 or 3 bedroom home or apartment. Preferably unfur nished. Chapel Hill vicinity. June possession. Write E. Dean, co Advertising, Box 1080, Chapel Hill. FOR SALE: 1959 RENAULT DAU phine, clean, good condition, $600. Call 942-2609 after 6 P.M. "THERE IS A SIGNIFICANT DIF ference between life insurance companies." Arthur DeBerry, Jr., C.L.U. Telephone 942-6966. Mh3 Cwdl3 KSSSf Imm&S 3 CSI3 UJelcome I a TL!. to fl inis uoupoii 1 I 0 Cor. Church & Parrish Sts. Downtown Durham 0! i 0 D OFF Regular or Stereo Off March 31, 6:00 p.m. E3 E3S SSl'tsa tJf made it 3-0, and his four-bagger in the fifth pushed it to a four-run lead. Held to two hits by Yale Starter Bob Kelly, the homestanders woke up in the fifth and narrowed the score to 4-3. A walk to UNC catch er Wendell Brande and Swing's ground rule double to deep center was followed by Buddy Tilden's single which scored both runners Heyward Hull's single sent Tilden Home Behind 9-4 the Heels made an ef fort in the eighth, but their rally I fell short by' three runs. Jim I Speight s sacrifice fly scoring Swing and Hull s triple to center SCOring Tilden were the big blows. Cox was the losing pitcher, mak ing his record now 1-1. Reliever Tom Petke gained the win for the visitors. Halloran had two hits for Yale, Neal and Hull collected a pair each for UNC. The UNC baseballers rest today and then meet Virginia Tech of the Southern Conference in a pair of contests on Friday and Saturday Game time at Emerson Stadium will be 3 p.m. - x4 - r4 Neyland Dies, Now Legend NEW ORLEANS (UPI) Brig. Gen. Robert Reese Neyland, the all-time Army athlete who turned the University of Tennessee into a training academy for the na tion's top football coaches, died in a hospital here Wednesday. .The,70-year-old Texan had been a, patient . at Ochsner Foundation Hospital since Jan. 14, suffering from a variety of. illnesses con tracted during a colorful military career. He " died at 11:30 a.m. EST a few hours after he lapsed into a coma. His " failing ' health had forced Neyland to give up the head foot ball coaching job after his big Tennessee team lost to Texas in the 1952 Cotton Bowl. He often joked that even though he may have been America's winningest coach, he had the poorest bowl record in the business. He became athletic director and later picked Bowden Wyatt, the captain of , his 1938 unbeaten, un- f v v" m .'KXw'' ta I I 1 I .T-7-r Yi & Daily Tar -4 .-. . - By CURRY KIRKPATRICK Bob Hart is a young man who gets places in a hurry. The 5-9, 150 pound junior, chosen yesterday as the seventh DTH Athlete of the Week, ' put on a tremendous indi vidual show last Saturday in lead ing North Carolina's track team to a 99-37 romp over Clemson. Hart took both the 220 and 440 yard races and anchored the win ning 440 and mile-relay teams in the performance that earned him this week's honor. Before moving to High Point, N. C, his present home, Bob Hart lived and attended school in Fay etteville. As a junior at Fayetteville High School, Hart was first intro duced to foot racing by a former Carolina ACC half-mile champ, Boyd Newnam. Newnam, a chem istry teacher at the school, taught Bob the first fundamentals of the 220 and 440 and Hart immediately caught the "fever" for running, j "Actually, I like tennis and of course it's a little more fun than track," Hart says, "but once you tied Orange Bowl team as head coach. At one time in his career there were 90 Neyland-trained coaches in the business. "General Neyland now becomes a legend," Wyatt said after hear ing of his death. "To those who knew him best, he was a man of great personal dignity and quiet strength whose devotion to duty and dedication to high ideals was a constant inspiration." Beefeaters' Havan . just for TUESDAY and THURSDAY Hare Ms? sfes n W8S? wjr- m 4$hw ajww A-yr.:"WAe rcvi. ivsi-r vs?o. k?k.k:j- -S5rc2i&r: &Z?.-Y-rt-Z J- .. . . AV RXOUM INK Ss9 PM tfe0 If she had only known about Bclk's great . . SPOB O ONE GROUP O Batik Prints O India Madras 88 Just Another Every Day COAT . Heel Athlete Of The Week Bob Hart get in your blood, it's there to stay." Running was indeed "there to stay" for Bob Hart. On entering Carolina in the fall of , 1959, the youngster was taken in hand by track coaches Dale Ranson aAnd Joe Hilton and further instructed in the art of running. Last year, Bob made his presence felt on Hanson's varsity squad but mainly as a sprinter in the 100 and 220. Then, at the end of the spring, competing in the Carolina's AAU, Hart ran the first individual 440 of his college career. Though fin ishing third, the sandy-haired run ner set a school record of 47.7 sec onds. Hart's best time for the shorter 220 was recorded in the Clemson meet when he covered the distance in 21.5. This is just five tenths of a second slower than the UNC record and Bob hopes he can match that next year. "I don't think I can hit twenty one flat this year in the 220 but I like to set goals for myself and this spring I want to break 47 sec onds in the 440." This would be a truly remarkable feat for a boy with only two years real experience. Ranson, who has been handling track here for over twenty years, has this to say about his star pupil. "It's hard to tell whether Bobby is better at the 600 or 440. (Hart runs the 600-yard distance in the winter indoor season and three weeks ago, won the ACC Indoor tHxt JW Ml ONE GROUP O Blue Denim O Seersucker Bargain Buy at Bclk's SPECIAL of Chapel Hill 'Ar il 1 Gaines 600 with a time of 1:13.) He has had such a short "period in which to develop so we don't know where he is strongest. But he has made a vast improvement and has come along like a 'house-of fire' in the last year." ' - " Hart himself prefers the 440 since he thinks he does it the best. Bob also would rather run outdoors than in because as fie 'puts it, "The only disadvantage . outdoors is oc casionally the wind may act up against you." - ' Hart, a social studies major who plans to" go into teaching; credits Wayne Bishop with helping him the most in his training pursuits. Bishop, Tar Heel track captain in 1959 and now a freshman in the UNC law school, worked with Bob all last year and ' has instructed Hart in the methods 'of '.'repeated short interval training. This . is the same training pro cedure that Hungarian Mihaly Igloi prescribes for his Los Angeles Track Club runners, among whom is one Jim Beatty, former UNC great and the only man to run an indoor mile under four minutes. The procedure consists of many sprints and longer runs interspers ed with jogs around the track Hart practiced this routine all last fall and it has certainly paid off for the articulate-speaking 20-year-old. When asked how Bob compared with his former Carolina 440 men, coach Ranson didn't hesitate, "He's got the school record. What more can you say?" Not much. " i-c- i J taoe&tati&ieDa&ftzlo Mteoertheles&eaffiea GsSamsIung impact end Gszzxe.$2zi8 ta IS Town & Campus I A 1 Page Four Cricket Club Chirps Past State Easily North Carolina defeated N. C. State, 143-70, in the first cricket match of the 1962 season. Lead ing the UNC scorers were Graham Milne, from England, with 45. points, and Australian Dave Buck-: ingham with 44. Englishman Peter Brown and; Kashinath Patil of India also reached double figures. The bowlers responsible for put ting State out were Milne two men out, Somesh Dasgupta two, K. B. Deshpande two, Marcus Ollington two, Buckingham one, Monogram Club Meets Tonight Monogram Club President Joe Davies urges all Club members to attend the meeting at 7:30 to night in the Club Room of Wool len Gym. The meeting is import ant as tickets to be sold for the Alumni football game on April 7 will be handed out. HELP WAHTED GRANT'S NEW STORE in East Gate Shopping Center is now taking applica tions for department managers and sales personnel. We are par ticularly interested in wives of graduate stu dents available full time for a period of not less than a year. Apply at the store Monday thru Saturday, 9-5. VV. T. GRANT GO. WHATEVER THE C AF' mmW H i ll Q JJtUJ 1 f ; L with GAME GOOD TASTE EVEnYUJHnjZl Whatever the occasion ... the perfect refreshment is the beer with the friendly flavor, Miller High Life. Whether you're bowling or having a friendly game of cards with the boys add to your pleasure with Miller High Life. It tastes so very good Brewed Only in Milwaukee . . . Naturally! The Champagne of Bottle Beer MILLER BREWING COMPANY; Thursday, March 29, 1962 and Frank Fish one. Das Gupta is from India. Fish from England, Ollington from Aus tralia and team captain Wilham Warren from New Zealand, giving the team quite an international flavor. Matches will be played regularly fhrnush the summer between UNC, State, and Duke. Some of the teams will combine and take trips to Washington and Savannah, Ga., to play other crick et teams. Hilton's 02 Tapered Tradiiionals Milton's most closely guarded secret can now be told. You can discard all your present button-downs and make way for added comfort, a roll collar that is absolutely perfect, prop er body taper, plus a longer and thinner half sleeve all with im peccable single needle tailoring. Batiste oxford in white $5.50; batiste oxford in yarn dyed blue, maize, olive beige or gol den beige $5.95. At Milton's you'll find the larg est array of pure Old School Traditional with a dedicated dif ference. Clothing Cupboard Downtown Chapel mil OCCASION... f3 1 1 A v t : ' ' 3 . Iiri yUijlalnl 1 y HH J : - - n.- , im A H
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 29, 1962, edition 1
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