Sunday, March 10, 196S Are Two Good Halves Fo on n c .gMDJie r THE DAILY TAB HEEL ! I I I I I I I vri UNCs Charlie Scott ' ! Baseball. By OWEN DAVIS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff Baseball season starts in a little over a week (March 16) but Coach Walter Rabb still doesn't have his pitching rota- YOUR MENU WEEK OF MARCH 11th i OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Luncheon Specials $1.09 MONDAY Braised Beef Tips 2 veg soup salad rolls TUESDAY Va BBQ Chicken 2 vegx-soup salad rolls YEDNESDAY Roast Leg of Lamb WM1NT JELLY 2 Veg, Soup, Salad, Rolls THURSDAY Bavarian Beef on Pumpernickel Soup & Salad FRIDAY Chopped Sirloin 2 Veg., Soup, Salad, Rolls OR i Filet of Flounder j 2 Veg, Soup, Salad, Rolls ! NIGHT SPECIAL 7:30-9:C3 MONDAY Eyo Round Steak 2 Vegetables Salad Bread Iced Tea or Coffee $1.29 r TUESDAY I j Spaghetti j ALL YOU CAN EAT I I Salad Bread I I feed tea or coffee I I 1.29 j WEDNESDAY I Vx Bar-B-Q j I ; Chicken j j wsalad & bread tea or coffee I $1.23 I J THURSDAY j I Pizza Special j Plain or Pepperonl I Vi Prico j 104 Y. Franklin St I j CLIP ME OUT I ! ;-J fcOL ' "T, l?Hn 12 Passes Off To Joe Brown ... In Friday's 82-79 Victory Over South Carolina It Begins At Carolina Soon But Starting Pitchers Aren't Set Yet o o tion established. "The weather hasn't been good enough for our pitchers to get much work," Rabb said. "We have five or six boys whom I think can pitch good college baseball." Carolina has two starters, Tom Buskey and John Yancey, returning from last year's good staff plus sophomore left hander David Lemonds who was undefeated as a freshman. But the Heels lost Garry Hill (8-0, 0.70 earned run average) and Mike Flanagan (49 strikeouts in 45 innings) from the 1967 team to the pro fessional ranks. . . Last ,season the UNC staff ' had a very low 1.66 ERA. ' Besides Buskey, Yancey and Lemonds, Carolina has southpaw John Richards and Chip Stone from last year. Cy Sitterson, Robert Rhodes and Barry Drill are others who will be vying for positions in the rotation. "The whole staff has thrown well so far," Rabb said. "Their control has been okay but we need to give them some play situations to work on. "They also need more work on curve and off-speed pit ches." The loss of Hill and Flanagaii will be felt when the season begins, but Rabb thinks Past Masters Champs Tab Jacobs For '68 Tourney AUGUSTA Georgia (UPI) Tommy Jacobs, first runner-up in a three-way playoff with winner Jack Nicklaus and last year's cham pion Gay Brewer in 1966, Saturday was selected by past tournament champions to play in the 1968 Masters golf tournament. The 33-year-old Jacobs, a sevem-time Masters partici- In the past, only four such pant, failed to win one of the golfers won last-minute in automatic berths to the highly vitations to play at Augusta. REYNOLDS COLISEUM N. C. STATE CAMPUS RALEIGH WWli jh u cNWvv;'.v;'x-K-:v.v.v.y:-:.:.:.:.y, SEE WKIX I 1 s r& Ai . .-. :-:.: v.v.v.v.wv. TROTTERS AT HALF-TIME. TICKETS: RESERVED $3:50; GENERAL ADMISSION $3.00 ON SALE: COLISEUM BOX OFFICE; THIEM'S RECORD SHOP, PENNEY'S LAY-AWAY DEPT. IN CAMERON VILLAGE; THE RECORD BAR IN RALEIGH, DURHAM AND CHAPEL HILL. ft V r . -1 II 1 I , TOM BUSKEY v his staff is strong enough to compensate. "We'll just have to see how well we can fill the gap, but I feel we can do it." "We mainly need to give our pitchers some runs. The defense behind them is good, but our offense will be the problem. "The pitching staff is ahead of the rest of the club right now but that's normal. It takes a little longer for the others to adjust." Lemonds and Buskey are probably the two ace pitchers although Rabb plans to give the whole staff an early shot at selective golf classic. Selection of six more U.S. professionals, nominated by the PGA on the basis of an established point system, will be made immediately after the April 7 close of the Greater Greensboro Open, the Sunday before the April 11-14 Masters beinsg. T0M0RR0V NITE 8:00 P.M. l i t f ZlUr.tZ OF 8ASKST8AUL" flus '::.:.2t: mo gram MUSIC MEN PLAY THE GLOBE Bv OWEN DAVIS of The Daily Tar Heel Staff CHARLOTTE It remains to be seen whether North Carolina can put together two good halves of basketball. Friday's South Carolina game showed once again that the Tar Heels can look like one of the best teams in the coun try one minute and then resemble a very ordinary out fit the next. UNC shot over 51 per cent from the field in the first half and had a 13 point lead at one time. Then the Heels slumped to a 30 per cent mark in the se cond period and had to fight for their lives to win in overtime. Against South Carolina iSi Chapel Hill, Utah in the Far West Classic and Virginia in Charlottesville, Carolina was fabulous in one half and poor in the other. A full 40 minutes of excellent play will be required in tourna ment competition. Only in the Kentucky encounter have the Heels come close to that. ' It was good to see both Dickie Grubar and Gerald Tut tle in the heroes' holes against USC. Grubar had not scored well for most of the season and hit less than 40 per cent of his shots, averaging but seven points a game. But in the last four games, the Schenectady, MX 1 " V V I ' i w iTnrnnilllil nnnniH an irifcai ,.iii-inr-. i.l n fit it WALTER RABB starting jobs. "The test won't come until we face outside comDetition." he said. "We haven't played enough intrasauad games to get a good line on our person nel." Rabb rates Buskey, who had a 3-3 record and 1.28 ERA last year, as a "good sinkerball pit cher. His strength is that he keeps the ball low. "He usually has good control and makes the hitters work to get on base," Lemonds has "both a good curve and good fastball," ac cording to his coach. "He has good enough control," he' said. Yancey, 3-1 and 2.25 ERA in 1967, is regarded as one of the stronger throwers on the team. "His fast ball moves well if he keeps it down." Rabb said. "His fast ball is adequate." McRae, the other pitcher who has started on several oc casions, has a good sinker. Rabb said Stone and Rhodes both have good curves but must improve their control. Rhodes will probably be used primarily in the bullpen since he was a relief pitcher in high school and American Legion play. A MUST FOR OUTDOOR SPORTSMEN! an (PATENT PENDING) MADE OF SPECIAL BRIGHT YELLOW FLAME RESISTANT MATERIAL. INS-TENT SHELTER IS DESIGNED ESPECIALLY FOR HUNTERS, FISHERMEN, CAMPERS, MOUNTAIN CLIMBERS, EMERGENCY SURVIVAL SHELTER. X OUT 14 Si. A full on"vino K..4- -Sa folds to pocket size. Weieh less than one pound. Includes Fast and easy to assemble. A Straight Thru Ventilation Safety Air Vent Sealed Floor 151 East BankAmericard and Consistency .Y- junior has taken aim for the basket and averaged 17 points a contest and, given Carolina needed help outside. UXC has lacked a consistent outside punch this season, and if Grubar continues his recent hot hand Carolina will be a much more formidable tourna ment foe. Tuttle has been used mainly to direct the four corners of fense. He has done little scor ing. The 6-0 guard had a bad Eastern Playoff s Cats, Colui y" Move To Regionals COLLEGE PARK, MD. (UPI)-Da vidson wrested the lead from St. John's of New York late in the game on a pair of quick baskets by sophomore- Mike Maloy and defeated the Redmen 79-70 in first round ac tion of the NCAA Eastern Regional Playoffs Saturday. , Earlier, sophomore Heyward Dotson poured in 32 points in leading Columbia past Lasalle 83-69 before a sellout crowd of 12,850. The victories movd Davidson and Columbia to the Eastern Regional Tournament next weekend at Raleigh. His team trailing 68-67 with 5:14 to go, Maloy hit for two baskets to send Davidson ahead for keeps. Using stalling tactics, the Wildcats built on the margin with Doug Cook scoring six points as the Redmen became desperate for the ball. It marked the thirteenth con secutive victory for Davidson, champion of the Southern Conference. Maloy, the first Negro to play at Davidson School, led the Wildcats with 23 points, 16 of them in the first half when Davidson took a six point lead. The sophomore star from New York City, grew up almost next door to St. John's. St. John's kept the contest in range and for a few moments wiped out the Davidson edge in the second half on the shooting of junior guard John Warren, who wound up with 24 "points, high for the game,t i The first 12 minutes of the game, a see-saw battle, neither team was able to gain a sizeable advantage. But at that point, big Rodney Knowles hit ior nve quick points tor tne wildcats as Jjaviason took a 40-34 lead into the dressing room at half time. Sophomore Heyward Dotson poured in 32 timely points Saturday to carry Columbia over Lasalle. Dotson overshadowed his ftT'l I.J V. 1 m 25c 25c HAPPY HOURS AT THE CAVE 2-5 MON.-SAT. For Coeds Specials on Food for Everyone pnir IliLC rope. tt 1 a 7 1 . "'B'"'l,k&ii. "S i J r.i V $350 Water-Proof A Rugged Durability A Reinforced Stake Holes Wfe0&30p& Franklin piiNS Charge Plan Lacking In game against USC in Chapel Hill and did not play at Duke. He had a poor second half shooting Friday when South Carolina left him free. But in overtime, he came through. He came up with a nifty steal and then hit two pressure-packed free throws to ice the victory. The Coliseum was astir dur ing and after the State-Duke slowdown. Naturally Blue ibia Win; fellow sophomore star, Jim McMillian, in the opening con test as Columbia led all the way. He not only responded with scoring bursts whenever LaSalle showed signs of catching up, but his all-court play under both backboards kept the Lions in command throughout. After only five rninutes of seven quick points to hike the piajr, uuisun naa pourea in Lions to a 19-9 marein over the champions of the Mid-Atlantic Conference. The . advantage rose to 16 points at one stage in the first nan until LaSalle, sparked by Larry Cannon, cut the edge to 40-33. But McMillian and Dotson responded with two closing buckets to build the half time lead to 45-34. At that point Dotson had con-' tributed 20 points and led the Lions in rebounding. vm HARRY SALTZMAN presents , MICHAEL CA1NE KALMALDEN COLOR byDeLuxe 3 PANAVIS10N If I w-Sb. 4i X 11 fm . iNlTEm II m THE DEAN Interviews and Filmed Highlights of UNC Dasketball with Bill Curris Sundays 1:88 P.U. nnnn irri Brought mm Si p V UK. USC Game Devil partisans criticised Stale Coach Norm Sloan's tactics. But Wolfpack fans considered him a genius. Sloan won with the stall, so it must be regarded as good strategy. The Wolfpack could not compete with Duke un derneath with big Mike Lewis, Steve Vandenberg and Joe Kennedy shutiing out the Featuring: Sports Proven For Consistent Dependability COMING WED., MARCH 13 DUKE INDOOR STADIUM The Artists Series Presents EUGENE ORMANDY, Music Director The Philadelphia Orchestra for more than five decades has been singled out by critics and audiences alike as one of the greatest orchestras in the world. Under Eugene Ormandy, its Music Director for more than thirty years, the Orchestra has won the hearts of countless millions of music lovers and grown to become what Harold C Schonberg, chief music critic of the New York Times describes as perhaps "the greatest virtuoso orchestra of all time." Program MOZART Syroj1 No. 35 jnQ. major, K. 385 t - - - - - - ---- (Haffner) CAS ELLA Paganiniana ROUSSEL "Bacchus et Ariane," Ballet Suite No. 2, Op. 43 RACHMANINOFF Symphony No. 3 in A minor, Reserved seats: $3.00, $2.53, $2X0; Unreserved seats: $1X3 On sale: Page Box Office Duke Station (enclose a Presents onnnl k SMITH : V Today's show features color highlights of the ACC Tournament Action to you by: mnnnn own p layup. This was a case in which the best team, Duke, did not win, but the superior coaching job of Sloan and sure ballhandling by the Wolfpack were the difference. Vic Bubas blew it was right he CONVERSE Basketball Shoes High or-Low Tops Only 08.95 C SSUJTCffO Op. 44 or Phone 634-4059 or write Box KM, self-addressed, stamped envelop). SHOW em .DQfnurja a.

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