Friday, March 23. 1979 The Daily Tar Hesl 7
Atkinson hits 2 homers
' Heels 'take wild me irom Ohio- 9
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Jim Atkinson hits second homer of the day
...sixth-inning blast put Heels up 7-1
By GEORGE BENEDICT
Staff Writer
It was a helluva game.
For the record, Carolina downed Ohio
University 9-8 Thursday afternoon in
Boshamer Stadium in 10 innings. Pinch
runner Steve Streater scored the winning
run off a shot up the middle by senior
second baseman Roy Clark.
There will be many extra notes in the
stat-sheet margins after this one, though.
It was not your normal laid-back, drink-a-brew,
get-a-tan baseball game.
The early innings were all Carolina.
After a scoreless first inning, the Tar
Heels took a 1-0 lead in the second inning
when P.J. Gay hit a double over second
base to score Brad Lloyd. The Bobcats
got hits in the third and fourth innings but
never seriously challenged UNC.
Carolina was still ahead 1-0. going into
the fifth inning when UNC senior Jim
Atkinson went on a hitting rampage. In
the fifth, and again in the sixth, the third
baseman knocked home runs over the
right field fence, with a man on base both
times.
Atkinson now has five home runs for
the season and moves up to second
among all-time home run hitters at
Carolina.
Carolina scored twice more in the fifth.
Ohio catcher Gary Grippa dropped an
infield fly by Greg Robinson, which
allowed Scott Bradley to score from
third. Robinson scored later, coming
home off several bad throws by the
Bobcat infield.
Ohio scored once in the sixth, but the
Tar Heels ran up two more on Atkinson's
second homer. With a 7-1 lead after seven
innings, UNC head coach Mike Roberts
was grinning broadly, and fans began to
stagger out of the grandstand.
Then came an eighth inning the Heels
would probably just as soon forget. The
Bobcats sent 10 batters to the plate,
nabbed eight hits and scored seven runs
to go on top 8-7.
Most of the runs were unearned,
coming off miscues by UNC. The big
blow, though, was a home run by left
fielder Rick Higdon with two men on
base.
The smiles suddenly switched dugouts,
but not for long. In the bottom of the
eighth came a call Ohio yill remember for
a long time
With one out and Atkinson on first and
pinch runner Byron Spooner on third,
Clark hit a fly ball to right field with both
Tar Heels off and running. Bobcat right
fielder Mike Echstenkamper caught the
Clark fly for the second out, then threw to
first to nail Atkinson for the third out.
In the meantime, however, Spooner
had returned to tag third, then dashed
home to cross the plate with the tying run
before Atkinson was called out at first. In
essence Spooner stole home.
Needless to say, the Ohio team was
more than a bit upset by the call. But,
their emotions got the better of them.
After a futile argument, the Ohio coach
tried to hit umpire Rusty Herring, had to
be wrestled to the ground by his own
players and was ejected, along with third
baseman Scott Kuvinka.
The Tar Heels held Ohio in the top of
the 1 0th, then ended the game with
Streater scoring off the Clark hit.
Bill Musser. relieving starter Blaine
Smith in the eighth inning, got the win for
Carolina. Mark Persson went the
distance for the Bobcats.
Carolina, now 12-8, travels today for a
3 p.m. game at Davidson. They return to
Boshamer Saturday and Sunday for two
games against East Tennessee State. Both
games start at 3 p.m.
Florida leads
Furman golf;
Carolina 7th
GREENVILLE, S.C. (AP) The
Florida golf team shot a 28 1 to lead a field
of 24 teams from the Southeast in the first
round of the Furman Intercollegiate Golf
Tournament Thursday.
Carolina is in a three-way tie for
seventh with Wake Forest and Maryland
at 294.
Defending champion Clemson is in
second with 287, and Georgia finished the
round with 289 for third.
Tied for fourth are Georgia Southern
and Louisiana State. Memphis State is
sixth with 293.
The 54-hole tournament continues
today and Saturday.
Prep playfcrs in
Ail-American game
Two players who have made verbal
commitments to play basketball at
Carolina next year will be among 20 of
the top high school stars playing in the
McDonald's All-American game at 8
tonight in Charlotte Coliseum.
The two are James Worthy, the
standout forward from Ashbrook High
in Gastonia, and Jimmy Braddock, a high
scoring guard from Chattanooga, Tenn.
Dominique Wilkins, from
Washington, is the state's other player in
the game. Wilkins last week made a
verbal commitment to play for Georgia.
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THE Daily Crooorjcrd by A.J. Santera
ACROSS
1 Custom
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Cerberus
10 Guevara
13 Cruise
island
14 Italian
port '
15 Washing
item
16 Operatic
parts
18 Horse's
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19 Chinese
river
20 Places
21 Japanese
religion
23 Directed
toward
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26 Stimulate
23 Impair
29 Elevator,
in England
30 Remain
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35 Swears (to)
37 Spend too
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40 Hindu fire
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1979 by Chicago Tribune-N.Y. News Synd. Inc.
All Rights Reserved
32379
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' SAT. 10 A.M. 6 P.M.
"WHY DO THE HEATHEN RAGE?
Psalms 2:1 and Acts 4:25
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Why do we have riots? Who is responsible? Read Isaiah
3:10.11: "Say ye to the righteous, that it shall be well with
them . . . Woe unto the wicked! It shall be ill with him for the
reward of his hands shall be given him.
THE VOICE OF RETRIBUTION: "FOR I THE LORD THY
GOD AM A JEALOUS GOD, VISITING THE INIQUITY OF
THE FATHERS UPON THE CHILDREN UNTO THE THIRD
AND FOURTH GENERATION OF THEM THAT HATE ME;
AND SHOWING MERCY UNTO THOUSANDS OF THEM
THAT LOVE ME AND KEEP MY COMMANDMENTS."
Part of the Second Commandment, Exodus 20:5,6.
History makes some singular developments in respect to
the retributive Justice of God. Nations, communities,
families, individuals, furnish fearful illustrations that "the
wicked is snared In the work of his own hand," and that "the
way of the transgressor is hard!" Wrong doing, oppression,
crime, are, by no means reserved only for a future
retribution. They draw after them an almost certain
retribution in this world. "There is no peace to the wicked,
saith my God!" He may seem to prosper riches may in
create he may revel in pleasures, and shine in honors, and
seem to have all that heart can wish; yet there is a canker
worm somewhere gnawing at the very vitals of happiness
a blight somewhere upon all that he possesses. History beers
at least an Incidental yet decisive testimony on this point
Perilous It Is Indeed to a man's well being In this Ufa to
his peace, his reputation, his best Interest to do wrong.
Possibly the wrong doer may not suffer himself, yet most
certainly his children, and his children's children will pay the
penalty of his misdeeds. Man Is undoubtedly so constituted,
whether regard be had to his physical, social, Intellectual,
and moral nature, as to make him a happy being. The right,
the unperverted use of all his powers and susceptibilities
would not fail to secure to him a high and continual state of
earthly happiness and prosperity.
And not only is the human machine itself so fitted up as to
accomplish such an end, but the whole external world, the
theater in which man has to live, act, and enjoy, is fitted up in
beautiful harmony with the same benevolent end. Every Jsr
of human happiness, every arrest or curtailment or ex
tinction of It, Is the fruit of transgression or perversion. The
violation of a natural law is as sure to be followed by
retribution as the violation of a Divine law. The history of in
dividuals, families, communities, nations, Is full of such
retributions!"
"Be sure your sin will find you out" Numbers 32:23.
"It shall not be well with the wicked." Eccleslastes 8:13.
P. O. BOX 405 DECATUR, GEORGIA 30031
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