6The Daily Tar HeelWednesday, April 18, 1984 Johnston returns to form after father's death She Hatly ar Ihtl By KIMBALL CROSSLEY Staff Writer "It's like losing the key to your treasure chest and you have to find a way to get back in." That's how North Carolina sophomore Cathy Johnston describes the loss of her father to a heart attack at age 60 and its subsequent effect on her golf career. Johnston was coming out of high school as the top ranked high school female golfer in the nation, but just days after graduating and two months after signing a letter of intent to attend UNC, Johnston's father died. He was not just a father to Johnston, but also her "best friend" and her private golf coach. "A day hasn't gone by since that I haven't thought about him," Johnston says. "And I haven't played a round of golf since without thinking about him." "Any time I ever played in a tourna ment all I wanted to do was win so I could come home and see him smiling. After his death, I didn't care much if T won or not." Johnston's father was not just a valuable aid in the area of inspiration, but in the area of perspiration as well. He was Arnold Palmer's coach at Wake Forest and was a Kill Devil Hills club pro who seemed to save his best advice for his youngest daughter. "He knew me so well," Johnston says. "He would immediately spot what I was doing wrong and tell me how to change it." Johnston's golf game suffered after her father's death. "I was scaied because he wasn't there to tell me what I was doing wrong," she says. "It was frustrating doing it on my own. "I thought maybe golf wasn't what I wanted to do. That I couldn't be as good without him. He used to tell me 'you can do it... you're the greatest.' After a while you begin to think maybe you're not." For the first year and a half without her father, Johnston shunned a private teacher, but still played on the UNC women's team. Baseball The top 20 college baseball teams, as selected by Scoreboard 1. Arizona State (34-13) 2. Southern Cal (37-12) 3. Texrs (42-9) QnltKoll 4. Oklahoma (30-5) U I I UCI 1 1 5. San Diego St. (46-12) 6. Fresno State (37-10) UNC 7, Liberty Baptist 2 7. Oklahoma St. (29-10) 8. Mississippi St. (28-9) Liberty Baptist 000 101 0 2 4 3 9. North Carolina (37-9) UNC 240 001 x 7 7 1 10. Cal St. Fullerton (42-15) 11. Texas A&M (33-8) Leading hitters: Liberty Baptist Van Engen 1-4, Ford 12. Tulane (34-8) 2-4 (3b); UNC Gray 3-4 (RBI). Faircloth 1-3 (2 RBIs, 13. Nebraska -(32-10) 2b). .14. Rice (32-8) WP Augusta. LP Bailey. 15. Stetson (37-6) 16. Pepperdine (32-12) UNC 4, Liberty Baptist 3 17. Hawaii ' (29-13) 18. Brigham Young (25-11) Liberty Baptist 201 000 0 3 5 3 19. Clemson (32-14) UNC 010 010 2 4 6 2 20. N. Carolina St. 3M5) Leading hitters: Liberty Baptist Van Engen 2-3, Byrne 2-3 (2b); UNC Holt 2-4 (3b), Powers 1-2 (RBI). WP Augusta (16-7). LP Bawalda 1 Records: Liberty Baptist 14-19; UNC 22-13 Calendar Today Lacrosse Wake The top 15 college lacrosse teams, as selected by the United States Intercollegiate Lacrosse Association: 1. Syracuse (10) 7-0 2. Johns Hopkins 7-0 3. North Carolina 6-2 4. Virginia 6-1 5. Army 6-1 6. Pennsylvania 7-1 7. Rutgers 5-1 8. Towson State 7-1 9. Mary land 4-3 10. Brown 6-3 11. Navy 5-4 12. Delaware 6-2 13. Massachusetts 2-2 14. Hofstra 5-3 15. Adelphi 5-3 BASEBALL at ACC tournament, 1 p.m.,. vs. Forest at Durham Athletic Park LACROSSE vs. Roanoke, 3 p.m. at Fetzer Field MEN'S and WOMEN'S TRACK in ACC championships. noon at Fetzer Field MEN'S TENNIS at Maryland, 1 p.m. Thursday BASEBALL at ACC tournament, TBA at Durham Athletic Park MEN'S and WOMEN'S TRACK in ACC championships, noon at Fetzer Field Friday BASEBALL at ACC tournament, TBA at Durham Athletic Park MEN'S GOLF at ACC tournament. No. 2 Course, Pinehurst WOMEN'S GOLF at ACC tournament, Durham MEN'S TENNIS at ACC tournament. College Park, Md. MEN'S and WOMEN'S TRACK in ACC championships, noon at Fetzer Field $L5 JFratrrnttrj Kmo ttjnpel Hill, 5JCC 27514 Hp tiit alleg a una a from ttjt mm Slaja 942-2171 Stye fortljole ,t-l rr- sS5S 11:30 am - 2 pm Cimch 5 mn - B pm Einnrr fiastmara. BUa and personal (Eljrcka Accepted Half-pound grmmo brrf steak S3. 45 ftaront &alad uittlj toppmg Hljttr meat raait-turkrg S3 .45 Jrtefi or Carbrquco Cbjckcn. Serf rips ouer rice ano an txtnufue selection of uegtables Winner of the Franklin Street Gourmet s Student's Choice Award ftrrutng students, faculty and townsfolk for ouer 40 gears, ttje Jorttjolr means good food at good prices, featuring bomrmade rolls baked datlg and a utidc selection of oegtables. Sbe Porthole's bomemade cook ing tastes so great, gau'd tbink it mas flam's. Bon't miss the specials. Specials Wed., Thurs., & Fri. Buy two toppings on our Garden Salad (GS) and get the next two free. ' v III! HM I ' 01. i J. Hi 2 X. :! date: April 19th time: 10:00-3:00 PLACE: STtldENT STORES nunnPFJOEns fj DMtion ot Carnation Company "I'm ten times worse now than I was ' two years ago," Johnston says matter-of-factly. Johnston, it seems, had forgotten all the times her father had told her to take in other coaches. "He used to say all the time, Tm not always going to be around'." Finally, eight months ago, Johnston took in another coach, and with him came a rebirth of her desire to be a pro fessional golfer. Johnston says that her two years at UNC helped her to make the decision. She calls it a growing period and a chance to get over what happened. "I realized that its not the end of the world," she says. "That you still haye to keep on going." Y "I always thought that I had to do it for him. I realized that I have to do it for myself. "I know I can be as good as I want to be. If I work. I plan to put more time into it." But that time may riot all be spent at UNC's Finley Golf Course. Johnston said she has not had the best working relationship with UNC coach Dot Gun nells. Johnston only says she doesn't know how longshe will remain at North Carolina, and if she had it to do all over again she's not so sure she would choose UNC. But she has made up her mind that the rest of her life will indeed revolve around golf, whether it's playing professionally, coaching, or digging weeds around the course. Ideally, Johnston would like to return to her form of just prior to her father's death, when she was a member of the PGA Junior Cup Team, and traveled the world competing in tournaments. She says now her inspiration comes from her mother, four older sisters, and an older brother, as well as from within. "I would love to be able to do it all over again," Johnston says. Maybe that's the newfound key to her treasure chest. BP Softball team sweeps two By MIKE SANDERS Staff Writer The North Carolina softball team swept both games of a doubleheader over Liberty Baptist Tuesday in Chapel Hill, 7-2 and 4-3, despite playing a role that would have made Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde proud. The first game was all UNC, with the Tar Heels scoring six of their seven runs in the first two innings and pitcher Virginia Augusta picking up 11 strikeouts. But in the second game the Tar Heels had to stage a dramatic seventh-inning comeback to defeat the Lady Flames. Jeanne Gray led off the first game for UNC with a single to center. Maria Powers then reached base on an error and, with two outs, designated hitter Susan Faircloth doubled in Gray and Powers with a shot to right-center. In the second inning, shortstop Candy Jarrell singled to left and advanced to third on a sacrifice bunt by Annie Loflin. Second baseman Suzie Everette followed with a bunt single to score Jarrell and ad vanced to third on Gray's second hit of the day, a double to right. Powers then singled up the middle to score Everette and advance Gray to third. A double steal followed, with Powers taking second and Gray coming home. An error on the cat cher's throw allowed Powers to reach third, and she came in on Kav Holt's 2 TERRIFIC FILMS groundout to short for the Tar Heels' fourth run of the inning. (. The Tar Heels then went hitless until the sixth, relying on good defense and Augusta's strong pitching to keep them in front. Augusta allowed only four hits in the game, and no more than one in any inning. The second game was a different story altogether, with the Lady Flames picking up two quick runs in the first inning off pitcher Marsha Brown and adding another in the third. The Tar Heels pick ed up one run in the second and another in the fifth, but didn't play as aggresively as they had in the opener. During the fifth, UNC head coach Susan Clark put Augusta back on the mound with two outs, and Augusta allowed only one hit through the final two and one-third innings. With the Tar Heels down 3-2 in the bottom of the seventh, Amy Spelman hit an infield single and advanced to second on a wild pitch. Lorae Roukema then singled to right to score Spelman and tie the game, and Holt followed with a shot through the shortstop's legs to allow Roukema to score the winning run. "We were fortunate to win the second game," Clark said. "We just weren't hit ting the ball." The Tar Heels are now 22-13 and play their final home game against Francis Marion Tuesday at 3 p.m. i, v-uJ '4 ."S''- -- r, " v h rrl - , ' i -'" " U '"'-"': " '" i ,S- '"""', '''If , , t , . -V .r"Jte JJy?.' - ''Mi - f f&'Xws ?';V't'';KU'',M 'ss -A '"'"' i "s - vy' i "i -"-y " U mi4mt?1m ' '-A ' "' tes'$'s$'. ' ?t,y,''.,i?iv,j ?s s ' ' v ' . . i?'' ' , J " i i s 'x' ' v- a , " , I g: Ss- sasZ' i v-s 4 V , - ' , " - ''?-'?,? ''v'zS' -- -- A's v - Wy.'wJ-y a ' ' ' ' " , ' " '' ' - " s v s 'a tt ' - ; ' ' 1 V s s j,s ' s . t I fifsi.4 ' ! DTHJamie Moncrief Cathy Johnston's father was her private coach and best friend HELD OVER! "A HILARIOUS TRAGEDY. CONTI'S IS A RICH, STRANGE CHARACTER I WON'T EVER FORGET!" -Hal Crowther, THE SPECTATOR f RLMED IN NORTH CAROLINA A VARSITY EXCLUSIVE 3:00 5 OO 7:00 9:10 SHE coiiBDy snAsn OF THIS YBAE! TOM HANKS DARYL HANNAH EUGENE LEVY JOHN CANDY A a If I IW 1 5:00 U 7:15 soay 1 CHINESE AND SEAFOOD RESTAURANT : . DOOR TO DOOR DELIVERY AND CATERING SERVICE AVAILABLE Lunch Dinner 2 meals - NO CHARGE 1 meal - 50t u v' ..J(J J 3 meals - NO CHARGE 2 meals - 50t 1 meal - $1.00 Take an exam study break call in for delivery or come by! ALL ABC Permits Major Credit Cards Accepted (919) 942-0006 Daily Luncheon is from $2.90 103A E. Main Street Across from NCNB Bank Carrboro, N.C. 27510 on "J" and "C" Busline Luncheons Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2:15 Sun. 12:00-2:30 Dinners Sun. -Thurs. 5:00-9:30 Fri.-Sat. 5:00-10:30 I ' mammmoaam Ml rnrji) gsa& gag GZEsO IT'S GETTING LATE... P0 YOU MINP IF I CALL MY BROTHER? ( NO, 60 RIGhA LINUS!!! SOMEHOW, I THOUGHT YOU MEANT VONTHE PHONE. J I BLCOM COUNTY 1 te a j i i zSonnu i Real Pit J Bar B Q 15-501 Bypass at Elliott Road 933-9248 HH, Dine In Take Out xrmtrinutiMitiTtruzzn. WP H6RB S!TS OUR CANfffm. WORKING LABORIOUSLY ON Tm SPBtCH FOR TOMORROW'S CAUOS., mm he cas sem t tmm TO TBUL HIS fl66. Five ? HO NO.. OUR RZC0RPS 5H0W THAT YOU'RE ACTUW W i ameer it. FAMILY iOKB-. iff hy Bcrlie Breathed m mss mm emvou ( m OF ft HARP TIME ABOUT WAT. ftLL WSYBOms. FM. mN UTTUB RBCORP SHOW THAT FIVE 15 TUB CORfZCli fiee FOR MISTER CPUS . ESS mar's mm op". rra O I O ! o L rui In 1 THIS WEEK: o! 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