Newspapers / The Chapel Hill Weekly … / Sept. 28, 1961, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thursday, September 28, 1961 rifrg ( Bowling World Ca-Vel Tech and Roxboro as-' ! sumed the lead in the Person Coun. ( ty Bowling League's opening ses- < ! .sion last week. I The League comes to Chapel Hill from Koxboro to do its bowling, and the trip paid off in one wayd of another for all the teams in the league except People's Bank. ' High individual game went to!* Vernon Huff of the C & A Hot- : shots with 213; high individual ' senes went to Brady Adcock of [ Koxboro Saw, 555, Davis & Huff; took high team game with 869, and Roxboro Metals took high team! series with 2448 Peoples Bank won one game. me sianuings: Ca-Vel Tech 3-1 Koxboro Saw 3-1 Koxboro Metals 2-2 Davis & Hull 2-2 ' C & A Hotshots 1-3 Peoples Bank 1-3 The Firesrde Coffee League clustered around and got itself or-! ganized last week. The Alley Kats lead the stand ings, but the Goofers swept the board of honors Goofer Bet McClamrodi took high; game series with 189 and 494, and' all three Goofer ladies took high I team game and series with 437 and 1256. The Goofers and the Pindusters are old team names reinstated from last year’s Fireside Coffee bowl ing The standings: Alley Kats 4-0 Goofers 3-1 Pindusters 3-1 Unpredictables 1-3 Team No. 3 1-3 Spareribs 0-4 Teams in the Guys and Dolls League have abandoned the double player-name system of naming their teams and gone in for way bowling Sunday. Joe Dunn of Far rell & Co. took high series with , 525. The Mistakes belied their name and took high team game with 709, and the Mavericks took high team. Standings: Flint stones 7-1 Mavericks 6-2 Mistakes 5-3 Mustangs 4-4 Strikers 4-4 Jets 3-5 Farrell & Co. 2-6 Rams 1-7 Monday the Commercial League had its first set-to on the All-Star ‘lane s, and All Star. Restaurant ca/ne out on the thick edge of the wedge. ■ Bert Smith of WCHL took high individual game, with 207, Scobie Farrell of Greene Electric took high series with 547, WCHL took high team game with 892, and All- Star Kestaurant took high team series with 2429 for three games. Standings: All Star Kestaurant 4-0 Town and Campus 4-0 WCHL 3-1 . Greene Electric 2-2 Tar Heel Motel 2-2 l ong Meadow Farms 1-3 Kenan Oil Co. 0-4 Mann Drugs 0-4 I JUST RECEIVED I I TULIPS ©MS f I I HYACINTHS I I NARCISSUS I I and other fall varieties. I Plants Bulbs Shrubbery \ H Fertilizer Soil Planters ■ Peat Moss Implements I 5 & 10c STORE I Eastgate Shopping Center . I Open 9-9 Daily; 9-6 Saturday Phone 968-1681 Yates Motor Co. has the Mer chants League by the beds to date, with two beers foaming fran tically close behind. Yates crushed Walker’s Gulf 4-0 Tuesday, thus keeping intact the 1 lead it established last week. Schlitzman Scobie Farrell took high individual game with 223; 1 Jack Rees, a Hubowler, took high series with 568; Schlitz, hinting at 1 a repeat performance of its steam roller tactics in last year’s league, took high team game with 914; and Yates Motor took high team series with 2511. has a lot of mile age yet to go. Standings: Yates 84) Schiitz 6-2 Falstaff 6-2 Walker's Gulf 4-4 , The Hub 4-4 Budweiser 2-6 Stancell Motor Co. 2-6 Maultsby-Perry Tire Co. 0-8 Final results of the first ses sion of the Eastern North Carolina Traveling League recently show Chapel Hill’s All-Star Lanes to be somewhat more than merely trail ing. All-Star came out 12th of 16 com jpeting teams with 10% points. National Boh is leading the lea- i present an interesting challenge to, All-Star. Players’ statistics for six games: ! Smith H 994 165 Winiarski 952 158 Smith B 1079 179 Ferrell 1040 173 Coif City To Hold Putting Tourney Mike Rubish's Golf City, on the Durham Boulevard, is sponsoring a SI,OOO putting tourney beginning this Saturday. Thirty-six hole qualifying rounds will begin Saturday . and continue through Oct 8. There will be three divisions—m en, ladies, and ofiil dren '6 through 14). At least 10 merchandise prizes, including dubs, golf hags, and a bicycle, will be awarded in each division. The 64 low qualifiers in each di vision will begin match play on Oct 9. Rounds may be played from noon until 10 p.rn. daily and Sun day. HASSELL Charles iPudi Hassell, freshman Morehead Scholar from Beaufort, is one of the top men whom-North Carolina assistant basketball coach Ken Rosemond will be looking for ward to welcoming on Oct. 15, i opening day of basketball drills. Hassell is also a fine football half back, though he did not go out for ■ the Carolina team, and is due for i a lot of left-handed pitching for the basebaliers. GOLF WINNERS W tuners in the women’s golf . tournament day before yesterday at the Chapel Hill Country Club were as follows: Mrs. Norman Eliason, low gross: Mrs Dwight Price, low net, and Mrs. E. B. Crawford Sr., !low putts. Rallying Wildcats Take On Graham BY RONNIE LOGAN Chapel Hill’s revitalized Wild- 1 cats take on victory-hungry Gra- ] ham in a conference affair Fri- ' day night at 8 o'clock in Graham. ' Fresh from a smashing 21-0 vic tory over Southern of Alamance, 1 die Wildcats apparently have a I aetter than even chance of defeat ing Graham, a team that lost to Oxford last week 19-0 Earlier this year Chapel Hill and Oxford fought 1 to 6-6 tie. Agaiast Southern, a pair of Cha pel Hill halfbacks. Gene Williams and Charlie Riggsbec, blossomed , into standout performers. The con- , sistent gains made by these two , kept the Chapel Hill scoring mar ches from faltering and each play ed fairly well on defense. The most pleasing development has been the emergence of some spirit and determination on the , part of the entire team Previously this had been lacking in many of the players. If this new attitude Archery Tourney Is Planned Here ' The UNC Outing Club will spon sor a handicap archery tourna ment starting October 1 This tourn ament is unique in that the handi cap enables the beginning archer to compete with even the most proficient of archers; and it is actually designed so that the arch-j er who improves the most will bej most likely to win. The tournament is open to all; students of the University, facult-i ty and townspeople. However, it is required that those entering the tournament who are not already footing Club members join the club ok pay a $1 entry fee covering all the shooting sessions of the tournament. The tournament will start on Oct 1. with the second session on Oct ober 8 and sessions every two | weeks thereafter. The last session will be Jan. 6,1 with make-up sessions set at this time to allow anyone who missed a session to shoot those rounds. The handicap will be determined by the first three scoring rounds and will be recalculated as the archer advances out of his class. The actual shooting in this tournament will be the standard round user! during alf Rod and Gun Slhld Meets. Each archer will shoot two ends (12 arrows) at 401 'yards. two ends at 30 yards, and 1 two ends at 20 yards There will ;be no separate divisions for those using bow sights, or separate di visions for juniors, men or wo-j men The handicap will make up an> difference in the scores of these groups Archers wishing to participate'in this tournament need not have their own equipment. The Outing Club | has archery equipment which will be available. • On October 14. the Outing Club iwill be the host for the Carolina . Open Archery Tournament. Ad l|vancc registration for this tourna [|mcnt shows that archers from all I over North Carolina and the su || rounding states will be attending |j the tournament In this tournament l| the archers will shoot by divisions | (freestyle or instinctive' Men I will shoot American rounds and I Women will shoot Columbia rounds AH archers are welcome to shoot and advance registration is not required, but the Outing Club would like post cards from interest ed parties so that they can plan 11 for Ihe expected number of archers. Rost cards should be sent to 315 Woollen Gym. Information will be sent to all those who prcregistcr. David Pizarro To Perform Tuesday David l’izarro of the UNC Music Department faculty will give an or- j gan recital at 8 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 3, in Hill HaU under the auspices of tlic department s Tuesday Evc-i ning Series. Admission is free and everybody is invited. The program will include works! by Buxtehude. Bach, Richard Don ovan, John Stanley and Marcel Du-j prcc. Mr. Pizarro received his master s | degree in 1953 at Yale University, and from 1953 to 1955 he studied in Germany as a Fulbright scholar. Before coming here he held organ choirmaster positions in Now York and Connecticut and was an in | structor in music at North Carolina College in Durham. STRING OF LOSSES The University’s football team has lost its opening game for six ! consecutive years. Four of these | losses were to State College, the opponent in this year's opening game here this Saturday. PRIZED FOR WRITERS The Carolina Quarterly is offer ing cash prizes totaling 175 to cam pus writers who submit the best fiction and poetry. The prizes will pc awarded at the end of the school year follows: SSO for best story ggd 625 for best poetry THE CHAPEL HIU WEEKLY is sustained for the remainder of the season it wouldn’t surprise many people if the Wildcats be* came contenders for the comcrence crown. There is still plently of room for improvement, however, as may be evident in future games. The current group of Wildcat footballers may not be the best team Chapel Hill has had in re cent years, but it has shown that it can make things pretty rough on anyone. One member of the current Wild, cat team is, in the opinion of the coaches and the student body, one of the best all-round linemen in the conference. He is Alex Mc- Ivcr. better known to his friends as Sonny Sonny is so versatile and adaptable that it is feared he will be passed over when the time comes to pick the all-conference team. He has switched between end and center so much that he may be overlooked in favor of someone who has played the same position all year long. Sonny is a solid offensive line man. but his forte is defense. He is the terror of any enemy back who tries to run with the ball. He ranges all over the field to make his bone-jarring tackles, and many i times he has surprised fast ball carriers by bringing them down from behind. But last minute injuries to key players may hamper the Wildcats quite a bit. Among them are Mc ■ ver and tackle-guard Pete Staas j bury. Mclver has a badly sprain l ed ankle and Stanstrury severely bruised ribs. It is also not known iwhether fullback Tony Lloyd will be able to play Fullback Gary Bowden is lost for the season with a knee injury. In Football > v In Fashions at Excitement Unlimited Excitement in ... COATS SUITS MESSES SPORTSWEAR SHOES ACCESSORIES ' FOOTBALL IN THE AIR ... VERY EXCITING > (£F |l| Exciting Fashions Exciting Colors Exciting Fabrics U w* Here 1 lasbioa ‘ IJ « know-how, V ALL IN ABUNDANCE AT.. . \Vi worm flatter j college. _ The House of Fashion In Chapel Hill for the Carolinas i \;;j First h Fashion —Firet m Qsslity - First 1r tha Hoods of UNO Cods GROUNDBREAKING FOR COKER HALL—Turn ing: the first shovelful of earth for the new William C. Coker Botany Building is Prof. Victor Greulach, chairman of the University Department of Botany. Mrs. W. (’. Coker, widow of the late Dr. Coker, is sixth from left, above. Others participating, left to right, are J. A. Branch, UNC Business Manager; John S. Bennett, Director of Operation*; Albert Cox of San- ford, General Contractor (The Cox Construction Co.)» Chancellor William B. Aycock, Prof. Ritchie Bell, Mta. Coker, Henry Gaines of Charlotte, the architect; Mrs. G. N. A. Westcoat of Moorestown, N. J., sister of Mrs. Coker; Prof. Albert Radford, Kenan Professor John Couch and Dean of the Graduate School, Alexander Heard. (Photo by UNC News Bureau) Page 3
The Chapel Hill Weekly (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 28, 1961, edition 1
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