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Western Carolinian Volume 75 Number 05
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April 10, 2009 WESTERN CAROLINIAN Page 10 SPORTS Men's Golf Team Ties for 13" Place Finish at Furman Intercollegiate Western Carolina Baseball Adds Nationally- Ranked Georgia Tech to Schedule By Jada Bratton Sports Writer Western Carolina mens golf slipped two positions in the final standings, finishing tied for 13th at the rain-shortened Furman Intercollegiate on Sunday, Mar. 29 from the par 72, 6,994-yard Furman University Golf Club. WCU posted rounds of 303 and 320 to collectively card 623, 28-strokes off the pace. Senior Andres Cuenca and freshman Martin Summer each finished with two-day totals of 155 to lead the Catamounts individually Andres Cuenca in a tie for 39th overall. Cuenca carded rounds of 77 and 78 to shoot 155, while Summer posted a low- round of 73 on Saturday before shooting 82 on Sunday to post 155. Cuenca led the tournament with 26 pars through the event which was shortened to two rounds after rain on Saturday, Mar. 28 cancelled the second round, Senior Dustin Furnari finished tied for 53rd, two strokes b hind his teammates with 157, while junior Tanner Briele posted consecutive 79s to card a 158, tied for 66th. Rounding out WCUs scorers was " junior Ricky Stout with rounds of 77 and 82 for a 73rd-place finish at 159 Martin Summer Playing as:individuals, junior Drew Miller finished tied for 46th with two rounds of 81 and 75 (156), while freshman Kyle Wilson posted 81 and 79 for a two-day total of 160 amidst a tie for 80th overall. East Carolina edged host Furman and Virginia Tech by a stroke, 595-to-596, to claim the team championship honors. First-round leader, North Florida (603), slipped to fourth with Old Dominion rounding out the top five teams with a two-day score of 609. Furmans Austin Reeves beat- out teammate Daniel Bowden in a playoff to claim individual medalists honors after the two Paladin teammates finished 36 holes tied with one-over scores of 145. Woffords Garrett Medeiros and Chris Kennedy from North Florida were tied for third, one shot back at 146. : Western Carolina retums to the Club in Scottsdale, Arizona. \inks April 6-7 at the: Cowboy | Classic, hosted by. the University of | Wyortti he at the Talking Stick Golf From Staff Reports Western Carolina has added an additional baseball game to its 2009 home slate. One day after visiting nationally-ranked Georgia Tech at Russ Chandler Stadium on April 21, the Yellow Jackets will to pay their first-ever visit to Childress Field / Hennon Stadium for a single game on Wednesday, April 22 at 6:00 pm. It is the second home-and-home series with an Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) member this season for the Catamounts as WCU will play a back-to-back, two- game set with Clemson on April 14 and 15 in Cullowhee and at Doug Kingsmore Stadium in Clemson the following night. . The game was added after mid- week cancellations dropped the | total number of scheduled games for both squads. WCU has lost two | games thus far this season due to inclement weather through the first seven weeks of the season, while Georgia Tech has fallen victim to bad weather with four games cancelled due to rain and another to in rankings published by Baseball snow. Georgia Tech (18-4) is currently ranked third in both the Collegiate Baseball and National Collegiate Baseball Writers Association (NCBWA) polls; fourth in the ESPN/USA Today poll; and 10th America. Catamount head coach Bobby Moranda spent six seasons as the associate head and pitching coach for Georgia Tech. During his time in Atlanta, the Yellow Jackets finished ranked in the top 10 four times, winning three ACC titles and made two appearances in the College World Series. Western Carolina trails Georgia Tech in the overall series, 15-17, all away from Cullowhee. The Catamounts dropped a 4-1 decision in Atlanta a year ago, last upending the then 14th-ranked Jackets, 10-7, back in 2007. WCU also has a win over Tech when it was number one in the nation, winning 8-5 on the road in 2005. Western Carolina will play national- lysanked Georgia Tech on Wednes- _ oday, April 22) The Yellow Jackets are 18-4 and play in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Students Dare to Duel By Cynthia Gallinger WC Contributing Writer On Tuesday and Thursday nights, the UC Grandroom is transformed into a Renaissance arena. Fencers stand poised with fixed concentration waiting for the mediator to announce, Allez. Suddenly, flashing metal clangs as opponents dip and lunge across the glossy wood floors. What appears to be a rehearsal for the Three Musketeers is really a typical meeting of the WCU Fencing Club. The current president, Andrew Dodson, has been a member almost since its inception in 2005. He raves about the sport. Fencing is like a physical game of chessit requires body and mind to be coordinated to achieve a strategy. No other sport is like it. Originally, fencing was practiced by nobility in preparation for warfare and involved a sword and shield. Later, training for duels became a gentlemens pastime, and the equipment became more refined. This led to the lightweight foil and epe, flexible fencing swords with bowl-shaped hand guards _ that aristocrats wore on the street. Although these weapons are still used today, the emphasis is on scoring points rather than inflicting damage. Dodson patiently explains the equipment, rules, and strategies to prospective members that show up at meetings. With the foil and epe, the object is to pierce your opponents target area. With the saber, you slash. Of course, the piercing and slashing are only hypothetical. All the swords in the clubs collection have special tips that calculate points instead of causing bodily harm. A wire runs internally from the q Pictured are Andrew Dodson, left, and Amanda Grippe. tip of the sword to an electronic device. When the tip connects with the mesh vests we wear, it scores a point. This cuts down on arguments about whether or not a point was scored. Amanda Grippe stands in the en- garde position, head forward facing her opponent, body sideways for _ protection, knees bent, ready to spring. Dodson demonstrates the different parrying positions, the half-moon and full-moon, the - thrust, the press, the beat. People can surprise you. | can work with someone at the beginning of a match and believe that its going to take a while for them to get the basics down. Then, when I put them in their first bout, they completely transform. Timid people can suddenly become aggressive, aggressive people can freeze up. You can never assume anything about a fencer, Dodson Photo by Cynthia Gallinger confesses. Although the WCU fencing club travels, it is not officially a team. The only UNC school that has a real team is Chapel Hill. It has an ex-Olympic coach. We watched them one time but we arent in their league. Were just a club, Dodson explains. Not competing in a conference alleviates a lot of pressure. Westerns team is more focused on learning. Over the last four years, the club has secured new electronic equipment, body protection, and now a roomy practice area in the UC. But Dodson thinks that the most important thing about fencing is people. Tt can be a long, close, ferocious battle, but afterward, when the fencers take off their masks, they shake hands and they are right back to being friends again. The Jones-Bowman Leadership Award Program is accepting applications for the 2009 program from nowuntiiMay1. Jones-Bowman Leadership Awards are made each year to enrolled member of the Eastern Band of Cherokee Indians who are undergraduate students committed to developing their leadership capabilities. Thase chasen to be Jones-Bowman Fellows will receive funding of approximately $3,000 annually for extra ordinary experiences while attending school that may Include activities such as travel, leadership develapment training, mentoring experiences and much more. www.cpfdn.org (under Resources and click on Jor Bowman Award), of nea ss by phone at (828)-497-5550,_ Ak artes iat Pownce REC YCLIN is Have you?
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The Western Carolinian is Western Carolina University's student-run newspaper. The paper was published as the Cullowhee Yodel from 1924 to 1931 before changing its name to The Western Carolinian in 1933.
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