Bis: Track Meet Comes Off Today Phi Delts Win . Intramural Track SATURDAY, JUNE 2, 1945 PAGE THREE mlT TT TYTi T7" 'TTTOlTh faTl Compete Iiu' Qa mi day TJhe Tair Heel sport; Stars Carolina In Tie For Tar Heels Hope To Jump Back After Loosing To Blue Devils By Irwin Smallwood Deadlocked with Duke for the Ration league leadership, Carolina's base ballers will battle the Pre-Flight Cloudbusters here on Emerson field this afternoon at 3 o'clock in the final game of the season between the two clubs. The skirmish this afternoon is an alMmportant tilt, as the locals will have a chance to gain a momentary half and maybe a full game on the Blue Devils. Duke also has another game with the Pre-Flights, and should the Busters turn the trick on the Dukes again, a Carolina win this afternoon would ; give the Tar Heels a chance for a full game gain. However, should Carolina lose, the Devils would have the same opportunity to gain in the loop standings. Either Tommy Andrew or Red For rest will start on the mound for the Tar Heels this afternoon, and the one that doesn't draw the initial bid will be held in reserve as the Carolina lads go all out to cop the Ration loop championship. Forrest is the leading pitcher in the league with a three and nothing record. . After the tussle with Pre-Flight, Carolina will have two remaining league encounters, both with Duke. The next will be staged here Wednes day afternoon at 4 o'clock, and the finale will be reeled off at Durham June 9. A game with Greensboro ORD is slated for June 8 at Greensboro, but it is not definite whether this game will be played or not. Carolina's Chuck Hayne, lanky righthanded fast ball artist, hooked up with Duke's Lefty Griff eth in a tight pitchers duel in Durham last Wednesday as the Blue Devils pulled up into a first place tie with the Tar Heels by winning by the close score of 3-2. In general, the hurlers fought on practically even terms, but Jin the second Duke pushed across two tal lies on an error on the shortstop, a misjudged line drive to right field and an infield hit. The bingle to right field was a hard hit drive and Mullen was unable to get his hands on it and it went for a triple, scoring a man from first. ' ' Neither team put up a serious threat for the next three innings, but in the top of the sixth, Carolina put in its best bid for a win to score twice and deadlock the affair. After Tommy Thompson had fanned, Zeke Zientek reached first by error and T?nh Fahev erot first on balls. Zien cuu a' uicjr . gvi v i tek stole second, went to third on a ' GENTLEMEN'S SUITS AND TOPCOATS SPORTSWEAR HATS SHOES -HABERDASHER Y HIGHLY INDIVIDUALIZED STYLES, DE VELOPED WITH TASTE AND SKILL IN THE STANDARD FINCHLEY MANNER. AMPLE AND INTERESTING ASSORT MENTS IN ALL DEPARTMENTS. . . r t . EXHIBITION TUESDAY, JUNE 5 ' COLLEGE SHOP .'- ' . MAIN STREET 'Vincent Bos-worth, Representative J IMPORTANT ALSO SHOWING LADIES' TOPCOATS, SWEATERS AND TAILORED BLOUSES FIFTH AVE., AT 46tk ST., NEW YORK . - ----- ---1 mi lini iir rrni r--"" r- l,,m,mmmilgSmmmimmmmimmmmmmm " passed ball and then came home on a double steal. Duke's catcher dropped the ball at the plate in the attempt to catch Zientek. Fahey came home from second as Red Hughes got an infield base knock. Duke iced the game in the sev enth, when, with two men out, George Clark walked, stole second and rode home on a single by Talcott. Thife was the Blue Devils' second earned run of the day and third and win ning tally. x In the last of the eighth a ques tionable play arose when Hughes failed to hold an infield fly. Appar ently the ball was secured enough for the out, but Hughes lost the ball as he started to throw it around the infield and the umpire awarded the hitter first base. A hot argument fol lowed, and as a result Thompson, Tar Heel second sacker, was put out of the game. Netters Meet Cherry Point Facing their first visiting opponent since Walt James took over the reins after Coach Kenfield left, the tennis team tackles a rugged Cherry Point Marine net squad this afternoon at 2:30. -.Being idle for the past two. weeks due to the cancellation of the Duke Carolina match, the Tar Heels have been priming for the Marines and will be in top shape for today's court en gagement. Walt James will probably use the same line-up that has been composing the Tar Heel varsity all season which will include Cliff Tuttle, Duke Wilder, Mac Davis, Ed Baity, Billy Weathers and Roy Rowe, in that order. Don An derson will pair with Baity to form the number three doubles team. The tennis fracas which was post poned with Duke will be played next TnpsHav afternoon on the Blue Devils j home courts. "' Loop Lead Tries For Win Over Fliers uf....,im.vx 'S' iftflWaaaowswiOifc Mike Elger Paces Phi Delts To Track Championship Phi Delts Capture Mural Cinder Meet Phi Delta Theta took the laurels in the intramural track finals, held on Fetzer Field Tuesday afternoon, chalking up an impressive 110 points to lead the field of nine cinder squads. The Med School offered their closest competition, trailing well behind the victors with 54 markers.- Phi Gamma Delta laid claim to third place with 47 points, followed by Sigma Chi with 30, SAE with 18, Sigma Nu with 17, Pi Lambda -Phi and Beta with five apiece, and Pi Kap pa Alpha, who failed to place. Elger, who won three first places, took individual scoring honors with 31 points to his credit. The summaries: '60-yard dash Won by Voris, Phi Delt, time, 6.8 seconds; Fannie, Med School, second; Nichols, Phi Delt, third; Seaman, SAE, fourth; Behnke, fifth; Fuller, Phi Delt, sixth. 120-yard low hurdles Won by Lilly, Phi Gams, time, 15 seconds; Elger Phi Delt, second; Gammon, SAE, third; Price, Sigma Nu, fourth; Dan iels, Med School, fifth; Darden, Phi Delt, sixth. 100-yard dash Won by Fannie, Med School, time, 10.8 seconds; Nichols, Phi Delt, second; Voris, Phi Delt, third; Camp, Sigma Chi, fourth; Full er, Phi Delt, fifth; Seaman, SAE, sixth. 300-yard run Won by Fannie, Med School, time, 35.5 seconds; Reiser, Phi Gams, second; Moskow, Pi Lamb da Phi, third; Colones, Sigma Chi, fourth; Davis, Phi Delt, fifth; Ackley, Phi Delt, sixth. 70-yard high hurdles Won by El ger, Phi Delt, 10.7 seconds; Lilly, Phi Gams, second; Darden, Phi Delt, third; Gammon, SAE, fourth; Ralston, Phi Gams, fifth; Hipp, Med School, sixth. High jump Won by McNeely, Phi Delt, height, 5 feet 5 inches; Lilly, Phi Gams, second; Ralston, Phi Gams, and Elger, Phi Delt, third (tie) ; Dan DANZIGER'S "V ' - ( ' v .v. v. v. ; , i'. ."..., .v.-.', ..'.,'. 1 j iiii 4 A Mangum iels, Med School, Nichols, Phi Delt, and Jennigan, Sigma Nu, fifth (tie). Shot , put Won by Elger, Phi Delt, distance, 35 feet 2 inches; Sims, Phi Delt, second; Allen, Sigma Chi, third; Gold, Med School, fourth; Hamen, Med School, fifth;, Daniels, Med School, sixth. Discus throw Won by Elger, Phi Delt, distance, 111 feet 9 inches; Spurlock, Phi Delt, second; Allen, Sigma Chi, third; Kerns, Phi Delt, fourth; Curran, SAE, fifth; Robinson, Sigma Nu, sixth. Broad jump Won by Walker, Phi Delt, distance, 20 feet 9 inches; Elger, Phi Delt, second; Camp, Sigma Chi, third; Hammond, Phi Delt, fourth; Lentz, Sigma Nu, fifth; Daniels, Med School, sixth. Softball throw Won by Hay, Med School, distance, 88 yards; Andrew, Beta, second; Sims, Phi Delt, third; Corey, Phi Gams, fourth; Camp, Sig ma Chi, fifth; Allen, Sigma Chi, sixth. 3-4 mile run Won by Forrest, Med School, time, 3:33.5; Dillard, Phi Gams, second; Spurlock, Phi Delt, third; Zientek, Phi Delt, fourth; Rob erts, Sigma Chi, fifth; Lentz, Sigma Nu, sixth. -440-yard relay Won by Sigma Nu, See ELGER PACES, page U. Mural Tennis Schedule Intramural tennis will resume next week, after a delay due to softball finals, with sixteen teams advancing into second round play. All matches will be played on the clay courts at five o'clock. The schedule for next week: Monday Zeta Psi vs. Phi Gam ma Delta; SAE vs. Sigma Nu. Tuesday Pi Lamba Phi vs. Two Brews; Steele vs. ATO. Wednesday Med School No. 1 vs. Phi Kappa Sigma; PiKA vs. Owen Hall. Thursday Med School No. 2 vs. Sigma Chi; Chi. Psi vs. Phi Delta Theta. Relax and enjoy cool, refreshing drinks and delicious pastries at DANZIGER'S AIR CONDITIONED TNinth A. A. U. Starts On Fetzer Field At 3 With a quartet of the nation's outstanding- track stars entered, in addition to many of the leading cinder specialists from schools in this section, indications are that the ninth A.A.U. Track and Field Championships to be held on Fetzer Field at Chapel Hill Saturday afternoon will be one of the best meets staged here in several years. Starting time is 3 o'clock. - Nine schools and one unattached t team from this section, including ap proximately 150 individual entries, have already indicated that they will enter, with a possibility of several other entries being received before the deadline. Those already entered include Camp Peary, Wake Forest, Hunter Field, Myrtle Beach AAF, South Carolina, Laurinburg-Maxton AAB, Cherry Point Marines, Duke, North Carolina, and an unattached team from Carolina Pre-Flight. Leading the parade of stars will be Fortune Gorden, Camp Peary; S-Sgt. David Schrader, Hunter Field, Ga.; S-Sgt. John Montgomery, Cherry Point, and Lt. Charley Beetham, un attached, from Pre-Flight. Gorden won the discus and shot put events in the Penn Relays this spring by heavine the discus 155 feet, six inches, and tossing the shot a fraction better than 49 feet. Schrader turned in the best discus throw of 1944 with a toss of 162 feet, eight inches. He bettered 150 feet in a meet with the Tar Heels last week, and tossed the shot 46 feet, six and one-half inches, in a quadrangular meet with Duke. The marks turned in by these two men compare favorably with the meet records of 46 feet, one and one-half inches for the shot put, and 149 feet, nine inches, for the discus. Another mark that is pretty sure to tumble is the pole vault record of 12 feet, nine inches set in 1940 by Mc Leod of UNC and Singsen of the Tar Heel A.C. Montgomery of Cherry Point cleared the bar at 13 feet, five and seven-eighths inches in the In door Meet last February, and his per formance this week is expected to be one of the meet's highlights. Lieutenant Beetham of Pre-Flight, who is competing unattached, along with 11 other members of the School, was voted the outstanding man in the Millrose Games in Madison Square Garden last February. He will com-' pete in one relay eyent, the 220-yard low hurdles, and in the 440-yard run, one of his favorite events. Carolina's entries for this after noon's A.A.U. meet include: 120 High Hurdles: Mangum, Line weaver, Cooke, , Clayton ; 100 yard dash: Haigler, Moorman, Bauer; one mile run: Leathers, Good, Lamb, Brown, Pierce ; 440 yard run : Hun ter, Hester, Dodson, Paxton, Harda way; 220 yard dash: Haigler, Moor man, Rosa, Sauer, Peterson; 220 low hurdles: Clayton, Lineweaver, Rosa, Hajgler, Hobkirk; 880 yard run: Dod son, Turner, O. Allen; two mile run: Erath, Holden, Hatch, Edwards, Cha fin, Osborne; pole vault: Begnaud, Gupton, Collins; shot put: Hazelwood, Hooper; high jump: Whaley, Clay ton, Rosa, Collins, Hobkirk; javelin throw: Bauer, Whaley, Clayton, Spaugh, Bullard; broad jump, Man gum, Clayton, Martin, Rosa, Fisher; discus throw: W. Allen, Clayton, Jor dan; 440 yard relay: A Haigler, Moorman, Begnaud, Clayton, Bauer, Hardaway; B Tinsley, Mallard, Fish er, Martin, Car.dillo; one mile relay: A Hunter, Hester, Dodson, Turner, Haigler; B Hardaway, Paxton, Pet erson, Rosa, Lineweaver; C Tinsley, Moorman, Maftin, Veasey, Lowry, Eagle. BOOKS F O Rv GRADUATION at AB'S INTIMATE BOOKSHOP In Town Below Post Office SCOTCH TAPE New available in 65c and 75c rolls. 1,296 inches to the roll. LEDBET.TER-PICKARD Cinder Event Major Upsets Recorded In Softball Race Softball Finals To Be Held Monday With all top seeded teams bumped out of the intramural softball tourna ment by virtue of upsets, with the ex ception of Phi Kappa Sigma, the finals are shaping up in somewhat of an unexpected fashion. Only the first two rounds of the tourney were completed before the Tar Heel went to press and out of the four games played, three major teams were dropped from the race. Phi Kap pa Sigma played their usual brand of ball in trouncing a determined Med School No. 3 team by the count of 9-2. On the same day, a surprising Cor sairs club, composed of ROTC's, eked out a heavy favored Vance Dorm out fit by the score of 6-2. The games on Thursday afternoon saw the tables turned on two of the league's strongest teams. The biggest surprise of the current flag race was the 6-4 victory registered by an un predictable Zeta Psi squad over the cnce-beaten Sigma Chi's, who were ranked as co-favorites at the begin ning of the play-offs. The semi-finals were run off yester day afternoon and the finals to de termine the campus champ will be reeled off Monday afternoon on Alex ander No. 1 at 5:30. Cornwell Works On Redeployment Of Servicemen Dr. O. K. Cornwell, head of the physical education department and graduate school for physical education trainees will bide his time between Chapel Hill and Washington, D. C, where he will consult with army of ficials on physical education pro grams connected with the redeploy ment of troops from the various thea tres of war. Several weeks ago Cornwell re turned from European theatre of op erations where he was familiarized with the task which he and other phy sical education authorities both civi lian and military are confronted with in handling U.S. troops from theater to theatre. In its embryo stages, there is little known about the1 work of the group of v;hich Cornwell is a member. It was started as an experiment and the real test is yet to be made as the task of re deployment grows greater, Cornwell stated. At the present time there is in op eration a college at Lexington, Va., utilizing the facilities of VMI, for the training of army officers in the rede ployment field. Dr. Cornwell prepared the curriculum for the school and re turned this week after seeing the school in operation. Commerce Test The replacement quizz for Com merce students will be" given in 412 New East at 2 p.m. June 11, accord ing to an announcement received from the department of Geology and Geography.

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view