THE DAILY TAR UK FT I PAGE THREE MieMran Takes Becomi Tilt From Tar Heel WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27, 1946 .::::: y',y. x-:-yr. .s.-ssy-yy .-s.ws.-xv- , .:yy;y. ' ,v:-v,- Carolina Scores Twice In First. Inning Spree Unbeaten Spartans Tally in Three Frames To Offset Early Scores by Tar Heel Nine By Bill Woestendiek Starting pitcher Bob Newell walked the first man to face him in each of the first three innings yesterday on Emerson field, and those three walks led to the three runs that gave, Michigan State a hotly-contested 3-2 victory over Coach Bunn Hearn's Caro lina nine. The victory was State's second over the Tar Heels and the seventh win in a row for the touring Spartans. Starting pitcher Bob Newell f Maass Boosts Tennis Stock For New Year Former Captain Back on Courts Bolstered by the return of the top ranking player from his championship 1943 net team, Coach John Kenfield prepared to start hi 19th season as Caro lina tennis mentor this week.' The veteran-he so eagerly wel comed back was Harold Maass, who returned to college in Janu ary after 24 years in the Navy. Maass occupied the number one slot and was captain of the 1943 aggregation, which cruised through a stiff campaign with seven triumphs against one loss. With the first match scheduled for April 3 against Kalamazoo College from Michigan, . Coach Kenfield has issued a call for can didates to report any afternoon at the varsity courts. Among those already out on whom he has high hopes are Duke Wilder, number two on last year's team, Bert Ingram, former Carolina high school champion, Dick Swi- gart, Don Skakle, Jim Nichol son, Sam Daniels, and Ed Dam- eeron. Nine matches have already been scheduled, with more still being sought. There is also a pos sibility that the Southern Con ference tennis tournament, a wartime casualty, will be resum ed. 32 Softball Squads Open Mural Program With Contests Today $,? ,yss. yssss!ysssssssv - - ' y-sssyy-'- SS&ifyj&'Sf's. &'ss'.-y-yy . sAS-sss.-yss.-ys. Sy--s;.SS.'y.'S.S.-S.S- .&y-yysss-y: yyyy.fr my 0ssWf y. &&T wZs mx Leading the University of North Carolina's Blue Dolphins into the National Intercollegiate swimming meet at Yale March 29-30 are the men pictured here. Left to right are Snooky Proctor of Rocky Mount, co-captain, and Coach Willis Casey, Co-Captain Ben Ward and Coach Ralph Casey, all of Goldsboro. Blue Dolphins to Enter National Meet Friday Coaches to Send Eight Men to Yale Event; Dolphins Lost Only to Ohio State, Army The Casey of baseball fame may have struck out, but as coaches of the 1946 North Carolina swimming team, the brothers Casey, Ralph and'W!Ilis, have again made the Blue Dolphins hit the top rung in Dixie. The Tar Heel mermen seek new waters to con quer when they compete in thef National Intercollegiate meet to be swum March 29 and 30 in Yale University's Payne Whit ney pool. (Filling in the breach when a Navy commission took Coach Dick Jamerson last year. Coach Thirty-two intramural softball Willis Casey at the tender age of squads will open the curtain on 23, and still a college boy him- mural athletics for the present self, turned out an undefeated tprm todav when they take the I Southern championship crew. field in a free battle for top This winter his brother, Ralph, laurels. freshman coach in 1940-42, re- Eighteen of the 24 fraternity ceived his Navy discharge, and om will taste action, and a together the two young men from liVp number of the 20 dormitory Goldsboro guided the Dolphins ,ffic ii rnmnfite. through higher waves than ever UUV11I0 x 1 . a -lnin nf rra-mpo to another great season. is on deck for today, tomorrow, and Friday. Pairings for the complete program were distrib uted to organizations yesterday. Today's schedule : 4 o'clock: Phi Gams vs. ZBT In five dual meets the Tar Heel tankers went undefeated, whipping Georgia Tech twice, Camp Lejeune, N. C. State and Duke all by comfortable scores. Only when they stepped into hnfrtmn-cwrpd northern comoeti- (field 1), Graham No. 1 vs. Law . , Dolphins bested, School No. 1 (field 2), DKE vs. fi , . h0h Armv and 0hio Kappa Sig No. 2 (field 3), Steele R. , - triangular meet and vs. Alexander (field 4), Phi Delt second to Navy but over Cornell No. 1 vs. SAE No. 2 (field 5), in another; The Tar Heels stag Aycock vs. ROTC 3rd Company d runaway wjth the Southern ineia b), z,eta rsi vs. r-m senior A.A.U. meet. No. 2 (field 7), and Graham No. Carolina . probably wffl send 2 vs. BVP (field 8). - . , . .n 1P nationals at IXA.V XAXV11 Yale. Heading the list is Richard pa Alpha No. 2 (field 1), ROTC (Little Champ) Twining of 2nd Company vs. Med School No. charlotte, a muscular lad who 2 (field 2), Kappa Alpha No. 1 never had seen a swimming meet vs. Chi Phi (field 3), Whitehead before coming to Chapel Hill. vs. Law School No. 2 (field 4), Beta Theta Pi vs. Pi Lamba Phi (field 5), Ruffin vs. Old West (field 6), SAE No. 1 vs. TEP (field 7), and Lewis vs. ROTC 1st Company (field 8). Umps Meet Today Softball umpires for the in tramural diamond program this quarter will meet this afternoon at 3 o'clock in 215 Woollen gym. Persons interested in umpiring games are also asked to attend. Baseball Team Meets All members of the varsity baseball team are requested to attend a meeting at 2:30 this afternoon at Emerson field. The meeting will be held regardless of weather conditions and every- j one must attend. That didn't stop him from crack ing two National Junior records last year and continuing this season to live up to his promise as one of the finest swimmers in Carolina histotry. Sone of General Nathan Twin ing, 20th Air Force commander during the Superfort raids on Japan, young Twining favorite event is the 220-yard free style, in which he holds the Conference record at 2 :14.1. Also in his game bag are the following marks: the Southern Intercol legiate 100 free style, 52.4 ; and the District A.A.IL 100 meter 200 meter and 400 meter, with times of 1:00.3, 2:16.8 and 4:57, respectively. Among other stars on the Dol phin crew are Co-Captain Ben Ward of Goldsboro and Jack Zimmerman of Brooklyn, N. Y., both vetreans from last year's crewthe team, which like the present one, carried on unbroken the skein of Conference cham- poinships rolled up since 1940. Ward holds the national junior 50 meter fre style and Confer ence 50-yard free style sprint records, while Zimmerman ranks almost neck and neck with Twin ing in the distances. Mike MorrOw of Wilmington is another-record, having ne gotiated the 100-meter free style distance in 1:02.2 for the Na tional Junior record. He, Ward, Twining and Warren Ficklen of Greenville make the 400-yard relay the event in which Carolina probably will be most dangerous at the Nationals, be handled for the Dolphins by Former Diamond Star Manages 'D' Outfit Paul Dunlap of Silver City, former Carolina baseball star, has been appointed manager of the Angier-Fuquay entry in the Class D Tobacco State League, it was learned here today. Grinders Open Spring Grinds Here Monday Several Standouts Return to School Carolina's second off-season grid drills will begin April 1 when Coach Carl Snavely greets an estimated field of 100 candi dates for spring sessions. Win ter warm-ups were held last quarter with about 85 aspirants on hand during the four week grind. Candidates will report for equipment Thursday and Fri day. The opening drill is schedul ed Monday. Heading the list of warriors expected to report is Charlie Justice, former Bainbridge Na val star who lived up to advance notices by galloping 64 yards for a touchdown against Guilford in a scrimmage last quarter. Along with Justice in the backfield is Billy Britt, a running mate of Justice's at Asheville High. Standouts from last year's Tar Heel machine who will be back on the field next season include Chunk Simmons, Jim Camp, Bob Warren, and Ken nedy. Walt Pupa, recently dis charged from the service re turned in January to reinforce the rear guardsmen. Four former pigskin special J ists return this quarter to, aid in plugging holes in the forward wall. They are George Sparger, reserve end in 1942; John Tan dy, first string end who scored the ftieing tduichdown against Duke in 1942; and Chan High- smith, first string center, all Southern in 1942. . Meredith Jones, who made first string tackle as a sophomore in 1942, is expected to return at the be ginning of next term. Line enforcements from last season include Stiedman, alter nate center; Pritchard and Rub bish, ends; Varney, Hazelwood, and a host of subs. Coach Carl Snavely and as sistants Max Reed and Russ Murphy are beginning to form the nucleus of what Carolina supporters hope will be another championship eleven. With new material, returned veterans, and holdovers from the 1945 squad the Tar Heel eleven will be much stronger than in the past few years. Water Polo, Tennis Entries Due Friday Deadlines for fraternities and dormitories to enter teams in the intramural tennis and water polo activities is Friday, according to an announcement from the mu ral department yesterday. walked the first man to face him in each of the first three innings yesterday on Emerson field, and those three walks led to the three runs that gave Michigan State a hotly-contested 3-2 victory over Coach Bunn Hearn's Caro lina nine. The victory was State's second over the Tar Heels and the seventh win in a row for the touring Spartans. As in yesterday's contest, the Carolina club started fast with a two-run first inning rally and was stopped cold as the State team scored once in each of the first three innings. DiLorenzo, Carolina freshman, replaced Newell on the mound to open the fourth frame and hurled three hit shutout ball the rest of the way, but his fine performance was nullified by the twirling of Michigan's Bill Page. After the Tar Heels made two hits good for two runs in the first, the bespectacled right-hander limit ed the home team to three hits thereafter, and successfully stop ped what threatened to be a last inning rally. The Spartans scored the de ciding tally in the third when Nick Gregory walked, moved to second on Guest's single to cenT ter, and came home on a line single to left by Bob Phillips. State opened the game with a run when Newell, who was con stantly getting behind the hit ters, walked Ludwig and Groves to open the game. Gregory sacri ficed them along and Ludwig dented the plate while Bo Hack ney was throwing out Guest. With one out in their half of the first, the Tar Heels bounced right hack with two scores of their own. John Gregory, who has turned in two fine games at first for Carolina, walked. Tom Clayton, who accounted for two of the five Tar Heel safeties smashed a single to left. Evans fanned, but Bill Webster clubbed a long double to deep left field to score both men with the only runs of the afternoon for the osers. NewelPs wildness allowed the State club to even things up in the second inning. He walked Hudenko, the first hitter, and the big catcher for the visitors came home after two were out when pitcher Page tied up his game with a line drive double to left-center. Both clubs were helpless for the last six innings as both Di Lorenzo, a tall left-hander, and Page put on a pretty pitching exhibition. The Tar Heel south paw stayed out of trouble and expertly picked Hudenko off sec ond in the eight when the State catcher was in scoring position with one away. Carolina made a final effort to pull the game out of the fire in See BASEBALL Page 1 A University Service Station Odis Pendergraf t, Prop. CLASSIFIED Advertisements must' be paid for in advance and turned in at the Daily Tab Heel business office, Graham Memorial, by 3 o'clock the day preceding publication. Dial 8641. Fifty cents each inch and fraction. The Daily Tas Eebl will be responsible only for the first incorrect insertion and then only to the extent of a make-sood insertion to be run only in case of an error which lessens the valoe of the advertisement. WANTED: Microscope, binocu lar preferred. State make, condition, price. Box .390, Lexington, Virginia. , ; AUTO FOR SALE 1941 Mer cury 2-door sedan. Approxi mately $100 less than ceiling price. Strowd Motor Co. Dial 5161. STEAKS? SERVICE? No Lines !----Tr "" 1 "" " ii, y . I'). . X , - - ' . -1 . v. - ( . We. Can't Be Beat! KANSAS CITY STfiAKS OUR SPECIALTY Exclusive at the Popular UNIVERSITY RESTAURANT The box score: Michigan State AB R H Ludwig, cf 3 11 Groves, If 3 0 1 N. Gregory, 2b 3 1 0 Guest, rf 4 0 1 Phillips, lb 3 0 1 Hudenko, c 3 12 Mineweaser, 3b 3 0 0 Urbankik, ss 4 0 0 Page, p 4 0 1 Totals 30 3 7 Carolina AB R II Thompson, 2b 2 0 0 Colones 2 0 0 J. Gregory, lb 2 10 Clayton, If 3 1 2 Cleetwood i 10 0 Evans, cf... 3 0 0 Cole 1 " a 0 Webster, rf 2 0 1 Beason 2 0 0 Warren, 3b 2 0 0 Hackney, ss 1 0 0 Pecora 2 0 0 Hayworth, c :. 2 0 0 Frazier 2 0 1 Newell, p 10 0 DiLorenzo 3 0 1 Totals 32 2 5 Score by innings: Michigan State 111 000 0003 Carolina 200 000 000 2 Errors: Urbanik 2. Runs bat ted in: Webster 2, Guest, Phil ips, Page. Two-base hits: Web ster, Page. Sacrifice hits: N. Gregory, Mineweaser. Stolen bases: Guest 2, Phillips. Bases on balls: off Page 5, off Newell 4, off DiLorenzo 2. Struck out: by Page 8, by Newell 1, by Di- .orenzo 5. Hits: off Newell 4 m 6 innings, off DiLorenzo 3 in 6 innings. Losing pitcher: New ell. Umpires : Johnson and Fuller. Pick Theatre TODAY 1 1 in III 1 1 in irfij.yiv l l JlilliUJ i til . s i I2arfo Skr-tZi a LUCILLE BALL Ceenoo WYNM ; Carl ESMOND Also COLOR CARTOON