THURSDAY, MAY 9, 1946 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE THREE Nine Drops. Tax Heels .;-tato:,Big:.Foiir Cellar by 6-4 Score State Jay vees Trim Blue Imp Nine By 9-2 Score Boseman Hurls, Hits In One-Sided Battle uurnam, jviay isenma a five-hit pitching performance by Bill Boseman, Carolina's junior varsity trounced the Duke Blue Imp nine by a 9-2 score here to day. , While Boseman was limiting the Dukes to two runs, his mates shelled two Blue Imp hurlers with a 14-hit attack. Boseman helped to win his own ball game with two timely bingles. Catch-, er Sid Varney and right-fielder Bill Webster also garnered two safeties apiece to pace the Tar Baby attack. Two Big Innings Carolina staged two big inn ings to pile up their victory mar gin. In the seventh inning the Tar Babies picked up four big runs and added three more in the eighth to provide a comfortable lead. Duke put together three hits in their half of the ninth to score two runs. Outside of the ninth inning Boseman was in complete control of the Imps, allowing only two hits and no runs. The Tar Babies will stage a re turn engagement with the Dukes on Friday, when they meet the Imps on Emerson field at 4 p.m Summary: R H Carolina J V 9 14 Duke J V - 2 5 E 3 5 Score by innings: Carolina "B" ...100 100 Duke "B" v. ..-000 000 4309 0022 Batteries: For Carolina: Bose man and Varney ; for Duke : She veick, Dhamron, and Lyles. CWC To Meet Today Members of the Carolina Workshop Council will meet this afternoon in Graham Memorial at 4 o'clock according to Chair man Charles Gaylord. - This will be the final meeting of the council. Coed Mural Slate The schedule today will be as follows: Kenan vs. Town Girls; Mclver vs. Smith ; ADPi vs. Chi Omega, at 4 o'clock; Carr vs. Al derman ; and Tri Delts vs. Pi Phi, at 5 o'clock. All games will be played in Kenan Stadium. Subscribe to the Daily Tar Heel I WILL BUY Your Outgrown Clothing and Shoes. GROSSMAN In Carrboro Upstairs- Write me a postcard and I will call. Dance To The Music of ROY COLE AND HIS ORCHESTRA Dial 6076 Cooked the Way Sizzling Steaks Sea 'Foods Hamburgers BRADY'S Riggs Holds Two-Match Lead Over Budge in Tennis Play Net Troupe to Appear in Woollen Gym Tuesday Night; Tickets Now on Sale By Bob Goldwater A gap of only two matches Budge as their nationwide tour next Tuesday evening at 7:30 Golfers Face Blue Devils In Big Match North Carolina's golfers face one of their toughest battles of the season when they match strokes with the strong Dulte Blue Devils on the Hope Valley Course this afternoon starting at one-thirty. The Tar Heels are unbeaten in Southern Conference competi tion, while the Blue Devils have only an upset loss to N. C. State to mar their record. The Wolf pack caught the Methodists off guard to ring up a 17-10 win on the Carolina Country Club Course Monday afternoon in Ra leigh. Garrett Paces Duke Pacing the Blue Devils will be Frank Garrett of High Point, a pre-war Duke star who recently returned from the service. He has been flirting with old man par on the Hope Valley links of late and promises to Graydon Liles, the Tar Heel ace, plenty of competition. How well the Tar Heels are able to do in the lower brackets tomorrow afternoon will have a big bearing on the match, since Duke is well fortified in the top positions. Coach Chuck Enck- son will probably use Liles and Ed Ashby in the No. 1 foursome, long-driving Ed Bailey and Dan Nyimicz as the No. 2 pair, and Jim Keiger and Bill Woods in the No. 3 position. ' Tough Match "This wjll be one of our tough est matches of the year," Coach Cnuck Erickson said last night. "It should be pretty even and I think we have a fairly good chance of winning." It all boils down to whether the boys are hot or cold. Two or three shots can win or lose a match, and if the Tar Heels are sharp, the chances are good, and if ipv aren't well. It 11 De a e-ood battle anyway. That's golf . . for you. Send home. x the Daily Tar Heel E. A. BROWN FURNITURE CO. 106 West Rosemary Across street from Bus Station Phone 6576 You Like It! Chicken in the Rough Short Orders on the Durham Road separates Bobby Riggs and Don nears its Chapel. Hill appearance p.m. in Woollen Gym. Student tickets for the event are now on sale in the gymna sium ticket office at $1.' All of the 3400 seats will be reserved. Once losing by a 14-5 count, Budge has captured 11 of the last 15 encounters to pull up into 18-16 deficit. His most re cent triumph took place Mon day at Smith College, Mass., when the redhead slammed his way to straight 6-4, 6-1 sets. Riggs was victorious in the la test clash at Hartford, Conn., Tuesday. The tour, originally a 40-match affair, has been in creased to 50 with the local show ing the 39th battle between the two rivals. Also appearing on the pro gram in preliminary singles and combining with the two stars in doubles are Wayne Sabin and John Faunce. The probable dou bles combinations will see Budge and Faunce oppose Riggs and Sabin. All matches will be the best of three sets. The two headliners are both former national Wimbledon, and Davis Cup stars in their amateur days, and the diminutive Riggs is the present professional title holder, by virtue of a four-set victory over Budge last Decem ber. As an amateur, Sabin was an alternate on the Davis Cup team. - . .. ... Chapel Hill is the fifth col lege town in which the troupe is to perform. Previously they had visited Michigan State, Illi nois, Smith, and Cornell. MAJORS AMERICAN St. Louis 1 3 0 New York.., 5 7 2 LP : Zoldak ; WP : Chandler ; HR : Rizzuto. Detroit 14 1 Washington 0 2 1 WP: Newhouser; LP:" Wolff Chicago 10 17 2 Boston 14 17 4 WP: Harris; LP: Haynes Cleveland 5 7 0 Philadelphia 2 6 ,4 WP: Feller; LP: Knerr. NATIONAL Boston 5 9 4 Chicago. 10 14 1 WP: Wyse; LP: Javery; HR: Rowell. New York 15 0 Pittsburgh ... 0 8 0 WP: Koslo; LP: Ostermueller Brooklyn 8 16 2 Cincinnati 5 10 0 WP : Lombardi ; LP : Lambert ; HR: Padget. TTAwHrnTc Ynn? Two little colored boys were talking and the first says, "I'se five, how old is you?" The second replies, "I don't know." "Well, do you git dat funny feelin' when you's aroun' girls?" "No," said the other thought fully, "Ah don "Then you is f oV Keep Off the Grass BULL'S HEAD BOOKSHOP Ground Floor Library "My Three Years with Eisenhower" by Harry Butcher Browse' Rent Buy Runners Point For Duke Meet AwaySaturday Local Cindermen Rate As Underdogs By Jim Pharr The Tar Heel cindermen are pointing for their most impor tant dual meet of the season, to be held in Durham Saturday against the potent Duke Blue Devils. The meet Saturday is expect ed to serve as a preview of the Southern Conference meet, that will be run here on Mav 17-18. The Carolina trackmen rate as underdogs to the Blue Devils, but Coaches Fetzer and Ranson hope to upset the Dukes with a squad that has been strengthened by the addition of several candidates from the football squad. i Carolina's track staff are hop ing that several trackmen who have been improving steadily in eacn meet this season will come through with enough points to turn the tide against he Duke runners. In the dashes, Laddie Terrell, Ted Haigler, Tom Jordan, and Charlie Don- nell carry the Carolina hopes. Vernon Reiser, Charlie Tiet- jen, Tom Turner, Alex Veazey, and James Briley will be the leading contenders in the 440 and 880, while Mark Burnham, Leonard Briley, Walter Francis, and John Strait lead the candi dates in the mile and two-mile events. The Tar Heel hurdles are ex pected to be strongly run, with Chunk Simmons leading a field including Dick Taylor, Hunter Heggie, and Ted Haigler. The track staff has been hop ing for improvement in the field events, which have proved to be weak all through the season. The one strong field event on the Carolina team has been the pole vault, with Norman McLeod, Hank Hickman, and Walter Ward have been getting fair height. Simmons, Terrell, Taylor Thorne, Ward, Paxton, Heggie, and Holt are the leading Tar Heel candidates in the broad jump and high jump, while Klosterman, John Tandy, and Hobbs are the outstanding men in the discus. In the javelin throw, Sim mons paces a field including Tandy, Hickman, and Paxton. Ted Hazlewood, Bob Riddle, Hobbs and Hartig are the Caro lina men that the Duke shot putters will have to reckon with MURAL SCHEDULE Thursday, 4:00 Field No. 1: Med School vs. Whitehead; No. 2: Kap Sig No. 1 vs. KA No. 2; No. 3: Chi Psi vs. Zeta Psi; No. 4 ; TEP vs. Chi Phi ; No. 5 : Law School No. 1 vs. Law School No. 2. ' 5 :00 Field No. 1 : Med. School vs. Old East; No. 2: Pi Lambda Phi vs. Sigma Chi: No. 3: DKE vs. ATO; No. 4: Kap Sig No. 2 vs. KA No. 1; No. 5: SAE No. 2 vs. Sigma Nu; No. 6; St. An thony vs. Phi Delt No. 2. Tennis Schedule Thursday, 4:00 Phi Delts vs. Betas; 5:00: Phi Gam vs. PiKA. Water Schedule Thursday, 4:00 St. Anthony vs. SAE ; 5 :00 : Delta Sig vs. Sig ma Nu. . " Two Runs in Seventh Inning Nullifies Rally by Carolina Johnson Pitches Victory for Wolfpack; Coleman Suffers Loss, Beason Hits Homer B1G FOUR STANDINGS Won Lost State , 6 1 Duke 3 3 Wake Forest 2 4 Carolina 1 4 By Bill Woestendiek Carolina baseball fortunes hit bottom here yesterday as the Tar Heels fell into the Big Four cellar by bowing to NC State for the third time this spring on Emerson field. This time the score was b-4 in iavor oi me loop Ernie Johnson's five-hit hurling with a 12-hit attack against Hamp Coleman and Vin DiLo renzo. Trailing 4-1 in the sixth inn- ing, tne lar neeis pur on ineir it FT TT 1 1 Jl only offensive attack of the day to make four hits and score three runs in a rally highlighted by right-fielder Harry Beason's two- run homer, his second in two days. Winning Runs State scored the winning runs in the seventh on three hits and an error. Jim Wilson led off with a ground ball double to right center. After PeeWee Gardner fanned, Jim Edwards connected for his third single, sending Wil son to third. Bob Courts then bounced to first-baseman John Gregory who scooped the ball up and threw to second in an at tempt to start a double play. However, the throw was low and Wilson scored with Courts going to third. Bill Stanton singled home Courts with the final score of the ball game. Coleman got off on the wrong foot by walking the first two bat ters to face him in the first inn ing. With Mewborn and Rich- kus on base as a result of trje walks, Wilson bounced a ball through the infield for a single, and Mewborn came on to score when the ball was bobbled by Cole in center. Gardner struck out, but Edwards lined a safety to left to give the visitors a two run margin. Beason, who has been hitting brilliantly in recent games blast ed a line-drive triple to right to open Carolina's second inning. Beason stayed on third until, with two out, Gardner kicked Hayworth's grounder, allowing the run to score. Twice in Third State tallied twice more in the third after the first two men had been easy outs. Coleman hit Gardner on the elbow and the latter promptly stole second, See BASEBALL, page 4 Have Your Car Serviced for the "Frolics" Washing Greasing Polishing Battery Service Waxing Jobs POE-MANGUM'S PUROL SERVICE STATION : Dial 6061 By Wire Anywher Dial: 6816-Day 9326-Night t I Til iFiv- T . . -v leaaers, wno DacKea iresnman Rnv Slrnra State AB R H Mewborn, 2b 3 10 Richkus, ss 3 10 Wilson, cf 5 12 Gardner, rf 4 10 Edwards, c 5 2 3 Courts, If 5 0 2 Stanton, lb 5 0 3 Utley, 3b 5 0 0 Johnson, p 4 0 2 Totals 39 6 12 Carolina AB R II Ryan, ss 4 0 1 Hearn, 3b 4 0 0 Cole, cf 4 10 Beason, rf 4 2 2 Gregory, lb 3 11 Cleetwood, If 3 0 0 Clayton, If 1 0 0 Colones, 2b 4 0 1 Hay worth, c 4 0 0 Coleman, p ... 2 0 0 DiLorenzo, p .'. 10 0 aHackney r 10 0 Totals 35 4 5 Score by innings: State .202 000 2006 Carolina . 010 003 0004 Runs batted in: Edwards 2, Stanton 2, Beason 2, Colones 1. Errors : Mewborn, Richkus, Courts, Cole, Gregory. Two base hits: Stanton, Wilson. Three base hit: Beason. Home run: Beason. Sacrifice : Richkus. See BOX SCORE Page U TROUBLED BY MOTHS? ROACHES? TERMITES? CALL 6901 TODAY Service Fully Guaranteed Eight Years' Experience Veteran Exterminating Company Dial 6901 SLSig- FLOWS For Mother's Day or May Frolics "For the Best in Flowers" - University Florist Pick Theatre Building

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