THURSDAY, MAY, 30, .1946 THE DAILY TAB HEEL PAGE THREE Tar Heel To mle Rally Lose .Deke9 (549 Om Mural Events Continue For Summer Term Softball, Tennis Tourneys Slated Intramural activities for the two summer terms took tenta tive shape yesterday as plans for holding softball and tennis tourneys were announced by Marvin Allen, head of the mural department. ine announcement also re vealed that no awards will be offered for competitive activi ties, and that fraternity and dormitory teams will be entered in like softball circuits. "There will be no restrictions on eligibility of players on the various teams," Mr. Allen stat ed, "and if two organizations want to combine and enter one squad they may do so." The plans call for two softball tourneys, one for both of the summer terms' The number of leagues will be determined by the number of entries. A tennis tournament which will be open to both men and coed students is planned along with several minor events. The net play will include doubles and singles, the same unrestricted eligibility governing as in soft- ball. Morrow Chosen Head Of Monogram Club Mike Morrow, co-captain of next year's swimming squad, was elected president of the Monogram Club to serve from .the beginning of the summer term until December. Other officers are Jim Camp, vice-president; Ed Golding, secretary-treasurer; Dick Seaver, representative to the Athletic Council; Mike Rubish and Paul Gordy, social chairmen; and Taylor Thome, historian. Softball 5:00 Phi Kappa Sig vs. Phi Gam (Fraternity play-off) . Field in front of Alexander Dorm) . Tennis 3:00 DKE vs. Zeta Psi. Tar Heel Trackmen Prepare For Invitational AA U Meet The Tar Heel cindermen are workiner this week in DreDaration for the Open Invitational A.A.U. Track and Field Meet, to be run the circuit coaches will be an on J?etzer Held baturday morning as a part of a sports-filled day that will wind up Spring athletics. The meet will be open to ama- : : Coaches to Select All-Big Four Squad The All-Big Four mythical diamond squad as. selected by teur athletes by invitation and will include Junior and Senior Divisions. Incomplete entries to date show a large field from the Carolinas and Virginia, as well as several promising unattached entries. Heading the entry list that has been received so far is the large entry sent in by the South ern Conference track champions for 1946, the Duke Blue Devils. The meet promises to be a con tinuation of the Conference meet two weeks ago, in which the Blue Devils edged out the Tar Heels for top honors. Leading the 39 Duke field will be their star sprinters Doug Ausbon and Terry Maxwell and their middle-distance men Roger Neighborgall and Bill Simons. Also included in the Duke list of entries are the Blue Devil two- mile team of Davis and Palmer and field event stars O'Leary and Gardinier. - . Carolina will enter a large field headed by hurdler Chunk Simmons, miler. Mark Burnham, vaulters Norm McLeod and Hank Hickman, and javelin event man Henry Giff ord. Other teams that have sent in entries at press time include the AAF ORD team from Greens-! boro; the United States Marine: team from Cherry Point, and the 82nd Airborne Division j team, from Fort Bragg, all in the Senior Division of the meet. In the Junior Division, high school and prep school teams en tered to date include Raleigh High School, Granby High School from Norfolk, Va., Tay- etteville High School, Hunting- nounced Saturday immediate ly following the Duke-Carolina baseball contest at Emer son field. The honorary squad will be chosen by Coaches Vic Sor rlel of State, Bunn Hearn of Carolina, Jack Coombs of Duke, and Murray Gleason of Wake Forest. Woody Wood house of WDNC in Durham, Jim Reid of WPTF in Raleigh, and Jack Horner of the Dur ham Morning Herald will do the tabulating. Each coach has been asked to select one team including members of his own team, and one team composed of raem- p Three Tallies in Eighth Give Game to Blue Devils Hearnmen Make Five Miscues in Inning After Errorless Ball for Seven Frames By Bob Gold water Coombs Park, Durham, May 29 Leading by one run and play ing errorless ball, the Tar Heels suddenly fell apart at the seams in the eighth inning here today and suffered their eighth Big Four loss as Duke's second-place ball club scored three runs on one hit and five errors to win, 6-4. The defeat left Carolina with only one chance of escaping the loop cellar. With the two rivals slated to clash again on Emer son field Saturday, the Hearn men can pull into a third-place deadlock with Wake Forest by spilling the Blue Devils in the Box Score BIG FOUR STANDINGS V ton Hicrh School from Hunting:- ton, W. Va., Staunton Military of opposing nines only. Academy from Staunton, Va., and Bovden Hierh School from Salisbury. Several unattached individ uals will add strength to the meet. Leading these is Dr. Bart Lindsey of Winston-Salem, who was formerly Southwestern Con ference champion in the broad jump ; James Miller, long dis tance man from Erie, Pa.; and Pvt. Elmer Klein from Fort Bragg, in the high jump broad jump. Team choices will include two catchers, five pitchers, a complete infield and outfield and two utility infielders and outfielders. Votes will be tabulated on a point basis, those receiving the most points landing a berth. MAJORS National League and Cincinnati 003 030 010 7 11 Pittsburgh Phi Kaps Defeat Phi Gams In Softball Playoff, 5 - 3 By Billy Carmichael CaDitalizinff on opponents' errors and playing heads-up soft ball, the hustling Phi Kappa Sigs took a one-game lead in the f ra ternity play-offs yesterday afternoon as they defeated, the Phi Gams, 5-3. Bud Stanbach's single to right m the sixth, which scored Stevenson from second, proved the margin of victory. Tony Jones was on the mound 201 300 0006 13 WP Gumbert (2-0) LP Strincevich (0-4) State 9 Duke '7 Wake Forest 4 Carolina 3 Completed schedule. L 3 4 8 8 vjitti lOVt for the victors, notching his eleventh triumph in twelve starts, while big Ted Haigler was handling the pitching chores for the losers. It was Haigler s first defeat of the season. The game was a loosely played affair all the way. The Phi Kaps got off to a two-run lead in the first when with one down Eglen reached first on an error, stole second and scored on Richard son's single over second. A mo ment later Richardson himself tallied when Rieser threw wild at second and then dropped the throw from the outfield. The Phi Gams evened the count in the top half of the second. Bencini opened the in- ;Sfp j y I? HllU ' I Ever Heard of SNOWBALLS in the Summer? Try "Bugs" Burnett's special ty when you visit Carolina Beach. "They were the. only, now they're the best." COOL OFF BETWEEN SUNBATHS. Shaved ice with flavoring. ning with a sharp single and Raker walked. After Rieser had sacrificed the two along, Ander son booted Greene's bounder to short and all hands were safe Haigler's squeeze bunt netted another run on a close play at the plate and it looked like a big inning for the Phi Gams. On the following play, however, Greene was picked off third base on a mV.fi throw from Stanbach to Suggs and Ahrendts. popped, out to retire the side. The Phi Kaps took .the lead again in the last half of the second when Stanbach reached first on an error, stole second and scored on Rieser's over throw. The Phi Gams knotted the score in the top of the fifth. With' one out Rice tripled to deep center and scored on Tate's smashing single. The sixth proved the lucky in ning for the winners. With one down Stevenson doubled to left as Tate lost the ball in the sun, and Stanbach followed with his timely single. The latter scored a few minutes later on a passed ball and an infield out to put the game on ice. THE SUPPLY OF NEW TIRES WILL BE LIMITED FOR MANY MONTHS Why not let us re-cap your old slick tires? BEST RUBBER AND EXPERT WORKMANSHIP Patterson Tire Company West Franklin Street Chapel Hill DIALF-2841 New York 000 100 0001 5 Brooklyn 300 000 20x 5 7 WP Vic Lombardi (7-2) LP Kennedy (3-2) 2 2 St. Louis- . 020 010 0205 8 Chicago 000 010 1002 10 WP Harry Brecheen (3-5) LP Meers (0-1) American League Philadelphia 000 000 000 0 6 Boston 000 001 Olx 2 5 LP Phil Marchildon (0-4) WP Dave Ferriss (8-0) Washington 000 000 0000 3 New York 110 002 OOx 4 8 WP jCharlie Ruffing (3-0) LP Haefner (2-3) Detroit 003 000 0014 Cleveland 000 000 1001 WP Newhouser (8-1) LP Reynolds (2-6) 8 0 5 2 . Water Polo 3:00 Phi Gams vs. SAE. NOTICE Change in Store Hours Beginning June 1, 1946 and continuing through June, July, and August our new closing hour will be 6 P.M. Please let us serve you better by observation of this change. SM1TH-PREV0ST CLEANERS final contest of the campaign for both crews. With a 4-3 advantage as they took the field for the last of the eighth, the Carolina defense showed its first signs of. crumbling when Fred Ryan juggled Grady Stott's hard grounder to allow the Blue Devil outfielder to reach first. After Bakie Palmer's infield out had pushed Stott to second, Ed Mc Carthy singled to right and the parade of errors continued. Harry Beason's throw-in sailed past catcher Jim Hayworth as Stott tallied the tying run and McCarthy scampered all the way to third before the ball was re covered. After a walk and an other infield out had placed the Duke runners on second and third, two more miscues by Ryan brought in a pair of mark ers and with them went the ball game. The winners lost little time in assuming the lead, combining two infield singles with a safe blow to the outfield in the first stanza to jump into a one-run lead. They scored again in the fourth on Stott's one-bagger, a passed ball, a disputed balk by hurler Hamp Coleman, and a See BASEBALL, page U Duke AB Gorome, If ....... 5 Vann, cf .'. 5 Muse, lb 5 Frye, 2b 4 Stott, If 4 Palmer, ss 4 McCarthy, c 3 Sailer, 3b 2 Houghton, p 3 Griffeth, p 1 Totals 36 Carolina AB Hackney, If 4 Ryan, ss 4 Cole, cf 3 Beason, rf 4 Hearn, 3b 4 Gregory, lb' 4 Colones, 2b 4 Hayworth, c 4 Coleman, p .... VjICW.111XW.IX DiLorenzo, p Frazier ........ 1 1 1 1 R 0 1 0 0 3 0 1 1 0 0 K 0 0 1 1 0 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 II 1 3 1 1 o A 0 1 0 0 0 II 0 0 1 1 1 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 Totals 35 4 6 Batted for Coleman in 5th. Batted for DiLorenzo in 9th. Score by innings: Duke 100 101 03x 6 Carolina .'. 000 022 000 4 Summary: Errors Ryan 3, Beason, Hayworth, Palmer 2, Muse, Sailer. Runs batted in Galinkin 2, Gregory 2, Groome, Vann, Frye, Palmer. Stolen bases Beason, Vann, Stott. Struck out by Coleman 1, Houghton 4, Griffeth 3. Bases on balls off DiLorenzo 1, Griffeth 1. Hits off Coleman 5 and 2 runs in 4 innings ; off DiLorenzo 4 and 4 runs in 4 innings ; off Houghton 5 and 4 runs in 6 in nings; off Griffeth 1 in 3 in nings. Winning pitcher Grif eth. Losing pitcher DiLorenzo. THOUGH AWAY Y0UCAN STILL: Keep up with Carolina. Know the activities of your friends. Be a part of UNC life. Through the columns of THE DAILY TAR HEEL SUBSCRIBE TODAY Rates: (payable in advance) Each Summer Session $1.00 Each Regular Session 2.00 Each School Year 5.00 Semi-weekly during both summer -sessions. Clip and Mail Coupon: Subscription Dept. Daily Tar Heel ' Drawer 1080 Chapel Hill, N. C. Please enter a , subscription for the period (s) .... a for: of NAME : Address .... City and State (zone, if any). Enclosed find payment in ther amount of (A" receipt will be mailed you.) Also MUSICAL NEWS NOW PLAYING PICK THEATRE

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