Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 19, 1951, edition 1 / Page 4
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J. V J- r : if'' M THURSDAY, APRIL 19, l! ?AGS FOUR ver WolfpcK iVme Pod 'Hurls Tar To 3- ictory H eels 2 B a J. Senter Top Hitter For Carolina " By" Zane Robbins Chalmers Port, fast becoming the ace of the Carolina mound staff, finally snapped the jinx which N.. C. State has held over the Tar Heels this year and hung up his third win of the season yesterday afternoon at Emerson Field as Carolina defeated the Wolfpack, 3-2. Port allowed only four hits in going the distance and fanned 11 State batters. In two innings the third and eighth he struck out the side. The stocky Miff ling town, Pu., product was seldom in trouble as he defeated State foi the first Carolina victory of the year over the ' Raleigh outfit. Carolina scored single runs in each of the first two innings and .was never in danger after that. After Mark- Herring had opened the Tar Heel half of the first inning by fanning, Bobby Hen ning blasted a long triple to left centerfield and scored when John (Sleepy) Senter cracked a single into leftfield. 1 Pori Drives in Run The second Carolina run came on a base on balls, a wild pitch, and a timely single by Port. Brookshire drew the . free pass and advanced to second when State Pitcher Ed Hobert unleash ed a throw that got away from Catcher Dick McGillis. Port then cracked a sharp single into left field to score Brookshire. The Tar Heels picked up their final tally in the fifth inning when Senter smashed a home run into deep left-center with the bases empty. State scor;d its first run in the third when Bill Martin walked, after Mark Wright had fanned to ope4i the frame, and came home on Hebert's stinging triple to left-center. Port then whiffed the next two men to face him to end the threat. -Final Wolfpack Run The final Wolfpack run came in the ninth when McGillis cow tailed a Port offering, slamming the ball against tho left-center- iJCia wan wun noDoay aDoara. j One of the funniest events of the afternoon came in the sev enth inning when State Center-, fielder John Fuscoe walked, struck out, and flied to center field during one trip to the plate. Umpire Porter Shepard called a ball after Fuscoe had started to swing at a 2-1 pitch and held up. Catcher Wiess and Coach Walt Rabb immediately protested, say ing Fuscoe had tipped the ball and was out since Wiess held on- to the pitch. Shepard then called two more balls, moving the count to 3-2. The State coach charged onto the field at that point, claim ing that four balls were sufficient to allow a batter a free pass. Shepard managed to talk him down also, however, and Fuscoe then flied out to Billy Reeves in centerfield to end the three cornered " squabble. We Dood It!!! Score by innings: N. C. State ..0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 2 4 1 U. N. C 1 1 0 0 1 0 0 x 3 6 0 Summary: E Martin; RBI Senter, Fort, Hobert, McGillis: HR Senter, , iviciiims: Henning. Hobert: S Henning; DP Herring. Brookshire and Henning; EB Off Port 3, of! Hobert 4; SO By Port 11, bv Hubert 4; LOB - State ,UNC 7: WP Hobert; HBP Stevens (Hobert): Umpires Shepard and Angel. Time 1:52. SEE THIS BUDGET-PRICED SLIDE PROJECTOR HERE! Made by KODAK AND IT SEL1S FOR ONLY W" T I KODASLIDE MERIT PROJECTOR This brand-new projector boasts features you'd expect to find only in far more costly models. With it, you can enjoy brilliant screenings of your 2 x 2-inch color transparencies. Comes with Lumenized f3.5 lens, 150-watt lamp, 1 1-foot cord, and has a built-in elevation device. FOISTER'S CAMERA STORE INC. Netters Capture 5-4 Match From Duke; Ager And Luxenberg Brilliant In Wirv : - By Harvey Rilch Suarked by the brilliant play of Bud Agar and Bob Luxe hbery, the Carolina tennis team rose to great heights yesterday afternoon, defeating a strong Duke net team 5-4 in one of the most thrilling matches ever played here. It was a hard earned win for the Tar Heels and the close play kept the 200-odd spectators on the edge of their seats from the be ginning to end. Three of the five Carolina points were the work of No. 2 man Bud Ager and third singles player Bob Luxenberg. Both play ed under terrific pressure and had to come from behind to win '.heir singles matches. They later earned in doubles play to add :he fifth and deciding point of iie afternoon. The turning point of the match came when Ager finally pulled through in his singles match with Duke's John Ross. After three hours of grueling play, Ager came back from a first set . deficit to edge out his opponent in a spine tingling match, 3-6, 13-11, 8-6. Luxenberg, back in action af ter a week's seige with influen za, played the tennis of his life in his win over Hal Lipton: Down 3- 6 -in the first set, he roared back to cop the next two sets, 61, 6-4. His outstanding performance in the No. 2 doubles match left no thing to be desired and brought high praise from Coach Kenfield. Del Sylvia, Carolina No. 1 man, ran true to form in his match with Ives Deimling, beating the Duke ace easily in straight sets, 6-3. 5-2. Sylvia later teamed with Captain Heath Alexander to take the featured doubles match from Duke's Deimling and Carloss, 6-2, 4- 6, 6-4. - The summary: SINGLES Sylvia (UNO defeated Deimling 6-3, e-2. Ager (UNO defeated Ross. 3-6, 13-11. ! 3-6. Luxenberg (UNO defeated Lipton. j 3-6. 6-1. 6-4. Warmath (Duke) defeated Alexander 6-1. 6-2 Schellenger (Duke) defeated Izlar, 6-1. i 6-8.6-4. I Xaplev' (Duke) defeated Lambeth. 4-6. 1 6-0, 3-2. Carolina Catcher Dick Weiss Top Hitter Among Big Four Batters With .636 Mark Special to The Daily Tar Heel DURHAM, April 18 Dick Weiss, a husky Carolina football fullback who is now turning in an outstanding job as the No. 1 catcher on the Tar Heels' baseball outfit, was the top hitter in the Big Four going into yesterday's game against N. C. State. Weiss edged two Duke power houses, First Baseman Bill Wer ber and Outfielder John Gibbons, for top honors in the first Big Four averages released this sea son. Weiss is hitting a hefty .636 through Saturday's games, while Werber and Gibbons are both slugging at a .625 pace. Weiss is also one of the top ex tra base hitters in the fast college loop with a double and two triples among his seven clouts in 11 trips. Duke tops the team bat fig ures, having averaged .377 at the plate in two games. North Caro lina, with a .292 average in three DOUBLES t Warmath-Tapley (Duke) defeated Iz- i . iar-Lambeth, 6-3, 6-2. Alexander-Svlvia (UNO defeated De- j Ager-Luxenberg (UNO defeated Lip-imling-Cat loss, 6-2, 4.-6, 6-4. I ton-Scheilenger, '6-3, 6-0. Blue-White Football Game Set For Saturday, April 28 The annual Blue-Whit? intra-squad football game will be held Saturday afternoon. April 28 at 2 o'clock in Kenan Stadium. This is the game that gives the students an early look at the Tar Heels i or the coming year. The game is sponsored by the Monogram Club. Tickets for the game have been distributed to NC Club members in the dorms and fraternity houses and may be ob- -; ; T tained from them. The student tickets are 50 cents each if accom panied by passbook coupon num ber 50. General admission tickets are $1.00. Anyone not a student of the University comes under this heading. The high school seniors, guests of the school administra tion for the weekend, have al ready had their tickets arranged. Students will enter gates No. 2 and No. 3. High school students will enter gate No. 5 only, on the south side. General admission tickets will be valid at either side of the field. Next year's varsity will be led for the first time by its newly elected captain and alternate captain, Joe Dudeck and Bob Gantt. Last year the Whites, composed of old grads and a few borrowed varsity players, dropped the up and coming 1950 team by a 14-13 count on a sweltering afternoon. A crowd of 19,000 was on hand last year. MURALS SOFTBALL 4:00 Field 1 Steele vs. Man gum: 2 Kap Sig 2 vs. DKE 2; 3 Phi Gam 1 vs. ZBT; 4 A Dorm 2 Vs. BVP: 5 ATO 2 vs. Sig Chi 1. 5:00 Field 3 Zeta Psi 1 vs. PiKA 1; I -1 Weslev Rockets vs. Victorv Village; 5 Pi Kap Phi vs. Delt Sig Pi. TENNIS . 5:00 Phi Gam vs. winner sig Cht vs. Sig Nn; Phi Delt vs. winner PiKA vs. Pi Kap Phi. league tussles, is runner-up. Top pitcher in the Big Four this far has been N. C. State's Lunsford Lewis, who has chalked up wins over Carolina twice this season as against no losses. Cred ited with one win as against no losses thus far in the Big Four arc Duke's Joe Lewis, Wake For est's Rip Coleman, Carolina's Bill McGinn and State's Ed Horbelt. Wake Forest's Stan Johnson has registered the other Big Four pitching win thus far, but has a loss to go with it. Mark Herring, little second baseman for the Tar Heels, was in fourth place in the Big Four batting race with a .556 average. Also ranking high for Carolina were Tommy Stevens with a .429 average and first basejnan Bob Henning, hitting the ball at an THE BIKINI MODEL HAS LOST ITS POPULARITY BUT... B. Gardner Goose-eggs UNO Frosh Special to The Daily Tar Heel RALEIGH, April 18 Bob Gard ner threw a brilliant np-hitter for, N. C State s freshmen to beat tne Carolina frosh, 7-0, here today. Gardner walked five and struck out seven in putting together his pitching masterpiece. . State's frosh collected seven hits off Carolina Pitcher Bobby In gram. Two of the hits were home runs. Johnny Ivars homered in the first inning with two men on base. Burke Probitsky collected one in the seventh with none aboard. The win was State's second in three games with the Tar Babies this season. Carolina's overall season record is one win and three losses. ;The Tar Babies also have a 4-4 tie with Gastonia. Carolina's next game is set for Saturday when the Tar Babies meet Duka here. They meet State in the last game of the season, May 16, in Chanel Hill. Score by innings: Carolina 000 000 000 0 0 2 State 200 220 lOx 7 7 1 ; T rr. , apH Maiikfhv Hardner ? Ingram ana JuauistDy, uaraner ' j Lauhridfie I even .400 clip. Carolina is cleaningt- p oMHT Carolina is leading the other three in number of two-base hits with five. State is tops in homers and triples. The league 'batting averages (five or more times at bat): AB R II Av. Wiess. Carolina 11 4 7 .636 Gibbons. Duke 8 3 5 .(? Gibbons. Duke 8 3 5 .(2.r Werber. Duke 8 3 5 .625 Bergeron, Duke 7 2 4 .571 Herring. Carolina 9 4 5 .556 Fuscoe. N. C. State 19 4 10 .526 Johnson. Duke 10 2 5 .500 Lewis. N. C. State 7 1 3 .429 Stevens, Carolina 7 0 3 .429 Dennv. Duke 5 12 .400 Henning, Carolina 10 3 4 .400 Tl ... A' 1 -UV.,-...t Q o 7 r. till IV II, , (1 HV X WI-OL , a . ' . C... .... .1 , 1 1 ' T,7 I klUiV l , CI UJJI Id 1 I . . Alford. Wake Forst . 9 13 ..".33 Flold. Wake Forest . 9 13 .333 Johnson, Wake Forest.. 6 0 2 .333 Powers, Duke 9 3 3 .333 Wright, ,N. C. State 13 4 4 .308 Brinson., N. C. State .... 22 5 6 .273 Cheek. N. C. State 15 2 4 .267 Reeves, Carolina 15 3 4 .267 Groat, Duke 9 1 1 .111 Brookshire. Carolina .... 11 2 1 .091 "SWIM" SUIT THIS CHEWY, CHOCOLATY CANDY . IS GETTING MORE POPULAR EACH YEAR Lacrossemen Set To Meet Washington V Coach Alan Moore's lacrosse men will begin the second por tion of their season tomorrow afternoon when they meet a star studded Washington College team on Navy Field. During the past two weeks, the Tar Heel mentor has been trying to devise methods to stop the high-scoring Shoremen. The Tar Heels received a devastating blow this week when it was learned that Dick Pillsbury had dropped out of school because of sickness. Now Carolina must rely almost entirely on the first stringers to carry the brunt of the attack. The defensive situation improved somewhat this week and should be functioning more smoothly when Jim Ervin returns to action on Friday. : On-Thursday of last week, the Tar Heels travelled to Durham to meet Duke's second stringers. The Tar Heel unit performed well in the last three periods but lost. -n the final seconds ; Washington College will fea ture the highest' scorer in the country in Ray Wood who tallied 140 markers in his first three seasons. Backing Wood up are Graham Menzies at attack ' and Duke Case at midfield. . The Tar Heels will have to be at their peak to stop the "whiz kids" from the Eastern Shore of Maryland. The Maroon raiders lost their first encounter to Navy, 6-8, but then triumphed over Adelphi, Hofstra, and Lehigh. Leading the local attack will be Ted Dawes, Walt Ernst, and Art Greenbaum. Dawes has tallied five g6als while Ernst is close behind with three. Greenbaum has only, one: but is leading in assists with five. CAROLINA Oil' THE MOREHEAD PLANETARIUM presents for ND THE WORLD Every night Matinees: Saturday Sunday i Advance made for any the ticket office from 10 a.m. to 10 p.m. Mon. through Sat, SPECIAL RATE OF 38 CENTS TO ALL U.N.C. STUDENTS FOR SCHEDULED ENTERTAINMENT Carolina Frosh Tracksters Win, Duke, Brown Cop Two Events By Bill Peacock , DURHAM, April 18 Bob May- j er took three first places here today for the Duke freshmen, but it wasn't nearly enough as Car olina's Tar Babies romped in a dual track meet, 78-48, under near-perfect condition's. Mayer got three of Duke's four ' firsts, winning the 830, mile, and two mile, breezing home in all three. The only other Duke first was taken by Jack Kistler, who won the shot put with a' good throw of 42 feet, 5'4 inches. Carolina had a pair of double winners, out of their 10 blue ribbons. Harry Brown won the 100 in the fine time of 10.2. and copped the first 220 he had ever run in 22.3, beating Chuck No vak of Duke by two strides. Billy Duke was the Tar Babies', other double winner, taking the pole vault and the broad jump. His pole vault was 12 feet, three inches, a good mark in varsity competition. He failed to break the freshman record of 12 feet, six inches after two tries. Duke's winning broad jump was 19 feet, 9 inches. ... Sonny Beall of Carolina took a first in the low hurdles and a second in the high hurdles, his performance in the lows being of varsity caliber. Beall won ;the lows in 25.3, whipping Curtis Langdon of Duke by a step. The summaries: 100-yard dash 1. Brown (UNC), 2. Novak (D), 3. Strang (D). Time: 10.2. 220 1. Brown (UNC) , 2. Novak (D). 3. Landon (Di. Time: 22.5: 4401. Welch (UNC). 2. Kesling (UNC). 3. Cain (UNO. Time: 33.4. 880 1. Mayer (D), 2. Higgins (UNC), 3. Lennon (UNO. Time: 2:03.9. Mile 1. Maver (D), 2. Houghton (UNO.- 3. Lennon (UNO. Time: 4:44.1. Two v mile 1.' -Mayer -(D-. 2. Glatz (UNO, 3. Bostian (UNC). Time: 10:34.5. High hurdles 1. Scott (UNC, 2. Beall (UNC). 3. Landon (D). Time 15 8. Low hurdles 1. Beall (UNO. 2. Landon (D). 3. Scott (UNC). Time 25.3. 6,000,000 C. L's roared at! 7he,800&... hilariously a best seller! NOW A SCREAMING SCREEN COMEDY... LATE SHOW SATURDAY SUN. MON. TUE. the first time OF at 8:30 p.m. 3 & 4 p.m. 2, 3 & 4 p.m. reservations can, be performance at Pole vault 1. Duke (UNC). 2. I.Matrrtas (D) ; ,3 ; Mewhinney , (Uio- Heighth: 12 ft. 3 in. Broad jump 1. Duke (UNC), 2. Per kins (UNC). 3. Amlang (D). Dis tance: 19 ft. 9 3-4 in. Shot put 1. Kistler (D). 2. Berry (D). 3. Slagle (D). Distance 42 ft 5 1-4 in. CAROLINA THEATRE On stage One Night Only- end (he New York ComgonV .e fiGEM JOSHUA fjj J yj ft - (iotl " BO, Y ..u.ltU lAWSEHCt ROBS SIT . RUSTY ClYDIM ROSS 6 ALL SEATS RESERVED MAIL ORDERS ACCEPTED NOV Please enclose self addressed and stamped envelope ORCHESTRA $4.20 $3.60 FIRST MEZZANINE $4.20 FIRST BALCONY $3.60 SECOND BALCONY S3.D0 COLORED MEZZANINE 1.80 .... COLORED BALCONY $1.10 ONLY MAIL ORDERS FILLED NOWV-Box Office Opens Apr. 20 mdnQ urn hungry Thousands of tiny windows in- the fabric invite every . brocze. Painstak ingly tailored for extra semesters of wear. Comfortable price, too. 77. Manhattan Shirt Company, makers of Manhattan s,,Vs. "Wr' ""'I""""-, Pojamas, sport shirts, head,n,,,r ami handhm . MANHATTAN SHIRTS PAJAMAS & UNDERWEAR Carried Exclusively JACK LIPMAiS CHAPEL HILL , 78-48; Apeice Javelin 1. Rcid (UNO. 2 (D) 3- Mewhinney UiC'),. 1), 157 ft. High jump 1. Haire (t'XC, Lennon (UNO tie, 3. I'L.iir Heighth: 5 ft 8 in. Disctts 1. Pruss (UNC). 2. ney (UNO, SlaKio Di. U 107 ft. 7 1-2 in. DURHAM N. C. Friday, April 27ih. 8:15 P.M .IB"" j ( M. m IOOAN White hu1tr.n. down oxford, soft roll to the collar. Popular a a holiija v with the follow i ami the ;ra 1. -BY- f "9 I S f 111 mn,"nm v- V 1 1 u'f- it:- f 1 4 . 1 Vif"'-
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 19, 1951, edition 1
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