"WEDNESDAY, 7AAY 1 1757
PASS FOUS
THE DAILY TAR HfiCl
aroiooa
Wake
"- "F f n "
deafen
Q) N
n
Tar Heels Still. Have
Chance As Duke Loses
WINSTON-SALEM (AP)
The Wake Forest Deacons rallied
for four big runs in the last of
th? eighth inning to hand the
Carolina Tar Heels an 8-6 defeat
ot Ernie Shore Field here yester
day. .
Jack McGinley, who relieved
.starter John Stokoe during a four
run Carolina rally in ;th fourth
inning, proved a one maH wreck
iv.i crew as he drove in four of
ifu Deacons' runs, scored anoth
er and pitched fine ball for the
remainder of the contest.
The loss, however, did not
I nock the Tar Heels out of con-
ntion for the Atlantic Coast
Conference championship as the
J.'ajme-leading Duke Blue Devils
i.:Lshed their season by dropping
a 7-6 decision to North Carolina
State. This made the Blue Devils
10-4. Carolina is now 8-4 with two
sanies to play. Two wins would
iive the Tar Heels a tie for first
lace and make , a playoff neces
sary. ......
McGinley held the Taf Heels
ntless and scoreless through the
ast five innings of the game and
lammed a three-run homer over
.he Ieftficld fence in the sixth
o cut the Carolina lead to 6-4.
A had led going into the inhingY
In the eighth inning, McGinley
-ingled in the second run of a
Wake Forest rally to tie the score
at 6-3. Then John Stokoe hit a
wo run doubl? that broke up the
?sme. .
Carolina starter Jim Itaugh
n -I !
I learnOnT WOOU
.
Player Area
By ED ROWLAND
What 2rea of North Carolina
produces the besL baseball play
ers: Judging trom tormer men , r '
school and legion stars now play-1 Y.Hiams .P- Miller. D-Lewis, Ba
ing on freshman squads around, r. Phillips, legette.. RBI Hud-
'
the state it seems that the West
ern Piedmont between .Winston-
Salem and SalLvxiry t holds the
honor. , V
On the Carolina freshman teani
from this area . are Winston-Salem's
Larry . Craver, Lexington's
Tommy Saintsing, and pitcher
Bobby Wooten from West Yadkin.
Also Wayne Young from Moores
viile might be included, though
that city isnt quite in the speci
fied area. All these boys are show
ing up well for . Coach Wayne
White and will be competing for
spots on the varsity next season.
Former Salisbury high school
and Legion Junior coach Joe Fere
bee has Salisbury's Tommy Eaton
and Mocksville's Brack Bailey on
the Pfeiffer squad. Eaton is the
hurlcr who pitched the 1953 Salis
bury Legion team to the Little
World Series in Minneapolis.
Also from that Salisbury team
i Butch Allie, who hails from
Statesville and is playing for the
Duke Blue Imps. Duke also has
pitcher Billy Sell from MocksviUe.
From this imposing list of stel
lar high school baseball players
who have made good on college
f reshman teams, it seems , clear
that no other general section of
the Old North State can legiti
mately claim to produce the best
players.
Though this array of talent
comes along only occasionally, col
lege coaches and major league
scouts possibly might uncover an
other Mickey Mantle or Herb
Score by appraising the talent in
:his baseball-mad section.
Nats Get
New
Mgr.
DETROIT (AP) The down
trodden Washington Senators
changed managers yesterday, ous
ting Chuck Dressen and naming
Harry Cookie Lavagetto the man
Dressen picked as his chief coach
znd sidekick seven years ago to
replace him.
Off to their worst start in 57
reasons In the American League,
the Senators decided drastic chan
ges were needed to pump new vig
or into the team that hasn't fin
ished in the first division in 11
seasons.
After the last-place Senators
dropped their eighth consecutive
game yesterday and their 16tli-in
20 starts,' President Calvin Grif
fith sped to Detroit to make the
change. : .
pitched well until he gave up a
double to George Miller to open
the Deacon eighth. Coach Walt
ftabh then called on Joe Morgan
Who pitched to one man. Then
big Tom Maultsby came on for
Carolina and - was charged with
the loss.
Carolina's big rally came in the
second -and fourth innings when
they rapped Stokoe for four runs.
The Box:
CAROLINA
Hartman, 3b
Lewis, 2b
I. Hill, lb
Shook, If
Honeycutt, ss
Hudson, cf .
D. Hill, rf
Legette, c
Raugh, p
Morgan, p
Maultsby, p
Ab
5
3
4
3
4
4
3
4
3
0
0
1
H
1
2
1
0
1
2
0
0
1
0
0
0
o
1
2.
14
0
0
1
0
6
0
0
0
0
A
3
2
0
1
5
0
0
0
2
0
0
o
t'b-Pons i:.,
TotU
;34 Z 24 13
W. FOREST ' : Ab
Murdock, c .... 4
Barnes. 3b 4
H
1
0
1
1
0
0
0
0
0
2
2
2
O
12
0
2
0
0
0
8
2
0
1
A
0
4
0
1
o
0
0
4
0
1
1
0
G. Miller, rf
McMillan, If
' a-M. Miller .
Wlliams, If
Phillips, lb
Baker, 2b 3
Bullard, cf
McGinley, p .
Moore, ss
Stokoe, p-cf
. 1
. 3
. 4
. 4
Totals
. 32 9 27 11
aDrew walk for McMillan in 8th.
j b Struck out for Maultsby in f th.
e. ......
! Carolina 020 400 0006
;Wake Forest 010 003 04x 8
' I "
R Shook, Honeycutt, McMillan,
I Hud-vn, D. .Hill, Legette, Hartman
' r ijhiiiis. n , i i-i in imv s iki 1 1 1 1 r
son, . Mciiuian, Legette, liaugn,
Hartman. Lewis, McGinley 4, Sto
ko? 2. 2B-G. Miller Moore. 3B
Hudson. HR McMillan, McGinley.
DP rBarnes, Baker and Phillips;
Honeycutt, Lewis and I. Hill. SF
Lewis. 4 Left-Carolina 4 Wake
Forest. 4. BB Stokoe 2, Raugh 2,.
Morgan 1, Maultsby .1, SO Stokoe
5, Raugh 6, McGinley 5, HO Sto
koe 6 in 3, McGinley 2 in 6, Raugh
6 in 7, Morgan 0 in 0, Maultsby
3 in 1. R-ER Stokoe (5-3), Raugh
(5-5), McGinley (1-0), Morgan (1-0).
WP Stokoe. W McGinley (1-3).
L Maultsby (2-1). U Thomas and
Pierce. T 2:00.
Duke Loses
RALETGH (AP) Don Hafer
and Eddie Wyant were 'the bat
ting stars as State defeated Duke
7-6 today to prevent the Blue Dev
ils . from clinching the ACC title.
However, the loss didn't keep
Duke from gaining at least a tie
lor tne cnampion&nip. Hafer and
Wyant (batted in three runs apiece
and each hit a home run. Junior
righthander Roger Hagwood pit
ched an 8-hitter that spoiled the
conclusion of Duke's regular sea
son ACC schedule.
The Blue Devils, finishing with
a 10-4 record, were assured of a
share of the title by Wake For
est's 8-6 victory over North Caro
lina. Score Hurt
CLEVELAND (AP) A line
drive by Gil McDougald, second
Jbatter for the New York Yankees,
struck pitcher Herb Score of the
Cleveland Indians in the head in
the first inning of tonight's game.
Score was carried from the field
pn a stretcher, but was hot uncon
scious. '
THE NEW YORK LIFE AGENT
ON YOUR CAMPUS
IS A GOOD MAN TO KNOW
George L. Coxhcad
UNC, '42
A Mutual Company
frosh Nine
Splits With
Deaclets
By ED ROWLAND
The freshman baseball
team
split a doubleheader
with the
Wake Forest frosh here yesterday
afternoon, losing the opener, 4-3,
and taking the nightcap, 5-4. The
series broujjht the frosh record to
13-7-1.
A two-run triple by Ty Clayton,
his second of the afternoon in the
last inning of the second game
tied the score, then a wild pitch
by Pascal gave the Tar Babies the
victory. Bases on balls to. Larry
Craver and Frank Montgomery
had put the tying runs on base.
Wake Forest gained a 4-run
lead in the second game before
Carolina scored after Tommy
Saintsing dropped a two-run fly in
the fifth to pad the Deaclet's lead.
The opener was a hard game for
Tar J3aby ace Wayne Young to
lose. He famed ten, gave up only
four hits and walked none, but
five Carolina errors handed the
game away.
Carolina scored two runs in the
fourth, inning of the opener on
singles by Vaughn Bryson and
Harold Workman, a ba on balls,
and a two-run error by the Wake
shortstop.
They added another in the sixth
on Clayton's first triple of the aft
ernoon and a single by Tommy
Saintsing. Carolina banged out
seven hits in that game off the
slants of winner Jerry West, but
five men were left on base in
strategic moments.
Wake's frosh tallied the winning
run.' in the fourth after Montgom
ery errored a grounder, Hauser
&in8iea ana caicner crump
I J l.il - A ' 1 A -..
i j .
uruppea a inira sixikc lO scna DOtn
runners home.
The visitors had scored their in-
itial brace of runs in the third
frame on -a triple by Neighbors
and three errors.1
In the second game Carolina
produced only three hits off the
two Wake pitchers, Lang and Pas
cal. They left seven men on base.
Bobby Wooten, who went six
innings, has the only unblemished
record on the frosh squad, 2-0. He
was "moved for a pinchhitter in
me Douom ot tne sixtn. He struck
out two and walked two in his
stint on the mound.
E
MAY 12th Is
MOTHER'S DAY
Mom's a good egg she deserves
nice token from you.
But take a word of advice from
your ancient bookseller don't
make it funrial. At heart. Mom
is a lot closer to that chick you're
trying to data than she is to
Whistler's rocking-chair antique.
And, pal, she'll thank you to keep
, that in mind,
That's why our cards are gay kid
ding youthful designs. That's why,
if you ask us to recommend a
book for a Mother's Day gift, we're
more likely to pick a lively modern
novel than a book of meditations
for the aged.
A woman's as young as she feels.
Clip a clump of years off Mom's
score wth a reminder that you
knew she's a lively biddy still!
THE INTIMATE
BOOKSHOP
205 East Franklin Street
Open Till 10 P. M.
3
Campus fteprtsantativa
Founded 1845
Netters Defeat
Tourney Starts
By JIM CROWNOVER
The Carolina tennis team clos
ed out its regular season yester
day afternoon in a whirlwind fin
ish, as they clobbered the Wolf
pack of State College, 9-0.
The Tar Heels played their best
tennis of the season in this their
final match losing only two sets ;
the whole day. j
These two closer matches were ;
in the fourth ' singles . and third 1
doubles encounters. Ray Newsome J
was pushed to defeat Ed Dye, 9-7,
2-6, 6-2, and the Tom Mclver
Canie Smith doubles combo de
feated Harry Beatty and Don Den
ton 6-4, 4-6. 6-2.
The match of the day found
Steve Bank, Carolina chief hope
in the ACC tourney coming up
this, weekend, being pushed to de
feat State's determined sopho
more hopeful Mickey. Solomon,
6-4,. 7-5. Bank played below his
iisiin1 Mmp. havin? fremiPTit tron- i
ble with . his serve. Bank, howev-1
er, showed up well in the doubles
and is expected to be in top form
for the ACC competition begin-t
ning at Duke Thursday.
the' summary
Singles: Bank (C) defeated Sol
omon, 6-4, 7-5. Black (C) defeated
DeCoursey, 6-2. 6-2. Livingston
(C) defeated Campbell 6-0, 6-0.
Newsome (C). defeated Dye, 9-7.
2-6, 6-2. Van Winkle (C) defeat
ed Yionoulis. 6-1. 6-3. Mclver (C) !
defeated Denton, 6-1, 6-2.
Doubles: Bank: Newsome (C)
defeated Solomon:Yionoulis, 6-0.
6-2. Black: Livingston (C) defeat
ed De Coursey: Dye, 6-1, 6-2; Mc
lver: Smith (C) defeated Beatty:
j
Golfers Beat
Duke, 1 812-8 '2 !
DURHAM ( AP Carolina golf
ers took an WzS1 decision from '
Duke here today in an-Atlantic'
Coast Conference golf match -onl
the . Hope Valley course.
Walter Summerville led the!
winners with a 69 for medalist
honors. Tate Landing's 71 wag
high for the Blue Devils.
The match ended regular sea
son play for the losers. They-. will
play in the ACC tourney at Win
ston-Salem this weekend. ,
AM
' It is a pleasure to report 'WEE GE0RDIE' is one of the
most heartwarming and enjoyable films of the season!"
X
"BUI
,s7vMechnicolor
c 'Wi f i 1 1
S lakes
?3P5! h) "spniGtiTiY
r r
rt
JL f l.t If
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A
TODAY AND
THURSDAY!
s
fit,,-
f ' ' ft- ?4 .4-. .-t-
ft v -'
Duke, 9-0;
Tomorrow
Denton, 6-4, 4-6 6-2.
TOURNEY PLAY
, Team-wise the conference ten
nis championship is sewed up in
the hands of Maryland, but the
individual champion is far from
being conceded to anyone as the
ACC tourney begins play tomor
row afternoon on the Duke Uni
versity courts. '
The Tar "Heel netters led by
Steve k Bank, whois undefeated in
the conference will, be very much
in contention throughout the 3
day" meet. Bank has defeated the
number one man of all ACC
schools with the exception of
Wake' Forest with whom our
match was cancelled.
The drawings for seeding in the
tourney will take place tonight at
Duke.1 This will determine which
netters will be seeded in the 64
man field.
Coach. Valdimir Cernik will be
on, hand tonight when the draw
ing takes place, and according to
him, "Bank is' "a likely choice for
the number one place since he is
unbeaten' in the Conference."
'Also competing" in the tourney
fr Carolina will be .Geoff Black,
Frank Livingstone, Fritz Van Win
kle, Bob Jacobus. Ray Newsome.
and Jay Walker.
Mural Track
The finals of the intramural
track meet were held jesterday
for both the dormitory and fra
ternity divisions.
The results were:
Broad Jump, Robinson (Med
Sch) and Goodman (ATO). ' '
100 yard dash, Morris (Dent
Sch) and Patton (Zeta Psi).
3-4 mile run, Meready (Dent
Sch) and Whitaker (DKE).
220 yard dash, Lee (Dent Sch)
and Patton (Zeta Psi).
'60 yard dash. Lee (Dent Sch)
and Sasser (SAE). '
Shot Put, 1 Harris (Dent Sch)
and Steele (KA).
'"- High Jump, ' Shingleton (Sig
Nu) and Oakley (Dent Sch).
880 yard . relay, Kap Sig and
Med Sch.
' 400 yard relay, SAE and Law
Sch.
Discus. Harris (Dent Sch) and
Leffler (Kap Sig).
nr,:o::s 0tS!ISL
"KlEAITiTJAEirllinG
ENJOYABLE!"
" 'GEOR0IE will do for Scotland what
John Ford's 'The Quiet Man' did for Ireland!"
Travers is ideal m the title rote.
has been used with artistry to
'Ill " 1WWBflllMI. bww w- - - 9
if X I V 9'11 and woodlands, deep-blue
S' nd woodlan
and mist-shrouded
mountains.
A OUST!
"Gentle and charming and
wryly humorful!"
lauehter springs easily anal
( spontaneously with a warm bk f
sentiment to mellow it. Th
audience comes off with a merry
Ottbuif Omttt m-rmi
"DILSGI3TFUL CODY!
A succession of chuckles . . .
highly amusing!"
FULL OF FUri!"
Carolina Trackmen Preparing
For Conference Meet Friday
By DAVE WIBLE
. Friday is ACC track meet time
for Carolina and Tar Heel coaches
Dale. Ranson and Joe Hilton are
busily getting ready for the big
event in which many conference
records are destined to fall.
Through the season, nine con
ference marks have been bettered
but conference records must be set
at the conference meet.
Carolina nas nad a greaf deal
to do with those bettered marks
by way of Jim Beatty, Dave Scur
lock, ami the mile relay team.
Beatty bettered his own confer
ence record time in- the mile at
the! Carolina-Maryland meet when
he ran a 4:08.6. He has also bet
tered the 2-mile conference rec
ord of 9:25.3. At the Penn Relays
Beatty covered the distance in
9:01.7.
Scurlock, who will be running is
the ACC meet for the first time,
has. bettered the conference mark
in the 880. H,e has run a 1:52.8.
Defending champion Carle Party
of Maryland has also bettered his
last year's time with a 1:53.8... Last
year Party won the event with a
1:54.4.
Carolina's relay team of Jim
Moss, John Sylvester, Dick McFad
din and Dave Scurlock set a new
school record in the Duke ' meet
last Saturday with a 3:18.5. The
conference record in the event is
over a second higher at 3:19.7.
The high jump will have the
greatest competition this year,
with three already above the ACC
record. .These are George Hogan
and Tom Tait of Maryland, and
Tom Cameron of Clemson. Hogan
will be trying to better his own
conference record.
Don Goodroe of South Carolina
seems to be a sure bet to set a
new ;record in the 120 high hur
dles. He has , been under Joel
Shankles conference record three
times thL season.
JDave'Simc, Duke's worideV Upy
who holds claim to two .world's
records and a tie on another, will
leave his first love baseball and
The star and producer of
"An American In Paris"
offer a screenful of origin
ality, talent and imagina
tion. , sUrrinf
TAIIARA T0UI1AN0YA
mi YOUSKEVITCH
An M-6-M P.Ctur.
OPENS TODAY
LATE SHOW SAT. NIGHT
SUN. MON. TUE.
1 uun airtax &chia
WEBB LOREN
m Kim
... k y
' nreiri ,
in 9crrn
V enf rf uinnttnt t
AUit
bring to yen
ikt outstanding
talent cf
J prx Um i m
J Mwie, Art '0
7 ( V X. JA.
1 "::
don a Duke track suit to defend
his conference marks . for two of
the three records' he holds'. He
will compete in the 100 and the
220, but he will not defend his
220 low hurdle title.
All together -there will be five
defending champions in this year's
meet: Beatty in the mile; Dave
Leai of, Maryland defending the
440; Carl Party of "Maryland de
fending the 880; Dave Sime of
Duke defending ths 100 and 220;
and Ed Cooke of Maryland who
will defend his shot put mark.
Bob Feller holds the major
league strikeout mark for one
season with 348.
GAKT OP KEW HAVEN
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pood taste and yov
good looks.
JULIAISTS
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l-ICHTWCJOHT
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t m
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Bob Lemon needs only one
more homerun to break the pit
cher's record of 37 homers in a
lifetime.
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