Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 19, 1928, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thursday, April 19, 1S23 THE TAR HEEL Pass Three -n ! f r CTDTf? ilil v. vy. ' 5 I 1 ill V J 1 Rally W his - i t 1 1 M f 1 i . 1 1 n UJi - o Carolina Pushes Over Winning Score in Seventh LANNING PITCHES WELL Jessup, Maus, Ball and Satter field Lead in Batting Honors for Carolina While Reynolds Stars for Wake Forest. The proverbial seventh inning rally netted Carolina three runs and en abled the Heels . to turn back Wake Forest College here yesterday 4-1 in the first game of the Deacon-Tar Heel series. The Heels spotted Wake Forest to a run in the third inning and until the seventh it looked as if that one run would turn the Carolina team back. Ball, Tar Heel huxler, and Lan- ning, Deacon moundsman, were twirl ing nice games and keeping the opT posing, batters well in check. In this frame, Jessup doubled, Nap Luf ty sent him to third a moment later and was also safe on an error. Stewart tried to bring Jessup in on a squeeze play, but was out at first. Jimmie Maus, star Tar Heel back stop, poled out a single to score both Jessup and Lufty. The Wake Forest team blew up temporarily at this pe riod and by the time the dust had cleared up Maus was safe at second. Harding was sent in to pinch hit for Ball. He was safe at first on another Deacon error, Maus scored at the same time. Coxe struck out and the Heels' rally ended when Harding was out stealing second. The Deacons scored in when Reynolds, second man up in the f ram, poled out a triple over Tom Coxes head. Lassiter brought him in with a squeeze play. This ended their scoring activities for the remain der of the game. - ' Jessup led the Carolina team at bat with three hits out of as many tries. One of his hits went for two bases. "Ball and Maus also gathered two bag gers for the Heels. Satterfield poled out a triple for the Heels while Rey nolds three base hit was the only ex tra base blow the Deacons got during the afternoon. . Box score and summary: Wake Forest Ab.R. iZ. O. Lassiter: cf 3 0 0' 2 A.E. 0 0 r Kuykendall, e .:. 3 0 2 6 1 0 Dowtin, 2b 3 0 0 2 1 0 Clayton, ss 4 0 1 11 1 Scarboro, If . - 3 0 0 3 0 0 P. Joyner, 3b .. 3 0 0 3 1 0 Laning, p 2 0 0 1 3 0 K. Joyner, p : 1 0 0 0 0 0 Foust, rf ................... 2 0 1 10 0 Revnolds . lb 3 115 0 0 Totals 30 1 5 24 7 1 Carolina Ab. R. H. O. A. E Coxe, cf : 4 0 0 2 0 0 RnrtL-2h 4 0 0 2 5 0 Satterfield, ss ....... 4 1 1 2 2 0 Mackie, lb 3 0 1 16 1 0 Jessup, rf .. ...3 1 3 2 0 0 .Lufty, 3b 4 1 1 3 6 0 Stewart, If .. - 2 0 0 0 0 0 Furches, If 1 0 0 0 0 0 Maus,c 3 11 2 . 0 0 Ball, p ...... 10 1 0 2 0 Harden 1 0 0 0 0 0 Westmoreland, n 0 0 0 0 0 0 Totals 30 4 8 27 16 0 Batted for Ball in seventh Wake Forest -....001 000 0001 Carolina . ........ .000 000 31x 4 Summary: Two base hits Ball, Jessup, Maus. Three base hits Rey nolds, Satterfield. Sacrifice hits Las siter, Dowtin, Scarboro, Laning, Jes sup. Double plays Laning to Clay ton, Lufty to Mackie to Lufty. Struck out by Laning 3, by Joyner 1, by Ball 1. Bases on balls off Laning 2, off Ball 2. -Hits off Laning, 8 in 81-3 innings; off Joyner, 0 in 2-3' in ning; off Ball, 5 in 7 innings ; off Westmoreland, 0 in 1 inning. Win ning pitcher Ball. Losing pitcher Laning. Hit by pitcher P. Joyner. Umpire Allgood. - Time of game 1 hours 40 minutes. GOLF TOURN AMENT TO BE HELD APRIL 28 AT LOCAL CLUB Book Exchange Offers . One Dozen and a Half Dozen Balls as Prizes On Saturday, April 28, there will be a golf tournament held at the Chap el Hill Country Club, which will be open to all members and student mem bers. - This is to. be a handicap tourna ment, and all persons wishing to par ticipate are requested to hand in three cards of twelve holes each. These cards should be signed by players and their opponents. The prizes which are offered by the Book Exchange; are one dozen golf balls for the winner, and a half dozen for the runner-up. EEL PRINT by Yarborougli Merely a column in -which the sports editor expresses personal opinions con cerning happenings in the sport v:hirL The question of a name for this column worried its editor quite a bit. He racked, his brain for a suitable cognomen and solicited aid from vari ous persons.. Even the social editor of this publication was requested to help in naming the newcomer to the columns of the Tar Heel. Finally in desperation the editor sought the aid of a girl friend. She knew of no name, but she seemed anxious to sug gest one to whom it might be dedi- : cated. Turning to sports, we note that "Lefty" Westmoreland has reached the form that earned him the cap taincy of the 1928 Carolina baseball team. Monday, he held the V. M. I. batters to seven hits and no runs, Thirteen men went back to the bench via the strike-out route. It seems as if "Lefty" is getting ready, for theland eighth places, respectively. big games yet to be played. Recently track athletes have been juggling the discus mark about quite a bit. "Puny" Harper, Tar Heel heav er, and Lund, V. P. I. weightman, have been receiving quite a bit of publicity , j on account of their work with the plat the third L , , , ,. , ier. ruu we Know ox two nign ana prep school boys who can give them run for their - records. Theron Brown of Greensboro hung up a new mark about two weeks ago when he tossed the discus 134 feet. And now we hear that Rhoades, Woodberry Forest track captain, has just tossed the platter around 140 feet. Rhoades is the same boy who came down last spring for the first Southern Inter- scholastic and hung up a record of 131 feet. Both of these boys will be seen in action on the Hill this spring. Brown will compete in the State High School meet this week-end, and Rhoades will be down again for the Southern Interscholastic games May 12. With the commencement of the State Intercollegiate tennis tournament this afternoon, Chapel Hill will find more sporting events listed for one week end than it has seen in quite a while, The Tennis matches continue through Saturday. Georgia Tech and Caro lina meet on the track Saturday, and on the same afternoon the Heels and V. Mr I. meet on the diamond. The freshman trackmen go to Durham this afternoon for a meet with.Duke f rosh The High schools hold their track meet during the week-end, and the high school tennis matches are also listed for the same time. A right big order for one week-end. "K. O." Warren, former student councilman, member of the Golden Fleece, and captain and member of several Carolina teams, has been put ting right many heavies to sleep, late ly. Since he turned pro last fall, Ad has been really fighting and we wouldn't be surprised to see him gd a lone' wav in the fight game. Of course, we aren't going to try to say how far he will go, for about a year ago we predicted that Tom Sharkey would beat Dempsey and even if he didn't beat the Mannassa Mauler he 1 "5 -w yUj -Wi v , O 1 1 "L State Tennis Meet Will Start Today Net luminaries of ftorth Carolina collegiate circles will meet here this week-end inHhe annual State Tennis Tournament to determine the inter collegiate champions of North Caro lina. Beginning today, court repre- sentatives of Davidson, Duke, State, Wake Forest, and Carolina will go through an elimination 'series that will culminate in Saturday's final championship matches for singles and doubles supremacy. This tournament will in no way decide the question of a school's claim to State Champion ship team honors; it will merely de termine the individual champions in North Carolina collegiate tennis. Coach Kenfield has been whipping the Tar Heels into final shape for the mass invasion of State intercollegiate stars. The Carolina team has been showing more speed and stamina lately, which is a woeful indication that they are ready for the test. Cap tain Waddell is commanding first place in the playing line-up. After him, in order, are Covington, Wilson, Scott. Norwood, and Merritt. Dal- rymple and Cone, of last year's var sity, have .been displaced by younger candidates, and now occupy seventh In the doubles, Waddell and Wilson are on the first team. Covington and Scott will probably compose the sec ond pair. The other combinations are, as yet, undecided, would some day be heavyweight cham pion. Sharkey hasn't done much since that seventh round in New York a while back. K. O. might run into somebody who could do the same with him. At present, however, he is elim inating a bunch of fighters and when we say eliminating, we mean that he is putting them out for a long time Last night he fought in the eastern part of the state, when this is read he probably will have scored another knock-outi News reports say that this is his last fight under Dean Paulsen and the last time he will fight in the state before going North. We repeat he is going a long way in the fight game, or we're way off the game. This business of building up a sports staff for the Tar Heel is real work, When the editor first undertook the position, he thought that it would be easy, but he hadn't met all the aspir ing sport writers. It seems that most every one of them wants to cover the editor's favorite beat, and none o them want the beats we dislike. The editor of this column wants sympathy and the only person-from whom he thinks he can get it is the girl who wanted the space dedicated to her. Since we wrote Hhe paragraph on the week-end sport card, we find that the freshman tennis ladder is to be started this week-end.-- More stuff for sport followers", although we doubt i it will interest anyone outside of the freshman tennis players. The year ling codrtmen are scheduled for a trip into the western part of the state sometime in May. Lucky birds! We wonder just who is going to read this first attempt. But we are leaving it for another . week at least then another. Readers! Preparexfor Heel Prints, for it is going to appear just as regularly as Walt Spearman's Random Thrusts and will probably be as interesting. We are not flattering our column but taking off on Walt's. L ONDEBMEN TO TiMFGEORGIA TECHSA1TJRDAY Henderson, Carolina's' Crack Two - Miler, Oat of Running. Represented by a galaxy of South ern Conference stars and, in two in- tances, by nationally known athletes, he Georgia Tech track team will make their 1928 debut Saturday on Emer son field. This will be the hardest dual meet, of the entire year for the Tar Heels. The Tech roster includes such men as Hamm, the fourth greatest colle giate broad jumper the world has ever known and Southern Conference title holder in the, broad Jump and 00 yard dash, and Kontz, Conference 440 record holder and fifth ranking national 440 artist. Carolina will pit against the invaders such men as El- iott and Pritchett, long distance men. The meet will be one of distance men versus' dash stars and weight artists. The Heels will be minus the services of Johnny Henderson, crack two-miler, who will be unable to compete, due to a leg injury. "Puny",: Harper will be the best bet f or U. N. C. in the weights while Hood, . who, in a recent meet, threw the shot over 43 feet, will prob ably add few points to the visitors' score. State High School Track Meet Will Open Here Tomorrow The sixteenth annual Interscholastic Track Meet for North Carolina high schools will open here tomorrow morning at 9 o'clock. This meet Is being held in connection with the an nual High School Week sponsored by the University Bureau of High School Debating and Athletics. ALWAYS H a 4A and you'll get the best "Made It's Way by the Way It's Made" for sale by iailcs CAROLINA GRILL tt This 'picture is now showing on Broadway for $1.50. See it here for 30c. Student days - carefree, footloose replete with life and laughter! Gold en days when Youth - glorious Youth - binds Prince to peasant maid with the bonds of love! Ramon Novarro and Nor ma Shearer bring the mad, glad hours of first love back to us in this beautiful picturization of the famous play. Also PATHE NEWS COMING "MAGIC FLAME" With Ronald Colman The complete list of schools enter ing the meet as announced by Mr. E. R. RzrJdn, director of the bureau, fol lows: Durham, Raleigh, Wilmington, Greensboro, Burlington, High Point, Oxford, Ahoskie, Seventy-First, Brag town, Condor, Charlotte, Farmviile, Kannapolls, Spring HilL Thomasville. Wendell, and Salisbury. The preliminaries will start at 9 o'clock and the finals will be held at 2. The meet will be in charge of Coach Bob Fetzer and associates. A beautiful silver loving euy will j. be presented the winner. Tar Baby Track Team Will Meet Duke Imps Today The Tar Baby track team will meet the Duke freshmen this afternoon on Emerson Field in what will be their first intercollegiate encounter of the year. The Carolina team has already met two of the strongest high school teams, Greensboro and Charlotte, and has defeated them both by safe mar gins. Coach Ranson's men have been working hard for this meet and should show up exceptionally well. Very little can be learned as to the strength of the opponents from Dur ham, but a close contest is expected. Tar Heels Down the Flying Squadron 7-0 "Lefty" Westmoreland, Captain on the Tar Heel baseball team, let the Flying Squadron down with seven hits and no runs to feature Carolina's 7-0 victory over V. M. I. Monday af ternoon at Lexington, Va. This game was scheduled for April 11 but as it was .rained out the team extended its stay into Virginia an extra day to play the Lexington team. The Heels hopped on Boxley in the first inning to score two runs. Burt singled and Henry Satterfield drove him home with a four base swat. Mackie followed this with a single, but Gillespie relieved Boxley at this point and Carolina's scoring was over CALL FOR Drag UL W N ..NORMA. U. v SB-0EAB3ER Vii; (f( and i ' I , rJ 1- $r JEAN HERSHOLT Wdn itV) K H ihKPi ' TOMORROW for that inning. Again in the third, the Heels scored two runs. Mackie cracked out a double and Jessup duplicated the feat, scor ing Mackie. Biggs ' errored Lufty's hit and Jessup wa3 safe at third. Barnhardt sent him home with a sac rifice fly. Captain Westmoreland held the Cadets well in hand throughout the contest, allowing them only seven hits and sending thirteen men back to the bench via the strike-out route. The big left hander .kept the V. M. I. hits well scattered and pulled the Tar Heels out of several pinches with strike outs. STYLE TIPS Men of fashion are wearing smart colorful cravats but there is a vast difference in a bright and' a loud tie. We Put You on Our Payroll After You're Too Old to Work Mighty comforting to think of having a fat check come reg ularly in the declining years of life. "YOUR Life Insurance PILOT" Pilot Life Insurance Company GREENSBORO, N. C. SATURDAY Sally O'Neil in "MAD HOUR" By Eleanor Glyn j THE PILOT j
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
April 19, 1928, edition 1
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