S el ports TUESDAY, APRIL 8, 1941 CHAPEL HILL. NORTH CAROLINA Jb BavM Ml TTTv IT far Babies Defeat State Freshmen, 5-2 Frosh Box Score Carolina Frosh- ab r h o a e Wray, ss i Waters, ss Hayworth, 3b Morris, 2b Cheek, If Ott, If -- - jfcCaskilJ, cf Hussey, rf LeBlanc, rf Turner, lb Wright, c Croom, c Cantrell, p Baseman, p x Serlich Totals 3 0 0 12 2 11110 0 51-2210 4 112 7 0 4 0 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 2 0 0 0 0.0 4 0 2 3 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 4 0 0 10 1 1 3 0 1 4 0 0 0 10 10 0 3 12 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 10.00 00 33 5 7 27 12 3 x batted for Cantrell in eighth in sing. State rrosn ao r n o a e Gordon, cf 4 0 0 Sterner, ss 5 2 1 Faircloth, If 4 0 2 Hcrton, rf 4 0 1 Ballard, c . 2 0 0 Fetner, c : 2 0 0 G. Johnson, 3b . 4 0 0 Dickson, 2b .. rL 4 0 1 Fitchette, lb 3 0 2 Harmen. p 3 0 1 J. Johnson .. 0 0 0 0 x Heath 1 10 10 0 0 0 12 0 3 10 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 1 4 0 0 1 1.1 0 0 0 0 Totals J 36 2 9 24 8 3 xbatted for Fitchette in ninth. Score by innings : . I State 100 000 0102 Carolina Jl 000 030 02x 5 Summary: Runs batted in Waters 2, Morris 2, Hussey 1, Faircloth 1, Horton 1. Three , base hits Steiner. Home run Waters. Left on bases Carolina 10, State 8. Stolen bases Turner 2, Morris, Hayworth, Wray. Double plays Morris to Turner, Wray to Morris to -Turner. Base on ball off Boseman 2, Harmen 3, Johnson 1. Struck out by Cantrell 5, Harmen 4, Johnson 5. Hits off Cantrell 8 in 8 innings; Boseman 1 in 1 inning; Harmen 7 in 6 innings; Johnson 2 in 2 innings. Wild pitches Cantrell. Pased balls Croom, Fet ner. Hit by pitcher McCaskill by Harmen. Winning pitcher Cantrell. Losing pitcher Harmen. Umpires Rabb and Radman. Time of game -2:05. Coed Sports Tuesday 12:00 Swimming classes t for be- gmners. 2:00 Badminton lessons. 2:00 Tennis matches. 3:00 Senior Red Cross life saving. 4:00 BasebaU. . DENTISTS Dr. Robert R. Clark Dr. John E. Pleasants Over Bank of Chapel Hill Phone 6251 Frank Cantrell Holds Wolf Cubs To Eight Hits By Harry Hollingsworth Mustering hitting and scoring power in two big innings, the Carolina fresh man baseball team defeated the State frosh here yesterday, 5-2, . but the State team almost tied up the game' in the ninth inning when it loaded the bases. A three-run fifth inning and Bryant Waters' two-run homer in the eighth was the scoring story for the Tar Babies. Frank Cantrell, who held the Baby Terrors to eight hits in eight in nings, started the fifth inning rally with a stinging single over third base, and took third on a single by Louis Hayworth. Hayworth went to second when a play at third failed to catch the portly Cantrell. Mack Morris singled both home with enough runs to send the Tar Babies into the lead. But Jack Hussey, moved to the outfield so his heavy hitting wouldn't be- lost, connected with his second hit of the afternoon and Mor ns scampered home with what finally proved to be the winning run. State had -tallied one run in the opening inning when Benny Steiner, sensational shortstop for the Wolf Cubs, gained life on a two-base error by Carl Wray. Lefty Horton batted See FROSH BASEBALL, Page h Coeds To Be Hosts TO Athletic Meet Carolina coed athletes will be host esses to the State Athletic Federation of College Women April 17, 18, and 19, it was announced yesterday by Mrs. J. G. Beard, director of women's sports. Women's athletic organizations from 18 state schools have already ae cepted invitations to join in this North Carolina sports conference of college women. Womens college sports organiza tions, co-recreational conduct, intra mural competition, and other problems of coed college athletics will be dis cussed at the three-day conference. Tennis Summary r Singles H. Everett (C) defeated L. Buchan an, 6-1, 10-8. Capt. Zan Carver (C) defeated R Feuille, 6-3, 6-3. Anthonv (C) defeated E. Fabian, 6-2, 6-1. Freeman (C) defeated Lerner, 6-8, 6-1. 6-2. Harnden (C) defeated Garnett, 6-2, 5-7,6-2. Neill rc defeated Christian, 6-1, 6-1. Doubles Carver-Harnden (C) defeated Buch anan-Feuille. 6-2, 5-7, 6-2. Anthony-Everett (C) defeated Fa bian-Christian. 6-1, 6-3. tvmoT, "Rnfcmson (C) defeated x v-v. ' Lerner-Garnett 6-2, 6-2. Remember to Send HER a Corsage, Potted Plants, or Cat Flowers From The Chapel Hill Flower Shop Opp. Post Office Phone 4851 Nile F-2156 Glamack Hurls Betas To Win Over TEP, 15-2 Yesterday's Results Everett 9, Grimes No. 2 3. Man gum 9, Manly 3. Beta Theta Pi 15, TEP 2. Grimes No. 1 8, ROTC 4. Chi Phi 6, Sigma Chi 1. With Big George Glamack on the mound pitching superb ball, the Beta Theta Pi hitters slammed out a 15-tb-2 triumph over TEP in the feature intramural softball game yesterday. The hard-hitting Betas tallied in every inning except the second, mix ing numerous errors and walks with timely base knocks. The sixth inning was the big one when the Betas sent six runners across, the platter on five hits and two walks. Glamack had the TEP club complete ly baffled with his fast ball and al lowed only three hits during the five innings he worked. Bill Little had a perfect day at the plate with three singles to lead the winners' hitting. Townsend and Winkler with two hits apiece were runners-up. Behind the fine pitching of Bill Swink the Chi Phi team defeated Sig ma Chi, 6 to 1, in a well played game. Swink held the losers completely in hand for six innings, but the Sigma Chi outfit pushed across a run in the seventh to ruin S wink's hopes of a shutout. Chi Phi opened their scoring with two runs in the second inning on sin gles by Donovan, Swink, and Wills and a fielder's choice. They added a singleton in the fourth and topped off the scoring with three runs in the sixth frame., Buddy Wills had three hits in as many times at bat to top the hitting attack of the winners. Mangum chalked up its second win of the season with a 9-3 victory over Manly. The winners got off to a fly ing start by tallying four runs in the opening stanza. The first four batters Hicks, Connor, Sparrow, and Bul lock hit safely and, combined with a walk and another hit by ' Cohn, . f our tallies were pushed across the plate. Herb Hardy and Ed York shared the pitching duties for Mangum and to gether set the Manly team down with six hits. Mangum collected 12 safe ties off the offerings of McGinty of Manly. Hicks, Connor and Ogburn with two hits apiece were the top hitters of the contest for Mangum. Ellis homered in the first inning to lead the Manly club. Everett opened its season with a 9-3 victory over Grimes No. 2. The winners had one big inning, the sec See INTRAMURALS, Page 4 Laerossemen West Chester, UTS a-J Goalie Gingrich, Visitors' Leader, Stops 19 Shots By Steve Refcs Displaying a fairly well coordinated attack for the first time this season, the Carolina .lacrosse team rang up its second victory in three days yes terday afternoon by downing West Chester (Pa.) Teachers college, 8-3,! in a rough, bruising game, marked by 12 penalties, and several near-fist fights. The Carolina attack completely throttled the. Pennsylvania team, which could get near enough to the Blue and White goal often enough to take only 12 shots at Goalie Don Atran, while the Indians made 32 attempts at the West Chester guardian, Gingrich, who was undoubtedly the outstanding per former on the field. Gingrich turned aside Carolina shots that were ear marked for scores, making a total of 19 saves, eight of them in the hectic final period, when the Tar Heels launched 10 tries at the goal. Rapidly gaining notoriety as fast beginners, the Blue and .White stick- j men registered in 15 seconds of the opening period, 10 seconds less than it took them to register their' first goal against Virginia Saturday. Again, as on Saturday, it was Milt Harris who opened the scoring, when he tallied on a pass from Ray Rosenbloom. Co- captain Coley Finkel added to the Carolina score when he registered the second goal of the game in 5:25. In 9:40, "Ben Blue" Toccarino, outstand ing on the attack for the losers, passed Atran on the first of his two goals of the afternoon. Budden Changes Positions Budden opened the scoring for the Indians in the second period, after he had been moved to offense from at tack, and after having received a pass from Sternberg, beat Gingrich in 5:05 on a nice backhand shot in front of the net. A little more than a minute and a half later, Sternberg got the most spectacular goal of the afternoon, when he received a pass from Rosen bloom about 30 feet to the side of the net, and found the corner on a sharply angled shot. Harris concluded the Tar Heel scoring for the half in 8:02, when he was awarded a goal on a disputed decision by the goal judge. The second half was rougher than the first, and a fist fight between Har ris and Houghton was narrowly avoid See LACROSSE, page -5. Lacrosse Summary UNC (8) Atran Desich Remy Budden Broadfoot Gugert Harris Sternberg I Rosenbloom Finkel Score by periods Carolina West Chester . Goals: WCTC (3) Goal Gingrich Point Guidici Cover point Moffett 1st defense Emminger 2nd defense -JafTee Center Wackenhut 1st attack Houghton 2nd attack Toccarino Out home Van Bus kirk In home Kalickman 3 O 18 13 Gu Carolina Harris 2. Finkel gert 2, Sternberg, Budden. West Chester Toccarino 2, Van Buskirk. Substitutions: Carolina Amoss, Loewenson, Wer ner, Graham, Begley, Cohn, Farris, Zimmerman, Borsky, Clark, Gordon. West Chester Matesky, Day, Bai ley, Giunta, Brown Peters, Horton. Officials: Shaap and MacPhee. Golfers Swamp Virginians By Fred McCoy In their second match of the season yesterday, the Carolina golfers gain ed a 13 to 4 triumph over the Hampden-Sydney squad at the Hillan dale course near Durham. In the opening engagement Frosty Snow lost to Fulton, 2rA to Vz. Snow and Fulton finished the first nine holes even up, ' but the Hampden Sydney player won the second nine and the1 match was his. Paul Severin evened the score for Carolina when he trounced Winston by the same score as the previous match. Dave Rumph put Carolina in the lead disposing of Dunlap, 3 - to - 0. Shooky Neese increased this lead still further by beating Dennis by the same score. In the best-ball matches, Snow and Severin tied the Hampden-Sydney duo of Fulton and Winston, l-to-l Rumph and Neese then combined to beat Dunlap and Dennis, 3-to-0 Rumph and Neese turned in the best scores of the day, each carding a 74, while Fulton, was low for Hamp den-Sydney with a score of 75. Tar Heel Netmen Drop Only Two Sets In 9-0 Win Oyer Virginia For No. 44 Everett Pushed To 10-8 To Take Set From Buchanan - ,. ABOUT you - . Health!! Keep well and enjoy those spring days For All Drugs Call 6141 CAROLINA PHARMACY ' "The Rexall Store" By Abby Cohen The tennis team varied not from the usual yesterday and shellacked the Vir ginia netmen, 9-0, boosting the mark to 44 consecutive victories for Coach John Kenfield's teams. Only thing out of the ordinary all afternoon was the number one singles affair in which Harris Everett was carried to 10-8 in the second set by Virginia's Landon Buchanan. The Tar Heel ace romped through the first frame, 6-1, and was leading, 5-4, in the second when the Cavalier netman began to reach his clever drop-shots and open up an offensive of his own. Many of! Everett's lobs were inef fective as Buchanan came to the net to smash them away for easy points. Games went with service until it was eight-all. Everett broke through with some brilliant volleys, and held his own delivery to win the match. Incident ally, Everett has yet to remove his sweater in any of his encounters this season. Either he is trying to take off weight, or his opponents have failed to work him up to the sweating point. Carver Fast Fastest tennis ,of the day was seen in Captain Zan Carver's match with Ricky Feuille. Both men were hitting the ball at an amazing rate, but the rallies usually ended with Carver lul leting the ball past the Virginia man or forcing an error from him with shots that almost knocked the racquet from liis opponent's hand. The Tar Heel captain won without being ex See TENNIS, Page t Coach Matty Gets Tells All Of Princeton Power on Track Tigers Here Again For Annual Meet And Conditioning By Ben Snyder For the fifth time in as many years, Carolina and ' Princeton trackmen mingled at Fetzer field yesterday aft ernoon as the two squads began to round out training schedules for the dual meet tomorrow that sees the two schools competing against one another for the sixth time since the inception of the rivalry back in" 1930. That was the year that a cracker- jack team from the North came to the Hill and administered a sound 81-45 drubbing to a Tar Heel team that hadn't seen dual meet defeat in eight years. Although Carolina went on to finish the season up with six consecu tive victories, the Tigers had, in a sense, spoiled the season. And they spoiled another promising record at the time of the series' resumption in 1937 when they inaugurated the pres ent rivalry, which has ripened into an annual affair, by walking off with an 82-44 verdict. It took Carolina eight years . to catch up with Nassau, but it final ly did the following season when Sophomores Jim Davis, Harry March, Tom Crockett, Fred Hardy and Co. really laid it on the visitors, 76-50. And the Tigers haven't won since. In '39 it was a close 70-56 decision and j last year an even closer 67-59 count. But this year the Princetonians are back for revenge and it looks as though they might get it. Led by Bob Jackson, Paul Douglas, Jack Freeman, Jim Corbett and Dave Wolcott, all of . whom won events in last year's meet, and featuring Ed Burroughs, who is best remembered here for his dual with Jim Davis in the half-mile last year, the New Jer sey club is one of the East's best and ranks, along with Yale and Cornell, at the top of the Ivy league heap. .Although the Princeton outfit saw but three days off the winter boards before making their trek to Chapel Hill, Coach Matty Geis expects his men to show up fairly well despite their lack of work on cinders. Among his headliners, Coach Geis revealed that Jackson holds the Princeton rec ord for the 100 , yard dash, having traversed the distance in :09.7; that Douglas turned in a :48 quarter in the Yale meet last spring; that Mil ers Jordan and Bragdon have been clocked in the vicinity of 4:20; that Weight Men Wolcott anil Mortonson have scaled the platter over 130 feet in the discus; that Corbett has vaulted 13 feet; and that Burroughs, really back in form, is practically untouch able in the half-mile. On the surface of, things it would seem that the locals might as well fold up and store their spiked shoes away for another and more promising meet, but yet the surprising Tar See TRACK, Page 4 . Wildcat Nine Has Old Heads At Infield Pos ts By Leonard Lcbred Beaten the last time out and handi capped in previous encounters because of a lack of hitting power, the Tar Heels resume Southern conference and open their Big Five competition today in Emerson stadium . against Davidson. Lefty Cheshire is slated to pitch, beginning at 4 o'clock. Carolina will probably continue to draw the opposition's leading mounds man, this time Ed Lucas being the person to be feared. Lucas, a junior from Greensboro, is the only letter man on the Wildcat hurling corps, and can be expected to last with Cheshire in a pitcher's duel if both teams fail to hit. Except for the infield, Davidson has a green club, composed mostly of sophomores and even more undecided than the Carolina nine. Bill Nelson, second-year man, has even taken over . the third base post held by Jim Hogg, hard-hitter who is well-known for his basketball talents. Bob Carter re mains at first, Tom Yarborough at second and Jim Owen at short, and they along with Hogg, Lucas, Out fielder Frank Niven and Captain and Catcher Rusty Edmundson are the only lettermen on the squad. Wildcats Experienced Their experience, however, should make the Wildcats a dangerous club, See BASEBALL, Page 4 Probable Lineups Carolina Jones, ss Mathes, If Browning, lb Reynolds or Bobbitt, rf Oswald, 2b Jennings, cf Rich, 3b Myers, c Cheshire, p Davidson Yarborough, 2b Owens, ss Carter, lb Edmundson, c Niven, If Caldwell, rf Lucas, p Clark, cf Nelson,. 3b Dress Up For EASTER and SPRING in Belmont Gabardines, Hockamum Flannels, Plaids, Worsteds, Tweeds or Suits; and they are three button and double breasted in stock to fit you. Complete Stock of SPORT COATS and SPORT TROUSERS ARROW SHIRTS and NECKWEAR TAYLOR MADE and CURTIS SHOES Complete Stock of Pajamas Interwoven Socks and Botany Neckwear at Last minute Easter Shoppers, we have a large assortment of latest Seasonable Styles.