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SATURDAY, MAY ,14, 1949
'i ,t .
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
PAGE THREE
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Fred Kovaleski
Against Seixas
In Singles Finals
By Larry Fox
As today's Southern Conference
tennis finals go, so may go Mon-
day's Carolina-William and Mary
match for the number one singles
, players and doubles combinations
i of the two schools are slated to
j meet ,this afternoon for the loop
titles starting at 2 o'clock on the
varsity courts. . ,
Vic Seixas and Fred Kovaleski
both triumphed in their semifinal
matches yesterday afternoon and
will fight it out today in a re
match of last year's finals which
saw Tar Heel Captain Seixas
emerge with the singles crown.
The doubles encounter will see
Seixas team up with Clark Taylor
against Kovaleski and Howe
Atwater. Kovaleski won the
doubles crown last year with
Bernie "Tut" Bartzen as his
partner, defeating Seixas and
Taylor in the finals, but this time
the 'WillianV and Mary duo is
seeded ' in the 1 number two slot.
,( , ( .Seedings Accurate
The, speiiings have held true
thus far in the tournament with
first-seeded Seixas dropping num
ber four-man Atwater in the semi
finals while Kovaleski, ranked
secgnd, downed Bo Roddey, third-
Af sppHpH snninr from Davidson Col-
pW lege.
I f ' The Kovaleski-Roddey encount
I ", er was billed as the top match
of the afternoon and lor the urst
set it looked as if the lanky. a .500 average in Big Four play,
Indian netter was going to havejwith their win-loss record tied
his hands full. The two took j at four-all. Three of the Caro
turns wmning their services and,iina victories have been at the
then Roddey went ahead by
breaking Kovaleski's service in
the sixth game. That made it
4-2 in the first set, but Kovaleski,
who had been making a great
-1,v number of errors, settled down
and won seven games in succes
sion before Roddey could get
back with a win in the second
canto that made the score 3-1.
It was all Kovaleski in the re
maining games and he took the
match, 6-4, 6-2, 6-1. Roddey al-
most pulled an upset with his
steady back court game, out
Kovaleski's service, he tallied
approximately seven aces, and
strong net game were the dif
ference. Seixas Scores
Seixas made his shots count
agaist Atwater, taking a straight
set 6-2, 6-4, 6-3 decision. The
first and third matches were al-
51 most duplicates, reaching 2-2 and
I 3-3 deadlocks, respectively, before
. . ...
T i i-s Cnivno tiirnnH loose a
string of
iJV WVUh.
wins to gain the set
The number-one doubles match
. of the afternoon featured Seixas
nrJ Tavlor acainst Davidsons
L v, ttnHdov and Ted Keesler. tfotn
' j..,. v,iA turnprJ in auarterf inal
ft'1 ! easy wins just before meeting in
tj the semis. The Carolina pair
i I ; .-i f u rtiiinlrnsf wins
counted one ui h""-"-"-
of the tournament, a 24-minute
straight-set swamping of William
and Mary's "C" boys, Huck Cole
i i and Xyman Chennault by twin
fty-.l 6-1 scorch ' ,
fcitf TrIiori.ntry dropped
Caroling Chafley Itice ana u.-WilctolU-in,
their quarter-finalfrnatV-K
hhkti was decided
on a twp-outf-three basis. The
semis are three of five.
No Upset Here
Seixas' and Taylor took the
first four games in the opening
canto to start things rolling and
dispell any ideas which the David
son crew's strong showing in the
nuarter-finals might have started
v concerning an upset.
'I The Wildcats broke through
Seixas' service to take the fifth
; (See LOOP TENNIS, page 4)
FORDHAM UNIVERSITY
School Of Law
New York
Three-Year Day Course
Four-Year Evening Course
CO-EDUCATIONAL
Member of Assn. of American
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Matriculants must be Col
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rinses Begin Sept. 26. 1949
For Further Information
Address
Registrar
Fordham Univ. School of Law
302 Broadway,
t-.., York 7. N. Y.
lie" -
104
Ballantines
Premium
Blue Devils-Play Here Today
In Big Four Fight With Locals
Carolina's hard-hitting baseballers will be out to main
tain their perfect record over their arch-rivals, the Blue
Devils of. Duke University, when the two nines meet this
afternoon in Emerson Stadium at 2:30 for their fourth con
test of the season.
The Tar Heels have met and
defeated the Durham diamonders
three times previously this spring
and a victory in today's encounter
will give the Tar Heels a firm
grip' on second place in the Big
Four standings and will put
them within one game of a clean
sweep of the series with Duke.
Coaches Bunn Hearn and Walt
er Rabb have reliable Ray Blair
as the Tar Heel's starting mounds
man. The big righthander has
hurled all three of the Carolina
victories over the Devils this sea
son, and local fans are hoping
for another winning performance
today.
In earlier contests with the Blue
Devils, the Tar Heels took a one
sided affair on Easter Monday,
and edged the Durham nine, 3-1
and 4-3, in the next two tilts.
The Tar Heels will field a
"murderer's row" of sluggers in
today's tilt. Led by Stan Good
man, who currently is pacing the
Big Four batters, and Sid Vafney,
who hit a homer in Carolina's
8-4 win over State Thursday,
the local lineup presents an im
pressive array of heavy timber
men. The Tar Heel diamonders have
expense of Duke, while the other
was over State in Thursday's
game.
The home team has dropped
two decisions each to Wake For-
est's dream team and State's
Wolfpack.
Today's starting Carolina line
up will probably see an infield
composed of Blair on the mound,
Varney behind the plate, Will
Hobbs on the initial sack, Good-
j man at second, Joe Brookshire
, at third, and Rip Ryan at the
, shortstop position.
Roving the outer gardens for
the Tar Heels will be Don Ward
in left field, Jim Ballou in center,
and Ed Lamb in right field. All
three are dangerous hitters.
Chapel Hill High
Tops Roxboro, 3-0
The Chapel Hill High Wild
cats kept alive their winning
winning streak here yesterday
afternoon by downing Roxboro
3-0 in the first half of an afternoon-night
doublcheader.
ROXBORO. May 13 Chapel
Hill High School's power laden
baseball team cinched the
North Central Conference
championship here tonight with
a 9-1 win over the Roxboro
High nine in the nightcap of
an afternoon-night double
header. The .Wildcats scored their first
two runs in the opening inning
on a Wt'dk and three singles. Thpy
added another in the sixth on a
bunt by Ivalee Hill. Tommy Gra
vitt did the chore's on the mound
allowing only three hits to take
credit for the team's tenth win.
The score by innings:
Roxboro 000 000 00 3 2
Chapel Hill .... 200 001 x 3 5 2
Barrett and Buchanan; Giavilt
and Maultsby.
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Frosh at Duke
Coach Henry House's Tar
Baby nine will journey to Duke
this afternoon for a lilt with
the Blue Imps of that Durham
institution.
The locals defeated the Duke
baseballers. 14-6. in their first
engagement and tied the Dook
sters. 6-6. in their next meet
ing, a ten inning affair.
. Thursday, in their last out
ing the Carolina squad was
handed a one-sided. 11-3 pasting
by the Wolfpack yearlings of
State. The locals have an over
all record of six wins, two
losses, and one tie.
Today's Sports
Baseball
Varsity: Carolina vs Duke at
Emerson. Game time 4 o'clock.
Passbooks needed for admittance.
Freshman: Carolina vs Duke at
Duke. !
Tennis
Southern Conference champion
ships. Finals in singles and doubl
es competition beginning at 2
o'clock.
Golf
Southern Conference champion
ships at Old Town Country Club
course, Winston-Salem. Carolina
team entered. '
Lacrosse
Carolina vs Washington & Lee
on Navy Field, at 2:30.
Track
Varsity: Carolina vs Virginia
Tech at Blacksburg.
Soccer
Practice meet with State on
Fetzer Field at 2:30.
MAJOR
NATIONAL LEAGUE
W L Pet.
GB
New York
Boston
Brooklyn
Cincinnati
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
St. Louis
Chicago
13 9 .591
13 9 .591
12 10 .545 1
11 10 .524
11 12 .478 2''2
10 13 .435 3.z
8 11 .421 3i
8 12 .400 4
Yesterday's Results
All jiighteaincs.
Today's Games
Philadelphia (Roberts 2-2) at
New York (Jones 3-3)
Chicago (Hamner 0-2) at Cin
cinnati (Vandermeer 1-1)
St. Louis (Brecheen 2-2) at
Pittsburgh (Chesne-s 1-0)
Brooklyn (Hatten 2-1) at Bos
ton (Bickford 3-2) Night
AMERICAN LEAGUE
W L Pet. GB
16 6 .727
10 7 .588 3"2
12 5) .571 3i
12 12 .500 5
11 12 .478 5'i
11 13 .458 6
fl It .450 fi
d 17 .261 10',i
Now York
Clcvel.ind
Detroit
Washington
Chicago
Philadelphia
Boston
St. Louis
Yesterday's Results
All niKhtKamcs.
Today's Games
New York (Raschi 4-1) at Phila
delphia (Kcllner 1-2)
Boston (Kinder 2-1) at Wash
ington (Scarborough 2-2)
Delriot (Newhouser 3-2) at St.
Louis (Garver 1-1)
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Ward Will Lead
Golfers in Loop
Tourney at W-S
By Billy Carmichael III ,
WINSTON-SALEM, May 13
A banner crop of collegiate golf
ers will tee off here tomorrow
morning at the Old Town Coun
try Club in the one-day 36-hole
Southern Conference golf cham
pionships. At least 13 of the 16 loop teams
will send entries to the big affair
which promises to be the closest
tournament in the dozen-odd
years that the event has been
held. North Carolina, Duke, Wake
Forest, and State rule as a quar
tet of toss-up favorites with the
Blue Devils attempting to re
gain the team laurels they won
last year at Pinehurst
Wake Forest placed second at
that time with State third and
the Tar Heelfi fourth, but this
year the Demon Deacons seem
to be the slight favorite if there
is one. They have victories over
Duke and State and tied Caro
lina over this same" Old Town
course two weeks ago.
Arnold Palmer of Wake Forest
is the defending medalist, but
he will receive stiff competition
this year from Tar Heel Harvie
Ward and Art Wall of Duke.
Palmer has beaten Wall in dual
meet play this season while hav
ing halved with Ward. Wall beat
Ward ealy this week in Durham.
A dark horse possibility for
the medal honors is Fred Smith
of South Carolina. Smith went
to the finals of the recent South
ern Intercollegiate at Athens, Ga.,
and split his season's match with
Ward.
The North Carolina entry will
be composed of Ward, Bob Cox,
Roy McKenzie, Jack Brantley,
Stub Sapp, and Frank Brooks.
Sapp and McKenzie are from
Winston-Salem and are playing
a relative home course.
Each team is allowed six en
trants in the team competition
with the best four scores making
up the team total.
The Old Town course, which
boasts one of the toughest back
nines in golf is in top shape for
the meet.
Other schools expected to be
represented besides the foremen
tioned include Washington and
Lee, Davidson, VPI, VMI, Mary
land, Clemson, and William and
Mary.
Soccer Clinic
A practice Soccer match will
top off the days activities in
the soccer clinic for the coaches
and officials of this area that
is to be held today in Chapel
Hill under the supervision of
Carolina's soccer coach, Marvin
Allen.
The clinic is sponsored by
John Blye of Duke. Arthur
Paschal of High Point ColLege,
Eric De Grote of N. C. Slate,
Robert Reese of Richmond Pro
fessional Institute, E. D. Fox
of Roanoke College, Larry
Ludwig of the University of
Virginia, and Norm Lord of
Washington and Lee.
The program for the day
will include discussions on the
fundamentals of soccer and
soccer officiating, a luncheon
for the officials 3Dd coaches
and the soccer match be
tween State and Carolina with
the officials working under
the supervision of Mr. Walder.
CENTS
Carolina Thinclads Stay Unbeaten
With 88-38 Victory Over Virginia
CHARLOTTESVILLE,' Va., May
13 The University of North Car
olina's visiting '.track team lived
up to expectations here today
as they smashed to an 88-38 win
over the University of Virginia
thin-clads on a very slow track
before a crowd of about 1,000.
For the Tar Heels it was dual
meet victory number four in four
attempts. The visitors were in
complete control from the first
start and increased their margin
with each successive event.
Running without the services
of several of their top weight
men, the Carolinians 'turned in
a very creditable showing and
swept 12 first places and tied for
another. Only in the discus, where
their three top men were miss
ing, did the Tar Heels fail to
garner at least a tie for top honors.
Double Winners
Carolina had two double win
ners for the afternoon. Big Jack
Moody resumed his winning ways
by copping the high jump with
a jump, of 6 ft. 2 in. and a win
in the broad jump with a leap
of 22 ft. 1 13 in. , Bill Crimmins,
sophomore, sprinter, won the 100
in 10.6 and the 220 in 23.2.
Virginia's lone winning effort
was accomplished by Harry Mott
in the discus with a toss of 132
ft. 10 14 in.
A big surprise in the Carolina
camp came as a result of footballer
George Verchick's win in the shot
put. Verchick's toss was 44 ft.
8 34 in. on his first attempt at
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Gobblers Next
BLACKSBURG, Va. May 13
The University of North
Carolina track team arrived
here today fresh from their
88-38 victory over the Uni
versity -of Virginia Cavaliers.
The Tar Heels take on the
Virginia Tech Gobblers here
tomorrow on the local track.
They are expected to make a
clean sweep on their Virginia
trip and put down the Gob
blers without too much trouble.
varsity competition.
Carolina swept firsts in all
three of the distance events. Frank
Hooper copped the half, Sam
Magill ran off with the mile and
John Ross won the two-mile. In
addition, to the slow condition
of the track, many of the Caro
lina runners were not accustomed
to the five-lap-to-the-mile track.
Both of these conditions were
factors in the slow times of many
of these events.
Laddie Terrell, Carolina quart-er-miler,
.turned in one of the
afternoon's better performances,
running the lap and a quarter
440 in 50.5.
In the hurdles, Carolina's fav
ored Dick Taylor won the highs
in 14.9 and Bill Albans ran away
With the lows in 24.6. Jack Moody
.1 n ooiAnl fnr- V,r Tnr. Hoolc
luu,i a
in the highs while Virginia s Don
Mohler was second in the lows
and third in the highs.
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Carolina's top pole vaulter Bob
House soared 12 ft. into the clouds
to gain a first place tie in that
event with Virginia's Roller.
Rusty Russell of Carolina took
the third. Bob Kirk, Carolina's
Penn Relays champ, won the
javelin throw with a toss of 102
ft. 9 in. '
In the two dashes Carolina
scored clean sweeps, taking all
three places in each event.
Athletic director Bob Fetzer .of
Carolina and Tar Heel coach Dale
Ranson both voiced complete sat
isfaction over the results of the
meet.
100-v'ard dash 1. Crimmins (UNO.
2. Marshall (UNO. 3. Rouse (UNO.
Time: 10.6.
220-yard dash 1. Crimmins (UNO.
2. Marshall (UNO, 3. White (UNO.
Time: 23.2.
440-vard dash 1. Terrell (UNO. 2.
MacKenzie (.UNO. 3. Taylor (V).
Time: 50.5.
860-yard run 1. Hooper (UNO. 2.
Drew (V). 3. Holden (UNO. Time:
2:03.7.
Mile run 1. Magill (UNO, 2. Walk
er (V), 3. Holden (UNO. Time:
4:35.2.
Two-mile run 1. Ross (UNO, 2.
Calhoun (V). 3. Lewis (UNO. Time:;own with Tommy Tongue leading
120-vard high hurdles 1. Taylor,
(UNO. 2. Moody (UNO, 3. Mohler j
(V). Time: 14.9.
220-yard low hurdles i. Ainans
(UNO, 2. Moliler (V), 3. Morrow
1 Ai'mil'
(UNO. Time: 24.0.
Mile relav not run.
Shot put 1. Verchick (UNO. 2.
Armstrong (V). 3. Morris (V). Dis
tance: 44 ft. 834 in.
Discus throw 1. Mott (V), 2. Koch
(V). 3. Albans (UNC). Distance: 132
n. 104 in.
High jump 1. Moody (UNO, 2.
Peebles (UNC). 3. Roller (V). Dis
tance: 6 ft. 2 in.
r-t i 1 nr..l.. (TTvr1 i o
iBrown (V), 3 Pauley (V). Distance:
I 22 ft. 1 1-3 in.
, p0ie ult 1. Tie between House
(UNO and Roller (V)
3. Russell
(UNO . Distance: 12 ft.
Javelin throw 1. Kirk (UNC). 2.
Wnsht Vl. 3. Harris (UNC). Dis-
l tance: 182 ft. 9 in.
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Sfickmen to Meet
Generals Today
On Navy Field
The Tar Heel lacrosse squad
will have their own plan of at
tack when the Washington and
Lee . Generals invade Navy Field
today at 2:30 to engage the Caro
lina team in the old Indian game.
During the past week, Coach Bill
Darden has worked out a new
attack system which he hopes
will net his vteam quite a few
goals.
John Bolgiano t and Sommers
will probably be the scoring
threats in this new plan of at
tack, while Jess "Choo-Choo"
Greenbaum and Fred Poisson
will also be scoring possibilities.
The scoring this year has been
almost evenly divided between
seven players. Greenbaum is high
scorer with five, while Taylor
is close behind with four. The
remaining ten goals are distribut
ed equally between Dietzcl,
Bolgiano, Manning, Poisson, and
Murchison. ' v '" '
The Washington and Lee teaml
will fashion an attack' t-of their
me. onensive line. iongue.,is a
product of St. Pauls prep" school
in Baltimore. Maryland. Last vear
I -
he was a member of the Southern
All-Star team which defeated the
North. Coach Baxter will bring
a squad of twenty experienced
players to Chapel Hill including
such formidable stars as Guthrie,
Jones, Ryer, Pacy, and Gray.
The Carolina defensemen con
sisting of Lynch, Timberlakc,
Winius, Debnam, Nearman, and
Wilkerson will be faced with the
problem of stopping the Generals
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