THURSDAY, APE II" 10, 1952 Wins. scores In alrv White, 3 its Off Duke's Joe Levis By Tom Peacock . 'Jhe- D.il:.? Flue Devils scored two runs in the ninth inning here yesterday to break a 2-2 tie, and give themselves a 4-2 win over Carolina an I undisputed first place in the Big Four standings. Joe Lewis held the Tar Heels to two hits, while Duke collected eight safeties in the contest. Lewis voted Most Valuable player in last year's Southern Conference Tournament, had little trouble with the Tar. .Heels, and at one time . L- : ; he retired nine men in a row. A of the jam nicely by getting the walk, triple, and a balk gave Car olina its two runs in the third in ning, and only one Tar Heel reached second base for the rest of the gam?. Cavaliere. Gibbons, Score The .Lue Devils were hitting almost everything Port showed them to the outfield, but Caro lina stavsd them off from the third to the ninth. Duke left field er Red Smith hit a hafd single o right with one out in the ninth, and third baseman Johnny Gib bons followed with a tainted in-side-the-park home run to break the tie. Gibbons homer was a line drive that hit on the left field foul line and rolled all the way to the fence and under a shrub in foul territory. Gibbons was rounding third before Wayne White could find the ball in the foliage. ' - Duke center fielder Benny Cav ali ere led4 the Blue Devils of f fn the first inning with a triple, and scored on a -grounder to second base, giving Duke a 1-0 lead. Bill Wereber singled but Smith grounded out to end the inning. Cavaliere singled to open the third, his second consecutive hit. Dick Johnson singled him to third, and-he scored on a ground ball to the pitcher for the second Duke run of the game. Dale Triples Fred-Dale tripled with a man on base, and Lewis committed a balk to send Dale home and give Carolina a 2-2 tie in the third. Mark Herring walked to open the inning, and Dale followed with his triple, a 375-foot clout to right center field. Fred Holt walked, and. then Holt and Dale pulled a successful double steal, but their effort was unnecessary as Lewis had- committed a balk. Carolina's only other "hit of the game was a triple by Wayne White in the fifth inning. White's hit went to the same sppt that Dale's had, but White tried for a homer and was tagged at the plate. ' Lewis was ia trouble only one other time during -the gams, when he walked three men in the sec ond to fill the bases. He got out 1 : RELIGIOUS C :' COOKS Man nd Go J $3.75 Greatisi Book Ever Written ........ . ...... 3.95 The Boc By My Side .... 4.00 Donga's Sermons 2.50 Rediscovering the Bible .." :3.50 PeacM of Mind Jj. 1.00 Penguin Introduction ' to jtHe Bible .i;:.J....j .. 5 Whatever Your IiiterestrH ; We're Interested iiit, Too. The Triple; Only Carolina hitters out on a pop-up, grounder, and a strikeout. Herring. 2b I-.. Dale, ss White, If ...... Holt. 3b ... 3 7 ... 4 4, ' ... i 1 1 0 0 0 0 o 0 0 0 2 2 3 2 1 9 3 2 2 3 0 0 27 2 4 0 3 1 0 0 1 2 0 13 Smith, lb 3 Stevens, rf 4 Reeves,, cf 2 Gravitte. cf 2 Weiss, c . 3 Port, p ..... .. ...1. 2 Henning 1 Totals 29 Flied out for Weiss in 9th. 2 2 Cavaliere, cf ...:. 3 2 2 3 Johnson, rf 4 0 12 Groat. . ss ... ........... 4 O 0 1 Werber, lb 4 0 18 Smith. ' If ........... 1 4 1.1 1 Gibbons, 3b . . 4 1 1 2 : Lea, 2b 4 0 1 2 Denny. 2b 3 0 1 8 Lewis, p 3 0 0 0 Totals 33 4 8 27 1 0 . 1 -5 0 3 10 Duke 10 1000 00 2 4 8 1 UNC 002 000 00. 0 2 2 t Summary: E Groat. Wiess; RBI Johnson. Groat. Gibbons (2), Dale; HR Gibbons; 3B Cavaliere. Dale. White; DP Groat. Lea. and Werber; Port. Dale, and Smith; Dale. Smith, and Holt; B B Off Lewis. 9; off Port. 1; SO By Lewis. 6 by Port. 1; H off Lewis. 2 in 9; off Port. 8 in 9; L O B UNC. 8; Duke. 3; B Lewis; HBP Denny; W P Lewis; L P- Port; U Vanderhoff, Ritinski; Time 1:58. Carolina Capsules On successive days here recent ly a member of a famous baseball family played on Carolina's Em erson Field. Dickie Harris, son of the Washington Senator manager, Bucky, is Wake Forest College's regular shortstop and played here one day. The next afternoon Con nie Mack, III, played with the University of Pennsylvania base ball team, i Carolina's shuttle hurdle relay team of Sonny Beall, Bobby Bell, Romas ; White and Bill Cornell won the event in the Carolina re lays recently in the good time of 61.7, just two-tenths of a second off the Relays record? ;' . Carolina's one-mile relay team could have walked to a victory in the freshman division of the Carolina Relays this year. The Tar Heels had the only team entered. oving Crating Shipping Storage Phone 2159 for Free Estimate NIGHT PHONES: 8-8587, 3-3382 810 Bamseur Street SOU U'L.' BATS IS 36 GONNA WATCH 8!RP IN TUB ATiST 'CAUSB YOU US 15 e TILL PMm iESS?. Lehigh Match Opens Heavy Week For UNC Tennis Team Coach John Kenfield's Carolina tennis te'am, riding on a 12-match winning streak, gets to the heavy end of the slate starting this week. Starting with Saturday's Lehigh University match he-, here is no let up for the Tar Heel netters. Next week the powerful Presby terian College team comes here, followed by Kalamazoo and Duke, a couple of strong opponents. Then its Rollins and Davidson College April 22 and April 26.' : Coach Kenfield expects the toughest matches to come from Duke, Rollins, Davidson and Presbyterian. Those clubs, plus William and Mary and Virginia later in the season, are capable of knocking off the high powered Tar Heels. " Despice the loss-of Buddy Ager, Southern Conference singles champion, Bob Luxenberg, who teammed with Ager to cop the loop's doubles crown, and veteran Heath Alexander, Kenfield has an other fine Tar Heel team. Hard hitting Del Sylvia is pac ing the Tar Heels. He has dropped but one match, playing in the number one position, and that loss came at the hands of Stan Dro bac, Michigan State's great ace. Playing -number two is Herbie Browne, a promising freshman from Columbia, S. C, who is one of the Tar Heels' finest prospects. Browne has shown steady im provement. He came here with a solid tennis background Last year, he won the National Inter scholastic championship. - - - - I Bobby Payne, another freshman who comes from Sylvia's home town of Richmond, Va. has taken over the number three position j and is undefeated in singles play He's the former Virginia high school champion and teams with Browne to form a strong young doubles tandem. . Bill Izlar, a junior from Miami, Fla., is a good doubles player and i plays the number one match with Sylvia. He holds down the fourth singles position. He is big and powerful and will be a strong contender with Sylvia for the Conference doubles championship. A pair of freshmen round out the lineup with Sam Handel, an ex-GI from Philadelphia, play ing in fifth position and Ronnie Kerdasha, North Bergen, N. J., newcomer, playing sixth. Handel has shown flashes of a strong ten nis game and has had good ex- TTl f "X." PARK. TOO VTlU-l -v ---. . . j j ...... X' 1 f . f . ' ! I I CANT I I Lacrossmen Play Lehigh Here Today Lehigh University's experience stickmen come here this afternoon at 3:30 for a lacrosse match' with Coach. Allan Moore's Carolina team. 0 The visitors will be the fifth intersectional team to appear here this spring. The Tar Heels opened the campaign two weeks ago with a victory over Georgetown Uni versity but have dropped succes sive matches to Williams, Dart mouth and Yale by one-sided scores. A "pair of Tar Heels has been carrying the scoring burden, with Dick. Harrall, a freshman from Towson, Md., and Ted Dawes, a junior from Baltimore, scoring 13 of the Tar Heels' 20 points be tween them. Harrall is one of a handful oi Tar Heels who have had exper ience in the old indian game. He played four years in high school and captained his high school team last year. He paces the team with seven goals. Dawes has a year of varsity and a year of freshman exper ience here. He won a letter on last year's teanv-which won one and lost five matches. He has hit the nets for six goals. perience while Kerdasha has been typically, erratic as a yearling. UNC Chessmen Lose The Carolina chess team, play ing a match with Columbia Uni versity, lost the first of a series of three matches here Tuesday. Columbia,, the National Inter collegiate Champions, defeated the Tar Heels, IVz-Vz, with Carolina's Kit Crittenden getting a draw with Eliot Hearst for the only Carolina point. ; Jimmy Sherwin, the intercol legiate - champion, defeated Tommy Makens of Carolina, mak ing 2& moves in the last three minutes to take a piece that Ma kens had left unprotected. Have you made a " P i g " of yourself yet? Someone asked us h o w I o n g we would continue to serve a "Pig's Din ner." Our a n s w e r was: "Just as long as there are folks who like to make Pigs of themselves' 4 TK99CMf9l f S9H (999 ATtTt GCn2)C3 H. COLUMBIA SX ctlamafo Bookshop 205 E, Franklin St. OPEN EVENINGS H i A-lo !DITaiMiJTWl9 a in New Orleans in 1933, who be-"

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