PAGE FOOT! ...THE -DAILY. TAR HEEL, --THURSDAY, MAY I, 1S52 77 - r ll.;fifnfj) L 'zsi KxJ u U U L. ZZZS kl- Li kJ Hi --TT i v D MS Ellnii'''''' ' ' I s,w Lore To Pitch As Tar -Heels Seek First Win Over Devils by Tom Peacock , onoir II ersnis liU Carolina baseball coach Walt Rabb will send hurler Bill Lore to the mound this afternoon against Duke University at Duke, as the Tar Heels try to take their first Big Four champions. ' Duke will probably use its ace batteries will be starting todaj' that started the last time the two teams met. In the last game Lore was blasted out of the box and the Blue Devils won the game, 13-5. Carolina is fresh from a hu miliating 4-2 loss to Wake Forest in which Deacon pitcher Don Woodlief held the Tar" Heels to three hits while striking out 18 men, and Rabb is hopeful that his charges will begin collecting a few hits. Duke nosed out Caro lina in their first meeting this year, 4-2, on a fluke inside the park home run. Carolina will need "some hit ting this afternoon, for no matter how good a game Lore pitches Duke stands to get a couple of runs. . Duke has a team batting average of .329, with left fielder Red Smith leading the team hit ting at .475, 'and shortstop Dick Groat second with .394. Coach Jack Coombs could start a team comprised of nothing but better-than-,300 hitters if he wished, by "catching Jack Tarr, a .314 hitter, and using Bob Davis, a .385 swat ter, on the mound. The Tar Heels have a 5-5 rec ord in Conference play, but they are trailing in the Big Four race with two wins over State, their only victories in competition with Duke, , State and Wake Forest. Carolina has lost five games, two, to Duke, two to Wake Forest, and one to State. Duke is way out front in both Conference and Big Four standings, with 13 wins and one loss in SC play. Lewis is leading the Blue Devils with a 4-0 record this season aft er pacing the squad all last year and posting one of the best slates in the Big Four. Duke is prob ably the most powerful team in the East with a 19-2 record, in cluding wins over many North ern teams. The Blue Devils have just returned from a northern trip. Carolina's' starting lineup isn't definite now, but it is a surety that Connie Gravitte, Tom Stev ens, and Dick Wiess, the three men who hit against Wake For est Tuesday, will start. Sports Show The annual Sports Show book put out by the Spalding Company is ready again for sport fans who like their sports history with a humorous twist. Featuring all new cartoons by the famous sport cartoonist Willaxd MuUin. the booklet is free for the asking. To get a copy write to Spald ing; Department" C-52; Chic opee. Mass Stationery Books Greeting Cards Gift Shop Esterbrook Pens Picture Frames and Picture Framing Thomas Cor. Corcoran & Chapel Hill Sts., Durham ' Phone J-2331 ; 's ;. Shaef fer Pens-r-Kodaks & Supplies Desk Lamps L. C. Smith & Corona Typewriters Desk Pads Expert Repair on all makes of Typewriters - win off the Southern Conference - pitcher," Joe Lewis, so the same : VonBramer Leads Betas To 15-14 Win The pitchers took a back seat to the hitters, and the hitters made the most of their opportunities as four early sof tball games were run off on the intramural field yesterday afternoon. Beta-1 defeated Lambda Chi 15-14, in the closest contest of the day. Other results found Kappa Sig defeating Pi Lam, 19-4; Chi Psi-2 defeating Phi Delt-2, 29-18; Beta-2. defeating SAE-2, 25-17; and ATO defeating SPE, 21-17. The Beta-Lambda Chi game was a real thriller, decided in the last of the seventh inning when Beta pitcher Paul Von Bramer came through with a three-run homer to break up the contest. The winners had gone into the last frame with a one run lead, only to have the Lambda Chi's score five times, the big blow being pitcher Bob Morris' home run with two aboard. The Beta's, however, came back in their half of the inning to score two quick runs and set the stage for Von Bramer's swat. Lambda Chi pulled off a triple play in the third inning to kill a Beta rally which had already been good for four tallies. Right fielder Travis Porter led the los ers at bat with three hits, while third baseman "Pot" Burton col lected three for the Beta's, includ ing a grand slam home run in the third inning. The ATO's spurted in the late innings to gain a victory" over SPE in a see-saw battle. ATO pitcher Dwight Elting and SPE hurler Jack Owens both had trou ble holding the opposing batters in check. Third baseman John Ruggles was the victors' leading hitter, rapping out four hits in six trips to the plate, while Nel son Fletcher had three for four to pace the SPE's. . The Phi Delt-Chi Psi slugfest looked like a runaway at first, with the Chi Psi's holding a 10 run lead at one point. An 11 run inning put the Phi Delts back in the ball game, however, and knocked Chi Psi pitcher Ed Waller out of the box. He was replaced by Tommy York, who managed to hold on to gain the win. Van Weatherspoon went all the way for the losers. The other game ended in the sixth inning, when the Kappa Sigs gained a 15 run advantage over Pi Lam. ooM Store fTff UlflfD.n, by Paul Cheney The number two tennis team of Connor dormitory swept three straight matches and the, lone dcuble event from Ruff in yester day afternoon in the intramural tennis finals to become champions of the dormitory division. In taking the title the Connor netters dropped . only one set during the entire afternoon. John Welbourne exhibited superior form in takings his singles match from Rod Nicol, Ruffin's number one player. Wel bourne won both sets by identi cal scores of 6-4. Tom West, number two man for the winners, took the mea sure of Ruffin's John Culbertson I in the second singles contest. West swept both sets, also by 6-4 de cisions. In the other single encounter Murals Tuesday's Results SOFTBALL 27 Zeta Psi-2 7 ATO 15 Phi Kap Sig 7 B-V-P- Phi Delt-2 24 Pi Kap Phi 0 SPE 0 NROTC 0 HORSESHOES 3. Dental School Med Sch-2 0 3 Kap Psi DKE-1 0 3 Chi Psi-2 PiKA-2 O 3 Pi Lamb-1 TEP-1 0 2 Winston-1 Med Sch-1 1 2 Zeta Psi-1 ATO-3 1 Today's Schedule SOFTBALL 4:00 Field 1. Winston 1 vs Connor 1; Field 2, DKE 1 vs. Beta 1; Field 3. Phi Delt 1 vs. TEP 1; Field 4. SAE 2 vs. Theta Chi. 5:00 Field 1. Med School 1 vs. Win ston 3; Field 2, Med School 4 vs. Con nor 2; Field 3, Delt Sig Pi vs. Lambda Chi; Field 4, Chi Phi vs. Sigma Nu 2. HORSESHOES 7:00 Lambda Chi 3 vs. Phi Gam 1; Beta 2 vs. Pi Lamb 2. 7:40 Theta Chi 2 vs. Kappa Sig 3; PiKA 1 vs. Delt Sig Pi. 8:20 Zete 3 vs. Lambda Chi 1; Phi Kappa Sig 2 vs. Phi Delt 1. TENNIS 4:00 Sigma Chi vs. Zeta Psi. -v-WlNTHROP Shoes GENUINE WHITE BUCKS WKim. v m if n xyu B. 'cciuyBia ex dim 4-0, iroir Dc Frank Bowman decisively de feated Frank Craver. Bowman took the first set, 6-2, and the second by a 6-4 count. Ruff ins doubles team proved a little more troublesome than its singles competitors, but lost in three sets to the Connor combi nation. The Connor team took the first set by a 6-4 count, and cap '. red the third by the same score. Ruffin took its only set in the second with a 7-5 victory. Charlie Bennett and Tom Bridges made up the Ruffin force, while the Connor combination consisted of Ed Steele and Jim Pacha ves. Nichol and Culbertson were Late Show Sat. Nile Sun.-Mon. ONE Most Astonishing Characters EVer Met In or Out of Any Jail I PUNCH Public Enemy Ho. 3 but gaining ell the timef - tesrisa r s BUT IT'S YOUR TREAT Maybe we should be patting ourselves on the back and shouting "Happy Birthday," but instead we've- spent our energy bringing you something new and exciting: THE FLAM ING SUNDAE. It's really spec tacular to see, marvelous to taste. Come in and try it. i " " . - A Our Try Our New i v FLAMING SUNDAE And remember! Thursday afternoon is ICE ' CREAM SODA FOUNTAIN AFTERNOON: There only 14: each Telephone 2-8581 slated to meet Steele and Pach aves in case each team took two matches apiece. In reaching the finals, Connor met several tough opponents. The most notable of these was the med school, who met the champions in the semi-finals. Ruffin also ran into some stiff competition before yesterday'3 matches. Connor will probably meet the fraternity champion for the all campus title. At present DKE, ATO, and Sigma Nu are in the semi-finals of fraternity competi tion, while Zeta Psi and Sigma Chi are in the quarter finals. If) cv tit: Ycu'- . . . and you'll meei six of 'em in mmsJl PiIiib precis I Sfaij Ifea fefS7 pix&t ii y o y in i i ; : t . 103 East Franklin ?4

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