FACE FOUR THE DAILY TAR HEEL FRIDAY, MAY 15, 195? Take Hor Bowling This Weekend. CENTER BOWLING 1 ALLEYS I DURHAM Post Offict Corner Open 11:00 A.M. 11:00 P.M. FISHING CONTEST The fishing contest, which is sponsored by the UNC Outing Club, has had the deadline extended to May 18 at 12:00 p.m. The three types of fish in the contest are bass, brim, and crappie. The prizes for the winners will be certificates, and they will be awarded on Monday, May 18, at 7:30 in 301-B Woollen Gym. Habitual worry simply puts the headlight on the tail-end. 2nd BIG WEEK! Stevens - Shepherd's GIGANTIC n rra MANY NEW ITEMS JUST ADDED! FABULOUS REDUCTIONS OF 20-50 & MORE ON SEASONABLE MERCHANDISE Short Sleeve B.D. Shirts . Wash 'N' Wear Slacks India Madras Sport Jackets Assorted Group Sport Shirts Values to Dacronwool Tropical Pants 3.95 12.95 27.95 2.99 7.99 19.95 10.00 3.99 & H.ispcl Cotton Cord Suits Seersucker Sport Coat Italian Rafia Tyrolean Hats Large Assortment Dress Shirts Palm Beach Suits AU Taylor-Mado Shoes Dacronwool Worsted Suit All Silk and Wool Challis Ties 16.95 19.95 28.75 22.95 5.00 5.00 43.95 13.95 19.95 16.95 2.99 3.99 29.95 20 OFF 55.00 44.00 2.50 35.00 . . . Plus underwear, belts, socks, and hundreds of other outstanding buys. Here is a chance o really SAVE, right in the middle of the season! STEVENS - SHEPHERD Ben Harding Homers To Give Carolina 3-2 Win Over State By ELLIOTT COOPER Seeing that it was getting late and that his teammates were not hitting State's John Scott, Tar Heel pitcher Ben Harding took things into his own hands in the bottom of the eleventh inning and unload ed a long home run to deep left center to give Carolina a 3-2 vic tory over the Wolfpack at Elmer son Stadium yesterday. The Tar Heel co-captain didn't waste any time in getting the job Just Brought In! A Small Library of Out-of-Doors Books It's the nice little collection of a chap who was interested in every outdoor thing from bee-keeping to big game. We think yoj'll like the books and the prices! THE INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 East Franklin Street Chapel Hill Open Till 10 P.M. I STUDENT SPRING SAFIiTY SPECIALS $20 VALUE FOR $10 1. Motor Tune-Up Front-End Alignment Brake Adjustment Balance 2 Front Wheels 2. FREE Grease Job With Every Oil Change 3. RECAPPING SPECIAL 470-15 9.95 750-14 ... 12.95 301 CAROLINA TIRE SERVICE (formerly Carolina Motors) E. Main Carrboro Phone 8460 1L KROSSWORD No. 27 ACROSS DOWN 1. Y vi c-nfr 1. Iycra, iit "-nt mi hma 7. I dry t .Hit 2. Thiu'll fWf it..,.. you th ahalf 11 K iin?iaur 8. ('filer nwly II i mri rhangi M k J a -n(iln 4. Thafa my Hurl! 1 . mj'll h i fw 6, tHalv hn ymir hair moment i. H. Impiah fnomaj 1 U h.i got 7. Whm Chl.wi thai ( yu aa limt 7. Il.-wtini H. Hawaiian city l.rothera S. Kverythinf I M'wt If). Winda H rrvmonam that 5". Mow food Hi iirnVmi' 1 1. Tongue laahlng 21 ot t.a. aarri 12. Aliprel 21. Hn ly orW 1'). Helup for i the ! paint job IT f.lL.t'a Adrn 22. CnwremWed t p.ll'in i'r ll aplla mewa ? In a i Z. A hit on 2 vui . . the h-al fn of a ainl) 2. Stale of I' m't hav, Alitalia' ly firai (.ovrrnor Si KJ 2n. Smoke If.lan.l K'xil rettn 3 7. i u1 to 2. I.HMc Kt prir.- (allr.) Khol lalarid Jl. km( Sie 2". Th-x roulil r tr- - KihiI lie Uwi 4". Swi)rh from 3". V,-Hi for thrtns tl..m to K. ai S. Jaik the 41. Kind of 8n. divin rlMnmin 34. The (llti 41, The are un k of Krame on it 41. Navy man 35. 2 3 pUalered 4 .. Koiia-H Klvia, (or ihort 4. Trw-y know 411. Cut, hut their Croaia not r I 47. At kaat 7 42. The end montha ay of Jark Webb 2 3 4 5 1 7 s J9 10 in fTT"" I 15 T6 l7 it IT" j To 24 23 26 e p 35 33 I 34 I 35 TT " " ' ' MaaaaiBaBaVaaaiBaaaaBwaaLMui IVre vou kodl 37 ENOUGH TO mmmm KRACK THIS? 41 42 """""X Ts " ; 1 ' ' I I SWITCH FROM TO 1 p - X I eW9wtresh.tinER ) KODL i I aK rll .aDi' I At cool ijid clean m a treatb, of freak air. e Finet leaf tobacco... tnild refreshing menthol-, and the world ' moet thoroughly tented filter I With every puff your mouth feels clean, your throat refreshed! ...ALSO tQULA SI2E KOOL WITHOUT FILTtHI f l ti. Wiilioxi Tbai- (ry, fell MHAMfNTHOL KIMS-f HI Qgarem- done either as he laced into Scott's first pitch and drove it all the way to the left-field hedge. By virtue of the homer the senior lefthand er, who came on in the eighth in ning in relief of Ben Hammett and Bob Deaton, evened his won-lost record at 2-2. For the Wolfpack the loss was their third of the season to Caro lina and certainly no sign of the debt of gratitude which the Tar Heels owe them for defeating Wake Forest on Wednesday. Five Sophs Start Carolina Coach Walter Rabb started five sophomores as most of the regulars rode the bench during the early part of the game. Dea ton, who opened the game for the Tar Heels, worked five scoreless frames and held State to but three hits before being pulled so that Hammett could get a workout. Against the big righthander the Pack was virtually helpless as they could hit nothing up in the air. Of the first fifteen outs in the game first baseman Vaughn Bryson re ceived credit for 13 as everything was grounded out. Tar Heels Score The Tar Heels jumped on State hurlcr Jim Overby for two runs in the third and it was quite awhile before they scored again. Bryson led off the second with a single, advanced one base on a wild pitch, moved to third on Dea ton's long fly to center, and scored when Harold Workman got on on an error. Workman eventually scored him self as he stole home when State catcher Latham Smith made a throw down to second base for no reason at all thus giving the Caro lina shortstop the opportunity to tally an easy run. The Wolfpack greeted Hammett rudely in the top of the sixth as they came up with three singles to chop the Carolina lead to 2-1. Two frames later the Pack tied things up on Don Hafer's double and Smith's single. After their two-run third the Carolina attack lay in a dormant condition until Harding's homer sent the few remaining fans away happy. From the fourth on the Tar Heels were never able to get more than one hit per inning. THE BOX N. C. State Story, rf Hill, rf Lancaster, If Easom, 3b Hafer, cf Wells, lb Sparrow, 2b Cox, ss Smith, c Overby, p fccott, p Totals N. Carolina Workman, ss Craver, 2b Frady, If Burgwyn If, rf Hollers, if Crump, If Bolick, c Baldwin, c Norton, 3b Camp, 31) Saintsing, cf Griffin, cf Bryson, lb Deaton, p Hammett, p Harding, p Totals N. C. State 000 C01 010 00 2 N. Carolina 002 0C0 000 01 3 AB R H RBI 3 0 10 3 0 0 0 4 0 10 5 0 0 0 5 2 3 0 5 0 10 3 0 0 0 5 0 2 1 5 0 2 1 10 0 0 3 0 0 0 42 2 10 2 AB R H RBI 5 111 5 0 10 2 0 0 0 2 0 10 3 0 2 0 10 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 0 10 2 0 10 2 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 5 110 2 0 10 10 0 0 2 12 1 42 3 11 2 Intramural Awards Given To Best Organizations Gastonia To Be Title Game Site By J. C. UNDERWOOD To the delight of all Carolina baseball fans, State College went o Winston-Salem Wednesday after noon and thrashed out a startling 9-2 victory over Wake Forest, thus leaving the Deacons, Tar Heels, and Clemson all at the top of the ACC ladder with 9-5 records. The Wolfpack's heroics in the Twin City will necessitate a play off to determine the league cham Wake Forest concluded an after noon of hard luck when they lost a flip of the coin with Carolina im mediately after the game to decide who would play Clemson in the playoff's first round. Carolina's exhibition game with Wake in Thomasville this Satur day night has been cancelled. Therefore, league directors have established Thomasville as the site for the Wake Forest-Clemson con test with game time set for 8 o' clock that night. The Tar Heels will then meet the winner on Monday night in Gastonia for the ACC title and the right to enter the NCAA regional. which begin June 4th. Carolina will hold a workout to night on Durham's Erwin Field at 7 o'clock in order to accustom it self to playing under the lights. Coach Walter Rabb indicated that, in all probability, Harold Stowe will be the Tiger's mound choice, opposing the Deac's Bob Plemmons. Should Clemson win, the Tar Heels, according to Rabb, will face lefty Ty Cline. A Wake Forest triumph would force Coach Gene Hooks to call on Jimmy Harrell to go against Caro lina, though Bob Lawrence is a possibility. Frosh Travel To Duke The Carolina Freshmen baseball ers journey to Durham today for a game with Duke that could de cide the first place finisher in the frosh Big Four. The Imps, fresh from a 1-0 tam ing of State's WolHflets in their last outing, have dropped only two Big Four decisions while the Tar Babies have lost three. This will be the season's finale for Carolina. Bank on the future but don't write checks against it. 1GDM -9l!d Hsa-y ouS of soj-j may. ipwS H 3 p nIVCTTTs a b 3Ts 1 V 1 3 b 3d din sioho7L" IdDd ill v d orUnm i iff fdlnljH o i i Um vtbTITs r1 S I a 3 N 3 OT" o3 s v on s i w jiiiaiy 3 0 3lgrld V 1 SON Oil vh y i o hi jjiNrJs a Wv janii v tf oi3 o 3ja lilliM BOA3J1 slildlvlHlslJoiNi ilaTits U3MSNVTCDH SAE and DKE Fraternities. Joy- ner Dormitory and the Medical School copped the Annual Intra mural Organization Championships n their divisions and were present ed with the winning trophies last night at the Annual Awards Meet ing in Woollen Gym. Pearce Weaver, Milton Nelson and Duane Johnson were winners of the Kay E. Lewis Memorial Awards for the most outstanding Intramural managers. These man agers received the most coveted award for their outstanding mana gerial work during the year. Weav er represented the DKE Fraternity, Nelson, Avery Dormitory and John son, the Law School. Winning Manager's Awards went to Walter Brown of the SAE Fra ternity, Maurice Rhodes of Joyncr Dormitory and Claud Grigs and Carl Bntt of Medical School. The Grail Award for the Most Outstanding Participants in each division went to James Kelly (SAE), Milton Nelson (Avery) and Howard Light (Peacocks). These men com piled the largest individual point total during the year. Walter Rabb Organizational Par ticipation Awards went to PiKA Fraternity, Cobb Dormitory and the Law School. These organizations, under the direction of managers Frank Martin, Tom Cordle and Duane Johnson respectively, had the best participation for the year in their divisions. This award was initiated at the beginning of the 1958-59 school year to encourage more participation in Intramural Activities. It was the last meeting of the year for the Intramural Managers. Director Walter Rabb praised the managers for their fine work and cooperation during the year. COMBO! Available For All Occassions WILLIE HARGRAVES Formerly "The Castleers" Phone 9-8777 Box 464 Chapel Hill Prestige Hangs By Many Threads You'll find them all noted in The Status Seekers, selling like mad at The INTIMATE BOOKSHOP 205 East Franklin Street CHUCK WAGON Special Of The Dayl BAKED HADDOCK TWO VEGETABLES TEA or COFFEE BREAD & BUTTER DESSERT TOWN & CAMPUS' Fabulous "IN - BETWEEN SALE" Begins TODAY, Friday the 15th Three Usually Make A Crowd, But TOWN & CAMPUS Doesn't Mind Squeezing In-Between! All Ladies' Apparel 10 OFF 197 lightweight tropical DacronWorsted SUITS formerly 55.00 60.00 65.00 69.50 Reduced to 39.95 45.00 47.50 49.50 Summer Wash 'NT Wear SUITS in Poplin & Cambri-Cloth Now only $34.95 One Special Group DacronCotton SUITS formerly up to $49.95 Reduced to $19.95 Lightweight DacronCotton SPORT COATS Reduced 20 DacronCotton Cord Were Now SLACKS 9.95 6.95 DacronCotton Wash n' Wear SLACKS - 20 OFF WoolDacron Tropical SLACKS - 20 OFF SPORT SHIRTS Short Sleeve DRESS SHIRTS 10 OFF Group Men's Madras SHIRTS - $7.95 f w r. , , , , , u. f 1 ....ieiMie L 149 EAST TRANffllhTstn mm f cfood) PHONE 57491 The ORIENTAL 116 E. Parrish St. Durha-n Catering Service And AMERICAN FAVORITES OPEN 11 a.m.-2:30 p.m., 4:30-9:40 p.m. CHAPEL HILL wm nil V Km rIlaf JKUmt . )i L w - - MILTON'S CAREER CAPERS Fabulous opportunity to select your career wardrobe at greatly reduced prices. Deliveries of many of our choice items were very late, hence a good many of our unusual clothing were just added, just in time for great savings on the best looking apparel on either side of the Rockies. Entire stock of dacronwool suits including 5V2 ounce 280 tropicals, solids, stripes, plaids, basic carrer suits, reduced from 56.95 to 46.95 Entire stock dacroncotton suits reduced from $39.50 to $29.99 Entire stock year round suits and sport jackets, 25 Off Imported India Madras jackets cut from $28.75 to $23.99 Dacronwool slacks all $3.00 off, $14.95 now $11.95; $16.95 now $13.95; $18.95 now $15.95 Dacroncotton trousers cut from $9.95 to $6.99 Cotton pants, formerly to $8.95, including cotton cords, now $3.49 Belts, including India madras, formerly to $3.00, now $.99 Large group short sleeve sport shirts, India Ma dras stripes, pullover button-down challis prints formerly $5.95, 6.95 and 9.95, now reduced to $3.50, or 3 for $10.00 $5.00 half sleeve pullover button-downs, 1 for $4.00 or 3 for $11.50 Long sleeve $4.50 and $5.00 dress shirts, 1 for $3.50 or 3 for $10.00 $8.95 India Madras plaid shirts now $6.99 Imported India Madras bermuda shorts and swim shorts cut from $10.95 to $8.99 Polished cotton bermuda shorts cut from $3.95 to $2.99 Entire stock $2.50 ties cut to $1.99 Entire stock of our umbrellas or "storm slicks" reduced, $4.50 umbrellas now $2.99; $8.95 um brellas now $6.99 Imported dirty buck shoes cut from $16.95 to $12.99 Dirty buck chukka boots from England cut from $12.95 to $9.99 English cordovan loafers cut from $17.95 to $10.99; $15.95 to $8.99 $20.00 cordovan tassel loafers, leather lined, cut to $112.99 India Madras vests cut from $10.95 to $8.99 Alligator polo shirts cut from $3.95 to $2.99; $5.95 to $4.99 Group polo shirts formerly to $5.00, now $1.99 FOLLOWING REDUCTIONS FROM OUR LADY MILTON SHOP Entire stock of our fabulous shirtdresses reduced $26.95 madras dresses now $23.99; $19.95 madras dresses now $16.99; $11.95 dresses now $9.99; $16.95 dresses now $13.99 All long sleeve button-down shirts reduced Entire stock skirts reduced $7.95 now $5 99 $9.95 now $7.99; $10.95 now $8.99; $11.95 now $9.99; $12.95 now $10.99; $14.95 now $1 1.99; $16.95 now $13.99; $18.95 now $14.99 Entire stock bermudas reduced India Madras cut from $10.95 to $8.99; $9.95 to $7.99 Entire stock tapered trousers reduced, including India Madras India Madras blazers cut from $26.95 to $19.99 ALL SALES CASH & FINAL ALTERATIONS EXTRA Milton's Clotlring CtuAoatJ) ' A'T U'T 11 i t-t I I in I , '