if Friday. May 20, 19G6 Rusty Adkins Tops ACC GREENSBORO (AP) Rus Adkins, junior infielder for tlcmson who won the 1965 At lantic Coast Conference batting crown with a .444 average, is NOW PLAYING This is T1IE GROUP -i PUT 1 int mtlt. novel SELLER "0"T, '9ht v"r ii i . .... , V:C187KT 11 THE - - i I GROUP TKMU: S CiSulCt EEKGLH JOANNA PETTET JCiN KACKETT WARY-ROBIN REDD ELIZABETH KARTMAM JESSICA WALTER ywm KNIGHT KATHLEEN Y.1DD0ES 1 COtOS b DtLUXE I Features 1:15-3:51 6:27-9:03 i TRAVEL-ON MOTORCYCLE CO, 929-2364 SUZUKI ! ftp mm in id' i inc. l 1 - CLASSIFIED ADS I - 1957 THUNDERBIRD CONV., til cu. in, 3-2 bl carbs, straight drive. Good condition, call be tween 5:30 and 9:00 p.m. $1,450.00, 942-7130 ask for Hon est Ed. Tor Rent: New air - condition ed mobile home, 10' x 50', available May 9. $90 per month. Telephone 942 3268 or 942-1749. Also several avail able about June 1st. FOR RENT. NEW 12 X 50 mobile home. Avaiable June August. Married couple only. Jerry Attkisson. 942-1541. FOR SALE: 1966 HONDA Su pr Hawk. Excellent condition 1100 miles. Model CB77 -electric starter, scrambler bars, crome fender ($760 new) 4635. Call Scott Bradley. 968 9(63. FOR SALE: SCUBA OUTFIT; single tank, regulator, mask, 2ns, snorkle, backpak, pres sure guage, and knife. Asking fiJO.00. Will deal. Phone 942 5410 after 7:30 p.m. CHEAP 2 BEDROOM apartment for rent this sum fr.er. Available 3 June-14 Sept. Competely furnished. 208 Elm St:. Carrboro, 968-8160 (nights). BOUSE TRAILER FOR SALE x 30', good condition, 1 bed room, air - conditioned, $1195 Or make offer. 603 Hillsbor 0ih Rd., Carrboro. Call 942 ST82. MXTED: THIRD GIRL TO stere apartment. 3 bedroos, 3 fcaths, air - conditioned, pas'- swimming pool. Near cam jMsand town. Call 929-3418 af 5 p.m. FOR RENT THIS SUMMER. 1 1 bedroom house completely furnished, 1 1-2 baths, party Iuora, air - conditioned, new . PpUances, 1 mi. from cam PJS GOOD DEAL! $160 a fronth. 942-2945. STUDENT NEEDS PLACE TO I: ore summer clothes. Will PJ storage fee. Call Mike f fsler. 8-9170. TR-3. WIRE WHEELS. ood condition, $450.00. Dave c?o-n. 966-3011 or 968-9156. Attractive two bed- furnished apartment. 10 a nute walk to campus. Avail- for summer. $90 per f-onth. Call G. Friedman, 968 t:55. 0R SALE: re, 2 door 1963 BUICK Le door sedan. 4 - speed. "1 - synchro. R & H. Excell t condition. New tires. $1600. Cnrr. Tulboit turning a late season into a serious bid for spurt a re- peat championship. through w " " 'V " : llT, aaiuns, with a .375 average ; o-- bonita, uaa milieu nis way to the top in what is the closest race in ACC his tory m the batting title. The battle is so tight, the man in sixth place currently could rise to the top in a sin gle game and this means the contest may go to the final out of the season before a de cision is rendered. The nearest thing to a cer tainty at this stage is that either a Clemson or North Carolina man should win the crown. The first eight men in the latest ACC Service Bureau averages perform for either the Tech Elites Heels, 15-14 The Tar Heels closed out the regular baseball season on a ferocious, but losing, note Wed nesday when they were out slugged by Virginia Tech, 15 14. The loss, the second in a row for Carlina, gave Walter Rabb's team a regular season record of 18-10. Wake Forest beat the Tar Heels, 5-4 in ten innings, Monday. Even in losing, the Heels showed the never-say-die spir it that has characterized them all season. They rallied from a seven-run deficit and took a 14-12 lead into the bottom of the ninth. Carolina couldn't hold the lead, though. Tech's Johnny Oates slammed a three - run homer to give the Gobblers the victory. Bud Cohoon took the loss for the Tar Heels. Mike McLaughlin and Rod ney Thompson homered for Carolina. The next stop for Rabb's ACC champions in Gastonia and the NCAA District III playoffs. The Tar Heels face the Southern Conference pen nant winner, East Carolina College, on June 2. B.S.A. MOTORCYCLE 1961 250ncc. Star. Candy Apple red paint, new tires, perfect for campus, trips, trail riding. Jim Newton, 968-9305 or 966 3028. Leave message. WANTED MAN WITH economy car for summer pa per route. 6-day week. 1 1-2 hrs. a day. $25 per week. Con tact Joe Hackney, Box 145, Chapel Hill. WANTED TWO FEMALES to share apartment with two males for fall semester. Call 966-5121 between 7 p.m. and 11 p.m. on Friday, May 20. CORVAIR CONVERTIBLE 1966, 7,000 miles. Being draft ed, no money down, assume payments only. Call 929-6337 after 5:00 p.m. SACRIFICE: 1963 HONDA 300. $195. Call 968-9053 or 968 9307. 1960 FORD CONVERTIBLE White with black top, cruso matic, V-8, power steering, 56,- 000 miles, plus 2 extra tires- Must sell $650; 929-2230. FOR SALE AQUA LUNG, two stage Aqua Master regu lator, back - pack, weight belt, knife, depth gage, profession al mask, manual. Paul Dick son. 929-5232, ' 968-9062, 968 9305. Need money. SACRIFICE! OWNER Transfered. Must sell 1963 Chevy II and 2 yr. old deluxe Frigidaire stove. Both excel lent condition. Call 942-2104 af ter 6 p.m. FOR SALE: 1964 BLUE COR vair Monza Convertible 20, 0C0 miles fine condition attractive price available only because owner in V i e t Nam with marines. Call 919 1447. ONE "PICK OF THE LIT ter" female German Shep herd 3 months old AKC Reg istered $55.00, terms. Call Judy Akridge Days 942 4121, Ext. 69. Evenings and weekends 929-2311. 9'4" DAVE SWEET SURF BOARD. Phone 929-3279. FOR SALE: 50 cc. SUZUKI only 1,000 miles. Must sell. Call Drew Murphey, 968-9074. FOR RENT : 3 bedroom, fur nished home. $130.00 per month June - August 117 Em erald Circle, (Parkwood) Dur ham. 10 min. from UNC. 544-2310. Still Close champion Tar Heels or the Tigers. However, Dan Kerns of Maryland is batting .350 and is still mathematically in the running. Adkins, who has hit safely in 39 consecutive games stret ching into last season, is trail ed by three men hitting .370 or batter. Teammate Keith Waters is second at .372. Char les Carr of North Carolina is third at .371 and Tar Heel Danny Talbott fourth at .370. Tommy Pack (.364) and Ed die Dantzler (.363) of Clem son round out the first half dozen. Averages for the ACC are running welh ahead of 1965 when only ten players batted .300 or better for the full sea- DU, Ehringhaus Win In IM By BILL HASS DTH Asst. Sports Editor DU Blue II and the Ehring haus C Nubs captured the fra ternity and residence hall in tramural softball champion ships on Wednesday. DU built up an early lead and defeated TEP for the fraternity crown, 11-9. DU did most of their damage in the second inning. Terry Henry led off with a home run. Jim Cutting walked, Pete Burgess singled, Randy Myer walked and Dennis Morgan doubled. Then Ted Edwards walked and Bob Tracy unloaded a three -run homer to cap the seven tWins And Losses By Barry Jacobs Changing Horses One old adage tells me stream. Another says don't get do both those things. Having successfully picked Kauai King to win the Kentucky Derby, I will now get off that winning horse in the middle of the Triple Crown stream and select another as the winner of the Preakness. My choice to win the tomorrow's 91st running of this storied race is Advocator. This Queen, by Bull Lea has yet to win this year, but he is an improving horse, Jn.his last four starts he has chalked up a third and three seconds. His best race, of course, was the Derby, in which he finished only a half-length behind Kauai King. The start before that, Advocator was second to Ambe roid in the Wood Memorial. Kauai King, without doubt, is the colt to beat. He won the Derby fairly, and he did it the hard way, leading all the way. The Maryland-bred son of Native Dancer will be a solid favorite tomorrow, perhaps odds-on. I don't think, though, that the King will be able to run the same kind of race to morrow that he ran in Louisville. The other jockeys aren't likely to let Don Brumfield get away again. Indulto, Kauai King and Stupendous should be in the first flight early, with Advocator not too far behind. The others should be farther back. At the finish, I'll call it this way ADVOCATOR, KAUAI KING, STUPENDOUS, AMBEROID. sure to WISH TO EXPRESS MY DEEP APPRECIATION TO MY THOUSANDS OF FRIENDS OF THE CAROLINA STUDENT BODY FOR THEIR SUPPORT AND HELP DURING MY DISASTER. I AM DOW N NOW, BUT STILL KICKING. HAIFA GOOD SUMMER AND VLL SEE YOU AGAIN IN THE FALL. KEMP THE DAILY Hitters aun. With the 1966 campaign almost over. 80 players are in side the .300 circle, with ten of them at .350 or better. Last season only three managed to go over .350. Clemson players dominate the extra base races, with George Sutton, a .350 hitter, showing the way in home runs with 11 and runs batted in with 34. Adkins tops triples with six and Jack McCall leads doubles with nine. Tal bott is pushing McCall in two base hits with eight and Law ton Cowart of Clemson is a close second in RBIs with. 30. Randy London of Wake For est is first in stolen bases with 11. Mike Fair of South Caro lina is second with 10. run outburst. The DU's led, 9-0. In the third inning, Kleit man blasted a two - run hom er to chop the TEP deficit to 9-5. In the DU fifth, Burgess and Myer walked and came in on Morgan's single to increase the lead to 11-5. TEP scored four more times to finish the game. NUBS TRIUMPH Ehringhaus pitcher Gary Lail gave up only five hits to the Griffith House G-men from Morrison in a 4-1 victory. Jim my Byrd led off the game with a home run to put the Nubs in front, 1-0. not to change horses in mid off a winner. So I'm going to son of Round Table-Delta LA PIZZA presents for your dining pleasure ROD PHILLIPS Piano Player Tuesday-Thursday-Saturday - 8:00-10:00 m During exams be call 967-1451 for delivery will be honored to have your SUPPORT and VOTE for ORANGE COUNTY COMMISSIONER Democratic Primary May 28, 1966 TAR HEE1 Duke Takes j Track Meet Duke won the first State In I tercollegiate Track and Field ! Championships Wednesdav, i clinching the title in the final event of the day. i The Blue Devils edged I North Carolina College, 47-45. UNC finished third with 36 1-2 ! points, and N. C. State was ! fourth with 28 1-2. Carolina copped two first ; places in the meet. Bill Bas i ett won the mile run with a : time of 4:21. Mike Williams took the 880-yard run in 1:53 Edwin Roberts of North Car olina College was named the meet's outstanding perform er. Roberts won the 100 in 9.5 and the 220 in 21.4. Healso anchored the winning 440-yard relay team. In the third. Bob Knott slam med a home run and Tildern Martin followed with another one to move the Nubs up by 4-0. TENNIS RESULTS Lewis Blue defeated the Ev erett Rogah for the intramur al tennis championship in resi dence halls and Law IV down ed Med Blue for the title in the graduate division. Jim Hough of Lewis won Mangum, Phi Delts Win 'Murals Mangum and Phi Delta Theta were the overall winners in intramural competition for the 1S55-66 school year. Mangum displaced Everett as the residence hall champ ion. Everett was second, Ruf fin third, Aycock fourth and Old East fifth. The next five were Graham, Lewis, Connor, Alexander, and Morrison C. The Phi Delts won the fra ternity championship for the third straight year, thus re tiring the trophy. DKE finish ed second, DU third, Pi Kap pa Phi fourth and Zeta Psi fifth. TEP was sixth, SAE sev enth, Chi Psi eighth, St. A ninth and Lambda Chi tenth. Graduate division totals have not yet been computed. l(c,vU?oiLji:5Sa SUN. MON. TUE. James ..Meuiia Garner Mercouri Sandra Tony Dee 7 Franciosa 'A Man Could Get Killed" m P I 1 m m m mmm technicolor j PAN AVISION BATTLE NYE Bob Lewis Named MVP Of Tar All-America Bob Lewis, jun ior from Washington. D. C. has been named Carolina's "Most Valuable Player" for the 1965-66 basketball season, according to Coach Dean Smith. Lewis, who averaged 27.4 points per game and set a school record with a 49-point performance against Florida State last December, headed the list of players selected for special honors at the annual basketball banquet. "Bob's tremendous scoring skill and his overall team ef fort made him a logical choice for the award," said Smith. The trophy is presented each Softball his singles match against Jim Hugenschmidt, 7-5. Tom Dail of Everett beat John Clemens of Lewis in number two sin gles, 6-0, 8-6. The Lewis dou bles team of Woody Perrel and Rich Page won over Ron Michlelove and Steve Shelds. 6-2, 6-3. Phi Delt beat KA for the fraternity championship. Law IV defeated Med Blue for that title. Members of the winning team were Char lie Shaffer, number one sin gles, John McMillan, number two singles, and doubles team Larry McDevitt and Rich Gwalty. UNC notes with regret the passing on of 107. CREED JWILLIE CCS JFA GRANDMA GOODING -r CHASE HALL WILL CONTINUE ITS SUNDAY BUFFET - During Summer School 12 to 2 and 5 to 7 ALL YOU CAN EAT -1.60 Complete CHILDREN UNDER 10 - HALF PRICE Cafeteria Will Be Closed on Saturdays During Summer School Heel Cage Team year by E. Carrington Smith. Other special honors went to seniors Jimmy Moore of Wilmington and Johnnv Yok ley of Mt. Airy. Moore, a substitute who played in all but 11 games, provides a good example of athletic value although one is out of the limelight. He was tapped for the Foy Robertson Jr. Memorial Award as the QUICKIE sez . . . . 'Dim'f throiv your hands up in d is pair I Exams ain9t so bad and if they get you foiri, roar doicn tit Q.F.M. for 9 BEER, CHAMPAGNE, MIXERS, SNACKS, All Kinds of relaxing goodies! We're it pen ' til 1 1 :3() every night r QUIK FOOD HART Meinrttttt WnMley loves good conversation. All he needs ' r - is an opener. KING OF BEERS ST. LOUIS NEWARK . 10S Patre player who "made the chief contribution to team morale and sportsmanship." Yokley, a two - year start er, was voted the "Outstan ding Senior" and earned the Educational Foundation Award, an engraved watch. Bill Currie, Charlotte radio and televisin announcer, was the principal speaker at the af fair. ANHEUSER-BUSCH. INC. ANGELES TAMPA . HOUSTON