The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, May 21, 1954, Page Page Six, Image 6

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4j .599 To'Bird Dia Carrying only eight men Petoskey's baseball team endei double-header win over Virg split in two games at Marylai lina a final record of 10 wins i games. The Terps, needing wins i for the ACC title, couldn't Tunstall, Friday, as the Bird, Hivyward Fans 12 Tunstall fanned 12 while walk ing only one and giving up four hits to the Terps, who entered the game with eight men batting over .800. Carolina's seven hits were scat tered among as many players. Petoskey had to shuffle his line-up for the trip, but the new combination paid dividends. Jimmy Shea opened the first game behind,the plate but inex perience caught up with him and he moved into right field in the fifth with regular catcher Jimmy Cox moving back behind the plate. Hofferth On First Another e:.periment, and one that proved more successful, was the shift of Tom Hofferth from shortstop to first. base. The Red Rooster contributed a run-produc ing single and also lashed a 390 foot line 'drive that was caught on the run by Maryland center fielder Chet Hanulak. But he couldn't connect in the other three games. The rest of the line-up found Buddy Stewart at second, Carl Brazell at third, and Frank Ellerbe at short to round out the infield. Jim Jarrett remained' in left, Ed Rast moved into center, and Shea patrolled right in the out field. Wildness by pitcher Gene Mol nar hurt in the second game as he walked 10 in a 6-3 loss. Molnar gave up seven hits and fanned three. Three Gamecock errors aided Maryland in five of their six runs. Again no Gamecock collected more than one hit, for a total of four. 1reak Ilitting Slump In Virginia, Monday, the Game cocks finally broke a terrific five 'giWhitting slump as they blasted 22 hits in a pair of seven-inning wins on the last day of the season. The Tunstall twins were double trouble for the Cavaliers with Hey ward winning the opener 7-5 for his second win in four days and Howard making his first start in a month a success with a 2-1 six hitter. In the five games previous to the twin bill, the Gamecocks had hit a miserable .161, but still man aged to wvin three of those games. The Carolina pitching corps had given up just six earned runs in that five game span. Ellerbe and Cox Iit Frank Ellerbe and Jimmy Cox were the heroes of the first game. Ellerbe had the first four-for-four game of his college career and Cox, wearing a Gamecock uniform for the last time, found the home run ringe for the first time this season, blasting two rou nd-t rippers over the left field fence, the first 'with a man on. Rast, Jarrett, CAPTAINS, NEW AND OLD baseball captain-elect for 1955, ,eha Jimmy Cox. The two were chosenu the Virginia doub lle-headerr, Monday Captains: Cox '54 Heyward Tunstall, rising senior from Darlington, will captain the 1955 Carolina baseball team. Tunstall was elected at a recent squad meeting, and Catcher Jimmy Cox was voted captain for the past season. Tunstall, whose twin brother Howard pitches and plays first base for the Gamecocks, started slow but ended hot as a pitcher for the '54 team. He won his last three games in a row, pitching four-hitters against The Citadal it Virginia Final Mark mond Team besides pitchers, Coach Ted I its season on the road with a inia Monday, after gaining a id. The three wins gave Caro nd 10 losses, 6-8 in conference i both games to edge Clemson hit Gamecock acq Heyward won, 4-2. Shea, and Tunstall each collected a pair of singles. Allen Barbee, leading hitter in the ACC, led Virginia at bat with a pair of putmch singles to right field in three trips to the plate. In the second game Cox con tinued to hit, belting two singles in three trips. The other six hits were scattered. Cox Lifts Average Cox, who upped his average from .213 to .257 in the four games, said he changed his grip a little at Maryland, holding the bat tighter. He scored the first run in the nightcap, scoring from -second on Howard Tunstall's single. The other run came in the third when Ellerbe singled, advanced on a fielder's choice, and scored on Rast's single. Howard gave up a run in the first on two singles and a sacrifice fly by Barbee and then shut the Virginians out the rest of the way. Bird Breathers . . . Jim Jarrett finished the season without a sin gle strikeout. He went to bat 44 times . . . Heyward Tunstall's 12 strikeouts against Maryland was high for the year for a Gamecock pitcher. After losing four in a row, Heyward was the winner in his last three starts . . . The baseball team was provided with outside entertainment and also education on the Maryland trip. They went to Baltimore Friday night and saw the Orioles beat the Red Sox, 7-2, in the first official major league game for many of the players. Ted Williams made his return'the next day. And at Virginia the team took a tour of Monticello, the home of Thomas Jefferson . . . The elec tion of captains was held on the bus on the trip home . . . Coach Petoskey's livewire 10-year-old son, Bobby, made the trip with the team . . . Carl Brazell saw his average drop from .350 to .324 in the final four games, but he still led the team in hitting. Frank Ellerbe was second with .321 and Ed Rast third with .297. Carolina 001 210 000-4 7 3 Maryland 000 001 100-2 4 3 Hey. Tunstall and Shea, Cox (5) ;Hemphill, Dinges (8) and Walker, Faulkner (4), Hoffman (6). Carolina 010 020 000-3 4 3 Maryland 102 002 01x-6 '7 1 Molnar and Cox; Weiss, Duffy (6) and Dinges, Faulkner (6). Carolina 020 111 2-7 14 4 Virginia 200 002 1-5 7 1 Hey. Tunstall and Cox; Zehmer, Forys (5), Wade (7), Northern (7) and Berry. Carolina 011 000 0-2 8 0 Virginia 100 000 0-1 6 2 Howv. Tunstall and Cox; North ern, .Jones (6) and Berry. ..Pitcher Hleyward Tunstall, left, es hands with 1954 captain, catchem by a vote of their teanmmates aftei (Ganmecock photo by Landis Perry) nd Heyward In '55 and Maryland and a six-hittet against Virginia. ofHeyward was the hard luck mar ofthe USC staff, losing a two hitter to Clemson and failing tc get credit for a win over Georgia after pitching 13 innings of a 14 inning game. Cox, after two seasons as the regular second baseman, moved be hind the plate this year to fill a big gap. He hit .257 the past sea son and hit two home runs against Virginia on the last day of the meanon. Students a Have Unij Pay Nomi, By Francine W. Reeves Above your Ifead, the Iilded vaultings of the cupola gleam; pink 'herubs, draped and laurel crowned Greek maids pick flowers, unconcerned, in the meadows of Puvis de Chavannes; below on the balcony, and down in the pit, the vast hemicercle hums like a bee hive. On the stage, no scenery but a long desk, a jar, a glass. Soon, the humming vanishes: a little dark man comes out of his trap, right by the stage-glasses and beard, of course-and sits down at the desk, while the first front rows stand up and nod-and ?it down again. "At our last meeting, we dis cussed some aspects of the meat trade at Rome in the fifth cen tury . . ." "Yes, this is about what goes on in a class at the Sorbonne, Universite de Paris, section Belles Lettres. Of course, if by any chance, you are not interested in the meat trade in the fifth century, you can pick any other course, and as many as you want, regardless of what exam you have planned to tackle at the end of the school year. You go in and find out at your own convenience; for, among the few thousand listeners, your goings-about are hardly noticed. In fact, most of the classes are practically public. Moreover, if you want to polish your car, or rrn your vacuum-cleaner while listen ing to your professor, all you have to do is to go home and turn your radio on. Of course, if you are a French student, you don't do that very often! If on the contrary, you feel a strange sneaking anx iety about the outcome of your eight-months course, you will at tend as often as you can-that is, once a week-more intimate classes, ranging from twenty to a hundred students, and write, at home, a development of the prob. lem, or discussion, offered to your attention by the professor. This Tod 0 1C The cigarette that give est quality - low nicot want - the mildness yo TASTE and MILDNESS MIL LIONS t Sorbonne n ited Cuts, sal Fees may be a problem, sueb as: "Why is Jean-Jacques Rosseau the fore-runner of the "Surreal Ists?" This is called a "pra ctical course." In it, your talents as a public speaker will be put to prac tice, since you will soon be offered the opportunity to take the place of the professor: for about an hour, you will put twenty lines or a page of a known-or unknown author through a kind of gin, squeezing out in proper order as much literary matter as you can, thus trying your hand at an age old basically French method of teaching. Regimtration Some facts: You register, with your two high school certificates called "baccalaureats," or less formally "bachots": one for the end of high school, and the other, for an extra year devoted either to philosophy, or to mathematics, ethics, and logic. Then, for the sum of five dollars for tuitivn, and three dollars for social security, the doors of the Sorbonne are open to you for a whole year-that is, seven or eight months of courses, from November to May, plus the opportunity to try the exam again in October if you happened to be absent from the exam, or in the 65% not listed among the happy few, after the exam. Then you must again pay the dollar or two you paid when asking permission to take the exam, In a formal let ter addressed personally to: "Monsieur Le Doyen de la Fac ulte des Lettres de Paris . . ." Two-Acre Iluildineg You may have some trouble, at . .. . .... Sae NON s Ies, se Lounging. Noiseless Dry Quickly - Pack Easily-Duarabl* Grade A"l Quality-Attract. es Solid Color Trough*UtlI Men s Sizost 7 - 13. Children's A Ladies' Skeet Etra Small *~ 2. .oldSmall. Medium anJl Large. 1110141"41st I*:: Color C*eo Clue. o youom reo6o White, Oreen or Red. P., seaOs els ad 2 color Q%okooe whoa or4orlmov hj_OSOWER 9006 GOPPLV So. Sept. 6.4 211F60. LIVIT41ft N.C Xy!s CHI .thease 'o the u want- cigar Boswell, Iriche And. Owh%gi. Lead USC Golf Team Bobby Boswell, Ralph Irick and Roy Owings compiled the bept in dividual records for the Carolina golf team this season. All three posted nine victories against five defeats during the 14-match season. As a team the Gamecocks won eight and lost six. Best medal score for Carolina during the seasion was turned in by Irick when he shot a one-under par 71 against Maryland over the Forest Lake Country club course here. first, finding your way in the two acres of the building which con tains 22 amphitheatres, two mu seums, 16 examination rooms, 37 professors' offices, 240 labora tories, a library, a physics tower, an observation tower, offices of all kinds, and living quarters for the "Recteur," head of the Sorbonne. But you always will, one way or the other, be able to get back to the Cour d'Honneur, in front of the 17th century chapel, and go in to see if Richelieu still rests nicely in his white marble tomb. Eventually. you will go out, and, if you like,you will buy the Catho lic student newspaper or the com munist one or some other, all ad vertised very politely, each in its turn, by students at the door. With the spring coming, and the anxiety growing, you might want to let some pressure off; so, a few I DELIVERY TOWER SC SANDWICHES, LUNCIIE! Phone Open 'l1 Wright-j 1330- M A e .orma/ Men's Clothing, -STERF rette E I hesterfIelcda for M ty years' scientific research goe cigarette. I've seen Chesteri rch laboratories and I've seen re made? I wouldn't smoke. any atte but Chesterfield!" Storring In Poroi t,40f;?&"CASANOVA'S BIG Color by Techr Tommy Woodlee Is Top Track Scorer With 77 12 Points Tommy Woodlee, Atlantic Coast Conference dash champion, led the Carolina track team in scoring during the past season. Woodlee scored 77% points in the 100 and 220-yard dashes and one-mile re lay. Garn McBride, captain and dis tance . runner, was close behind Woodlee with 72 points. Other leading point-makers were Bobby Drawdy, 56.87 points in the dashes and javelin; Sonny Wilcher, 52.87 points in the 440, 220 and relay; Gene Berry, 46 in the jave lin and broad jump; Freddie Rob erts, 441 in the 880 and relay; Joe Silas, 40 in the discus; Don Whetstone, 39.12 in the hurdles; Jack Martin, 28 in the hurdles and high jump; Jim Summer, 288/15 in the high jump and broad jump; and Allen Inabinet, 26% in the mile and two-mile. weeks before the exam, you will take your ruck-sack and join the pilgrimage to the 13th century cathedral of Chartres, an annual walking trip of about 50 miles, in which 3,000 youth, students or not, Catholics or not, take part, debate all subjects, and sleep at night in barns. The climax is, of course, the arrival before breakfast at the cathedral, with mass and music. Then you go home-by train-and bury yourself in books if you plan to enjoy your full four months of summer vacation. SERVICE DA SHOP i, FOUNTAIN SERVICE 1-9278 11 p.m. ohnston LIN ST. cap 30p ent Shoes & Furnishings ELD Is &er Mad id's how The cigarette with other with smokers. Here inations of a grou noirnt' adverse effects to r NIGHT" frmCe ieoler frmsmoking Ce argest Selling 4 In America's C Sherer Finishes Tennis Season With Top Record IXnox Sherer, junior from Co lumbia, was the top winner for the Carolina tennis- team this spring. Sherer, playing in the No. 6 singles position most of the year, won ton and lost five, inclu ing his last eight straight match. Jimmy Potter at No. 3 and John Heinz at No. 5 had 8-7 records, John Speer, No. 2, posted a 7-8 mark, Bobby Ariail, No. 4, won six and lost nine, while Wally Poorlb had a 4-9 record at No. 1. The Gamecocks finished the sea son with a 7-8 team record. HOW'D YOU UKE TO... meet rank of leader of Selection Team) He's here, on campus now to show you how to... earn over $5000 a year... become an officer in the air force .. . get a head start in let aviation . . . be dpart of a great flying team .. . as an Aviation Codet. See him while you can. Capt. Robert E. Coates and an aviation cadet selection team are com ing to the University to show you how. They'll be here two days, Thursday and Friday, May 27 and 28. Meet them in the Air Force ROTC Librar during their stay. Robins Air Force Base Ceorii the ea *Idus for Me 3" Univ. ,@1f a proven good record it is. Bi-monthy exam p of smokers show no iose, throat and sinuses terfield. ~Igarette rifle ges 1|3|