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Cindermen Lose To Tar Heels The Tar Heels of North Caro lina took their fifth victory of the season by defeating the Univer sity of South Carolina Gamecocks last Saturday afternoon at Chapel Hill, 81%-49%. The Gamecocks got an early lead but the Tar Heels twice came from behind to tie the score, and after the seventh event they lead the rest of the meet. The Tar Heels swept the last three events, the two-mile, the 220-yard low hurdles, and the' mile relay in taking the last 23 points of the meet to cinch their victory. The outstanding trackman of the meet was Boyd Newnam of North Carolina. He ran the 880 yard in the winning time of 1:54.7, which is better than the South Carolina State record. He also was the anchorman on their win ning mile- relay team. The Gamecocks' Dick Bartuiski threw the javelin 195 feet, 21. inches to win that event. His toss was also better than the South Carolina State record. Tommy Woodlee was high-scorer for the Gamecocks with 10 points. Tommy won both the 100 and 220 yard dashes. His times of 9.9 and 21.7 seconds were exceptionally good, as both events were run against a slight breeze. Tomorrow afternoon the Game cocks meet the Clemson Tigers on the Fort Jackson track for their last regular meet of the season. The summary: Shot put-1, Morris, N. C. 2, Maslow, N. C. 3, Silas, USC. 51 feet, % inch. High jump-1, four-way tie: Bryant and Wilson, N. C., Martin and Collins, USC. 5 feet, 10 inches. Mile run-1, Beatty, N. C. 2, Roberts, USC. 3, Inabinet, USC. 4:29.6. 440-yard run-1, Wilcher, USC. 2, Whetstone, USC. 3, Wright, N. C. :50.2. 100-yard dash - 1, Woodlee, USC. 2, Thomas, USC. 8, Mitchell, N. C. :9.9. 120-yard high hurdles-1, Scott, N. C. 2, Rhule, N. C. 3, Martin, USC. :15.1. 880-yard run-1, Newnam, N. C. 2, Beatty, N. C. 3, Roberts, USC. 1:54.7. Broad jump-1, Yarborough, N. C. 2, Summers, USC. 3, Berry, USC. 22 feet, 9% inches. Pole vault-1, Waters, N. C. 2, Yarborough, N. C. 3, Bolton, USC. 13 feet, 3 inches. Discus--1, Morris, N. C. 2, Silas, USC. 3, Bolton, USC. 149 feet, 41% inches. 220-yard dash -- 1, Woodlee, USC. 2, Thomas, USC. 3, Mitchell, N. C. :21.7. Two-mile run--i, Barden, N. C. 2, Nanney, N. C. 3, Griffin, N. C. 9:51.6. 220-yard low hurdles-i, Rhule, N. C. 2, Wilson, N. C. 3, Scott, N. C. :24.6. Javelin--1, Bartulski, O4SC. 195 feet, 2%. inches. One-mile relay-i, iNorth Caro lina (Booth, Wright, McFaddin and Newnam). .3:23.6. USC To Have Own Network Next Fall For *Foot ball Games The University of South Caro lina will establish its own radio network for football games next fall, athletic director Rex Enright announced recently. Bob Fulton, one of the nation's outstanding sportscasters, will give the play-by-play accounts of the games. Fulton, now employed by a Columbia station, became popular throughout the country as a member of the Mutual Broad .-asting System's major .league ~Abaseball broadcasting staff last summer. Fulton has broadcast USC foot ball and basketball games for several years and had previous experience as announcer for the University of Arkansas network. The "Gamecock Network" will afford Carolina fans who are not able to attend the games color ful and authoritative reports of the action. It will also enable stations throughout this state and other states to carry the broadcasts at a moderate fee, encouraging wider radio coverage of Carolina games. Carolina's schedule next fall in cludes games with Wofford, Wake Forest, Navy, Furman, Clemson, Maryland, North Carolina, Duke FOOTBALL AND TRACK ... around athlete. He won honors in fc so at Carolina. His present sport is continually breaks the existing state i Bartulski W School Star Is A Gamet By SID B Gamecock Sp This is first in a series of i week on outstanding athletes bright stars for the Gamecoc Twenty years ago in Turtle Creek, Pennsylvania, a mining town of 30,000 people, a son was born to Mr. and Mrs. Ted Bartul ski. This strapping youngster was later christened Richard Theodore Bartulski and was to be called Dick by his family. Mr. and Mrs. Bartulski were a proud pair and had high hopes of Dick becoming a fine athlete some day and their hopes were not to be denied. Dick is one of four children and he speaks with pride of his brother Barry, who is in the army, and his two sisters, Jay and Judy. lHe matured quickly and starred on the Turtle Creek High School Junior Varsity football team as a ninth grader. He recalls how stiff the competition wvas at that time as there were 85 boys out for the team. He was not to be denied the following year as he made the varsity squad as a halfback. His high school coach realized his potentials as a fullback mainly due to his blocking ability and the fact that he wvas a powerful runner. During his junior and senior years he did run from full back. Turtle Creek ran from the single wing formation at that time. Dick received much recognition for his fine play on the football field and wvas chosen as All West ern Pennsylvania on the all-star] teams~ picked by the Pittsburgh Post Gazette and the Pittsburgh Sun Telegraph. He was sought after by many schools all over the country among which were Penn State, Rutgers, Miami of Florida, Nebraska and South Car olina. Dick also excelled in track, swimming and gymnastics. The javelin, which he - is most noted) for at the present, was his spe-. cialty, although he did not begin throwing it until he wvas a junior, in high school. His best distance then was 170 feet. In a track meet involving 16 of the top schools in Western Pennsylvania, and which was called the Western P en nsaylv a n ia Inter-Athletic] League, he placed first with 13 points. As a senior, he entered the Amateur Athletic Union Swim Meet, one of the largest of its kind in Pennsylvania, and placed fourth among entrants from colleges, universities, high schools and other amateur swimmers. Dick was not only popular< among the field of sports but was quite a politician also. He wasi sophomore class secretary, senior class president and president of I the student council. It may shock t some of you other athletes but his I favorite subject in high school was chemi.a-ry. Dick Bartulski is an excellent all, otball in high school and may dc throwing the javelin, in which h( ecord. as High Now.He Iock Star ADGER )rts Writer rticles to be written each who, in my opinion, will be ks in future years. In the fall of 1954, Mr. Bartul iki entered the University ol south Carolina. During his fresh nan year, he starred on the "Bid lie" football squad and was gen !rally the workhorse due to an njury-riddled team. After bo-hunking in 1954, ob servers believe he is in for a fine ear with the "Roosters" in '55. L)uring spring training, Dick wa. ,onsistently one of the better )acks. His aggressiveness, spirit, mnd all-around play stood out inong the top performers. He ig )owerfully built on a 5'8" frame mnd has the deceptiveness and pleed to be a threat each time he ~arries the ball. There is nothing we can tell he track fans about his feats with he track team thus far. He con istently betters the existing state -ecord in the javelin throw and or me occasion in practice threw it 0t9 feet or better. He has alsc een scoring in the discus anc ias turned out to be one of Coach Baskin's top scorers. "Zeke," so called by his team nates, is a better than average itudent with his favorite college ubject being English. When asked about the South mnd the University, he said that ie liked both very much. After irst arriving here, no, but he said .he place grows on you and whc nows, it could be his permanent ioe. He said that the coachei ire a great bunch and if the guys -eally put out next year that the 'Gamecocks" could be playing in he Orange Bowl. Dick's biggest thrill of his brief ithletic career came In Florida not oo long ago when he placed sec )nd in the javelin throw during he Florida relays. What does backfield coach Earl )unham think of his halfback?7 'DIck is a very good competitor, le has fine spirit and aggressive iess. He looked very good during pring practice and in the spring tame. He'll play a lot of ball next eason and should be a great help o the team." So ends a brief sketTh of Mr. lichardl Theodore Bartulski's ath etic career up 'til this time. Be ore he leaves South Carolina, here will probably be pages writ en about this fine "Gamerooster' ho is destined for stardom. Woodlee Lead. Scoring Leading score:rfor the Game. 'ock track team during the first ix outdoor meets was Tommy oodlee, Atlantic Coast Confer nce dash champ, with 52 1/3 >oints. Woodlee turned in his best inmes of the year against North jarolina State winning the 100 rard dash In 9.8 seconds and the 20 in 21. Qecnds.A Frosh Tra Bobby Drawdy, freshman ising "Biddies" will meet Cl the varsity rneet which is to 1 Coach Drawdy indicated th the varsity squad considerablb Among the more outstanding .performers is Conway Snipes, who hails from Georgia and holds a state record for the pole vault. His record-breaking height was 12 feet and 9 inches. Snipes also broad jumps, runs the 100-yard dash and runs a leg in the mile relay. Heyward King of Lake City stands out in the 100 and 220-yard dashes. King shows promise of being a top sprinter with a fast 10.1 already recorded. He also broad jumps and runs a leg In the mile relay. Coach Drawdy also says that Jim Carter may be Carolina's most outstanding hurdler since the "Droopy" Atwell days. Other men on the squad and their specialties are as follows: Johnny Stallings in the pole vault, high jump and javblin; Bobby Bunch in the 440 and 880; Marion Edwards in the 100- and 220-yard dashes and mile relay; Juris Ozols in the 440- and 880 yard runs; Harry Edwards in the 100- and 220-yard dashes; Murphey Lemmon in the high jump, broad jump and mile run; Jim Wise in the low hurdles and 220-yard dash; Jack Foster in the shot put, discus and javelin; Dean Crain in the high jump; Bob Barrett in the shot put and discus. Golf Team, Tennis Team Have Meets The Gamecocks will meet Clem son here in Columbia in a golf match this afternoon. This is the team that USC opened its season against. Tomorrow afternoon the guest for the golf team will be the Pres byterian Blue Hose, whom the Birds will meet again on May 10 at Clinton. A WHOL ~ For so A WONDERFUL SLANT on the Droodle above, titled tasting Lucky Strike whi] Pisa. If your own incina .join the many college snm From any angle, Luckies better, first of all, becausi tobacco, Then that tobacc "It's Toated"-the famnor tones up Luckies' light, go it taste even better. Little above all other brands-in o IOin TASHEI CLEANER, FRESHI ckmen Fa4 track coach here at Carolina, ar amson's Cubs in a track meet oe held on the same day. Field t he has several promising year next season. Star of the Week Jarrett Lea( In Batting By JIM BIR Gamecock Sp( Star of the Week laurels fv leftfielder for the Gamecock's Jim is a righthanded juni, Carolina. Jim took top honors t standing performance he has ti Gamecocks. After the North Carolina and Duke games last week, Jim found himself leading all other Game cock hitters with a batting aver age of .367. His closest rival is I first baseman Bob Cross with an average of .325. All of the Game cocks are hitting well but Jarrett is the leader. Runner-up this week was Hey- I ward Tunstall, who scattered seven hits Saturday afternoon in Dur ham as he pitched the South Caro lina Gamecocks to a 11-5 rout over Duke's Blue Devils. Heyward handed Duke its fourth ACC loss against three wins. Honorable mention goes to the USC trackmen, who have set three state varsity records this season. Sophomore Dick Bartulski's 195 feet, 21 inches javelin throw, Joe Silas' 146-foot discus throw, and the one-mile relay teams 3:19.7 The rest of the schedule includes Wofford on May Day here in Co lumbia. Then, that same week, from the fifth of May through the seventh, the golf team will be en tered in the Southern Intercolle giates at Athens, Ga. The season will end with the ACC tournament at Winston Salem. The tennis team has two more games, both at home. They are played at Maxey Gregg Park. CABOODLE 0 NHAT'S THIS? ution see paragraph below. smoking! You'll find it in Tourist enjoying better e leaning against tower of ion is toward better taste, okers who prefer Luckies. taste better. They taste i Lucky Strike means fine o is toasted to taste better. ws Lucky Strike process xd-tasting tobacco to make wonder that Luckies tower allege popularity! ROODIES, Copyright 1953 by Roger Price BETTER t ER, SMOOTHERI &e Kittens nounced today that his prom saturday in conjunction with ,vents will begin at 2 p.m. lings who should strengthen Is Team tverage ANDON orts Writer 11 this week on Jim Jairett, baseball team. )r from High Point, North his week because of the out irned in at- the plate for the ffort surpass records set at the tate meet at Cl:nton in the past. Leading scorer for the Game ocks during the first six outdoor neets was Tommy Woodlee, At antic Coast Conference dash 1 ,hamp, with 52 1/3 points. Bartulski is second to Woodlee vith 37 points and Silas is third vith 34 points. The Gamecocks have beaten 'resbyterian, Georgia Tech and \orth Carolina State, while losing .o Duke, Florida and North Caro na. UP AND OVER . . . Tomorrow tz ieason against the Clen%on Tiger%. he Fort Jackson track. f LUCKY DRC SPAGHETTI sERVEn ST NEAT WAITER Pamela Schroeck University of Connecticut PENNILESS WORM TRYING TO MAKE ENDS MIET Lester Jackson Duquesne University Kenneth Black &anfoni Univer.ity COLLEGE SMOKERS PREFER LUCKIESI iee lead all other brands in leges-and by a wide margin ording to an exhaustive, coast moast college survey. The No. Oason: Luckies taste better. Prna AnaMEarC A'S L.mADN n M=AN...... Page Seven Birds Lose Exhibition To The Marines A total of 27 men were left on )ases by both teams Tuesday when -he Gamecocks dropped a 9-2 base >all decision to Parris Island's arines in an exhibition game at Veteran's Hospital Field. Marine starter Charlie Chrono )oulos, who had fanned six while ;hutting out the Gamecocks over ,he first three innings, suffered a >roken leg in the top of the fourth ,vhen he slid into third base. Thronopoulos had hit a 340-foot .wo-run home run in second in ing. Coach Ted Petoskey started Eoward Tunstall for Carolina and ollowed with R. 0. Hughes and rommy Van Keuren. They walked t total of 12 men as the Marines eft 14 men stranded and Carolina [3. Catcher Buddy Frick with two ;ingles in four at bats and first )aseman Bob Cross with a single ind double in five trips and second >aseman Larry Jewell with two iingles in five times up led the carolina hitting. Parris Is. . .130 011 030-9 11 0 C7arolina 000 000 110-2 10 1 Chronopoulos, Minto and Ure movich; low. Tunstall, Hughes (3), Van Keuren (9) and Frick. e track team closes out its regular Lction such as this will be seen on I0DL.ES PIG WHO WASHED HIS TAIL AND CAN'T DO A THING WitH IT Maurice Sapiro U. of Rochester 666666666 AMMUNITiON POR SUK-SeO@TU C. J. Grandmai.on U. of New Hampshke RI C 7