Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 3, 1929, edition 1 / Page 3
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THE DAILY TAR HEEL C 3 r 1 ?! Another Pivot Star 60 Yard Run Furnishes Bhr Thrill liHiiiUiill I "f r"i fa IT' Id u s, U 'His ltu4 u v mt Impressive Schedule for State Champions Arranged by Ath letic Authorities; First Bid For Eastern Horrors. The University of North Car olina track team, Southern Con ference champidns once recently and State champions for the past eight consecutive years, today announced the addition of the Princeton Tigers to an already impressive 1930 schedule. , The first meet announced was a dual affair. -with Perm State Scheduling of the Princeton meet is taken to mean; thai? the Tar Heel cindermen, long famous for a great line of distance aces, are ready to tackle the best teams in the land. - Princeton produced one of the East's strongest track outfits last, year, including such indivi dual stars as JBen Hodges, who placed second in the high jump at the Olympic games, and Ros- ner, great half-miler. v Seventy men are working out daily in fall track practice at the New Jersey institution, and all reports indicate the Tigers will nresent an equally strong and well-rounded team this year. Exact dates have not yet been announced for either the Penn State or Princeton meets. Both, it is understood, are to be on a home and home basis. The dates, along with the remainder of the Tar Heels' 1930 schedule are to be announced soon, according to Charles T. Woollen, Graduate Manager of Athletics. NEIMAN HAS GOOD RECORD IN TRACK i Football Results FRIDAY Tularte 21 - Georgia 15. State Fresh 6-DavVn Fresh 0 " SATURDAY Carolina 32 - N. C. State 0 Boston College 20 - Duke 12 Tennessee 27 - Auburn 0 Virginia 13 - Maryland 13 V. M. I. 12 - Davidson 6 Kentucky 44 - Clemson 0 ' CoIgate-60 - Hampton-Sid. 0 Yale 16'.- Dartmouth 12 Villanova 17 - Allegheny 7 Army 30 - South Dakota 6 , Harvard 14 - Florida 0 Vanderbilt 13 - Alabama 0 Notre Dame 26 - Ga. Tech 6 Pitt 18 - Ohio State 2 Detroit 6 - Marquette 6 La. State 0 - Arkansas 19 Chicago 15 - Princeton 7 North Western 7 - Illinois 0 Cornell 12 - Columbia 6 Ole Miss. 6 - Sewanee 6 L Red Gilbreath, sophomore cen ter, proved that Carolina is well fixed in the center of the line. Yesterday he played great foot ball against State, breaking up passes and getting tackles. Red has played in one or two games as a guard this season, but his real position is center. Intramural Standings Meets with Penn State and Princeton promise to put the 1930 Tar Heel track team to an acid test, but such outstanding performers as Dave Neiman are mitigating the worries of Coaches Fetzer and Hanson no little bit. Neiman, as a sophomore, piled up 45 points for the Tar Heels last year, just one point shy of what the best Tar Heel scorer did. . He shattered a University broad jump record of 22 feet 5 inches, better hy inches than the then state record, that had stood for-13 years, and showed great promise in the pole vault as well, reaching 11 feet 6 inches consistently. Neiman placed second in the broad jump in both the state and Southern Conference meets. With his great speed, his activi ty, and his quickness to respond to tutoring, the coaches expect him to reach new high marks and to be one of the principal mainstays of the Tar Heel team. He is from Charlotte. The Tar Heels are working hard in fall practice in antici pation of this hard schedule, for the Tar Heels have an enviable record to maintain. They have not lost a dual meet, and have won one Southern Conference and eight state titles in the last eight years. They placed second at the Southern Conference meet last year. Collins Uses Many Men As Tar Heels Trample State's Wolf pack 32 - 0 (Continued from first page) field exhibitions seen on Kenan field this year. The quarter end ed with the score 13-0 in favor of Carolina. Following the kickofiy Coach Collins substituted an entire new eleven. Two passes Ward to Fenner brought the ball to State's 15 yard line. The passes were both in the same place, and good for 35 yards. Slusser' shot through right tackle for nine yards. It was first down on the four yard line. House rushed center for the third touchdown. The half ended with the ball in Carolina's possession in midfield. The superiority of the Tar Heel aggregation over the Tech men was easily apparent; Thirty two men entered the fray for Carolina during the first session. To the observer there was no visible difference in the different combinations used. State offered enough resistance to make it a football contest, but the Caro lina eleven rarely extended itself. The second half was a repeti tion of the first half. Once or twice State carried the ball into Carolina territory, but each time the Carolina line held for downs. ;A State threat was turned back in the last quarter wVipti Carolina reDulsed four thrusts on its own four yard line. This was the only time the Tar Heels were called upon to display strength. Near the end of the third period Erickson intercepted a pass on his own 25 yard line and twisted his way to State's four yard line. Harden carried the ball "across for the touch down. V .. The race for intramural hon ors in tag football is very close, with several undefeated teams in the-lead at present. The marked decrease in the number of forfeits is held by intramural officials to be the reason for the close competition. Two of the leaders will meet this week. Beta Theta Pi and zex& rsi win ngnt it out on Wednesday afternoon. , Delta Kappa Epsilon and Pi Kappa Phi both have two games sched uled for the coming week. The standings to date are as . - follows : , Fraternity League Team W L hBeta Theta Pi ...... 5 Dekes ........... 4 Pi ; Kappa Phi 3 Zeta Psi .: 3 Sigma Nu ............... 2 is 5 i IN EASY STYLE Jensen Leads Freshmen to 17 39 Win; Five Varsity Men Join Hands As They Finish. Taking one of State's punts on his own forty yard line, Strud Nash, halfback, exhibited one oi the neatest bits oi run ning seen in Kenan stadium this year in returning the punt for a touchdown. Half a dozen State tacklers had their hands on him but none seemed able to hold him. Chuck Erickson, halfback, has the knack of furnishing big thrills in football games. Yes terday he intercepted a State pass and ran 70 yards before being pulled down on State's four yard mark. He is one of the fastest men in the Carolina group of halfbacks. TAR HEELS MEET GAMECOCKS NEXT Battle Of fcarolinas To Be Played In Columbia; Palmetto Team Has Won Only Two Games In 17 Game Series. Intramural Games a. t. o.:.. 2 Kappa Sigma ...... 2 Sigma Chi " 1 Phi Delta Theta 1 Kappa Alpha 1 Pi Kappa Alpha 1 Phi Sigma K. 1 Sigma Phi Sig. 1 heta Chi 0 Chi Psi 0 S. A. E. k... 0 Chi Phi ,.:... ,0 Kappa Psi . ...... .. 0 0 0 0 0 1 1 2 2 2 2 2 2 3 2 4 2 4 4 Dormitory League The charge that terrorism is rampant in Cuba, is denied by Cuban editors, claiming that the alleged ferment is Machado about nothing. Atlanta Consti tution. The best child-welfare work used to be done in the wood shed. Cincinnati Times-Star. Statistics N. C. State - North CaroHna N. C. State, North Carolina Yardage through the line: ' 100 123 Yardage around end: 20 39 Passes attempted: 4 4 Passes intercepted by other team, : 4 v 1 Passes completed: 3 7 Yardage on passes: 64 187 Penalties in yards: 0 15 Average yardage on punts: 34 27 Yardage on punt returns: 7 99 First Downs: 9 13 Team Mangum .. .... New Dorms Ruffin "F" Carr Steele 1. .. Old East ....... "J" Steele. C... Old West ... ... Grimes "G" : v- w 6 4 3 4 2 2 2 2 2 1 1 1 0 L 0 0 1 2 2 4 3 3 4 3 4 5 5 Pet. 1.000 ! 1.000 1.000 1.000 .667 .667 .500 .333 .333 .333 .333 .333 .250 .000 .000 .000 .000 .000 Pet. 1.000 1.000 .750 .667 .500 .333 .400 .400 .333 .250 .200 .167 .000 Snell Active in Sports Chester D. Snell has been ac tive in tennis since" he went from here to become director of extension at tne University of Wisconsin. He and Bruton, a Carolina alumnus now at Wis consin, won the doubles tourna- ment of the city of Madison this last summer, and Mr. Snell has won two of six tournaments in which he has played since May. He has also found time for fish in v. and he, writes to a friend C3 T here : "On a trip to the north ern lakes country we caught eight large wall-eyed pike, some pickerel, and all the perch we wanted. As soon as I get fully on to the art of casting .we are going after the muskies, which have to be 'over 30 inches long before they can be taken." Henry r ora purchased ; an ancient popcorn wagon . of a Georgian for his Dearborn mu seum. Must be assembling a family" tree for the tin Lizzie. Atlanta Constitution. The annual "Battle of the Car olinas," when North Carolina "Republicans" will renew their quarter-century grid feud with the South Carolina "Democrats," is carded for the Gamecocks' stadium in C olumbia, S. C ., next Saturday. The Tar Heels displayed drive and flash against N.- C. State yesterday, and with South Caro lina showing great power against Citadel, conquerors of the Oglethorpe team that beat Georgia, prospects are for a hard, close battle. The series history is.a differ ent story, for the Tar Heels hold a 16p-sided edge of 12 victories to two losses and three ties, one of which was last year's scoreless affair. The Tar Heels also hold a wideedge on points scored, having countered 236 points for the series to the Gamecocks' 46. The two teams held their first meeting in 1903, and it took the Gamecocks 21 years to win a game," with just two tie scraps in between. Tne Tar Heels won the first five games by margins of from three to five touch downs, with South Carolina registering its first score in the 27 to 6"game of 1910. The first of three tied battles came in 1912 when each team pushed over one touchdown, but the Tar Heels won in 1913 and 1914, with the latter victory counting a 48 to 0 margin. Since resumption of the rivalry after the World War, North Car olina has won five, lost two, and tied two games. These figures show the series is waxing warm er. 'The close scores show the same thing. Even the famous 1922 Tar Heels, undefeated South Atlantic champions, bare ly nosed; out the Gamecocks 10 to 7 in a game featured by Snipes' 67-yard run for South Carolina. Bill Dodderer, fleet end and great Tar Heel basketball star, recovered a blocked kick and ran 20 yards for a North Carolina touchdown and a 6 to 0 win in 1925. Tom ' Young, Tar Heel halfback, did the same thing to give North Carolina a victory the next year. The Tar Heels lost 14 to 6 in Columbia in 1927, and last year's game, played on a mud-soaked Kenan field here, ended in a scoreless tie. Fifth Week : Novemoer 4-8 MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4 3 :30 p. m. 1. Carr vs Old East. 2. Steele vs Lewis (J). 3. Graham (G) vs Aycock (F). 4:30 p. m. 1. New Dorms vs Ruffin. 2. Chi Phi vs Sigma Chi. 3. Grimes vs Mangum. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5 3 :30 p. m. 1. Pi Kappa Phi vs Kappa Alpha. 2. Phi Sigma Kappa vs Delta Kappa Epsilon. 3. Alpha Tau Omega vs Sigma Nu. ; ;" 4:30 p. m.l. Sigma Phi Sigi- ma vs Sigma Alpha Epsilon. 2 Carr vs Graham (G). 3. Pi Kappa Alpha vs Kappa Psi. WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 6 3 :30 p. m. 1. Steele' vs Old East: 2. Grimes vs Old West. 3. Manly vs Lewis J). 4:30 p. m. 1. Beta Theta Pi vs Zeta Psi. 2. Ruffin vs Ay- cock (F) . 3. Steele vs Mangum, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 7 -3:30 p. m. 1. Pi Kappa Phi vs Sigma Nu. 2. New Dorms vs Graham (G). 3. Alpha Tau Omega vs Delta Kappa Epsilon. 4 :30 p. m. 1. Phi Sigma Kap pa vs Sigma Alpha Epsilon.; 2. Sigma Phi Sigma vs Sigma Chi. 3. Chi Phi vs Kappa Psi. -.-v FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8 3:30 n. m. 1. Carr vs Old West. 2. Grimes vs Old East, 3. Manly vs Mangum. 4 :30 p. m. 1. Everett (1) vs Avcock (F). 2. Theta Chi vs Phi Delta Theta. 3. Kappa Sig ma vs Pi Kappa Alpha. With five Carolina men break ing the tape at the same time, the Tar Heel varsity cross coun try team defeated Coach Alex Redf era's N. C. State proteges at Kenan stadium yesterday af ternoon, scoring the lowest pos sible number of points Clar ence Jensen, freshman captain, also led his team to an over whelming victory over the State freshmen, breaking the tape more than a hundred yards ahead of the nearest man. Barkley, Baucom, Pierce, Wrenn and Phoenix of Carolina, coming in together, , covered the distance of four miles in 22:24. Redfern and Alexander of State followed these men, with Cohen of Carolina not far behind. In the freshman meet, Jensen of Carolina, first to cross the line, was followed by Cox and Cordle, also of Carolina. Troutman of State came in fourth and closely behind him were Lumpkin and Zelley. Jensen's time in cover ing the three mile course was 18:54. The final score for the varsity teams was Carolina 15, State 45. The score for the freshmen was Carolina 17, State 37. Ldwry, varsity harrier, was unable to run in yesterday's meet because of . an abscessed tooth. However, he is expected to be in good shape for the meet with Duke, which is scheduled to be held next Friday, November 8. Club Dinner-Dance Next Week As an Irishman would say Mr. Shearer appears to be the life of the parity. Florence Herald. ' , There will be a dinner-dance at the Country Club, for mem bers and their house guests, r - - - - . from 7 to 11 o clock next Fri day evening, November 8 . The charge is $1 per plate and checks should be sent to Mrs. ntfn StnblTYiaTi. P. O. Box 630. No fee is required from the members who want to come for the dancing but not for the din ner. : - Unless we are mistaken, the Penry Ford, who says women lack initiative, precision and in ventiveness is the gentleman gentleman who once declared history to be bunk. Boston Transcript. Babies in Newark, U. S. A., wear bibs inscribed, "I don't want to be ill. Do not Ess me." There are faces like that in this country too. The Passing Show (London) . Come and Meet the Gayest" . . . Sweetest . . . , Bravest Lass that Ever Shook A Hip On Broadway! ' ALL-MELODY! ALL-LAUGHTER! ALL-SENSATION! - BETTY COMPSON Western Electric Talking Equipment IN "STREET GIRL" Singers dancers bands girls and the world's fastest-cracking comedy combination in this delight ful romance of a girl who chose suc cess before love and almost lost both I - Added : 'IF MEN PLAYED CARDS AS WOMEN" A Vitaphone Vaudeville- Act PATHE NEWS TUESDAY Sue Carol in , "Why Leave Home" MONDAY
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 3, 1929, edition 1
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