Saturday, Ilarch -8, 1930 THE DAILY TAR HEEL, Vzr,2 Thrcs Field Ai! Set For Monogram -Rookie Battle This Afternoon e- am Will Be Swan Sons Of! V Eight Men; Captain Farris. To Lead Last Time Today. Two camps of Tar Heel grid ders stacked arms last night and waited tensely for today's Monogram-Rookie game, annual closing feature of winter foot- D&il? Wliiuii nm give aaiio ititj.. first real line on whether the ;1930 Tar Heels will live up to the record of their predecessors . 11 TTV. -rrrin ; of .1929. The Monogram-Rookie fea ture is to be played in Kenan i ofUnm at 2 ri'elock. sothat snec- 3 Ltn-n. - - x tators can go directly from the grid features and catch" the be- j ginning fix "the preliminaries for the first tSoutliem Confer ence indoor games. CaptainHay Farris, all-south- grains intorthe fray- Captain Farris last at Carolina." - With him will be eight other regulars from last fairs finest Tar Heel team of all-time. -Pete ",Wyrick, quarterback; Striid Nash and Phil Jackson, halves, and "Yank Spaulding, fullback, -will team together in the Monogram Ibadkfield, jwith such other Monogram stars as Johnny "Branch, Jim Magner, Chuck "Erickson and Henry House, held in reserve for the second charge. With:Don Hdlt, graduated at the close of ilast football season; leaving Ms job iin Graham to come hack for one more last game, the Monogram line will be the same fighting, charging line of 29, except for Tackle Adkins, who will bekepkout by his track participation. Holt And Fenner will tnan the .flanks ; Bill Koenig iind George Thompson will have the tackles ; Captain Farris And Bud Eskew will be At guard ; and Ned Iipseomb will hold down center. The Rookies will present their own quota of power. A group of new-coining hacks Moore, Chandler, Houston, McNeil, Croom, MeAlister, Suggs, Las siter and others -have been showing, with the best in the in tensive six weeks of practice. Last year's freshman line was unusually strong. All in all, -a great battle is expected. Probable lineups, as an nounced by Coach Collins are as follows: Monograms Holt Koenig Farris Rookies Johnson L. E. Smith Newcombe ........... Allen L. T. L. G. Lipscomb ...... Eskew Thompson ..... C. Petrie R. G. Underwood R. T. Fenner .Bridgers R. E. Wyrick Moore Q. B. Jackson Chandler L. H. Nash Houston R. H. Spaulding .. McNeil F. B. TRACK AND FOOTBALL IN GALA PROGRAM AT IL N. C. The fact that the Monogram Rookie game closing Tar Heel winter grid work and the first Southern Conference indoQr games are both to be held on one gala program this afternoon is putting a number of ver satile athletes in. a quandary. Adkins, Slusser, Reid and Brown, star trackmen, are not to get to play in the final foot ball classic, but will have to look on from the bench, to keep in shape for the big track meet. Meet Officials Officials for the South ern Conference indoor track meet to be held in the tin can today from 4 to 6 p. m. and from 7 to 10 p. m. are as follows : Referee W. A. Alexander, head football coach of Georgia Tech. ' Starter J. V. Mulligan. Clerk of Course Frank A. Kopk, secretary of the South eastern A. A. U. . .Assistant Clerk W. J. Cerney. Chief finish judge Hi J. Stege man, athletic director of the University of Georgia. - Finish judges J. P. Harland, W. H. Ervin, J. F. Kenfield, Minor Gwynn. Chief timer N. G. Pritchett. . Timers Wallace Smith, C. C." Collins, Phil Utley. Chief field judge A. S. Law- : . rence. ;-; . ; y - -- Field judges Lacy Hanson, Rex Enright, Jim Phipps, Bert Linker, Odell Sapp. ' s Assistants--B. S. Colburn, E. ' P. Dameron, J. F. - Gleen, C. P. Erickson. Chief inspector W. E. Cald- well. " " . '' . .. Inspectors J. N, Ashmore, iW. ; R; Abbott, R. B. Lawson. :? Marshalls E. S. Nash, R. S. Farris, J. B. Fenner, Fleming Wily, L. A. Spaulding, Ken " Gay. : ' Scorer G. E. Shephard. ; Assistant scorer Marion Alex- 1 ander. Announcer Lester Belding. s ' Assistant Vernon Cowper. 'Spectators at the South ern Conference track meet will enter the East gate of the tin-, can. Contestants . will enter the West gate. CO-EDS WIN LAST GAME OR SEASON Johnson Features A Last-Minute Rally To Win Over Fayette ville High School Sextet, 26-24. Staging a brilliant rally dur ing the last three minutes of play to overcome a four-point lead, the Tar Heelettes closed their season last night in Bynum gymnasium with a 26-24 win over the Fayetteville high school sextet."", : Johnson of the co-eds caged two foul shots in the last two minutes to provide the winning margin. The game was hard fought throughout, with Thack er, Johnson and Lee of the co-eds and Biggs of the visitors provid ing the features of the contest. Last night's game marked the close of a successful season for the local basketeers in their first year of competition with teams from other institutions. At the end of the half the co eds were leading 15-8, but the Fayetteville contingent had pulled up on even terms, 18-18, at the end of the third quarter. Co-eds (26) Lee (8) Johnson (9) Thacker (9) Hill Fayetteville (24) Tew (6) F. : Bowles (8) F. Woodhouse (4) C. Andrews G. Currie Kilpatrick Curry - Tillingham G. ;; Special Fencing There" will be a special in tramural match between Sig ma Nu and the Buccaneers Sunday at 11:30. The match will be held in "Hinkey" Hendlin's room, 313 Old East. The fencers are requested to be prompt. Permits for the manufacture of perfume from alcohol do not contemplate its use to perfume the consumer's breath.- Says Us by Browning Roach Adherents of the division of the southern conference into two sectors, one comprising the northern institutions and the other the southern ones, should find some more supporters of their views around Chapel Hill now. After the University of Georgia knocked the Tar Heels out of the conference football title by administering to them the only defeat of the 1929 sea son and then, not yet satisfied, eliminated Carolina in the bas ketball tournament, Tar, Heel fans are about ready to take any steps necessary to get rid of the Georgia jinx. A division of the conference into two sectors would clear the situation up satisfactorily-for all concerned, just so Carolina and Georgia were placed in separate divi sions. We don't mean to imply that we are afraid of Georgia; or any other Southern Confer ence team, but ; the' Crackers were most certainly instrumen tal in messing up what' was otherwise an untarnished grid iron record. Here's hoping we get it -back on them next year. - ' . -. m The Tin Can having estab lished itself.', as a practicing ground for almost every sport indulged in at Carolina, why not. make it all-inclusive and add tennis to the roster of athletic events engaged in beneath its spacious root rnis colossal structure has, so far as we are able to ascertain, been utilized for basketball, track, boxing, wrestling, football, fencing, baseball, golf, handball, volley ball and "doug." The Tin Can contains ample floor space for marking off one doubles and ...on i in a v. 1529. Liggett & Mras Tobacco Co. 7 two singles courts, and tennis candidates would be able to make use of these when occasional spring showers drive the men off the. outdoor courts. As it is, with more than half the courts undergoing - recontsruc tion while the drain systems are installed, the courts fit for use do not begin to accommodate the persons desiring to play. Al most any sunshiny afternoon be tween two and five o'clock you can go out to the tennis courts and. find every available court in use and a number of players sitting on the sidelines waiting their turn. " ." . We have heard from semi authoritative sources that the co-eds are planning to put out a tennis team this spring, h From j the way some of them handled Sl basketball during this past cage season, we judge that they would be good at tennis. A smaller sphere and a racket with which to manipulate would seem more fitting to; their : athletic attainments..' We have observed from a distance- a' few of them swinging & racket in the last week or two, and if many of them can handle a swift serve and back-hand drive as well as a couple we know of, the co-eds ought to be able to get up a good team. ; t Heavy Hurdlers Here . Harry Flippin and Calvert deColigny, who are doped to set tne pace in the hurdles at the first southern conference indoor games here . this , evening, tip the scales at almost 200 apiece, a strange thing for such speed sters! Flippin has broken or tied three. , indoor world hurdle records in the last two year DeColigny ran the outdoor high hurdles as a freshman last year in: 15.3, a story which needs no Comment. : v screen t ft .y;x-:-;-xP mm- is Si v vx.yy:"a' ::: "X "Cidarette ii -'"Mfiiiiiv.: Merit IS SURE to rise." Make a cigarette of better quality, of richer aroma and finer fra granceand all the world will find it out. Witness Chesterfield's popularity, growing every day. No flash in the pan, but enduring popularity earned by giving smokers the one thing they want: TASTE above everything FINE TURKISH and DOMESTIC tobaccos, not only BLENDED but Cobb Memorial Scores Win Over N. C. Co-Eds In a game characterized by a scoring race between the oppos ing centers, Cobb Memorial won from the Co-ed sextet at Bynum gymnasium Wednesday night by 31 to 20. T. Gatewood, cen ter for the visitors, dropped in nine field goals and a foul to lead the scoring. Thacker of Carolina, ranked a good second with 12 points. L. Gatewood of Cobb Memorial and Johnson for the Co-eds,v showed up best at the forward positions, with the former registering 10 points and the latter 6. r . ."'.--' The Co-eds winJ up their court season with a contest with FayetteviHe high school at 7 o'clock tonight at Bynum gym. Cobb Mem. (31) Co-eds (20) Neighbors (2) :- f. Lee (2) Johnson (6) L. Gatewood (10) F. T. Gatewood (19), .Thacker (12) :- , c. . Millner- Currie G. Sykes ... Jones ... Curry Hill G. G. The butcher, we read, still uses everything about the pig except its squeal. This is used by the customer when he hears the price of pork.-Punch. FANCY ICES DURHAM ICE CREAM. CO., Inc. "Blue Ribbon Brand" ICECREAM . DURHAM, N, C. BLOCKS rWon its Favor if ' i ":'v":' 4, '& ITS - li h vV f 1 1 a O) ii iJ. il Stars Selected The Tar Heel football coaches announced Inst night the names of the winter foot ball stars to compete in Sat urday afternoon's final Mono gram-Rookie game for the gold medals offered for best play in different departments of the game. . The selections of contest ants, follow: Best . offensive v center Lip scomb and Allen. Best defensive center Lip scomb and Allen. Best offensive guard Fysal, Mclver and Newcombe. Best, defensive guard -Fysal, Mclver and Newcombe, Best offensive tackle Un derwood. Thompson and Hodges. Best defensive tackle Un derwood. Thompson and Smith. ; . Best offensive end--Walker : and Bridgers. Best defensive end-Walker, Nelson and Nichols. Best 1 fullback McNeil and Suggs. r . Best .. Quarterback Wyrick, I Moore and Branch. Best halfback Chandler, Daniels and Houston. TheV,.; first communications merger was probably a women's sewing circle. Florence Herald. SHERBETS - by its Flavor" PUNCH LD 4 . . and yet THEY SATISFY CROSS-BLENDED o