Friday, April 10, 1931 DAILY. -TAXI HEEL- ' i - X AA&J , snmorei Team Will Meet Five Southern Conference and Tri-State League Foes. SEVENTEEN MAKE TRIP Tar Heels Handicapped by Lack Of Practice Due to Rainy ' Weather. , Coach Jim Ashmore, Mana ger Art Sickles and a squad of seventeen baseball players from the University left here last night on a week's Northern tour which will carry them against five strong Southern Conference and Tri-State; League foes. Maryland, tied for the lead in the Tri-State, will be met at College Park Friday, with the first of the annual three-game series with Virginia to follow at Charlottesville Saturday. After a rest on Sunday the Tar Heels will jump back across the mountains to play Washington and Lee and V. M. I., both at Lexington on Monday and Tues day, winding up at V. P. I. on Wednesday. The seventeen players Coach Ashmore picked for this hard trip were : Captain Potter and Pattisall, catchers; House; Pea cock, Blythe and Croom, out fielders; Dunlap, Wyrick, Fere bee, Powell, Leonard and Moore, infielders; and Longest, Ed wards, Shields, Hinton and Griffiith pitchers.- . Longest, Shields and Edwards have all been rested since last Friday, and Coach Ashmore will probably rely most on these three veteran right-handers of the Tar Heel mound corps. Which one of the trio will start at Maryland, however, hasn't been decided. The Tar Heels will be handi capped by lack of practice as they fare forth on the tour, for five of nine games scheduled to date have been rained out, and there hasn't been a chance for much practice. The team hit and fielded well in opening victories over such Northern leaders as Cornell and Pennsylvania, but in its one previous Tri-State League start, it was an easy prey for Pitcher Williams and the hard-hitting Washington and Lee Club, 8-2. Symphony Orchestra To Play for Children For some time the depart ment of music has been engaged in working out a plan whereby the children of the Chapel Hill schools might hear a series of two or three concerts played by the University Symphony Or chestra, or a selected group of musicians from that , organiza tion. Miss Katheryn Brown, teacher of school music in Chapel Hill has been preparing the children for these concerts by a series of lessons of ex planation utilizing pictures of the instruments in conjunction with the phonograph. , The date of the first concert has not been set but it is planned for the near -future. There will probably be one con cert in April and at least one other during May. Music suit able for the development of the Power of appreciation among the children will be utilized with the various instruments indivi dually and .in groups being Matured for special teaching Purposes. Professor Harold S. er is working with Miss Brown on the plan and will di rect the concerts. INTERSCHOLASTIC TRACK MEET SET FOR THIS MONTH Nineteenth Annual Meet for High Schools Will Take Place April 17. The nineteenth annual inter scholastic track meet for North Carolina high school will be run off at the University April 17. The complete list of high schools that will enter teams Is not yet known but it is thought that the entries will not be less than those of previous years. The committee in charge of this annual affair is composed of N. W. Walker, chairman, C. G. reaie, k. a. Fetzer,; H. D. Meyer, J. P. Moore, E. R. Grum man, J. R. Hawkins, and W. F. Warren. In the eighteen years of com petition only five schools in the state have won the champion ship. In 1913, the first vear that the meet was held, High Point High School won. For the next seven years straight the Friendship high school won the meet. Since then the Char lotte high school has held the championship except in 1928 when the Greensboro high school took the trophy. The program consists of four teen events, the usual thirteen in a regular track meet and a relay even! Ison of Charlotte high school is the only man to hold more than one individual record, holding the fastest time in the hundred yard and two twenty yara dashes. His time for the hundred is ten and tenth seconds and . two-twentv in twenty-two and three fifth seconds. COMMUNITY CLUB LISTS PROGRAMS FOR THIS SEASON The bulletin of the Chapel Hill Community Club for the coming season includes events of varied interest. The citizenship ; department will meet Wednesday, April 1 7, at three-thirty o'clock in 'the Episcopal parish house. The Garden Club will meet at eight o'clock, April 8, in Davie Hall. A representative of the Mor-rison-Neese Furniture Company of Greensboro will talk on "In terior Decorating" at a regular meeting Tuesday, April 14, in the social rooms of the Meth odist church. ' - - ' The two final programs of the year, which will culminate the year's activities, will be the pro gram of modern Spanish music rendered by Mrs. T. Smith Mc Cdrkle on April 15 in the music building and a review of Selma Lagerlof's : "The Ring of the Lowenskolds," by Mrs. J. H. Valentine. INTRAMURAL BASEBALL SCHEDULE Friday " 4:00 p. m. (1) Alpha Tau Omega vs Delta Sigma Phi ; (2) Phi Gamma Delta vs Phi Kappa Sigma. , 5:00 p. m. (1) Delta Kappa Epsilon vs Theta Chi; (2) Pi Kappa Phi vs S. A. E. -Alabama's legislature resolves and demands " that bootleggers give a full 16-ounce pint. The fellows should be made to under stand that violation of the weights, and measures statutes fosters disrespect for all laws. The New Yorker. TAR I 1051 WINSTON BY SCORE OF 17-10 Contest Turns Into Slugging Fest; Visiting Hurler Allows 19 Hits But Fans 11. In one of the . most listless games played this year, the Tar Baby nine won its second j straight victory, trouncing the j Winston-Salem team by ; the score of 17-10, on the freshman field Wednesday afternoon, Yer- j ton, who started the game for the Tar Babies, worked a nice game for the first five innings, and allowed five hits but kept them well scattered. Clodbet ter, the visiting liurler, although touched for nineteen hits, fan ned eleven men and got a triple himself. Coach Sapp used twenty-two men during the whole game and Phipps, Parker, Matheson, and Mclver were the hitting stars. John Phipps drove a terrific homer, into left field late in the game while Mabel Matheson, the redheaded catcher, had three hard singles for four attempts. Voss, visiting first baseman was the big gun for the losers, get ting a. double and a single, and on top of that he made a re markable catch of a foul fly in the fifth inning which was noth ing short of a miracle. The Tar Babies have another game Saturday with the Camp bell College team and this is ex pected to be a real test of the team's strength. So far the season's record of the yearlings shows a lost to Wardlaw and victories over both Roanoke Rapids and Winston-Salem. The team is anxious to win tomor row and with two days of hard practice it should give the op position some real trouble. The game with Winston-Salem T I 1 " oegan wrni eacn team scoring two runs in the first stanza and was rather close. The visitors bumped Strickland and Crouch for five runs in the fifth. Then the Tar Babies came back with six runs in their half and then in the eight sewed the game up with four runs. After the game Coach Sapp seemed satisfied with . the hit ting of the team but was seem ingly irked at the work of the players afield. There was a total of at least six official errors re corded and the players made several "bonehead" plays which can only be cured by a lot of hard practice. . There seems to be a wealth of material at the- disposal of the coacnes ana Deiore the season ends there should have been ample time for each man on the squad to have shown his stuff and a very powerful nine round ed into shape.' The pitching de partment seems to be the most uncertain at present. Yerton showed good form yesterday and should develop, and Elon Crouch has been doing some good work. Outside of these two men nothing definite is known. The summary of Wednesday's game is as follows: ?: . . R H E Winston-Salem 10 13 4 N. C. Freshmen .. ......... 17 19 6 Batteries: Clodfetter, Reed, and Carter; Yerton, Strickland, Crouch and Parker, Matheson. More and more people are having their ears pierced," says a jeweler. So many of us have neighbors with daughters who fancy themselves as vocalists. The Humorist. O0 EEABY -let Clean and Press GRANT. WE mmmm nil 1K1V MEET THIS YEAR Carolina Net Ace Picks Hines And Sutter as Outstanding Southern Prospects. Bryan Grant, ace of the pow erful University of North Caro lina tennis team, will abdicate the southern amateur throne J V - J 1 At f t t this year and leaTe the field wide open to all comers for the first time since 1927. - The 64-inch sophomore an nounced during the course of a radio speech last night that he does not plan , to . defend the Dixie title he has held for three consecutive years. He ." said, however, that he would compete again in the national clay court tourney, which he won in 1930. Grant, who ranks tenth on the national list, was a speaker on one. of Chuck Collins "B. C. Sports Revue" programs broad cast; by Sation WPTF in Ra leigh. He told his audience he rated Bill .Tilden as the greatest player of. all time, although he himself had held the tall Phila- delphian to close scores in two matches. ; -, Grant said he rather believed the court master was toying with him on those occasions. The hardest match he ever played, said Grant, was against Cliff Sutter, national intercol legiate champion; in the finals of the southern tournament last year. , . ; ' , ; : It was played in the broiling sun through five hard, close sets. Grant won, as he has be-jinxed the college champion every time they have ever met. Grant picked Clifford Sutter, intercollegiate champ and Wil mer Hines, Junior Singles Champion, as the outstanding youngsters in Southern tennis, today. Wilmer Hines, Carolina's na tional junior champ, also a sophomore, and Coach John Kenfield made short talks as part of the program. Coach Kenfield, for 15 years a. profes sional and coach, made interest ing observations on his concep tion of tennis as a sport. t Kenfield said he always has advised, his proteges to go out for a major sport in addition to tennis, but he thought golf and tennis would give them pleasure and enjoyment in later life, long after they're too old to be a half oack or a sprinter. To that end he supervises . 40 tennis courts at the University and gives in dividual instruction to a large squad of ambitious hopefuls. PHI KAPPA SIGMA j PLANS MAY DANCE ' -i The Carolina Inn ballroom will be the scene of a dance held by the Phi Kappa Sigma fra ternity Friday night, .May 15 This is the second affair given by this group during this year and will be the final dance staged by the fraternity in this quar ter. Jelly Leftwich and his Univer sity Club orchestra has been se cured by the committee in charge of arrangements to fur nish the music for the occasion. As the second unit in the se ries of two dances offered by the Phi Kappa Sigma' and Kappa Alpha fraternities will come the tea dance of Kappa Alpha fra ternity, the following afternoon. This function will also take place in the ballroom of the Carolina Inn and Leftwich will play. FOR us- Your Clothes Now JLracImi en Georgia ATLANTA HIGH TO MEET FRESHMEN IN TENNIS TODAY Georgia School Will Invade Chapel Hill for Brace of Matches. The Atlanta Boys High ten- TS?Q tars Tn iiirtnv m -fft Vie xuuuciii-uu lui tilts ;Souihern au ,ast two veterans . back and added strength by the addition of an extra star in Billy Reese, will invade Chapel Hill this week end for a brace of matches with the Carolina Frosh and with the Varsity Reserves. The Frosh will probably be met at 3 o'clock this afternoon, the Varsity Reserves at 3 o'clock Saturday afternoon, -although the order may be reversed. - The Carolina Frosh in their previous -matches beat Wake Forest Yearlings 9-0 and Ra leigh High 5-2. The top four who will be picked to play the strong Boys High team will! probably be Dillard, Shuf ord, Morgan and Dockery. For the varsity reserves the lineup will probably be Phil Lis kin, Captain Ed Graham, Lenoir Wright and Lucas Abels. The Carolina Frosh also have a return date with Wake For- est's Frosh for the weekend. ; If Boys High is met here Friday the Baby Deacons will be played at Wake Forest Saturday, or if the Freshman matches with Boys High are set for Saturday, Wake Forest will be met there Friday. PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS See Us W for Used Car BARGAINS and r.!r; . -y 1" ; vV1 - Lowest Prices on TIRES .. V .. . ' '-. ' - We Appreciate Your Business . h i - -! ' . Strowd Motor Co. Ford Products Since 1914" This Clothes Blade to Your Individual Taste $29.50 334.50 - Featuring the Best in Furnishings Dobbs Hats, Manhattan Shirts, Interwoven Hose . ..................... Faultless Pajamas Superba Neckwear ecii I omgM Tar Heck Hold 101-27 Win Over Atlanta Cinder Squad; Tech Without Eddie Hamm. CAROLINA STRONG IN POLE VAULT Gash With V. P. I. Next ca Schedule; Contest Is Set for April 18. Carolina's Southern Confer ence track champions will leave Chapel Hill tonight for Atlanta where they will meet the strong Georgia Tech cinder squad Sat urday afternoon. Last year the Tar Heels - swamped the Tech men by a score of 104 to 27 in their second meet of the season, but the boys from the "Flats" of Atlanta are said to have a much stronger team this year and are out for revenge. Tech will be without Eddie Hamm, the great broad jumper who led their scoring last spring, but they still have enough vet erans left over to make things interesting if the new material lives up to early promise. Doug Graydon, the boy who has been doing such outstanding work with the javelin for the past few years, will be one of the vet erans back. Graydon, along with Hamm', accounted for the majority of Tech's points last t year The Tar Heels will present their greatest strength in the pole vault where Brodie Arnold Continued on last page). NOW PLAYING HOT NEWS! ' A warmhearted debutante with smouldering eyes and scorching lips is burn ing1 up all the flaming youths from noblemen to nobodies! Come and meet Slim Summerville Comedy "Arabian Nights Sound News 39.50 1 1 I A i ! with BEN f I J I L Y O N I I Ona III Vfc also : J PHONE 7011 PHONE 7011

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