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Saturday, February 11, 1933 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page Three tieeis uui iror Over Duke Leadership in Conference and State Races at Stake in Con test in Tin Can at 8:00. FROSH TEAMS WILL PLAY Game Between Blue Imps and Tar Babies to Act as Curtain Raiser for Varsity Game. The Carolina basketball squad has' been working its hardest of the season this week and is ex pecting to be at its peak for the all-important return game with Duke here tonight at 8:30 o'clock. A Carolina - Duke freshman game starting at 7:15 will pre cede the varsity contest. Big Crowd Expected Extra bleachers are being put in readiness, and there should be plenty of seats for all com ers, early and late. The biggest crowd of the season is expected. This should mean that a royal thriller is in store for the great crowd that is expected. Duke is undefeated in the Big Five, while Carolina's one loss was at Duke, 36-32. Conference Lead at Stake Moreover, the conference lead will hinge in the balance. Both teams are otherwise undefeated in the conference except single losses at Maryland, and both teams hold victories over two teams, V. M. I. and Washington and Lee, which beat Maryland away from home. With so much at stake, these old rivals are due to be primed (Continued on last page) YROSHRINGSTERS 1EAVE TODAY TO MEET OAR RIDGE Tar Babies Will Be Forced to Forfeit Heavyweight Bout Due to Loss of Kanner. Ten freshman boxers will set out for Oak Ridge this afternoon at 12:30 o'clock where they will meet the prepsters in a dual meet tonight. " ' ' With a glorious record so far this season, the chances for the team continuing its undefeated string tonight is uncertain. With the same team that took Virgi nia over the hurdles last week, the Tar Babies would have been a hundred to one shot to come through for Virginia was reput ed to be the best f rosh outfit in the south but with several un tried boys working and with one bout already lost to Oak Ridge by forfeit, Coach Allen's maul-1 ers have the odds against them. Murry Kanner, lost to the team, leaves a vacancy . in the heavyweight class which no one has as yet applied for, leav ing Coach Allen nothing else to do but forfeit that bout. Dean, who got a little experi ence in the intramurals, will work for the first time tonight. He fights as a welterweight and as he is big and rangy, he may develop into a good fighter. Hor ner, another newcomer, will get his chance tonight in the 155 pound division. Eutsler, flash little bantam weight who stole the show last Saturday in the f rosh meet, will go in his usual capacity. He is undefeated this year and is one of the best prospects on the team. Frucht or Edwards will see ac tion in the featherweight class, while Glenn, Flaherty, or Gen rette, another new boy with Promise, will go along as light weights, Coach Allen being un certain as to which' of the three h will use. Ellisberg, undefeated middle weight, and Owlick, who fought &ce and lost a four round deci sion, completes the line-up. Jteven Five Tonight Tar Heel Star - Stuart Aitken, smart Tar Heel, who is expected to figure , , j t greatly when Carolina and Duke meet in the Tin Can tonight. the first game between the two teams this season, Aitken scored seven points and led the Heels on the floor. FRESHMAN CAGE TEAM WINS OVER DARLINGTON PREP Tar Babies Set to Play Blue . r Imps in Tin Can Tonight ". At 7:15 O'clock. 'Carolina's freshman cagers continued their unbeaten record over prep school teams by down ing Darlington 41 to 26 in a fast but loosely played tilt last night. . Darlington had a fast 'pass ing team but could not make their shots count The Tar Ba bies also missed frequent throws at the. basket. Carolina's yearl ings jumped into a six point lead before Darlington was able to count. The prep school then took: the upper nana ana got a 10 to 9 lead before the Tar Ba bies could steady their defense. From here on the freshmen were never .in danger, and led by the snooting of Moore, they ran up at 21 to 12 lead before the open ing half was over. With Rankin leading the way, the Tar Babies continued build ing np a big lead, holding a mar gin of 36 to 16 after the teams had been in action only six min utes of the second half. Coach Dameron then sent in his sec ond team which finished the gamel Darlington clearly out played the second team but not enough to overtake the wide margin. v Jim McCachren, newly elect ed1 captain of the Tar Babies, led i the play of the winners. Cap tain McCachren nlayed a beau tiful defensive game and also added much to the offense. Potts, forward, and R. Hackett, guard were the stars for the visitors, both playing steady floor games throughout. Moore, freshman forward, led the scoring with (Continued on last page; CAMPBELL'S 'BLUEBIRD' MAY RACE TOMORROW Sir Malcolm Campbell and his fourteen - cylinder "Bluebird" may roar down Eaytona Beach tomorrow in an attempt to bet ter the Englishman's own world speed record. The speed ace is waiting only for the beach to be whipped into suitable shape for high speed racing. "It's much better than at any time since, my arrival, said the British daredevil Thurs day. "While it's impossible to say when everything will be ready because of the contrary weather it seems that the beach should be in shape by Sunday or Monday at the latest.' PHI DELTA THETA SMOTHERS ZETA BETATAU, 74-6 Ruffin, Old East, Betas, Sigma Nu, and Sigma Chi Are Other Winners. Phi Delta Theta crushed Zeta Beta Tau, 74-6, yesterday in the intramural race, with all five men on the winning team scor ing twelve or more points. Mof fitt had nineteen, Tucker sixteen, Mosier fifteen, and Hershey and Parker twelve each. Brown and Shell scored all the points for Zeta Beta Tau. ' . Ruffin Wins - Ruffin, campus champion last year, disposed of Mangum as a pennant contender, handing the hitherto undefeated five a 26-22 setback in an overtime game. The eventual winners got off to a good start, taking a lead of m 6 6 . i. a 16-6 advantage at the. half- . . jntime vvniaue. 1111s ieaa dwin dled m the second half, but with three minutes to so Ruffin was still trailing. Sigma Nu downed Kappa Al pha, 34-22, with Joe Griffith scoring thirteen points for the winners. Bost added ten to this score, while Skinner's thirteen stood out for Kappa Alpha. Ed Everette's bid for scoring hon ors was halted temporarily as he scored only two points. Old East, conquerors vof Ruf fin earlier in the season, kept up its high-powered scoring, crushing Manly, 53-11. Fox and Hinson got nineteen and twelve points respectively to add to their high totals for the season to date. Wright's six points were the best single contribu tion to the Manly total. Betas Down Phi Gams j. Holding their opponents score less throughout the first three quarters, the Betas smothered Phi Gamma Delta, 36-3. Billy Tenille shone for the winners, amassing fourteen points, while Trainer and Dunn got ten and six respectively. Henry Ander- son s fine deiensive worK was instrumental in holding the Phi Gams to three lone points, scored bv Hoercrard late in the final WW period. Sigma Chi outscored Sigma Phi Sigma, 16-11, in a dull con test. Phelps and Brayhill for the winners and Froneberger for the losers all scored six points. MAT WIN FAILS TO IMPRESS QUINLAN The varsity wrestlers broke into the win column for the first time this year when they deei sively downed Duke's grapplers 20-8 but Coach Quinlan, Tar Heels' mat coach, was not im pressed with five time deci sions and only one fall. "The varsity mat men were up against tough enough competi tion, but they certainly looked better against V. M. I. and Washington and Lee than in their bouts last night," Quinlan said in a statement yesterday afternoon. Carolina's varsity and fresh men mat candidates will be giv en a short termination of training until Monday when they will resume practice, prim ing themselves for the David son meet, February 25. DEACONS LOSE CAGE TILT TO WASHINGTON George Washington Univer sity cagers stopped Wake Forest Thursday in Washington to the tune of a 38-28 tally. The Deacs pulled quite a sur prise by holding the capital city lads to a 14-all deadlock at the half, but the North Carolina boys couldn't stand up against the Colonials when they cracked down in the second period. DEPENDABLE - 5c . Herb Thompson, Blue Devil Eddie Cameron's starting line and Southern Conference leads whistle blows at 8:30 o'clock. WEATHER FORCES RUNNERSINDOORS Tin Can Work-outs Will Prob ably. Continue Due to Near ness of Conference Meet. Inclement weather forced Carolina's track team to seek refuge indoors yesterday after noon. This might be termed as a gesture on the part of Provi dence in that the Tar Heels must start priming themselves in earnest for the conference in door track meet which is little less than a month off. Coach Dale Ranson super vised the work-outs in the Tin Can yesterday. Some of the hurdling candidates were out for work and drills were held on the wrestling mat. Hawthorne, Abernethy, and Glenn looked best among those clearing the single hurdle used in the short workout. Ranson announced that the en tire track squad will have an in door drill Tuesday night at 7:30 o'clock in the Tin Can, and if the snow and sleet continue the Tar Heels will hold all their week end drills indoor. Virginia a Threat . One of the main reasons that the Tar Heel track men are plunging into their work at pres ent may be due to the fine form Virginia showed in trouncing Washington and Lee 63 2-3 to 26 1-3 in a dual meet held at Charlottesville. Coaches Fetzer and Ranson are anxious that their charges should look good in the conference meet and are therefore beginning work. In the Virginia-Washington and Lee meet, one of the most (Continued on last page) .i ? LOYOLA COACH ELECTED TO SUCCEED AL STAGG Clark D. Shaugnessy's ap pointment as successor to Amos Alonzo Stagg as gridiron coach at Chicago University has been officially approved by the board of trustees at the Windy City in stitution. Shaugnessy, who gained a rep utation at Loyola, New Orleans, as a "one-man coaching staff," was chosen by Thomas Nelson Metcalfe, new Maroon director of athletics. The new coach is the second ever had by the University of Chicago. Stagg had served ever since the inception of athletics there forty-one years ago. Now that the latter has passed Presi dent Robert Maynard Hutchins' age limit of seventy, the old maestro has taken the advice of Horace Greeley and gone out west into the football country. DUKE GUARD V:; IP .-ss; IS mm m guard, will probably be in Coach - up tonight. Both the Big Five will be at stake when the opening FOOTBALL STARS WILL SCRIMMAGE "Georgia Tech" and "Vander bilt" Wai Clash in Practice Game This Afternoon. Carolina s other pair of winter practice grid teams, "Georgia Tech" and "Vander bilt" will swing into action with a game in Kenan stadium this afternoon at 2:00 o'clock. "Geor gia" trounced "Virginia" 24-13 in the first of the series of bi weekly round-robin games Wed nesday. 'Tech" Is Veteran Team Of the teams to clash Sautr day, "Georgia Tech" has vet erans all along the line and in the backfield. "Georgia Tech" looks like the team Coach Chuck Collins hopes will come through for Carolina next fall. Julian Frankel and Leo Man ley man the flanks. Jim Tatum and Bill Collins are at the tack les, George Barclay and Edwin Kahn at the guards, and Gordon Mclver at center. In the back field there will tye an all-star quartet of Pepper Martin, quar terback ; Johnny Phipps and Kay Thompson, halfbacks, and Bill Croom, fullback. Every man is a letterman except Manley and Martin. Martin played frequent ly last fall, and Manley has showed much promise in prac tice. "Vandy" Line-up The "Vanderbilt" line-up will be Bill Moore and Bus Arthur, ends ; Tom Evins and Sam Hob good, tackles; Stevens and Em mett Joyce, guards; Murray Kanner, center ; Charlie Woollen, quarterback; Red Phelps and Johnny Daniel, halfbacks; and Herman Snyder, fullback. . This line is an all-freshman affair except for Stevens, who (Continued on last page) TERRORS WIN THIRD IN BIG FIVE. RATING North Carolina State College Red Terrors took third place in Big Five cage rankings Thurs day night when they bowled over Davidson, 39-16, at David son. Leroy Jay, forward, and (George Beageen, center, were the big guns in State s win. Bea geen piled up eleven points. Jay scored nine. Dickerson topped the 'Cats with seven tallies. Previously State had lost con tests to Carolina and Duke, but now they have attained a per centage of .250 for one win in a quartet of . games. State is good for third place in the Big Five. TAR Hi ML STATE BOXP MITTM TONIGHT Strength of Both Teams Uncer tain and Outcome of Meet Difficult to Predict. In the first meet away from home in a month, the Carolina varsity boxers will engage Penn State tonight at State College, Pa. The team arrived yesterday and will , weigh-in. this after noon. As both teams' strength is un certain, the outcome of the meet would be difficult to predict. State has lost several of last year's letter men through grad uation and its line-up tonight will present many new " faces. Carolina's line-up will have most of the boys who faced Virginia starting, but they have been shifted around in the heavier divisions and the result of the shift, whether favorable or otherwise, will not be known un til the fighters answer the gong. Giddins and Brown Swap Sam Giddins, Peyton Brown, and Tom Parsons all figure in the change. Giddins, regular middleweight, will be fighting for the first time as a 155 pound er, while Brown will have Gid dins' old post instead of ' his usual lightheavy spot. Parsons, who has seen action once this year, will be the 175 pounder. , In another change, Pete Ivey will work for the first time this year, stepping into Cliff Glover's place as bantamweight. Ivey is a fairly good bantam and is in (Continued on last page) ALBRIGHT PLANS FOR INTRAMURAL INDOORCONTT Director of Graham Memorial Announces Tournaments in Bowling, Ping-Pong, Pool. Mayne Albright, director of Graham Memorial, announced yesterday that the long prom ised bowling, ping-pong, and pool tournaments for the win ter quarter will start in a few days. The indoor games will be part of the intramural program. In the bowling tournament, each dormitory and fraternity may enter a three man team. ' Each team will bowl at a sched uled time in a qualifying round. Teams qualifying will be brack eted and seeded, and then the elimination rounds will begin. The winner of the fraternity tournament will meet the dormi tory champion for the campus title. The bowling alleys will be re served from 2:00 until 5':00 o'clock every week day and games will be scheduled between these hours. No cost will be in volved in entering of players in the tournament. Teams should apply for entrance to Mayne Al bright at Graham Memorial be fore 6:00 o'clock Tuesday, Feb ruary 14, and no' teams will be registered after that time. - Generous allotment of points in intramural standing will be allowed organizations entering teams in the competition. Each team participating will receive twenty-five points. The winner of each bracket of the tourney will receive forty points, the other finalist thirty points, the eliminated semi-finalist twenty points, and the eliminated quarter-finalist ten points. In the fraternity league the teams eli minated in the preliminaries will receive five points. In the Grail scoring toward the individual cup, the men on each team will be given five points for winning or one point for losing. The ping-pong tournament will be run at the same time and (Continued on last page) ENN EN
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Feb. 11, 1933, edition 1
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