Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / April 5, 1935, edition 1 / Page 3
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V FRIDAY, APRIL 5, 1SE5 Vines From Til TVT -a .en A iNussiei Overflowing. Crowd Sees Exhibitionists Doubles 5 latch Provides Thrills; Lott Conquers. Nusslein in Closing Battle. VINES' PLAY SENSATIONAL About 2500 spectators thrill ed to the strokes of the tennis exhibitionists last evening in the Tin Can as Ellsworth Vines pounded out a victory over Til den in the feature match. The four master professionals, Tilden, Vines, Lott and Nuss lein, performed upon an emer ald canvas court that lent a bril liant touch to the much-awaited exhibition. Tilden Humbled ' The opening singles was a dis mal failure as Big Bill Tilden failed to check Elly Vines. The old charm of Tilden was gone and the fire lacking, as he hit shot after shot into the net. Vines had . no trouble winning 6-2, 6-3. A few volleys were prolonged and drew roars of approval from the crowd, but the match was drab and unin teresting. The doubles was the star con test of the evening. The ball was hit brilliantly and solidly across the rigid net, and after the ap plause had died into a murmur, the final score was found to give Tilden and Vines a well earned victory over Lott and Nusslein by a count of 6-3, 6-8, 6-4. Vines was superb and Lott list less in the doubles contest. Vines' overhead thudded throughout the night as Lott, billed as the world's greatest doubles star, failed to approach expectations and erred repeatedly. Nusslein also played' smooth, dependable tennis in this match. Tilden gave an improved show ing over his singles but was still subordinate to the other two. The doubles produced the (Continued on last page) TENNIS PLAYERS MEET DAVIDSON TEM MORROW Netters Will Play Wildcats at Davidson; Regulars Will Probably Start. BOAST OF FINE RECORD Three wins to the good, the varsity tennis team is priming for the coming meet with David son, to be played tomorrow at the Wildcat's court. The Tar Heel squad carries an impressive background into Sat urday's meet. In the three matches already played, the team has dropped but one in dividual encounter. Wake For est and State were soundly set back by 9-0 scores and Dart mouth was humiliated to the ex tent of a 7-1 count. An optimistic outlook for the remaining clashes is prevalent in the Carolina ranks. The one great obstacle that is loom ing is the Princeton match early next month. The Tigers have been the only team to stop the Tar Heels in the past six years. With additional power on the squad, Carolina looks forward to better results. In all probability, a similar lineup will face the Wildcats that faced the other teams. Levi tan, Harris, Willis, Do Gray, Shore and Minor are the six stal warts that have been carrying the banner to date. Damp weather prevented play yesterday and the team was contented with acquiring finer points by studying the master Tilden and his players at work. W iies Mate At Tinman; d Lott Beaten LINESMEN MEET STATETOMORROW Tar Heel Golfers Will Play Wolf- pack on Raleigh Course; Change in Lineup. Tomorrow afternoon's golf match with the State College linksmen will mark the first time this season for the Tar Heels to play on a foreign course. The team will begin the meet with a record of three wins in as many starts. Their oppo nents could score no more than three points in any onemeet. All of the team's decisive victories were scored on the Hope Valley course; thus the result of to morrow's meet will be a good in dication of the success of the team during the remainder of the season. Should the team emerge with another victory over State it will be safe to say that they are headed for the Big Five title and possibly the conference cham pionship. Change in Lineup The line-up for the coming meet will bring Laxton up against Newnam, State's ace, and Harris will meet Bartlien. Pijanowski, a sophomore, will play in the number three posi tion instead of Coffin, and should find little trouble in repeating the 3-0 win Coffin scored over Dusty last week. The number four position on the team is the most disputed, and is the one most likely to change from meet to meet. Four men have hopes of representing Carolina in the final place on the team, and they will probably de cide who will play by means of play-offs this afternoon. The four men who have hopes of meeting Pastore on the Ral eigh links are Hamilton, Bridg- ers, Coffin, and Crawford. Brid- gers in the last meet won a 2-1 victory over Pastore who is one of State's veteran players. Martin (Continued from page one) of power, he pointed out, for all revolutions only give us new tyrannies for old. "Revolutions produce the bankruptcy of law and order ... and end only in dictatorship," Dean Martin stat ed. Three Periods of History Dividing all history into three great periods, the speaker showed that the ancient period had ended with the Octavian dic tatorship at Rome and the suc ceeding debauchery of the glori ous Roman empire. The second period ended with the outcome of the church reformation and the subsequent dictatorship of various church groups and the disorganization of what little fra ternity there had been before that time. The last great period ended October 25, 1917, declared Mar tin, for then communism struck down on liberalism, and democ racy and completed the decline of political progress that had been made in the direction of liberalism by the revolutions of the 18th and 19th centuries. Comparing the revolutionary action of the mob to that of an insane person, Martin warned America that if liberalism were really dead, universal suffrage, freedom from persecution and torture, trial by jury, freedom of speech and thought all would be destroyed and man re turned to the condition of baby hood under the tyranny of Fas cism, Communism, Nazism, So cialism, and the like. THE DAILY FROSH NETSTERS OPEN TODAY WITH DmffiBLUE DIPS Coach Kenfield to Use as Many Players as Possible from Powerful Squad. CONTEST HERE AT 3 P.M. The Tar Babies inaugurate their 1935 tennis season this af ternoon at 3 o'clock, on the clay courts against the Baby Imps from Duke. The freshmen, boasting the greatest yearling team in Caro lina history, expect little trou ble from the Duke team, and Coach Kenfield plans to put as many different players into the match as possible. If a satisfactory lead is ac quired in the singles play, the doubles combinations will be composed of second string play ers. This method is unorthodox, but with the present power of the frosh, it is quite safe. Good Players Either Ramsay Potts or Eddy Fuller will open the season by facing Ted Collins, Duke ace. Collins reached the final in the fall tournament at Pinehurst and is a possible threat. How ever, there is no expectations of either Potts or Fuller experi encing . difficulty in competition with him. Gordon Robinson, Canadian youth, will probably play in third singles and Johnny Foreman, hard hitting Illinois star, in fourth. The remaining positions are doubtful with Frankie Farrell, New York youth, seemingly in possession of the fifth singles. The remaining post will be the the greatest source of trouble in respect to selection. Seymore Fast, Vic Strasberger, and Ray Bartelman are all within strik ing distance. The remaining players will see action in doubles. This will give Coach Kenfield an opportunity to get a first hand view of his entire squad under competitive pressure. The frosh have had little chance to show their worth. MURAL ENTRIES MUST BE MADE THIS AFTERNOON F. E. R. A. and Carr Teams Won Last Year. Entries for the intramural baseball and tennis tourneys will close this evening at 6 o'clock. They will be acceptable at 310 South all day until 5 o'clock, and for an additional hour at the Emerson stadium office. Last year the F. E. R. A. nine, under the leadership of Emmet Joyce, came through to cop the crown with a 6-1 win over Phi Sigma -Kappa, frat titlists. The F. E. R. A. team reached the finals by defeating Med School, while the Phi Sigs came in by virtue of its triumph over S.A.E. After an absence of two years, tennis is back on the intramural slate. This sport will be run in two separate leagues, with the first place teams meeting as usual for the campus champion ship. The last year of tennis found Carr Dormitory (Law School) as champs, due to a win over Sigma Nu. Garr's team was composed of Markham and Bai ley, and the snakes were repre sented by Jones and Bruce Old. All but Bailey are still in school, Jones now being a member of Coach Kenfield's varsity net team. . ' . The matches will consist of two singles and one doubles, with the best two out of three sets taking the matches. The set-games are altered slightly from regular tennis in that only five games need to be won to win the set, no two-game mar gin being necessary. TAR HEEL TRACILF.IENr.IAY BREAK RECORDS INW.&M.MEET Galaxy of Stars Will Perform At Emerson Field Tomor row Afternoon. HUBBARD MAY BE OUT Inclement weather conditions again forced the varsity track mentors to ease up on work for their charges in yesterday's practice session, which didn't add anything to the already none-too rosy outlook for the W. & M. engagement this week end. With several of last year's out standing William and Mary competitors back, a keenly con tested meet is in store for the initial appearance of Carolina's champions. The spectators may even be treated to one or two rec ord-breaking feats. Records May Fall One Emerson stadium record that may topple is the 24 ft. in. broad jump mark, made by Ed Hamm, American s record- holder, back in 1930 while wear ing the Georgia Tech colors. "Monk" Little is capable of doing 24 ft. or better, and with Higby and possibly Hubbard in the competition, a new record may be established. The nation's fourth ranking intercollegiate miler, Harry Williamson, may be the cause of another- mark going off the books. Should he be placed in the mile event, the Emerson sta dium record of 4 :21.2, establish ed by Elliott of U. N. C, in 1926, should be broken. Williamson holds the present University mile mark with a time of 4:15.23 which he turned in at Los Angeles last year. How ever, it is possible that he may be entered in the 880 and 440 events if Hubbard does not com pete. William and Mary Stars Several of the field events are certain to develop into hotly contested battles. In the pole vault, the visitors will bring Langboner and Flickinger, who placed first and third in that event in the 1934 meet at Wil liamsburg. However, Langboner's first was a tie with Don Jackson, and with Bear added to the picture, the cross-bar should reach a goodly height before the victor is decided. Tom Evins will be in for a busy afternoon in both the shot and the discus throw. Quirk, who last season placed second to the husky Carolina boy, and Sorenson, who was but a slight distance behind Evins, will be listed in the shot and discus, re spectively. Armfield is Carolina's best bet in the javelin toss, and it is hoped that the improvement he has shown over his last year's work will capture a second place award for him. To do this he will have to beat out Bralley, who bested him last year. Little is an almost certain winner in this event, but with three or four other events to compete in, it is hardly probable that he can better LeGore's rec ord of 212 feet 7 inches. Varsity Track Coach Dale Hanson asks that all members of the var sity track squad meet with him at Emerson field at 4:15 this afternoon. Mass Tennis Meet All prospective entrants for the. gigantic Duke-Carolina mass meet in tennis are asked to sign their name on the bul letin board in front of the var sity courts. ' Tar Heel Nine Year Against Cats Today Carolina Coach a: 1 J. V Above is Bunji Hearn who is beginning his third season as baseball coach of the Tar Heels. His team opens the season this afternoon against Davidson. WIND STOPS FIRST YEAR NINE DRILL Batteries Have Featured Year ling Work to Date. Strong winds forced Coach James to call off yesterday's yearling baseball drill after the entire squad had turned out pre pared for a hard practice ses sion. With today's practice under their belts the freshmen will have finished their first full week of training. Despite the fact that they have been batting and fielding for only five days, the frosh have come a long way and the future drills should bring out a well rounded out field. Although many of the starting fifty have dropped out, the pres ent squad is well over thirty. Coach James has used three nines during the past week and each have clicked in fine style. The battery combinations have undoubtedly been the outstand ing performers to date. Humph ries, Turbyville, and Willard have all done their share of mound work, while Brickle myer, Andrews, Dalton, and Redfern have displayed fine catching ability. The infields have been smooth ly working units from the begin ning, but the outfielders, all of who started out in a bad rut, have shown steady improvement of late. In the two inter-squad games played so far, the regulars have managed to nose out the yanni gans 3-0 and 1-0. The lack of scoring testifies to the fine hur ling and the weak hitting which has prevailed. Frosh Golf Meeting Candidates for the fresh man golf team will report at Emerson field at 10:15 a. m. varsity and freshman golf today, Coach John Kenfield, coach, announced yesterday. This will be the second year that Carolina will have a year ling links team, the first one having been organized last spring. . Cincinnati Alumni Organize Approximately 20 University alumni living in Cincinnati, Ohio, will gather for an informal din ner tonighf to effect the organi zation of the group into a per manent local alumni club, mak ing another in the chain of 60 such organizations . throughout the country. The meeting has been ar ranged by W. E. Conally, Jr., of the class of 1932, and will take place in Cincinnati's Kemper Lane hotel. Patronize Our Advertisers PAGE THREE? Will Open I Fred Crouch to Hurl In Game at Davidson Bullard Will Probably Start at Third; Harris Will Be oa Mound for Wildcats. TO PLAY AGAIN TOMORROW Carolina's 1935 baseball team leaves this morning for David son to open its season against the Wildcats this afternoon. To morrow the Tar Heels will bat tle Davidson again in the second game of the trip. Fred Crouch, veteran of two years, will take. the mound for Carolina and will likely be op posed by Charlie Harris, also an old performer. Ed Bullard, sophomore, will probably, get the first call to play at the disputed third base position, but Harry Montgomery and Dick Dashiell are also mak ing the trip and both men may see action before the two-tilt se ries is over. One Other Soph Buck McCarn, big first base man, will be the only other soph omore in the lineup. McCarn re places ex-Captain George Brandt and although his fielding is not up to standard he has cracked out several long hits during the practice sessions. The keystone combination of Trip Rand, second baseman, and Tommy Irwin, shortstop, will round out the infield. Rand worked half-time at third last year and was a steady perform er while Irwin was a sensation at shortstop. Rand's little bin gles have been featuring the pre season practice. Veteran Outfield Coach Hearn's outfield of Cap tain Thurman Vick, centerfield, Eddie Shapiro, rightfield, and Gus Mclver, leftfield, is a hold over from last year. However, this trio has not started click ing in top form and as a result two excellent-fielding reserves, Ed Voliva and Lefty Groomer who have been hitting hard dur ing practice, may get chances. - Big Jim Tatum, a long-dis tance hitter who did the receiv ing for Coach Hearn's Kinston team last summer, will be be hind the plate. - Bill Strayhorn, who has already shown plenty of stuff both at bat and in the field, will relieve Tatum if it is necessary. Other pitchers besides Crouch who made the journey to David son are Leo Manley, letter man, Irby Wright, Latcher Webster,, and Bunn Hearn, Jr. 'Cats Are Strong The veteran Wildcat nine looks plenty dangerous to the Tar Heels' chances of getting off to a good start. Davidson has al ready played two games, defeat? ing Michigan State, 3-1, and loss ( Continued, on last page) fiSV SLAVE MARTS s OF BAGDAD! Spectacle to spellbind you! Dromo to thrill you! Mystery to intrigue you! Glamour to entrance you! Beauty to dazzle you! Oriental opulence to amaze you! with ANNA MAY WONG Also Comedy News .TODAY CASH NIGHT TONIGHT $15.60 in cash and a carton of Lucky Strike cigarettes will be giveni mm flj
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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April 5, 1935, edition 1
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