car ;CoSportIiiitfira Ira S-r&sohn and Lee Turk TRIM THE CAVALIERS! SPORT STAFF: NATE LIPSCOMB, GRAHAM . GAMMON,JIM MCMILLAN, FLETCHER FERGUSON,MO ETON GOLDBERG, HARVEY KAPLAN, FRANCIS RASPBERRY, EDWARD KARUN mmly wtzl I See By The Papers By Ira Sarasohn VARSITY RUNNERS INCONFERENCE MEET MORROW Southern Conference Champion ship will be Determined This Saturday two closely matched teams will clash on Riddick Un icaicourse . field in Raleigh in what should be one of the hardest-fought games CL0SES CURRENT SEASON witnesseo in mis setuvi ui me wj j . www auu uusm win at- tempt to determine the Conference and Big Five winners. A win Four crack cross-country for the Blue Devils win unquesuonaory maKe tnem uonierence ana squads will race for the coveted Southern Conference plaque over the five mile course tomor- row at 11 :30. .The institutions who have entered teams in the meet are North Carolina State, Duke, Washington and Lee, and the University of North Caro lina. ' The Conference run will be preceded by a meet with Guil ford College Two Carolina var- LAW SCHOOL TEMI Tar Baby Team Plavs Imos . - I ml w BEATS RUFF1N, 9-0 In Kenan This Afternoon TO GARNER CROWN Win Gives Lawyers Dormitory Crown; Will Play for Cam pus Title Soon KAVEN Y STARS ONCE MORE Undefeated Duke Freshman Team will Defend Record Against Determined Carolina Freshman Eleven As Two Clash Today at 2:30 P. M. . PROBABLE STARTING LINE-UP: Carolina Gordon Big Five champions. BERLINSKJ, ROBINSON vs. PARKER, HACKNEY: Since 1924 Duke has won six games and State has taken five. The rivalry here is almost as intense as the one that ex ists between Duke and Carolina. Last year a weak State team bowed to the Wade-coached combine by some 30-odd points. Tomorrow it will be a different story. State's backs will not be overshadowed by Duke's Hackney, Parker, Alexander and the rest of the flashy Blue Devil runners. Berhnski, Robinson, Entwistle and Company have proved to be equally as speedy as the Durham men. Parker can hardly expect to surpass Entwistle and Gadd's sity reserve teams will partici punting. if the State men continue to maintain the same average pate in this meet and they will thev have maintained in the past games. As for shiftiness of each be out to avenge the previous fpam's hacks we'd take Berlinski in preference to any one of the defeat at the hands of Guil Duke stars. Centered about Steve Sabol, the State line may turn in a better performance than the equally strong Duke forward wall. ; VE PICK STATE: With backfield and lines as evenly matched as they are, the outcome of the game will depend greatly on the better coached team. Although Wade is considered by many to be a better coach than Anderson, we'll disregard the fact as we're looking for a rougher State team to take the Methodists into camp by a small number of points. This prediction should surely place us in the good graces of David Clark, even if he isn't as sure . of a victory over Duke as he was of one over us a few weeks ago. DUKE-CAROLINA GAME FRESHMAN VERSION: : Right here in Chapel Hill there will be plenty of excitement to day and tomorrow. Today an inspired freshman team will attempt to beat one of the strongest Duke freshman teams that the Meth odists have offered in recent years. But the story of that game is will consist of . the following probably better told by Graham Gammon as he has followed the men: Conte, Daniel, Gammon, practices and games of the Tar Babies more than anyone on this Gardiner, Garland, Goldman, Staff . His story on. this. page will be much more accurate than any I Kind, and Mark. . inere . are we could offer here and so we'll leave the facts and predictions on I some members of the varsity the game to Gammon. ! . . SOUTHERN CONFERENCE MEET: Speaking of Gammon reminds us of the cross-country meet that will be staged here Saturday. The meet will see some of : the best harriers in the south running some five miles for the Southern Conference cross-country championship. Three of the favorites of the meet are Gammon of Carolina, Morse of Duke, and Davis of State. There is an outside chance that Conte, captain of the Carolina team, may finish in one of the ''money" places in his last cross-country race. Conte has im proved steadily since the beginning of the season and may prove to be the "dark horse" of the race. For some strange reason cross-country meets don't draw half the crowds that this same sport draws in other sections of the country. It is not an uncommon sight here to see even as little as 50 people watching the finish of a grueling five-mile run. One possible reason that this sport draws such a small number of peo ple here is that the races are usually dual meets and have only a small number of contestants. In a cross-country race held early this week in New York, almost every school within a radius of 200 miles entered a team. Several thousand people watched Paced by the play of Kaveny I Cooper and Bryan, Law School's eleven Abernathy or Lowe aeieated Kumn 9-0 yesterday to Adams clinch top honors in the intra mural loop for the second suc cessive season. Although they came within scoring, distance several times, Cernugel it was late in the last half be- Kline fore Law School could get any- Kraynick thing past the alert Ruffin de- Madill Maronic Reynolds Watson Pos. Duke L. E. MIze L. T. Baskerville L. G. Robinson C. Spangler R.G. HiH R.T. ' Rogersoa R.E. Yorke Q.B. Gross L. H. O'Mara R. H. Bailey F. B. Mart fense. Then, after the running SnQVeymen Practice down, Kaveny booted a field goal For Cavalier Game from the 25-yard stripe for first blood. In their anxiety to over- Team Instilled with New Spirit ford's strong harriers; ' The Guilford meet will be over the 3.4 miles course, and will start and finish at. Emer son field. The race is scheduled to start at 11:15. Limit of Entries The championship event is open to Southern Conference in stitutions only. Each team may enter 10 men, eight of whom may start the race although only the first five finishing for their respective teams will count in the team score. The team which will represent Carolina in the Conference run come this lead, Ruffin opened up and began firing passes right and left.. But this proved to be their undoing. Bryan, alert After Suffering Slump , Coach Snavely's Tar Heels have finally cast off the "ill af- Law School end, intercepted one , . . . - . ., , . f and are rapidly regaining their of these misguided aerials on the Ruffin 25-yard line and shook off all would-be tacklers to cross the goal for a six-pointer. The attempted placement for the extra point was wide. Ruffin Tries Hard In a desperate effort to pro- squad whose names do not ap- Dear on this list who may be chosen to run at the last minute. The varsity reserves will be divided into two teams in their race against Guilford College. The reserves who will partici pate, in this race are : Aberly, Anderson, D'Ascensio, Drake, (Continued on last page) previous form in preparation for the Turkey Day classic against a strong defensive Vir ginia aggregation. Awakening from their leth argy, the Tar Heels went through their snappiest practice session oi the week. They luiigmcguuic, xvumucaueu time, seemed to haye forgotten the uuu aiier every piay. rorwara Dasf as thev Dassed. tmnted and pass, lateral, line play, end run went through their formations T" 1. . 1 J1 1 t- 1 w luimn xriea mem ail. buz ine ,, ;TV1Q ot,j Ruffinites just couldn't get go- cision ing as the alert Law School vet- ' rpQ, n, noTTol. erans intercepted their forwards, , , . , j iT 1 garded by most everyone as a j , , - , . breather, but a glance at the re and kept them from making a , , first down. . , , , . - - ers might be in for a bit of a sur- ; In spite of this, it was by all rise statistics alone can show n , t uuus uu WdUWW xur "ie aw- the power of the Virginia de yers, but closely-contested from fense Since the season got beginning to end. . under the Cavaliers have Yesterday's win gives Law played to four scoreless ties. bcnooi a berth m the lmals and a team with such a defensive an opportunity to deiend their record must be reckoned with campus championship against and Coach Snavely is determined the winner ot the Sigma jnu-S. to have his charges in their (Continued on last page) Don Jackson Will See Action As Yale, Harvard Teams Glash Harvard Star Has Same Name as Our Player; Dartmouth-Princeton Game will See Two Unbeaten Teams Clash in Another Feature of Saturday's Games : By Fletcher W Ferguson The North Carolina Tar Heels FROSH HARRIERS TO RUN SATURDAY Will Oppose High Point High School Team The freshman cross-country squad concluded their workouts for the High Point high school meet with a light practice session. The meet with the High Point high school team will see the entire Carolina freshman squad entered in the race although Dale Ranson has decided to di vide them up into three teams. The race will start at 11:05 with both the start and finish taking place at Emerson field. The freshmen, who will run in this race are Burns, Cheek, Christy, Dalton, Elliot, Gunn, Hall, Hendrix, Holdren, C. Hub bard, D. Hubbard, Monk, Rus sell, Rhodes, Sacrinty, Simmons, Swift, Underwood, Willis, Wil liams, and Wilkins. . This meet will be the last meet in which the freshmen will par ticipate this year. As the only 4ef eat which the freshmen have Cavaliers Add Meet The University of Virginia has added the University of Richmond to the 1936 boxing schedule for a match in Rich mond on Saturday, Feb. 15, ac cording to announcement by James G. Driver, graduate man ager. The bout between the Virgin ians and the Spiders will be their first ring meeting, and will probably take place in the Mos que where the Cavaliers defeat ed Yale's ringmen two seasons ago before a near capacity audi ence, numbering nearly 5,000. This addition to the schedule will give Virginia"" seven dual meets in addition to two home tournaments, Jthe 10th Southern Conference championship tour nament on February 28 and 29 and the N. C. A. A. tryouts for the Olympic Games on March 27 (Continued on last page) take a much needed rest this the race and it commanded lead stories on the sport pages of the weekend from gridiron activi- metropolitan papers. ties, but for Don Jackson there will be plenty of work. How ever, this Don is another Jack son, who hails from Providence, R. I., and will head the Harvard attack against . Yalefs Bulldogs in the 47th meeting of the two at Cambridge. Despite the fact that the Crimson have won but thrice and lost on four occasions, there will be plenty of cash to say that they will upset Yale's apple wagon which has gone through to five wins and two defeats. This battle is always a colorful affair regardless of how each has previously fared. In the series, Yale has won 25, Har vard 16, and there were five ties. Our pickYale to make it 26. Princeton vs. Dartmouth Up at Palmer stadium on the Princeton campus every one of the 50,600 seats should be filled as the Tigers attempt to stave off the most determined bid for national fame that Dartmouth's Indians have made in the past decade. Both teams are unde feated and. untied and the result no doubt will give the winner the mythical eastern crown. encountered this year has been at the hands of the High Point team, the Tar Babies are hop ing to prove that they are the better runners. top form by next Thursday. The squad opened hard practice Tuesday and will continue through next Wednesday. It will be the longest practice ses sion the team has had since the season opened. Captain Johnnie Leys, Vir ginia's able leader, is 'ranked on In eight games Dartmouth the all-time Cavalier eleven as has amassed 289 points against picked by the noted football au the opposition's 25; while the thority, George Trevor of the Nassau eleven has tallied 192 New York Sun. Leys, who plays against 19, in winning eight and at the flank position, is a senior seven games respectively. Only on the squad, and will be play- two common foes have been ing his last game for Virginia met Harvard and Cornell. The on Thanksgiving Day. Indians won by scores of 14-6 According to reports, there and 41-6, while Princeton's has been a large advance sale triumphs over the respective of reserved seats for this Tur- pair. were 35-0 and 54-0 scores, key Day classic. About 20,000 B. C. vs. B. U. ' spectators are expected for the TPRTite ttm fnot that. Yalfl game which is to be the 39th and Harvard clash just across meeting of these ancient rivals the line, Boston home-loving Qjgj SPEAKS TO KIWANIS ians win prooaoiy worx inem- selves up into a frenzy over the Harry F. Comer, secretary of struggle between Boston Col- the Y. M. C. A., addressed the lege and Boston University. For Kiwanis club of Burlington last the past few seasons, .the Ter- night on "Thrift Program for rors of B. U. have been no Youth." match for the Eagles, but to day or maybe but a few to morrows away they stand as a logical opponent to challenge for the Hub supremacy. Both teams have come through with fair seasons and will be By Graham Gammon The freshman football classic of the south will be fought this afternoon in Kenan stadium when the best freshman team in Duke's history meets a reju venated Carolina team. More than 3,000 fans are expected to be in the stands at 2:30 for the kick-off. The Tar Babies are underdogs but are highly geared for this game. For the past two years the games between Baby, Blue Devils and Baby Tar Heejs have been spectacular. Last year Duke won 21-18 and also won the year before by a 13-7 count Both contests were hard-fought from start to finish and many . of the players in those two games are now varsity stars. Duke Team Strong The Duke team has made door mats of all the opposing teams that they have faced! this year. Their most notable victory was over the N.C. State? Wolf cubs. 14-0. Vicious blocking and tackling has made the Duke team what is it. Excellent play ers have been combined into a smooth working unit that rolled 80 yards to score two touch downs on the State team in the third quarter. Eric Tipton. Ken "Gentleman" Lovell . and Bill Bailey are outstanding ball toters. Bob Spangler and Dan Hill lead the "perfect, blocking line." Carolina, with a great array (Continued on last page) primed for the game. B. C.'s outstanding triumph was an 18-0 win over Michigan State, while B. U.'s best claim was a 13-7 re versal of Tufts. Tonight over 10,000 spectators are expected at a mammoth B. U. rally in the Boston Arena, where their ; (Continued on last page) Tennis Meeting There will be an important meeting of the varsity tennis team this afternoon at 4:30 at Emerson stadium. Frosh Players All freshman football play ers who made the trip to Charlottesville are excused at 12 o'clock from classes to eat at the Mayflower. KEEP WARM SWEATERS AND MUFFLERS JUST THE THINGS FOR CAMPUS WEAR. SUITABLE FOR ALL WEATHER. Sweaters in all colors and sizes. From $2.45. Mufflers All colors. From $1.50. womxt