Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 14, 1939, edition 1 / Page 3
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1 On JBdDW nr. Maumu TO) ? dD And StiU They Go car mnbxtg But Frosh Go Down CHAPEL TOT N. C TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, 1939 Helped Carolina Win Last Night ii i . i in .m in T. v ity& .v- -r-v 4 -, "( sfi'' ' V ' - ? ....... vtm-J - y, f : - ,f yy- . ..... f .: '--. a : - - - -n -, i i L r4 i-v.J'yA-ys. Cap'n Bill McCachren, right, made ten points and played an excellent floor game at Woollen gym last night as the Tar Heels dumped Virginia, Paul Severin played his usual aggressive game, making six points. Law School Falls From Top Of Dorm Basketball League N C HIGH SCHOOL WRESTLERS HERE Yestrday's Basketball Results Graham No. 1 31, Law School No. 2 20. ' Lewis No. 1 31, Ruff in N?2 24. Sigma Chi 31, Phi Kappg1 lpha Law school No. 2 fell from the list of undefeated dormitory teams and from its perch on top of the dormitory basketball league yesterday afternoon as it dropped a hard fought basket ball game to a revenge-seeking Gra- The Intramural department re quests that all contestants in Table Tennis be prompt to their games, and also that they wear rubber soled shoes. In an event that a game is post poned, this game must be played by 4 o'clock the following day, or one or both teams will be forfeited out. ham No. 1 quint. The Graham team, having lost its first game of the sea son last week to Everett, was out to upset the Shysters and did so in a very outstanding manner. The lower quadrangle team took the lead in the first few minutes of the game and never relinquished it during the re mainder of the game. The Lawyers only threat came in the early part of the second half when they rallied to score 10 points to tie the score at 16-16. Graham, led by Allen, Connors, and , Stern, stopped this rally and moved on to win the (Continued on tost page) Ping Pong Results Yesterday's Table Tennis Results TEP No. 4 3, Kappa Alpha No. 6 0. Kappa Sigma No. 3 2, Zeta Psi No. 4 1. St. Anthony No. 4 3, Phi Alpha o. 3 0 Sigma Chi No. 2 3, Chi Psi No. 5 0 ATO No. 3 2, Sigma Chi No. 7 1. SEE or PHONE CY JONES For North Carolina's Most Complete Newspaper. The Winston-Salem Journal PHONE 7241 or 8221 Pick Theatre NOW PLAYING BOB LIVINGSTON ROSALIND KEITH In "ARSON RACKET "SQUAD" Also Comedy Novelty Greensboro, Durham, Barium Springs, Salisbury, Thomasville and High Point are expected to vie for honors in the North Carolina High School Athletic Association's ninth annual wrestling tournament to be held here today and tomorrow. Competition will take place in nine weights: 98, 108, 115, 125, 135, 145, 155, 165 and 175 pounds. 165 and 175 pounds. Favored to win the tourney is Barium Springs, champion for the past five years. Only other previous winners were Durham, in 1931 and 1932, and Greensboro in 1933. The preliminaries will get under way this afternoon. The semi-finals i are on tap tonight and the finals will get under way tomorrow evening. - - Six Tank Teams Enter AAU Meet Six team already have filed entries for the University of North Caro lina's first Carolina AAU swimming meet which will be held here Thurs day night in the Bowman Gray Pool. The teams entered are Carolina, N. C. State, Duke, Clemson, Durham High School and the Goldsboro Swim ming Association. . The individual participants in clude the following: 1 Carolina Otho Ross, George Cox head, Fleming Stone, Billy Stone, Bill Peters, Ed Mueller, Hoffman Wilson, Louis Scheinman, Ben Lee, Jim Bar clay, Whit Lees, Jim Nash and Bill Cowper. Duke Emmett, Moise, Jenkins, Shepard, Bunce, Goode, Forrester, Butte, Sandbaum. State Thompson, Donnell, Rey nolds, Cox, Bailey, La Morte. Goldsboro Crone, Nufer, Kennedy, Middleton, Pate. : Mural Schedule Basketball 4:00 Court No. 1 Sigma Nu vs. ZBT; Court No. 2 Kappa Alpha vs. Phi Alpha; Court No. 3 BVP No. 2 vs. Manly No. 1; Court No. 4. Grimes No. 2 vs. Lewis No. 2. 5:00 Court No. 1 Grimes No. 1 vs. Law School No. 1; Court No. 2 Chi Psi vs. Alpha Chi Sigma; Court No. 3 Mangum No. 2 vs. Chapel Hill; Court No. 4 ATO vs. (Continued on last page) !Diike Imps Come Up in Last Minute To Beat Frosh 38-3 ROMAN EXPECTS NC CHAMPIONSHIP FOR BOXING TEAM Boxing Coach Michael Z. Ronman granted his weekly Monday afternoon interview yesterday and allowed as how he was right proud of his boys, who tied a conference-leading team from Maryland Saturday night. The "victory," following a series of defeats, boosted the weak Tar Heel record to a present standing of losses to Citadel, Virginia, and VPI, a win over State, and a tie with Maryland. Last year, after winning three and losing a similar number, Ronman's" fighters took the State championship crown a rather doubtful laurel in view of the fact that only Carolina, State, and Duke participate in the race. Now, with State already set back and Duke likely to fall this Friday, the mitters are almost certain of re peating as North Carolina champ. DUKE MEET CHANGED The Duke meet, originally sched uled for Saturday, has been moved up a day and will be held in the Duke gymnasium Friday night. Both' .the freshmen and varstiy teams will box. Ronman complimented his charges yesterday. "Nearly all of them looked good," he said, "especially Claude Sapp and Billy Winstead. And Bob Hermson showed us he has possibili ties as a fighter. If they all do as well against Duke, IH probably take (Continued on last page) ZBT Downs AE Pi In Volley Ball Yesterday's Volley Ball Results ZBT 2, AE Pi 1. Chi Phi 2, Kappa Alpha 1. ZBT remained one of the leading teams in fraternity volley ball yes terday afternoon as it rallied to down AE Pi, 2-1. AE Pi captured the first game, a hard fought affair, 15-10. ZBT, paced by Finkel, Kind and Lask er, rallied to take the final two con tests 15-8 and 15-3. Chi Phi was forced to three con tests as it defeated Kappa Alpha, 2-1. In the first contest the two teams battle to a 9-8 score before Kappa Alpha rallied to win, 15-8, Kappa Alpha took a big 9-6 lead in the sec ond contest and then fell under the powerful work of Chi Phi and lost, 15-9. Chi Phi, led by Cooper and Sutton, continued to rally in the final game and won, 15-8. This win leaves Chi Phi one of the chief contenders for the fraternity crown. MATMEN PREPARE FOR DUKE MATCH WITH FULL TEAM . Although Wrestling Coach Chuck Quinlan was confined to his bed with a bad cold, the varsity and fresh men grapplers went through hard con ditioning sessions yesterday afternoon, anticipating a tough meet with Duke in Durham Friday night. Encouraged by their double victory over Davidson last Friday afternoon, the Tar Heel matmen will seek another Southern conference win when they tangle with the Blue Devils. To date, the Duke grapplers have lost to State and Davidson, teams which Carolina downed in good style.' Never theless, the UNC matmen will expect plenty of competition when they in vade the Duke campus. TORREY RETURNS For the first time in over three weeks, the Quinlanmen were at full strength yesterday as Don Torrey, regular 175 pounder, returned to prac tice after being out of competition for three weeks with a bad cold. Posi tions on both the varsity and fresh men squads will again be thrown open to all comers this week. Coach Quinlan will stage trial fights. Al though the reserves are plenty good, the squads will probably remain un changed except for a few men. Impressive in their victories over the Wildcats, and almost sure fighters (Continued on last page) Heel Swing Men Drill For April Apparently the Carolina swing boys are takng the defense of their Caro lina's AAU gymnastics title seriously for they have been drilling for the meet, which doesn't occur till April 12, ever since September. . Dr. R. B. Lawson, Carolina gym coach and chairman of the Carolina's AAU gymnastics committee, stated that . Carolina, Duke and possibly Davidson will meet in the tournament, slated for the. rear end of Woollen gym. South Carolina, the Citadel, Wake Forest, and State replied that they would not enter the meet this spring. THREE REGULARS Regulars from the 1938 champion squad which beat Duke for. the tro phy are Ed Winstead, Lunsf ord Long, and Jim Kirkpatrick. Winstead took the all around title, was runner-up in a couple of more, and took one or two (Continued on last page) To End Rivalry March Hopes To Out-Jump Terp Star In Indoor Meet Keep In Trim O : Bowling Carolina Next To Hffl Bakery A high jump duel between Harry March of Carolina and Ed Miller of Maryland will be one the most close ly fought events in the tenth annual Southern Conference Indoor Games in Woollen gym a week from Satur day. With only the approaching event and one other meet in which they will compete I together remaining, March hopes to outjump Miller at least once before the Terrapin star retires from collegiate competition this spring. The rivalry began in Washington, D. C, in the spring of 1934, when Miller, a high school junior, beat March, a sophomore from another school, in the annual Central "C" club meet, the annual high school classic. Since then they have opposed each other nine times in high school and college competition, and each time Miller has won. Since Miller will graduate this spring, only the Indoor Games and Conference Outdoor Meet remain in which March will have a chance to break that jinx. MARCH AS BEGINNER The high jump last year was a vic tory for Miller, a junior at Mary land, over March, in varsity compe tion for the f irt time. This year, however, March is a veteran. As one of the Tar Heels' high scorers last season, he set two new University rec ords, running the low hurdlers in 23.9 seconds and high jumping 6' 1 3-8." March now believes he can beat his old rival, or push him to another new record, in the attempt as he did twice before in the Indoor Games last year. In high school, Miller beat March six times. The closest March came to taking Miller was in the 1936 In door Games here, when his high school became the first and only school to take two successive "scholastic titles. They jumped together and won their events,' freshman for Miller and scholastic for March, at 5 feet 10 inches after just missing six feet. That Spring Harry missed Miller's six foot jump by only one inch in a meet between the Maryland frosh and the Tech high school. They didn't compete against each other in 1937. Miller was jumping in varsity class and March was a fresh man here. In the Indoor Games last winter. Miller won first place with a record-making leap of 6' 3-4" and March placed second after dropping out so as to get ready for the broad jump. ' As the last outdoor season rolled (Continued on last page) i BY JIM VAWTER Despite the urging and the strain ing on the part of Carolina supporters as the Tar Baby basketball team clung to a one point margin over Duke university's freshman cagers in the final minute of play last night, two rapidly fired field goals by Mock and Brown, Imp forwards, shoved the Dukes to the front and spelled defeat for Carolina frosh, 38-35. The loss brought to a close the Tar Babies' five game winning streak and set them even-steven with the Duke aggregration, as they won over the Imps in the two teams' first engage ment last Thursday 52-48. ROSE SCORES 19 POINTS The game last night was raging hot all the way with Bob Rose, Carolina forward, setting the Tar Baby pace as high scorer with 19 points. Henry Feimister, also forward for Carolina, followed him with 12 points. Allen, center, led Duke's attack with 13 points. Mock made 10 and Brown 9. Aside from four good foul shots by Jimmy Dempsey, Tar Baby guard, Rose and Feimister accounted for all of . Carolina's points. Carolina started the second half of the game with a 19-18 advantage, but Duke's Brown and Mock dropped in two field goals immediately and put them to the front. The two squads fought severely through this phase of the game with considerable fouls being called on both. However, the Imps managed to hold a 29-28 lead at the end of the third quarter and kept it until four minutes of the last frame when a push shot by Rose tied the ball game up 31-31. Allen added one extractor Duke, then Rose sank two in a row and ,the Carolina frosh were ahead scantily, 35-33. A foul should plus Mock's and Brown's two disastrous field goals brought the game to a furious climax. IMPS START STRONG The Duke Imps took over the lead in the first minutes of the game and held a decided advantage through the first period. The Tar Babies spurted, though, as Feimister and Rose started dropping goals from every section and Dempsey came through with two foul shots. They scored 12 points to 7 for the Duke frosh in this quarter (Continued on last page) GLAMACtt AGAIN SHINES AS HIGH SCORER AT? n AH ur utti li H. By SHELLEY ROLFE Taking time off from the all im portant struggle for a Southern con ference basketball tournament bid, the Tar Heels played non-conference Vir ginia at Woollen gym last night and defeated the Cavaliers 48-37 to wia their fourth game in a row, fifth ia the last six starts and their ninth ol the season against nine defeats. Gorgeous George Glamack. scoring? r dynamite from the mid-lands oX WAKE FOREST, Feb. 13 Wake Forest defeated Davidson 61-43 to night to take undisputed lead of the Big Tire basketball race. Jim Wal ler was high man for the Deacons, Frosh Lose One Carolina Frosh (35) Feimister, f Smith, f .. Gersten, f Rose, c Neely, c Dempsey, g : Robbins, g Loock, g . .. G FT 4 4 12 0 0 0 0 0 0 .8 319 .000 .044 .000 .000 Totals Duke Frosh (38) Mock, f Brown, f Telling, f Johnson, f Allen, c McCahan, g Prinel, g Knickerbocker, g Spuhler, g 12 11 35 G FT - 5 0 10 .419 -215 .000 .5 3 13 .000 .000 -00 0 -11 Totals, .16 6 38 Pennsylvania, was high scorer for th night, making 13 points before foul ing out early in the second half. Capa Bill McCachren, who helped ignite tha present winning streak when he was elected captain some six games ago, played his best floor game of the sea son and made 10 points. Strickler and Feldman each had 10 for Virginia. ON TOP IN FIVE MINUTES Foundering a bit at the start, Caro lina overtook the Cavaliers after less than five minutes of play and held the advantage the rest of the game. Mc Cann and Feldman sent Virginia into an early lead with field goals after Glamack had twisted one in for Caro lina and Paul Severin had made a foul. Behind 5-3, the. Tar Heels tied the game on a Glamack bucket-shot and Severin dropped in a crip to send Carolina ahead 7-5. The score upped to 25-14 by half-time. Shooting from every corner of the court, Carolina kept adding to its lead early in the second half and before most of the Cavaliers knew what was about, the Tar Heels had mountedthe lead to 32-19. The Virginians hung be tween 11 and 13 points behind until McCann made a field goal and Feld man rammed two rapid-fire ones home to pull 'em within seven points of the Tar Heels. Walter SMdmore did some pulling at this point, replacing substi tute guards with the regulars and Carolina promptly added six points oa a field goal by Branson and two by Worley. Worleys second shot was sent off just before the gun went off end- (Continued on last page) Roses Are Red . . . Carolina Dilworth, g Howard, g Roberson, g Worley, f Severin, f Glamack, c Branson, g Watson, g McCachren, g Totals G F T 1 1 0 2 3 2 4 2 4 1 3 0 0 0 4 0 6 3 13 3 0 0 0 2 10 18 12 43 Virginia Strickler, f BlackwelL f Feldman, f . Board, f-c Harm an, c McCann, g W. Smith, g Swan, g Keywan, g Redavid, g G F T .3 4 10 0 0 4 10 0 3 3 1 2 1 0 3 1 0 0-0 0 0 0 0 6 5 5 2 0 0 0 Totals .13 11 37 Officials: Gerrard and Jay Men Who Can Tutor Any Course (Sophmore and Freshman courses especially). Come To a Meeting Of The Carolina Tutoring Association In 110 Saunders At 5 P. M. Wednesday MUNICIPAL Auditorium Raleigh Famous Stage Play Not a Picture Friday And Saturday Evenings O Matinee Saturday March 11, at 2:30 I I 1 it JOHN BARTON Stage Success Of The Century . MAIL ORDERS NOW Eves: Orch. $26; 1st Bale. $1.70; 2nd Bale $1.13. Mat: Orch. $1.70; 1st Bale $1.13; 2nd Bale 86c Taxes Included j Make remittance payable to Virginia Nowell, 801 Odd Fellows Bldg Raleigh. , ..... i ; : ' i i ! i i i i : I i i -, i ' !' t 1 1 I i-'Y ! l f 5 " . ' ". ! '"" J"l5!
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 14, 1939, edition 1
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