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LOCAL COMMITTl
E
PREPARES GYM FOR
CONFERENCE MEET
By LEONARD LOBRED
The banked track is in place; the
jumping Pits ar,e g, fiUed h
Ldust, the pole valut runway is
Z; pieced together, and trackmen
Roaring into Chapel Hill for com
tition in four divisions in the tenth
Crm f erence Indoor
annual
ULUVi v "
Woollen gym tomorrow
6"
nnd evening. The meet be-
. a- t; r.an at 1:
30 and moves
L WooUen gym at 2:30, where the
: Tiroerram is to start at 7
rns in. -"
rening program
o'clock.
Wavine moved the meet from the
Tin Can, where it has been the biggest
ijidoor track meet in the South, to
Woollen gym, the athletic department
is working overtime now to make
arrangements for the 440 contestants
and 2200 spectators expected here to
morrow. Coach Bob Fetzer, director of
athletics at the University and chair
man of the games committee, was in
Woollen gym yesterday directing the
installation of the 10-lap track and the
bleacher seats. Reserved seats will be
provided for 850 and students seats
will hold 1050.
TROPHY EXHIBITED
The Lionel Weil trophy for the win
der of the Southern conference mile
arrived yesterday and was immedi
ately put on exhibit in the lobby of
the gymnasium.
Sleeping arrangements for 260
visiting participants is one of the
wpct nroblems. Marvin Allen is
leading the search for empty beds for j
tofcj
representatives of 23 high schools and
some of the competitors m the con
ference, non-conference and freshman
divisions.
COMPETITORS
Following is a list of competing
high schools: Bel Air (Md), Central
(Wash, D. C), Chapel Hill, Columbia
(S. C), Curry (Greensboro), Dobyns
Bennett (Kingsport, Tenn), Durham,
E. C. Glass (Lynchburg, Va.) , Episco
pal (Alexandria, Va), Georgia Mili
tary academy, Greensboro, Hopkins
vflle (Ky), Jefferson (Richmond),
Jefferson (Roanoke), John Marshall
(Richmond), Johnson City (Tenn),
McKinley (Wash, D. C), Maury
(Norfolk), ..Newport News (Va) ,
Washington-Lee (Arlington, Va) ,
Winston-Salem, Sanford, Woodberry
Forest school.
Swordswomen Set
For Terp Opener
Completing practice with a handful
of bouts with the reserve men's team,
the coed fencers yesterday afternoon
ran through a final drilling exercise,
ready to face the University of Mary
land swordswomen in Memorial hall
tomorrow morning at 10:30. '
No official results were released for
the bouts, but it was conceded that the
coeds had topped the reserves during
the meet. In the eight bouts held, five
women fencers unofficially won their
meets.
The Maryland women will bring a
team of three sophomores, who will
also take to the strips in their first
meet of the year. Both teams will be
out for their initial victory of the sea
son, and will have women fencers on
the strip who have never before fenced
in inter-collegiate competition.
The University of Virginia is cele
brating its fiftieth year of intercol
legiate football.
arrow
,
Talk about
VERSATILITY . . .
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ARROW Gordon. Only
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Carolina Men's
Shop
Eob Varley, UNC
Who Said They
Couldn't Win?
n
.Heels Take On Dukes In Decisive Game
SWINDELL, PRICE
WORRY PHANTOMS
Probable Starting line-ups:
Carolina Duke
Severin rf. . Swindell
McCachren if O'Mara
Glamack c ; Holley
Howard rg Bergman
Branson Jg Price
Somebody will short-circuit the sud
denly aroused Duke power house one
of these days perhaps in the Southern
conference basketball tournament if
the Devils get there but there are a
respectable number of basketball fol
lowers, inexpert and otherwise, who
say out loud it will be Carolina when
the two teams meet at Duke gym to
night at 8:15.
The under-dog in the game in the
Devil gym, Carolina1 will have to beat
! Duke or perhaps not go to the South-
era conference tournament when it
opens Thursday in Raleigh. And the
winner of the battle will at least have
a tie for the Big Five lead with Wake
Forest, and, if the Deacs lose to David
son tomorrow, undisputed possession
of the top.
Beaten and buffetted around the
earlier part of the season, Duke, with
tournament elimination hanging by a
thread, came to life Saturday to beat
Wake Forest and end a seven game
losing streak. The Devils followed the
Deac win with a triumph over State.
They will go into the tournament on
a .500 average if they take Carolina.
The Tar Heels by winning can not only
insure their own invitation but keep
Duke from getting one.
'To beat Duke, Carolina will have to
stop the cool long shooting of Ed Swin
dell and the never-a-dull moment
guarding of Glenn Price, believed by
many to be the best man on the Duke
team. To beat Duke, Carolina will
have to break through the ranks of the
best team in the state man for man.
To beat Duke, Carolina will have to
cool down a team which gets hot only
at the end of the season. Last year
the Devils just got through the gate,
so they promptly won the tourney.
The Tar Heels already hold a 37-32
win over the Devils this year, hand
ing Duke one of the defeats on its
seven game losing streak. The Tar
Heels started the season off with more
knocks than a Model T, then seven
games ago picked up speed. They've
won six out of seven and five straight.
Baseball Gloves Here
Varsity and freshmen baseball
candidates who wish to get gloves,
can get them from Manager J. B.
Lamb in the Tin Can today between
2 and 4 o'clock. Varsity and fresh
man battery candidates will con
tinue working in the Tin Can from
2 to 4.
TILLETT TO CAPTAIN FROSH MATMEN
IN LAST MEET OF SEASON WITH VMI
On the eve of the finaland toughest
meet of the season with VMI, which
will decide whether or not the Tar
Baby wrestlers will capture the South
ern conference crown, Coach Chuck
Quinlan's frosh grapplers elected
Charley Tillett, consistently victorious
136 pounder, as their captain yester
day afternoon.
Tillett, a high school champion be
fore he came to Carolina, was a nearly
unanimous choice and through his fine,
steady work he has shown that he is
the man to lead the undefeated Tar
Baby matmen into their hardest and
most important meet of the . year. In
the last regular workout of the sea
son preparatory to the varsity and
frosh meet with the Cadets in Lexing
ton, Saturday, Coach Quinlan selected
Jim Joyner and Bill Broadfoot as the
varsity men who will represent the
The University Barber Shop
FOR EXPERT SERVICE
In Front Of Methodist
Church
The University Barber Shop
CHAPEL
Lawyers Take Dorm Volley Ball
Boxers Compete In Conference
Carolina Mittmen
Favored In Tourney
By WILLIAM L. BEERMAN
Special to the Daily Tar Heel)
COLUMBIA, Feb. 23. University
of North Carolina boxers and attend
ants registered here tonight, took a
brief workout, and then settled down
for relaxation until tomorrow after
noon, when they weigh-in for the 13th
annual Southern conference boxing
tournament. Preliminary fighting be
gins tomorrow night.
Showing five capable boxers, Coach
Mike Ronman made it clear that his
men were entered with the definite in
tention of taking as many of the con
ference titles as fists, fate, and faith
would allow them. Several of the Tar
Heel five are among the list of favor
ites to compete in the finals Saturday
night.
MANY SCHOOLS REPRESENTED
Represented in the tournament are
over half the Southern conference
schools, many with champs of their
own who have established strong
claims this season. Especially are the
South Carolina teams well-stocked
with able boxers Citadel, Clemson,
and the University of South Carolina
boasting noteworthy individuals.
Other entries are from VPI, Duke, N.
C. State, Maryland, and Carolina.
CAROLINA CHAMPS
Of Ronman's crew, Billy Winstead,
Andy Gennett and Ed Dickerson are
conceded excellent chances. Red San
ders and Ed Hubbard are also among
pretenders to the thrones, and Hub
bard's stock went up when it was found
that South Carolina's Baxter would
not fight because of an injury.
LvGennett's 127-pound class talent
is varied. Experts McCrady (South
Carolina), Ross (Clemson), Bengal
(Citadel), and Jordan (Duke) are
ready to dispute his position as fav
orite. Gennett is unbeaten for the
year.
Mural Schedule
Swimming
4:00 6:30 Preliminaries for in
dividual swimming events.
Table Tennis
4:00 Table No. 1 Grimes No. 6.
vs. Mangum No. 1; Table No. 2
Smith vs. Aycock No. 1.
4:45 Table No. 1 Independents
vs. Graham No. 2; Table No. 2
Sigma Chi Noi 5 vs. Kappa Alpha
No. 1.
5:30 Table No. 1 Sigma Nu No.
1 vs. Alpha Chi Sigma No. 1; Table;
No. 2 Phi Alpha No. 2 vs. ZBT No.
1.
Tar Heels in the 165 and 145 pound
divisions respectively.
The rest of the varsity line-up which
will face VMI will . be the same as
usual with Georgie Zink handling the
121 pound class, Captain Johnson
Harris in the 128, Walter Blackmer
wrestling 136, Steve Forrest at 155,
Don Torrey in the 175 pound class,
and Erskine Clements fighting in the
unlimited division. With the definite
knowledge that frosh star 128 pound
er, Jimmy Changaris, will not be able
to fight at Lexington Coach Quinlan
plans to fight Gene Devant in his
regular spot in the 121 pound division.
But Tillett will take over matters in
the 128 while Burgess Urqhart will
fill Tillets vacated position in the
136. Charley Reece, a newcomer, will
fight the VMI 145 pounder. After a
two week layoff due to a cold Clarence
Idol, star 155 fighter, will wrestle,
while Sam Gregory, steady 165 pound
grappler, Roger Weil, 175 matman
who is nursing a sore back, and
Johnny Sasser, unlimited, will round
off the Tar Baby line-up which will
be defending its nnmarred record.
Car
HILL, N. C FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1939
ffdDnnniKee
Swindell Of Duke
V Sit- s"
Yes Willie, this is a picture of Mr.
Ed Swindell of Duke, the long shootin'
fella. He is a very good set shot. Duke
has a very good basketball team.
Swindell and the Devils play Carolina
tonight.
Whiteshirts Take
Intersquad Contest
Ending Practice
Jim Lalanne, Sid Sadoff, Don Baker
and Frank 6'Hare brought winter
football practice to a wild and wooly
close in Kenan stadium yesterday
afternoon by making frozen custard
out of the Blueshirts, 53-0 in the third
of the intersquad series while several
hundred spectators shivered in sym
pathy. The victory, which wound up seven
weeks of muddy workouts, gave the
Whiteshirts a 2-1 edge over their op
ponents. The first of innumerable fumbles
set up the winners' first touchdown
(Continued on last page)
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Midnight Show Tonight
ALEXANDER DUMAS' IMMORTAL STORY
"COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO"
. - with
ROBERT DONAT - ELISSA LANDI
potts
Championship;
Meet Tonight
Zetes Lick Chi Phi
In Frat Semi-Finals
Yesterday's Volley Ball Results
Law School 2, BVP 0.
Zeta Psi 2, Chi Phi 1.
Law school ended its most success
ful undefeated volley ball season yes
terday afternoon as it captured the
dormitory championship by defeating
BVP in two consecutive games.
Zeta Psi gamed the privilege of
playing Chi Psi in the fraternity finals
Preliminaries in individual intra
mural swimming events will be
held this afternoon between 4:00
and 6:30, instead of tomorrow.
Dormitories started their table
tennis tournament yesterday after
noon, and the intramural depart
ment requests that all players be
prompt for their matches.
Monday afternoon at 5 o'clock, by de
feating Chi Phi in semi-finals match
that was extended to three games.
In handing BVP its first defeat of
the season, and in maintaining an
eight game undefeated record for it
self Law School exhibited the best
form seen in the dormitory league
this season. Both clubs handled the
ball in a brilliant manner and their
team work was exceptionally good.
Paced by the brilliant work of Carr
and Adams, Zeta Psi rallied in the
final two contests of their volley ball
match with Chi Phi to win the semi
final round by a 2-1 score.
Yesterday's Table Tennis Results
Old West No. 1 2, Mangum No.
3 0.
Graham No. 1 2, Lewis No. 3 0.
Everett No. 1 3, Manly No. 2 0.
BVP No. 1 3, Graham No. 3 0.
Manly No. 1 3, Grimes No. 3 0.
Bobby Jones is the only golfer who
won four major championships Na
tional Open, British Open, National
Amateur, and British Amateur in
one year 1930.
Lfd
'. , - -
"ofk
TODAY AND
SATURDAY
SEE
SEE
SEE
SEE
FOR THE THRILL
"nnnn nn
with
GEORGE BRENT
OLIVIA DoHAVlLLAND
JOHN PAYNE
Frank McHugh John
Victor Jory Henry
Also
Novelty "The Story
Alf Noble"
Mermen Get Second
Victory Of Season
ionight
HEEL SWIMMERS
END SEASON, 2-3
By SHELLEY ROLFE
Coach Dick Jamerson was right.
The Carolina swimming boss man had
promised the Tar Heels would beat
Washington and Lee at Bowman
Gray pool last night, and . they did,
winning 42-33 for their second victory
of the season against three losses. It
was the last meet of the season, and
the Carolina swimmers celebrated in
tradtional fashion by throwing two
managers into the pool. Some side
line heckler suggested they pitch
Jamerson in, but nobody did anything
about it.
Behind the Generals in the first
seven events, the Tar Heels went
ahead when Tom McQuade won the
400-meter free style and Bill Thomp
son came in third in the next to last
race. And with victory in the meet
resting on the 400-meter, relay, the
(Continued on last page)
Whee,WeWon!
300-meter medley relay: W. & L.
(Crawford, Aiken, Campbell), first;
UNC, second. Time: 4:14; 200-meter
free style: Farber, W. &. L. first;
Ayers, W. & L. second; Thompson,
UNC, third. Time: 2:54; 50-meter
free style: Wilson, UNC, first; Cow
per, UNC, second, Lawton, W. & L.
third. Time: :29.4; 100-meter free
style: Farber, W. & L. first; Muel
ler, UNC, second; Nash, UNC, third.
Time: 1:65.1.
Diving : Ross, UNC, first 81.7;
Schreeves, W. & L. second 80.4;
Boyce, W. & L. third 72.7; 150-meter
backstroke: Hart, W. &. L. first;
Mueller, UNC, second; Crawford,
W. &L. third. Time: 2:21.9; 200
meter breastroke; Ross, UNC, first;
Woodhouse, UNC, second; Warner,
W. &. L. third. Time: 3:14.6 (new
pool record); 400-meter free style:
McQuade, UNC, first; Hiers, W. &
L. second, Thompson, UNC, third.
Time: 6:9.6; 400-meter relay: UNC,
(Wilson, Cowper, Nash, Mueller)
first; W. & L. Second.
2-,
v 0
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Uncle Sam8 amazing mystery plane
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