PAGE FOUR
THE DAILY TAR HEEL
THURSDAY, MAY 25, ittg
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' ' - - - -'- ' A
Mural Trackmen
(Continued from page three)
DKE; Winbourne, SAE; Murchison,
t. Anthony; Parham, Zeta PsiH
Broadfoot, SAE; Darden, Phi Gamma
Delta. i
THIRD HEAT: Singletary, Beta
Theta Pi; Dilworth, Chi Psi; Dunn,
SAE; Rice, ZBT; LaLanne, Kappa
Sigma; Smith, SAE; Wilson, Zeta Psi;
Torrey, St. Anthony; Carlton, DKE.
100 YARD (DORMITORY)
(First three men in each heat qual
ify for finals.)
FIRST HEAT: Baker, Grimes; An
derson, Mangum; Allen, Graham; He
witt, Old West; Gersten, Ruffin; Ros
coe, Grimes ; Corneigie, BVP ; Folger,
Grimes.
SECOND HEAT: Southerland, Man
gum; Cuneo,. Lewis; Mitten, Ruffin;
Sparrow, Everett; Shytle, Everett;
Snyper, Mangum; Urban, Grimes.
THIRD HEAT: White, Grimes;
Nesbit, Mangum ; Markham, Man
gum; Smathers, Graham; Van Cise,
BVP; Anderson,. " Grimes; Bowman,
Old West; Lamb, Graham.
100 YARD (FRATERNITY)
(First three in each heat qualify
for finals.) ' 4
. FIRST HEAT: Hambright, Kappa
Sigma; Parham, Zeta Psi; Maynard,
Phi Delta Thdla; Carlton, DKE;
Brunner, Sigma Nu; Rice, ZBT; Lit
tle, Beta Theta Pi; Clodfelter, Zeta
Psi; Dunn, SAE; R. Torrey, St. An
thony. SECOND HEAT: Dilworth, Chi Psi;
Blalock, Zeta Psi; Singletary, Beta
Theta Pi; Broadfoot, SAE; Dees, Sig
ma Nu; Hitchcock, DKE; Davis, Beta
Theta Pi; Darden, Phi Gamma Delta;
Murchison, St. Anthony; Clark, Zeta
Psi. v
THIRD HEAT: Sumner, Kappa Sig
ma; Quarles, DKE; Winbourne, SAE;
Vincent, ATO; Nicholson, Sigma Nu;
Walker, fit. Anthony; Wilson, Zeta
Psi; Linker, DKE; Smith, SAE.
FIELD EVENT QUALIFIERS
Javelin throw 4 to 6 o'clock six
throws each: Lalanne, Kappa Sigma?
Schinhan, DKE; Carlton, DKE; Rich
ardson, SAE; Hambright, Kappa Sig
ma; Millaway, Sigma Chi; Grant, Beta
Theta Pi; Vincent, ATO; Schroth,
Beta Theta Pi; Woodson, DKE; Davis,
Beta Theta Pi; Maynard, Phi Delta
Theta; David, Sigma Chi; Harnden,
Chi Psi; Scales, Sigma Chi; Linker,
DKE; Carr, Zeta Psi; Daniels, SAE;
Mitchell, Beta Theta Pi; Collett, Beta
Theta Pi; Upton, Zeta Psi; Noell, Chi
Psi; Beadles, Sigma Chi; Darden, Phi
Gamma Delta; Mordecai, Zeta Psi.
Shot put Fraternity 4 to 6 o'clock
six throws each eight for finals:
Siewers, Beta Theta Pi; Grosse, St.
Anthony; Dilworth, Chi Psi; Hitch
cock, DKE; Carr, Zeta Psi; Kimball,
DKE; Bryant, Lambda Chi Alpha;
Clark, Zeta Psi; Mitchell, Beta Theta
Pi; Burtt, Chi Psi; Crabtree, Sigma
Chi; Beattie, Phi Delta Theta.
Discus throw Fraternity i to 6
o'clock six throws each eight for
finals: Davis, Sigma Chi; Peiffer, Phi
Gamma Delta; Morrisette, DKE;
Grosse, St. Anthony; Mitchell, Beta
Theta Pi; Watson, Chi Psi; Noell, Chi
Psi; Murphy, Sigma Nu; Bournique,
St. Anthony; Bryant, Lambda Chi
Alpha; Blalock, Zeta Psi; Walker, St.
Anthony; Millaway, Sigma Chi; Siew
ers, Beta Theta Pi; Wilson, Zeta Psi;
McCord, Phi Delta Thtea; Wright,
ATO; Scales, Sigma Chi; DeLoach, Pi
K A; Schinhan, DKE; Dilworth, Chi
Psi; Crabtree, Sigma Chi; Clark, Zeta
Psi; Richardson, SAE; Turner, DKE;
Fuller, Zeta Psi; Park, Sigma Nu;
ULJU
Hunter Lists
(Continued from first page)
Wall, chairman; Misses Joe Martin,
Winnie Shell, Marion Igo, Elizabeth
Schleeter, Lucy Belle Ecles, and Lois
Barnes; and George Harrelson, Dick
White, Phil Ellis, Billy Winstead, Win
ford Norman, Charles Moore, John B.
Harris,: Bill Brown, Albert Mathes,
Clyde Brooks, Pete Burkheimer, Bob
De Guzman, Bobv Woodard, Marshel
Karesh, J. L. Pittman, Tom Keys, Ma
rion Hamer, Jesse Pike, Joe Holeman,
Paul Alf ord, Howard Guion, Joe Daw
son, George E. Nicholson, Frank Rob
inson, Seymour Tick, Bob Berbert,
Dave Bowman, Carlton Watkins, Rich
ard Worley, George Ralston, Morris
Rosenberg, Bill Blalock, Gilly Nichol
son, Bill Tenenblatt, Ray Stroupe, Hal
Armentrout, A. C, Hall, Lamar Gudg
er, Bob Alexander, James L. Pittman,
John Latham, Bob Council, Jim Mc
Callum, Bunk Anderson, Ray Pittman,
Don Ackerman, Billy Weil, Shelley
Rolfe, Bill Stauber, Sanford Stein,
Martin Harmon, Ed Rankin, Bernard
Nordan, Joe Burton, Sam McPherson,
Buddy Cheshire, John Laurens, and
John Singletary.
Frosh Fireballers
(Continued from page three)
three.
Fred Stallings -and Tom Snypes
pitched the remaining innings, the for
mer acounting for a victory during the
six frames he went against Wardlaw
prep early in the season. '
Bo Reynolds, the team's most con
sistent hitter, piled 19 hits in 49 times
at bat for a .388 BA. Left fielders
Hardy Thompson and Phil Moore fol
lowed with respective .375 and .353 av
erages. Hal Pope, substitue catcher,
hit .333 to round out the .300 class.
Ernie( Carraway missed out by six
points with .294, and Popeye Jones,
leading the team with 12 runs batted
in, came in at the .279 mark.
Caretaker Of
(Continued from first page)
Walter explained.
BEEN AT IT EVER SINCE
Walter 'took the job in 1925 with
the intention of keeping" it only two
weeks, but he's "been at it ever since."
Walter continued by saying, "Some
people think we buy bodies before
they are dead, but we don't, we don't
take anybody unless he is dead."
The new medical building will have
a cold storage "vault" for the "stiffs"
and Walter thinks he will like his job
"a lot better." He will just have "to
wax the bodies, wrap them up in
cheese cloth, and hang them up in cold
storage. It will be a lot cleaner, too,"
Walter added.
Torrey, St. Anthony; Collett, Beta
Theta Pi; Seymour, Chi Psi; Kimball,
DKE; Hall, Beta Theta Pi; Gugert,
Chi Psi; Woodson, DKE; Lalanne,
Kappa Sigma.
Broad jump Fraternity 4 to 6
o'clock six jumps each eight for
finals: Harnden, Chi Psi; Parham,
Zeta Psi; Lalanne, Kappa Sigma; Dil
worth, Chi Psi; Gugert, Chi Psi;
Clark, Zeta Psi; Ashby, ATO;
Wilson, Zeta Psi; Davis, Sigma Chi;
Bryant, Lambda Chi Alpha; Burtt,
Chi Psi; Nash, Zeta Psi; Walston,
Zeta Psi; Crabtree, Sigma Chi; Rice,
ZBT; Beadles, Sigma Chi; Torrey, St.
Anthony.
Til f UHIiMTB
FOR xk O0URS!
Oh, hoy, vhnt a riot!
Laagh till it hurts!
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Cartoon
Novelty
TODAY
AND
FRIDAY
Annual Patterson
(Continued from first page)
raitory which had made the most out
standing record. -
These Grail awards were presented
by Paul Thompson, president of the
organization, to the following:, Chuck
Kline, football; Jimmy Howard, bas
ketball; Dave Morrison, track; George
Nethercutt, baseball; Ed Dickerson,
boxing; Bill Rood, tennis;, Edward
Mueller, minor sports award; Dick
Kendrick, outstanding freshman ath
lete; Stanley Van Cise, dormitory in
tramural athlete; Kenyon Wilson, 'fra
ternity intramural athlete; and the
dormitory award went to Battle-Vance-Pettigrew.
Zeta Psi fraternity was awarded the
Delta Kappa Epsilon trophy for show
ing the best scholarship-athletic at
tainments among the fraternities.
Pete Heyward, president of the DKE
fraternity, made the award.
The publications keys given to those
persons who have worked six or more
quarters on the four campus publica
tions had not arrived at the time of
the affair last night. Upon their ar
rival, they will be . presented to D. E.
Bishop, Edna Bynum, W. G. Broadfoot,
W. L. Beerman, Pou Bailey, W. W.
Bniner, Alman Barbour, Ernest
Craige, G. E. Deyo, W. A. Fonvielle,
L. M. Ferling, Hugh Foss, A. J. Green.
XJ. B. Garland, L. E. Hoenig (honor
ary), Laffitte Howard, Jane Hunter,
Harry Jones, William Joslin,rErnest
King, R. Z. Lerner, C. B. McGaughey,
B. F. Merrill, T. L. Morrow, J. T. Mor
row, J. T. McAden, W. H. Ogburn, B.
L. Premo, R. M. Pittman, H. Roberts,
W. E. Stauber, N. V. Stockton, Jr., L.
J. Schleifer, A. C. Spies, Gladys Tripp,
A. J. Utley, T. H. Vance and L. M.
Wiggins.
Interf raternity trophies presented
were : intramural football champions,
Zeta Psi ; basketball champions, Phi
Kappa Sigs and Softball, Zeta Psi.
Zeta Psi also received a cup for hav
ing the greatest number of intramural
points. Interfraternity council head
Studie Ficklen made the awards.
Big Track Year
(Continued from page three)
cated this time in several other meets,
ran :14.6 against Georgia and then
popped off a :14.5 in the trials of the
conference meet to tie the conference
record. Seemingly not content with
this, Wild Bill ran :14.3 in the con
ference finals last Saturday to equal
the time that stood as an American
college and AAU record when Coach
Johnny Morriss ran it some time ago.
Hendrix, having placed third in the
Bishop Cheverus 1000-yard invitation
al run last winter at Boston, lowered
the University half mile record three
times. Against Duke he ran 1:54.1 to
beat Williamson's school record by one
tenth of a second. At Annapolis he
ran 1:53.3, equalling the conference
record set by Coleman Headley of
Maryland last year. Hendrix ran
52.7 in this year's conference meet
for a mark which probably won't be
approached soon.
Davis' 4:14.2 mile was one of the
fastest college miles run all spring,
and broke Williamson's school record
of 4:15.23 and the conference record
of 4:15.7 set by Hubert "Red" Lewis
of Duke, now Blue Devil coach, in 1933.
MARCH MARCHES ON
March this spring bettered two Uni
versity records he set last year and
also set two others. At Charlottesville
against Virginia, the time he competed
in only one event, March ran the low
hurdles in 23.4 seconds to lower his
old school record of :23.9. In the AAU
meet he ran the 100-yard dash for the
only time this year, and was timed in
:9.8, which equalled the school and
field record. In the same meet he ran
the 440-yard hurdles in 54 seconds, one
and one tenth seconds faster than the
winning time in the 400-meter hurdles-
nine feet shorter-at the Penn relays
the day before. He concluded his rec
ord-breaking performances by high
lummner t ieet ivz incnes m xne con
MM A 1 . . ll.
ference meet to better his old Univer
sity height of 6 feet 1 inches"
Royce Jennings and Tom Crockett
set Fetzer field records, Jennings' time
being also a University mark. Jen
nings ran his best race against Harold
Johnson in the Carolina-Duke meet,
running 48.6 seconds to beat Red
Drake's record of :49.3 set in 1935.
Crockett, having set the field record
of 9.51 against Princeton last year, im
proved his record to 9 : 41.8 in the Tiger
meet this year. In the Southern con
fenrence meet he ran 9.40.4 for anew
conference record, and Fred Hardy,
coming in second behind him, also bet
tered the old mark
TEAM WELL BALANCED
These men were the stars all season,
but all of the team must have been good
in order to place in all but two events
in the conference meet. This year's
team was the best balanced team of all.
Tom Holmes, who didn't run track
until he came to college because his
high school had no track, was the
team's leading sprinter and one of the
high scorers for the season. Having
Board Is Set Up
4
(Continued from first page)
ing, recommendations as to where em
phasis should be placed; to evaluate
the Council's procedure in violations
of the honor system and the campus
code; to consider the thoroughness and
fairness of investigation, the basis of
decisions, the types of discipline, the
method of follow-up, arid recommend
changes or approval of those tech
niques, and act ;as an interpretor of
council procedure and action to the stu
dent body; to study the council policy
of secrecy in honor system cases and
make recommendations.
The second phase of the proposals
deals with policy in student govern
ment. The suggestion read: to study
the possibility of students having some
say in the formation of curricular pol
icy, and to recommend what fields and
techniques might best be used first; to
study the relation of fraternity self
government and administration pol
icy; to consider the values or, lack of
values in our present form of class
organization and make recommenda
tions if changes are considered wise;
to investigate the status and use of
student fees and make,, recommenda
tions as to their use or changes in
amount; and to attempt to make stu
dents realize that fees are self-imposed
and they are our form of taxation.
; 1
door games, he was Carolina's only sure
threat in the dashes, and also helped
out in the 220 low hurdles when need
ed. Chuck Slagle and Bob Weinberger
led the shot putters and threw better
this year than the throws of last year's
team. Neither of them was able to
approach Evins' distance, but they did
well against their opposition. Wein-
bereger, showing an improvement of
three feet over his throws last year,
took the only first in the shot put all
season in the Navy meet and put Caro
lina into the lead in 'that meet, which
had been figured as the team's tough
est of the year.
Joe Hilton, the only Carolina man
throwing the javelin until late in the
season, threw 191 feet 2 inches to
take second in the conference for the
second straight year. Jim Richards,
having hurt his arm in the opening
meet, placed in the conference javelin
event, but his best event was the dis
cus, in which he had the best throw of
the year for the Tar Heels.
March, in addition to setting his
four University records, turned in the
best performance in a fifth event the
broad jump. He jumped 22 feet 8
inches at the Florida relays, better
than any other broad jump perfor
mance all year. Jim Piver and Red
Sanders.led the riole vaulters, both do
ing 11 feet several times and Piver get
ting a tie for the first place at that
height in the Georgia meet.
Greenland, with an area of 827,300
square miles, is the largest island in
the world.
r.r -WiMMUn puuuuumu mwtoy
gf
It leads in acceleration . . it leads in hill-climbing
and it also leads in sales!
In more ways than one, this fleet, handsome Chevrolet, the ace per
j former of the low-price field, is the first car of the land!
) It's first in sales, of course, for the eighth time in the last nine
years, topping all other cars in public demand!
It's first in all the many things which spell value, which, means
' high quality in every single part that goes into the car, and low cost
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It's first in acceleration first in hill-climbing first in all-round
performance with economy!
Get the most for your money buy a new Chevrolet!
Everv AQ seconds
,
501 W. Franklin St.
SmaHFrjr
. (Continued from page three)
there's-still-hope-for-me gleams in his
eye.
.
POT-POURRI
Now that the Lower Quadrangle
will have two new dorms added on to
it, the section will henceforth be known
as the Lower Sextangle. ... Julian
Hayes, who labors in the reserve room
and behind the main circulation desk,
has become so identified with the li
brary that people just look at him on
the street and exclaim, "Oh hell, I for
got! I've got a book overdue again."
. . . Eloise Parrish (her first name is
Mabel, but it's your life if you call her
that) is the only coed in four years who
ever got past first base with Hal Bis
sett. . . . The June issues of Harpers,
Scribners and Atlantic Monthly all
contain stories by the late Thomas
Wolfe, which should put the finances of
his most ardentadmirer and imitator,
Frank Holeman, at a decidedly low
ebb.". .. Bill Ray claims that, outside
of going witli each other, he and Alta
jane Holden have done nothing that
would make, good copy. Altajane re
fused to comment. . . . And then there's
t'he red-headed coed who relaxes so ef
fectively that her boy friends have
awarded her the. nickname of "Mat
tress." ADIEU, KIND FRIENDS, ADIEU
Since, this is the last "Small Fry"
of the year', we wish to make the fol
lowing acknowledgments: ,
To Nell Mclntyre for making us
aware what a fundamentally elemen
tal creature man really is.
To Virginia Giddens for being the
butt of so many of our choicest cracks,
half of which never should have been
made. Although she1 has taken it all
much too seriously, she bore the stigma
of being married to us with surprising
ly good grace. We sincerely regret the
discomfort we've caused her and hope
that someday she will manage to think
a little better of us than she does now.
To Gilbert McCutcheon who had a
long interview with us about his fra-
It'll Be Hot Here
This Summer
If you're going to Summer School assure yourself of
a cool place to stay. Large rooms, comfortable parlora,
showers, and a select group. You'll have all of these for
7.50 Per Session
. at
THE CHI PHI HOUSE
Call 5051 or See V. M. Montsinger
IL4 I'U.
M
of everv tin cnmkn.. U....- '.
m , wv u new
CHAPEL HILL
Exhibit Features
(Continued from first page)
are the Virginia Dare Commemora
tive issua of 1938, the Lindberg Air
mail issue of 1927, the Hawaii Com
memorative issue of 1937, and recent
Farley commemoratives.
The purpose of the display is to in
terest people in stamps and to form
those already interested into a club.
The library has a complete set of
books on stamps, several of which are
included in the exhibit.
ternity and managed to act like a per
fect gentleman, although he -felt lie
wringing our neck.
To Doris Goerch for her verbal sur
prises. Every time she opens her
mouth, out comes first-rate copy.
To that attractive third-floor Spea
cer brunette with the independent mind
and the trim ankles (this narrows
down the field considerably) who
taught us that there's no sense trying
to win a girl when her heart belongs
to someone else no matter how dis
tant or indifferent that someone elae
may be.
To our editor for sticking by us in
our hour of need.
Amen ! . .
The North Carolina
the Carolina chickadee.
state bird ia
CLASSIFIED
YOUNG ATTORNEY planning to at
tend summer law school desires to
keep some professor's house open
from June 8 to August 26. " Single.
Very conservative. Write William
T. Manor, 325 Cherokee Place,
Charlotte, N.' C.
FOR THE SUMMER SESSION Cool,
quiet, comfortable rooms. Pleasant
surroundings with a select group.
Convenient to thje campus and the
Library. See Duncan McColl or Al
bert Maynard at the Phi Delta
Theta House. Phone 5041.
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won the 70-yard low hurdles in the in