THE DAILY TAB
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 14, I9n
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PAGE FOUR
Health Department
To Open Well-Baby
Clinics In Town
Two well-baby clinics, one for white
and one for colored, will be opened by
the local Health department soon to
serve the Carrboro and Chapel Hill
communities, it was announced yes
terday.
The colored, clinic, under the direc
. tion of Dr. Eena Henrywill be open
ed tomorow at the Orange country
training school and will be held the
third Thursday each month thereafter.
The white clinic will be opened March
4.
Services available will be immuniza
tions against diptheria, typhoid fever,
smallpox and other contagious dis
eases; routine physical examinations;
information and advice on diet, cloth
ing, etc, and a limited amount of tonics
and medicines such as cod liver oil
and vitamin tablets for emergency
needs.
Mrs. Holmes To Read
At Bull's Head Tea
Mrs. Urban T. Holmes will read
selections from Robert Nathan's new
novel, "Portrait of Jennie," at the
Bull's Head tea this afternoon at 4:15
in the staff room. of the library.
, Mrs. Holmes played the part of
Flora McDonald in. the Playmaker
production of 'The Highland Call" at
Fayetteville last fall.
Intramurals
(Continued from page three)
Hambright racked up field goals and
Austin added a foul shot while holding
Sigma Chi scoreless, to forge ahead
by a 12-7 score.
Lineups Kappa Sigma No. 3 (27) :
FoIger-5; Jeffress-5;. Umstead; Ed
wards; Reynolds-10; Hambright-5;
Austin-2. Sigma Chi (21): Lentz-2;
Milloway-4; Parker-3; Smith-8; Davis
8; Davis-2; Edwards-2.
ZETA PSI NO. 1
Zeta Psi successfully maintained
its undefeated record for the season
yesterday as it moved one step nearer
Loop Games
(Continued from page three)
tions of more than 250 athletes who
want to participate in the annual
track and field games.
Much of the interest in the meet
will be centered on the returning in
dividual champions. Conference cham
pions in eight indoor events and a like
number of outdoor events have signi
fied their intentions of returning for
the indoor games. . Three of the re
turning individual champions in the
conference won titles in both the in
door and outdoor meets last year.
And there's the non-conference divi
sion which has four champions plan
ning on returning for the games.
Carolina has Bill Corpening, winner
of the high jump and broad jump last
year in the indoor games, and win
ner in the high hurdles in the outdoor
games; Jim Davis, who won the out
door mile;. Tonj Crockett, who won the
outdoor tvrt mile; and Harry March,
winner of the outdoor high jump, back
this year. Maryland has Joe Murphy,
winner of the 00-yard dashi in the in
door affair and the 100- and 220
yard dashes outdoors; Mason Chronis
ter and Tommy Fields, winners in the
one mile and two mile runs indoors,
Alan Miller, indoor quarter mile
champion, and Jim Kehoe, half mile
champion indoors. Bob Montfort,
champion pole vaulter, is Duke's lone
returning champion. Washington and
Lee's returning champion is Bill Wha-
ley , in the 70-yard high hurdles. South
Carolina has Dick Little, broad jump j
champion outdoors, coming back.
University of Virginia has a mo
nopoly on the returning non-conference
men with no less than three of
the four, including Frank Fuller in
the high hurdles, : Bill Perry in the
high jump and .Lee McLaughlin in
the shot put. Leon Chabot of Navy
is the other champion. He won the
60-yard dash.
MEET OF CHAMPIONS
In fact, so many champions from
last year's meet in . which five rec
ords were broken in the conference di
vision and four in the non-conference,
are returning that this year's meet
Mermen Take On
has been
pions."
Entries
the fraternity title by trimming BetarcjU(je.
trmed a "Meet of Cham-
in the four divisions in-
Theta Pi, 28-17.
The Zetes, paced y Wilson and
Carr, piled up a lead in the first period
and were never in danger of being
surpassed. In another center's battle
Carr held the Betas' high scoring
center, Hall, to only four points while
he in turn was leading the winners'
offense with 10. Wilson and Mordecai
were second in the victors' offense
with seven each. Lineups Zeta Psi
No. 1 (28): Wright-4; Wilson-7; Carr
10; Mordecai-7; Hancock. Beta Theta
Pi (17): Woodall; Hall-4; Harvey-4;
Dalton-3; Grant-2; Reed-4.
SIGMA NU
In the concluding fraternity game
of the af ternoon. Sigma Nuvtrimmed
Pi Kappa Alpha No. 2, 20-13. Robbins
with seYen points led the Snakes' of
fensive attack while .Bruner starred
on the defense. Rogers was high scorer
for the losers with seven points. Line
uv9 Sigma Nu (20): . Robbins-7;
Chambliss;"Grimes-2;,Cohoon; Joslin
4: Couehenour-5; Murphy; Bruner;
McNaughton-2. Pi Kappa Alpha No
2 (13): Sloan; Godwin; Ball-2; Duke-
2; Rogers-7; Kimrey-2.
VOLLEY BALL
Chi Psi No. i successfully defended
its volley ball championship yesterday
ai ternoon as.ip mainiamea its uime
feated. record by defeating previously
unbeaten SAE. 2-1. After dropping
the opening match .15-7 the last year's
champions made . a dramatic come
back to win the.next two by 15-5 and
iS-lfl srnres. The winning team is
composed of BrpWn, Neill, Oavis, Ar
mentrout, Stahler and Cale.
Pi Kappa Alpha No. 2 remained in
the. field for top honors in the volley
ball loop as it gained its fifth con
secutive victory with a, 2-0 win over
Chi Psi No. 2- The team, composed of
Hatch," Meserole, Sloan, Ball, Conley,
Kimrey, Godwin nd DeLoach, won
the first game i5-3 and the second
15-4.
ZBT
ZBT, one of the top notch, but un
defeated teams of the league, took
one of the hardest fought battles of
the season as they defeated Chi Psi
2-1. Chi Phi, composed of Walker, Wil
lis, Donovan, ,' Sutton, Cooper . and
Brown won the first game 16-14. The
-victorious team, made up of btem,
3Iunves, Levi, Bosenbloom, Finkle,
Cohen, B. Rosenbloom, .. Winklestein,
and Altshull, came back to take the
final two 15-5 and 15-13.
In the final match of the day Phi
Gamma Delta No. i gained an easy
2-0 victory over Kappa Alpha. The
victorious outfit of Elliot, Snow,
Owens, Brantley, Sugg, and Headles
won the first game 15-3 and the second
15-8.
Send the Daily Tas Heel home.
Southern conference North Caro
lina, defending champions, Maryland,
Duke, South Carolina, VMI, David
son, William and Mary, and Wash
ington and Lee.
Non-conference Virginia, Navy,
Newberry, Georgia, Georgia Tech, and
West Chester state teacher's college
from . Pennsylvania.
Freshman North Carolina, South
Carolina, Duke, Davidson, William
and Mary, Virginia, and Newberry.
Scholastic Charleston high (W.
Va.), Morristown high (Tenn.), Geor
gia Military academy, and R. J. Rey
nolds high school of Winston-Salem.
Fencing:
(Continued from page three)
beat 16-11. W and M has an all-vet-
eral first team, much like Carolina.
Both teams have been fencing each
other for two years now, pitting the
same forces against each other in
dual competition and in tournaments.
This year marks the final year and
climax for the boys who started as
soDhomores in the W&M-Carolina
rivalry which includes the leading
fpneers on both teams and in the
South.
In foil, W and M's strong swords
men are led by three-year men Henry
Kibel and. Paul Makler, followed by
Jim Classman. The Tar Heels pre
sent all three-year veterans in Co
Captains Allan Bloom and Joe Boak
and Dave Malone. ,
FINCH VS. KIBEL
Enee will feature the renewal of
the Finch-Kibel rivalry. In dual
competition last year, Kibel blanked
Finch, the only man , to accomplish
such a feat; but in the Eastern In-
tercollegiates later on in the year,
Finch defeated Kibel for the title.
As in ..foil, W. and M will be missing
the services of their No. 1 man, Wood
bridge, but Makler and Kibel are as
good. Kibel last year won two and
tied one in epee. Finch will be un
defeated in epee when he takes to the
strip tomorrow and is out to stay un
defeated Kibel or no Kibel. Dick
Freudenheim, senior epeeist, is also
pointing for revenge for his defeat
at the hands of Kibel last year.
When a Carolina and a William
and Mary sabre team, meet on the
strips, bystanders had better stand
clear, for there's sure to be some hefty
swinging and clashing of steel., Caro
lina will be weaker in sabre than
last year, mainly lue to the loss of
Wayne Williamson who cannot make
this trip. In his place, following
Bloom, will be Lome Payne and Bob
Tolmach, two pretty dependable sab-
reists. It will be hard for these three
(Continued from page three f
sible, the Dolphins are set on making
the Florida men break every local
pool record to win. They are out to
"get the 'Gators."
FLORIDA ON TOUR
Florida at present ii on a tour
through the south, having Kentucky,
Georgia Tech, Tennessee, Duke, Caro
lina and State on schedule this week.
Kentucky was toppled, 58-17, with
several sophomores beating the fa
mous Rood brothers and Captain Chic
Acosta.
If they aren't too tired after the
Florida meet Friday, the Dolphins
will be favored to whip Washington
and Lee Saturday. But the Generals
p'resent several men who placed con
sistently high all last year and may
be very dangerous. Farber, second in
the 100 and 220 in the conference in
1939, heads the Generals. Other
stndouts are Schultz, Ohio interscho
lastic champion in the 220, and War
ner in the breaststroke.
Tar Babies
(Continued from page three)
fensive work by both teams, and four
minutes and 35 seconds passed before
Bean scored for Lees McRae. At the
half the Tar Babies were leading 24-13.
With the third team in the game
for the Babies, Lees McRae ran the
score up to 37-31 and seemed to be un
stoppable with three minutes left to
play, but Siewert sent in the first team
and almost immediately the score
jumped to 44-33. Carolina had pos
session of the ball under its own basket
at the end. -
Phantoms Take
Continued from page three)
in 19 games and the second over the
Eagles. v j
Bill Holleman and Paul Roye led
the second half scoring for McCrary.
Both fouled out before the end, of
proceedings; Roye with 16 points and
Holleman with 14. The Phantoms
used 15 men and George Glamack was
high man with 13 points.
AT START
Carolina was off with several leaps
and bounds at the start. Ben Dilworth
opened with two quick field goals and
Les Branson added a foul. The score
kept mounting moving from 11-2 to
20-4 an4 so on through the period. The
Phantoms were close to perfection and
in no way resembled the team that
paraded around the second period.
Glamack picked up seven points and
Dilworth six during the half.
McCrary made only , two field goals
and two foul shots while the Phantoms
were moving at top speed. Bill Lange
used two complete teams during the
period. The starting club of Dilworth,
Glamack, Foy Roberson, Les Branson
and Paul Severin moved the count to
22-4. The next outfit kept things mov
ing and it was 28-6 at the helf .
Wrestlers
(Continued from page three)
Generals, while the varsity ought to
spill the W and L crowd for the first
time in eight years.
In the one preliminary trial fight
yesterday Gene,; Devant showed that
he was still number one man in the
121-pound division as he threw his
leading contender, Picket Hamlin.
All-University Meet
(Continued from page three)
Gloves competition, or who i3 not on
the freshman or varsity boxing teams,
is eligible to enter.
SCHEDULED BOUTS .
127-pound class Warren vs. Kess
ler. 135-pound class Robinson vs. Leak;
Nimmons vs. Jernigan; Conrad vs.
Perky.
145-pound class Oswald vs. Bill
Wilson; A. D. Wilson vs. Powers; Jones
vs. Mendalhall; Graham vs. Kelley.
155-pound class Griff en vs. Sims;
Darden vs. Grant.
Playing The Game
(Continued from page three)
Friday Carolina's swimmers meet
Florida, for three years champions
of the Southeastern conference and
winners of 38 consecutive meets.
Saturday the Carolina wrestlers
meet Washington and Lee, co-champion
with VMI of the' conference.
Wrestling has long been neglected.
Few have thought it a spectator
sport, but those who try it usually
go back for more. Interest here is
weak, but at Annapolis 2,000 Mid
shipmen and their dates watched
Navy and. Carolina tangle on the
mats earlier this winter.
Boxers Practice
(Continued from page three)
contest. -
Maryland and South Carolina have
also beaten Duke. Carolina after los
ing badly to Virginia during a night
of general horrors has licked succes-
Corrected Honor Roll
Shows Seven Omitted
Brings Total To 380 '
Due to error seven University
dents were left off the honor re f
the fall quarter the Central Record
office announced yesterday.
With the addition of these seven :e
total is brought to 380 and an inerea
of six is reached over the fall quarts
of 1938. When the total was prev.v
ly printed the honor roll fell ore le
than the roll of the year before.
The supplementary list of the
dents making all A's includes S. y
Smith of Pilot Mountain, N. C, H. y,
Symmes of Wilmington, and I.
Zuckerman of Far Rockaway, X. y
Those left off the "B" honor roll were
B. F. Aycock of Fremont, Lloyd Bon
of Shelby; Wallace deWitt of Erie,
Pennsylvania, and C. R. Williams of
Rockingham.
For a student to make the honor roll
he must have a "B" average and car
ry a minimum of 15 hours work. There
must be no incompletes in the report
and only students who are regularly
enrolled are counted.
sively State. VPI and Maryland. Cit
adel tied the Tar Heels, 4-4, to be
named as co-favorites in the Southern
conference tournament, which comes
up next weekend at Columbia.
Other that Bobbitt's demise, Ron
man has felt no rude shocks lately.
Every man has come through without
injuries, and all will be ready for
Duke.
Th William College Nws is mak
ing a special movi of all phases f
campus life.
Send the Daily Tar Heel home.
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(5 I NEVER KNEW THAT ABOUT QUAKERS!
a world-wide i
7t
CAN MARRIED PEOPLE "KEEP YOUNG BY
TRAILING THE YOUNGER SET? What do you think
of married people who continuously horn in on young
people's parties? Here's the story of a husband and wife
who tried to find the fountain of youth that way . . . and
what happened to them. A short story in this week's Post,
You're As fild As You Feel, by RICHARD SHERMAN.
HOW TO CATCH A CROOK WITH ROD AND
REEL. Crunch and Desperate put to sea, in this week's
Post, on theirrnost dangerous adventure to date. An ad
venture that started as an innocent b;g-game fishing trip
and ended with guns in their ribs and the Poseidon headed
for nowhere. An exciting yarn on page 12 of The Saturday
Evening Post. Crunch Goes Haywire,by PHILIP WYLIE.
WHY NO "BLITZKRIEG" IN THE BALKANS?
The countries that touched off the last war aren't even in
this one. Why? And for all their rich possessions, Stalin
and Hitler have so far kept hands off. Why? Meet the
Balkans' crafty strong-arm squad Carol, Boris, Paul,
Metaxas and Gen. Ismet Inonu and you'll know. Don't
miss The Balkans Play It Safe, by JOHN T. WHITAKER.
WALTER D. EDMONDS NEW CIRCUS NOVEL.
The prize-winning author of Drums Along the Mohawk
re-creates the romance and glamourous adventure of two
young runaways with a small-time traveling circus, a
hundred years ago in upstate New York. Start reading
this colorful new Post novel. Second part of eight.
&
7
Do you know how the Quakers can run
relief organization on an annual budget of only $90,000?
How they got the Nazis permission to enter Germany and
to help the Jews? What they did in Spain? ... An eye
opening article about an army that quietly fights for peace,
not for war. Read 100,000 Quakers May Be Right, by
STANLEY HIGH.
"SHE'S A CHAMP!" "SHE'S A QUITTER!"
Queer horse? 'jThe Lady." She was a chestnut darling with
the legs of a dancer, and each hoof left a print the size of
a teacup's rim. A born racer who mysteriously quit
every race at the half-way mark. . . The heart-thumping
story of a horse trainer who refused to lose faith, The
Lady Was A Flop, by BORDEN CHASE.
THE MAN WITH 3500 VALENTINES. In a pack
rat's paradise in two rooms on 42nd Street in New York
City, Sy Seidman has an amazing collection of 3500 old
valentines, a dozen of which appear in color in the Post
this week. The unique story of a hobbyist who collects
everything from fans and souvenir hankies to banks and
presidential songs. See Roses are Red.
' . s . ' ...... : . ,
AND . . . The exciting solution of Leslie Ford's murder
mystery novel; another chapter in Dime Store, the life of
F. W. Woolworth, merchant prince; short stories, edito
rials, poems, cartoons, and Post Scripts all in The
Saturday Evening Post this week.
to match last year's 6-3 win, but they
have a good chance of doing so. j