mlp mar ports WEDNESDAY, MARCH 5, 1941 CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA Swimmers Retain Comferemee Title By earning m6 TTft Roger Weil, Sam Gregory Co-Captain 1942 Matmen Both Juniors Lost Only One Match In 1941 Competition Breaking precedence by selecting the leaders for the next season at a meet ing following the conference tourna ment, lettennen chose Sam Gregory cf Halifax and Roger Weil of New York City as co-captains of the 1942 wrestling team. The two captain-elects compiled the best records on the mat team in the recently completed season, both being undefeated in Southern conference dual meet competition, and each hay ing suffered only one loss during the rear season, both at the hands of Navy grapplers. Weil, seeded number one in the 155-pound class of the tournament, lost in the finals to Car ter Beamer of VMI, to take second place in that division. Gregory cap tured a third place in the 165 pound weight by conquering Canup of N. C. State. Weil, who saw competition in every dual meet of the season, compiled six victories in seven starts, holds deci sions over Davidson, Duke, VMI, Vir ginia Tech, State, and Washington and Lee, bowing only to Bennett of Navy. The Tar Heel 155-pounder, who prep ped at Choate, came into prominence only this year, after a rather mediocre season in 1940. Conspicuous parts of Weil's grappling paraphernalia were bandages and plaster, which he wore in most of his matches, due to mat barns, bruises, and boils, which both ered him all year. A steadfast pro ponent of leg holds, Weil was an ag gressive fighter, and his main weapon was a punishing figure-four, which he used to good advantage to tire his op ponents. Although not as aggressive and flashy as Weil, Gregory was a steady performer all year, and turned in five victories in six times out, missing only the Virginia Tech meet because of illness. Gregory held decisions over Duke, Davidson, VMI, State, and See WRESTLING, Page 4 Coed Sports Schedule Wednesday 3:00 Basketball. 4:00 Modern dancing, 304 Woollen gymnasium. 5:00 Fencing. 7:30 Social dancing, 304 Woollen gymnasium. 4- I Mill at Baseball Slate Lists 23 Games Carolina's varsity baseball team will meet Cornell, Navy and Sprine field, crack Eastern teams, and Mich igan's fine club from the Mid-West in feature contests of a 23-game sched ule, announced yesterday by Assist ant Athletic Director Bo Shepard. Springfield, Cornell and . Michigan all come to Chapel Hill for games with the Tar Heels. Carolina will play Navy in the Middies' stronghold Twenty-one of the 23 contests are with college nines and the collegiate card opens here Wednesday, March 26, with Carolina playing Springfield. Preceding this game are contests with two strong independent teams, May Hosiery and Hanes Hosiery Mills on March 21 and 22. The annual three-game Carolina Duke series calls for games at Dur ham, Chapel Hill, and Greensboro. Carolina will also play eight of the 15 conference teams. The schedule: March 21 May Hosiery Burlington s March 22 Hanes Hosiery Mill at Winston-Salem March 26 Springfield here April 2 Cornell here April 3 Washington and Lee here April o-William and Mary here April 8--Davidson here April 11 Washington and Lee at Lexington, Va. April 12 VMI at Lexington, Va. April 14 Michigan here April 15 Wake Forest here April 19 Davidson at Davidson April 22 N. C. State here April 24 Virginia at Charlottes ville, Va. April 25 Maryland at College Park, Md. April 26 Navy at Annapolis, Md. Anril 29 Wake Forest at Wake Forest - May 3 Virginia here .May 6 N. C. State at Raleigh May 10 Duke at Greensboro May 12 Duke here , May 14 Duke at Durham May 17 VMI here Cadets from The Citadel, military college of South Carolina, trained officers of the famous Palmetto regi ment in 1846 for the Mexican war. F t :'.Ah. ,- .. f r . i S9f tr. f t- L ft; i - ' i Tart i ' -. . I " i. , i v ""'.'"sf ...... - . 1 . " SOUTHERN CONFERENCE SWIMMING CHAMPIONS for 1941 are these Carolina mermen. Front row: Don Sittman, George Peacock, Bill Elmore, Don Nicholson, and Johnny Feuchtenberger. Second row: Buzz Mitchell, George Coxhead, Lou Scheinman, Bill Thompson, Captain Jim Barclay, George Meyer, Whit Lees, and Billy Stone. Third row: Momo Mahoney, Marvin Ostrowsky, Bob Rose, Henry Gross, Bob Ousley, Roy Gibson, and Coach Dick Jamerson. Back row: Peyton Townes, assistant manager, Pembroke Rees, head manager, George Adams, Fred Crows on, Truman Hobbs, Hawley Funke, Norman Primack. Andy Weiss, leading 440-yard free style ace, was hot present when this picture was taken. Favorites Advance In Dorm League; Other Teams Win By Narrow M argms Basketball K No. 1, 22; Town No. 1, 20. . Town No. 2, 29; H No. 2, 28. Law School No. 1, 53; Mangum No. 1, 31. . .Ruffin, 50; Steele, 29. BVP No. 2, 34; Everett No. 1, 32. Lewis No. 1, 47; Aycock No. 1, 22. t The two favorites in the dormitory tournament, Lewis and Law School, took their first games of the cage tour ney in fine style. Lewis defeated Ay- cock, 47-to-22, and Law School over came Mangum, 53-to-31. Lewis showed a well-balanced at tack in winning its game with com parative ease. They went out into the lead at the beginning and were never headed. Roy Lee Connor used his height to good advantage getting re bounds and took scoring honors with 16 points. Roy Asch with 12 and Char lie Rich with nine points played out standing games, for Lewis. Rodman was' best for Aycock with nine points. Mangum proved no match for the fast-breaking Law School quint and went down, 53-to-31. At the half the winners led, 28-to-12, and increased i their lead in the final half. Allen : Cobb with 14 and Louis Gaylord with 10 points led the victors' scoring. Ravenel and Stone also played fine games. For the losers Sparrow and Markham with 10 points each led the scoring. In a hard-fought game K triumphed over Town No. 1, 22-to-20. The K five put on a great defensive game in the second half, holding Town to three points, while they scored eight points. In the final five minutes with Town leading, 20-18, Julian Miller tied the score for K at 20-all and Ralph Craw ford dropped in the winning goal with two minutes to go. Miller with eight points was the game's high scorer while Crawford was runner-up with seven markers. For Town, Scully with six points and Marks with five were See INTRAMURALS, Page h Ronman Will Send Gennett, Sanders To Ring Nationals Boxing Coach Mike Ronman an nounced yesterday that he is making plans to enter at least two Carolina mittmen in the National Intercolle giate Boxing tournament which will be held March 27-29 at Penn State. Coach Ronman said that he will definitely enter Co-captains Andy Gen nett and Red Sanders in the tourney. On the basis of their splendid per formances in the recent conference meet, both men have proved that they can give good accounts of themselves among the nation's best. The two fighters have lost only one bout apiece during the last year and both won individual league crowns at Columbia last weekend. In the national , tourney will be boxers from the country's finest ( ring teams including Syracuse, Wisconsin, Army, Idaho and the Southeastern Louisiana Teachers' college. The lat ter school is undefeated this year, has won its, closest match. by & score of 5 to 2, and recently gained a vic tory over Idaho, last year's tourney winner. Arm Infection Keeps Big George Abed in Infirmary Mural Schedule i 2 3 K V I Tastes good...costsJittle and swell fuino , - and buy several P i MINT vu.f k Basketball 4:00 Court No. 1. Kappa Sig No. 1 vs. Chi Phi; Court No. 2 ZBT vs. Phi Delta Theta No. 1;. 5:00 Court No. 1. SAE No. vs. Phi Kappa Sigma; Court No. Zeta Psi vs. Chi Psi; Court No. Grimes No. 1 vs. Law School. Volleyball 500 Chi Psi No. 2 vs. Pi Lambda Phi; Sigma Nu No. 2 vs. Phi Delta Theta No. 1. Table Tennis Tables on main court behind bleachers. 3:00 Lewis No. 1 vs.. Town, No. 3; K No. . 1 vs. Mangum No. 2; Town No. 4 vs. Manly. 3:30 Steele No. 2 vs. BVP No. 1; TEP No. 2 vs. Phi Kappa Sig ma No. 3; Phi Delta Theta No. 2 vs. Zeta Psi No. 3. 4:00 Kappa Alpha No. 2 vs. Chi Psi No.' 2; Beta Theta Pi No. 3 vs. DKE No. 2; Zeta Psi No. 1 vs. Phi. Gamma Delta No. 2. 4:30 Sigma Chi . No. 1 vs. Phi Delta Theta No. 1; Beta Theta Pi No. 1 vs. Phi Gamma Delta No. 3; Phi Kappa Sigma No. 1 vs. SAE No. 1. 5:00 Zeta Psi No. 2 vs. Pi Lamb da Phi No. 2; SAE No. 3 vs. St. Anthony No. 1; Everett No. 1 vs. BVP No. 2. 5:30 Kappa Sigma No. 2 TEP No. 1. vs. Big George Glamack was confined to the University infirmary last night with a severe infection of left elbow, caused by a bruise, that has been termed "very dangerous" by infirmary physicians. The infection began last Thursday afternoon, the day of the Southern conference tournament in Raleigh, but George said nothing to anyone about it except the team physician because he didn't want the injury to look like an alibi. Now that the tourney is over George remarks that "the swelling and soreness continued to increase all duriner the eame and when it ended my arm was paining me very severe ly." He continued that had the White Phantoms won over Duke Thursday night he would not have been able to play Saturday because then his arm had swollen to almost twice its normal size. He still believed it to be only a minor bruise, however, and neglected seeing any medical authority until Monday when he talked with Dr. E. M. Hedgepeth of the University medi cal staff. Dr. Hedgepeth confined him to the infirmary and has taken every precau tion for the' safety of Big George's 458 - point arm in 1940 and 538 in 1941. An identical injury occurred to Glamack his sophomore year immed See ARM INFECTION, Page 4 Swimming Summary Carolina 38, State 37. 300-meter medley relay State first (Ingram, May, Peele). Carolina (Gib son, Sittman, Thompson). Time 3:50.5. New, dual meet record. Old record 4:15.4. - 200-meter freestyle .'Barclay (C) first, Stone (C) second, Katterman (S) third. Time 2:32.7. New dual meet record.- Old record 2:46.4. 50-meter freestyle Cox (S) first, Bower (S) second, Lees (C) third. Time 29.0. New dual meet record. Old record 29.8. Diving Nicholson (C) first, 91; Feuchtenberger (C) second, 80.46; Thomason (S) third, 77.76. 100-meter freestyle Cox (S) first, Bower (S) second, Coxhead (C) third. Time 1:05.9. New dual meet record. Old record 1:07.5. , 150-yard backstroke Ingram (S) first, Gibson (C) second, Scheinman (C) third. Time 1:46.2. Establishes dual meet record. 200-meter breaststroke Wood house (C) first, Gross (C) second, , See SWIM SUMMARY; Page U Terrors Give Closest Races Of All Season By Harry Hollingswortl Although State captured five first places in the nine events, Carolina's well-balanced swimming team came in with the seconds and thirds yesterday r oo i7 r i j . a iu vtiu u oo-o i victory ana its tccuuu consecutive Southern conference tank crown.. Although the contest was the most closely contested meet of the year, only two superior times were recorded. Sid Ingram, Southern conference back stroke champion for the last two years, covered the 150-yard backstroke in 1:46.2, but his time didn't compare with previous times. Andy Weiss, swimming to a first place in the 400 meter freestyle, marked up a new Uni versity record of 5:35, one second un der the old record. Billy Stone's second in the 400-meter freestyle gave the Tar Heels their last three points, which proved to be the winning margin when the State 400-meter freestyle relay team captur ed first place and seven points to push the score to 38-37. Seven dual meet records were brok en 'and one University record was es tablished. State accounted for five of the marks while Carolina was rub bing three off the books. The feature event of the meet cast Roy Gibson and Louis Scheinman against State's Sid Ingram in the 150 yard backstroke. Ingram made an at tempt to better the intercollegiate rec ord, but missed it by several seconds. Gibson pushed him for the first 100 yards, but dropped behind at the fin ish. Except for Captain Jim Barclay and Billy Stone in the 200-meter free style and Don Nicholson and Johnny Feuchtenberger in the diving, State captured first and second in three of the first five events to build up 23 of its 37 points. Don Nicholson, taking up where he See SWIMMING, Page i Coed Basketball Spencer and Town were victorious in coed basketbail games played over the weekend. Spencer topped Dorm No. 3, 29-22 to continue as a leading threat for the coed title. Town defeat ed Dorm No. .2 by 2-0, to take third rank behind Spencer and Chi Omega. Frosh Cagers All those affiliated in any way, shape or form with Doc Siewert's frosh basketball team are urgently requested to report in Room 304 at Woollen gym this . afternon at 4:15. The business on hand will include a showing ; of the motion pictures of the Campbell junior college-Carolina freshman game. Waiicla TonHaorraw For Hew o SMITH & WATTS DRY CLEANING CO. ' CAJIL M. SMITH, Prop. PHONE 3531 OPPOSITE BUS STATION It' " SUITS, OVERC04TS, HJBERDJSHERY, HATS . " AND SHOES ' FOR YOUNG GENTLEMEN' ' COMMUNITY CLEANERS Today & Tomorrow March 5 & 6 Representative: Mr. Robert Gray , FIJFja.AVENUE, NEW YORK

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