Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 2, 1943, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
TUESDAY, MARCH 2, 1943 THE DAILY TAK HEEL PAGE THREE etes Win Gam L 7 Itie With 27 WlIB pis Dolphins. Encounter State,, Duke Toda Mermen Seek To Stretch Loop String In Triangular Swimming Event Here Invincible against conference competition, Coach Dick Jamer son's Blue Dolphins set to conquer new fields this afternoon wHen they face Duke and State in a triangular swim meet in Bowman Gray pool starting at 4:30 p. m. . The Dolphins have taken both the Terrors and the Blue Devils over the hurdles once before this season and shouldn't have too much trouble in taking them both on at the same time. In fact, tank team, after the fearful 56- 19 licking they absorbed from the Tar Heels last Saturday, would be hesitant to venture into a Car olina swimming pool. T" 1 m r-i .ooKies 10 swim Coach Jamerson, with an eye to the Southern Conference championships coming up this weekend at Lexington, Virginia, is not planning on using the same powerful outfit that humbled the Blue Devils last Saturday, but will experiment with several of the less experienced but promis ing first-year men on the squad. Probable highlight of the big meet will be the sprint events in which Captain Bill Marshall of Duke, Bob Reynolds of State, and Carolina's freshmen aces Ben Ward and Jesse Greenbaum will collide. Ward beat Marshall twice by narrow margins last weekend while Reynolds was triumphant when the Terrors visited Bow- las Crugar, Barbara Staff, Mar man Gray a short while back. '1 Urquhart, Thomas Weaver, Greenbaum will probably take to William Kerr, J. S. Rowland, the lanes in the 50 with Powell Jenkins while Ward will team up with Bill Merr in the 100. Huse Shines Highly pleased with the fine performances of late of Henri Huse, yearling middle-distance star, Jamerson is planning on us ing him in the 220 freestyle to day with Co-captain Bill Elmore. , Huse swam a leg in the fast 400 relay quartet that nosed out the Blue Devils in one of the best events last Saturday. The Dolphins' crack medley trio of Denny Hammond, Steve Sokoloff, and Ben Ward will swim the medley relay while Hammond will probably team up with Snooky Proctor or Allen Kauf- Fetzer, Hanson Rate Orchids For Excellent Track Games Orchid Dep't A great big bouquet to Director Bob Fetzer for going ahead after the confe rence had given the red light to the meet and independently stag ing the best indoor games in his tory . . . more of same to Coach Dale Ranson for the swell one man job he did in grooming a green Tar Heel squad . . . more posies to the Navy in general to the Annapolis lads for their splendid showing, to the Pre flight school for a spirit of co operation without which it would have been impossible to hold the meet . . . and two hundred or chid boutonieres to each and every competitor for his fine sportsmanship and a hard try. Highlights The ever-impressive flag ceremony, a bit more impressive this year . . . the natu rally glamorous mile run, won by Creamer of Navy after a true battle of champions ... a splen did bit of pace work by army bound Tom Jewett in same . . . Moffat Storer's triumph over a lightning fast sprint field . . . the great work of the Carolina frosh stars Julian McKenzie, Jim my Miller, Don Nelson and Ted Schultz, who served notice of great things to come . . . Roy Ca they's win in the 440, which more ArmyGweS DtlTOcher DaCR loNL Umpires NEW YORK March 1 (UP) The Army lost a fight ing man and National league umpires kept an enemy today when Manager Leo Durocher of the Brooklyn Dodgers was rejected from military service because of a perforated ear drum. DurGcher was "sur prised and disappointed. Take Me Oat, Coach Struggling in vain to free themselves of the infirmary's grasping tentacles are the fol lowing : Aubrey Terry, Lewis Bauman, Thomas Lane, James Lockhart, John Sibley, Richard Shack, Ann Strause, Jack UU man, WTilliam Bell, Daniel Rea ves, Richard Phillips, Albert Jacobson, Parke Whedon, Frank ! Williams, Edwin Bayle, Nicho- Calvin Warren, Wade Shuford. Yeshiva college reports a rec ord enrollment in United States history, government and related courses dealing, with American ideals and traditions. man in the 440. Several Tar Heel campaigners who have seen little service this year will get into some of the other events. Larry Johnson and Goldfarb will start in the back stroke while Pete Hexner and Lou Rubinson will go in the breaststroke. A tentative quartet of Bill Merr, Co-captain Momo Mahoney, Powell Jenkins, and Jesse Greenbaum will take care of the 400 relay duties. than atoned for his heartbreak ing performance of last year Tommy Todd's great record breaking flight of low hurdles . . . and last but not least, Car olina's game mile relay team, which came through with the blue chips down to catch the Na vy in the home stretch. Comebacks Mike Mangum's anchor leg on the vital relay after two heartbreaking hurdle races-.-. . Rich Van Wagoner's great legs in the two "relay events, which more than made up for his failure in the mile. Master-min;d Qoach Dale Ranson; for saving Larry Hole man, his number two quarter-mi-ler for both relays. Quote Dep't The Duke of Wellington: "the battle of Wa terloo was won on the playing fields of Eton" ... McArthur concurring. In closing Truly a great spectacle, the indoor games . . . 900 students and cadets plus John Q. Public crowded under the same roof watching 200 more of same displaying stout legs and stout hearts. . . ripples of competition, a current of unity . . . a sight calculated to thrill us of the U. S. A. . . . and chill Hit- lpr. Hirohito. et al to t.hp. marrnw. Carolina's 1943 Conference Mat Champions liii f llllli K ?3 . Frank Mordecai tmen Pick McKeever M ordecai As Undefeated Aces Take Championships As Carolina Nosed Out for Team Title By Westy Fenhagen Hobie McKeever and Frank Mordecai both Southern Conference champions, were elected co-captains of the wrestling team for the current season at a meeting of the squad held after the heartbreak ing loss of their team tiitle to VMI this last weekend. McKeever and Mordecaii, both seniors, went undefeated during the 1943 cam paign and both won three straight matches in the conference tour- Mat Captains Pay Tribute lo Colleague This past Saturday night in Waynesboro, Virginia, eight wrestlers and a coach fought their hearts out for Carolina and lost. One of these wrestlers was a freshman from Woodbury For rest, who deserves a great deal more than mere mention as runner-up to the champion in the Southern Conference Tourna ment. Five days before the tourna ment date this boy suffered a slight fracture of his left collar bone, but at the time the doctors thought that only the tendons of the shoulder had been pulled. We entered the boy in the tourna ment on the condition that if at any time the shoulder was in jured, he would immediately for feit the fight. Winning his first two matches the boy won his way into the final round of the tour nament. Before his final match we asked him to forfeit because the shoulder was paining him terribly and was of little use anyway. In the first thirty seconds of his match this boy's collar bone was broken bv a sudden stand- ing switch, which his opponent used. Instead of quitting and forfeiting the bout this boy fought for two more full minutes, begging us through his clenched teeth as we jumped to stop the match, that he was not hurt and could finish. We hope that in some small way these empty words will serve as a tribute to Oscar Greene. Signed: Hobart McKeever Frank Mordecai Volleyball Slate 6:00 NROTC No. 1 vs NRO TC No. 2; Kappa Alpha vs Phi Gam No. 1; Chi Phi vs. DKE; Zeta Psi No. 1 vs. Phi Alpha. 6:45 Zeta Psi No. 2 vs. Sig ma Chi ; Phi Gam No. 2 vs. ATO ; Pika No. 1 vs TEP. mm: mmmm n-rt-sftgfffitirtnrtfffvfir Hobie McKeever Co-Captains $nev Fridav and Saturday, for McKeever it was his second loop title in a row and Mordecai was runnerup last year. McKeever took a one-sided 11-3 decision over Blalock of State in the 128 pound championship fight while Mordecai decisioned Edwards of State, 13-6, in the 165 bout. The team title wasn't decided until the final consolation bout Saturday night when Grim Hobbs, needing a fall to give the Tar Heels a tie with VMI for team honors, met up with John Maskas, gigantic VPI heavy, and decisioned the huge Greek. A fall ' would have given Carolina a 33- 33 .even. split with the Cadets but the decision stiill left Coach Quinlan's men in the rear, 33-32. Three Place Three other Tar Heels, Mose Robinson at 136. Oscar Greene; nt 14c; and T.em Gibbons at 175. 1 , , , ' I at 145, and jem uiooons at n.the help of Searles, an accurate went to the finals. Robinson and I,. o4.mA' i Gibbons dropped decisions while Greene, who broke his shoulder in the first 30 seconds of his bout with ace Sherrard of VMI, cour ageously fought on for two more minutes before having to forfeit. In the consolation matches, Tommy Hearn, who lost in the semi-finals to Stroup of Duke on a one-point ti me advantage, dropped a 3-2 nod to Spencer of the championship VMI. Ed Hipp took a referee's decision over Stallings of State in the 155 con solation while Grim Hobbs beat Maskas of VPI. IRC (Continued from first page) which brands an entire nation as criminal. Knowledge Needed Dean R. B. House, a familiar figure on the campus, is expec ted to view the Japanese situa tion with the idea of getting a better understanding of the prob lems confronting the Nippo nese. "We cannot hope to make intelligent and lasting plans for the future," the Dean comment ed, "unless we learn a great deal more about what goes on behind the Japanese mask. This the forum should attempt to do." Having just completed a paper for the extension division Bul- letin on the topic "Conflict of Political Ideas," Dr. Kattsoff NROTC Outfit Downed. In Two Overtime Periods Wright Drops in Two Field Goals In Extra Session To End Thriller By George Mitchell After having things their own way in the fraternity league play offs, a fighting Zeta Psi outfit found that the NROTC wins over Lenoir Dining hall and the "BB" boys were definitely not freaks and only after two overtime periods and with the aid of some beau tiful shooting by Ike Wright were the frat champions able to eke out the determined sailors, 31-27. The Zetes, after holding a commanding 13-8 lead at half time, Take A Bow, Zetes ZETA PSI fg ft tp pf ' Wright 4 0 8 1 Taylor 3 1 7 0 Peel 3 17 3 White 1 3 5 3 Gilliam 10 2.1 Shook 1 0 2 1 TOTALS '13 5 31 9 NROTC fg ft tp pf Bennet 2 3 7 1 Rouse 113 1 Elliot 7 0 14 0 Scully 1 13 4 Williams 0 0 0 0 Dokmanovich 0 0 0 1 TOTALS 11 5 27 6 Referees Jamerson (Rice) and Mullis (Carolina). Harvie Sparks Coeds Of Spencer To 37-33 By Phyllis Yates Spenser dormitory yesterday nosed ahead of the Chi O bas ketball team to take their final game of the coed season, 37 to 33. From the opening minutes of play scoring was close with one team chalking up a basket only to have the other squad even matters in the next play. Finally at the half the winners went ahead, 18 to 16, and man aged to retain their hold on vic tory for the rest of the game. Harvie, of Chi O who showed up as one of the finest forwards in the tourney in her first game, again took the scoring spotlight and with Umstead and Oldham, kept the Chi Omega side of the ledger moving up. Flanagan and McCormic played tneir usual clever game ! at forward for Spencer, and with shot. but unsteady player, held the lead for their team. Yesterday saw some of the finest guarding of the season with James and Ferrier for the winning team, and Porcher showing marked improvement for the sorority. The Pi Phi's will meet the Al derman team this afternoon at 4 p. m. Phys Ed Department Requests Coed Suits The woman's physical educa tion deparement requests that all coeds check in the equipment in their lockers at the gym before the end of this quarter. If this equipment is not turned in be fore next week, holders of lock ers not checked in will be charged for the equipment. will put to use his recent study of the Far East in his address tonight. Schooled at the Uni versity of Pennsylvania, Illinois and in Kiel, Germany, Kattsoff will elaborate on the problems of post-war dealings with Japan arising from the ancient Shinto and Bushido creeds, both of which glorify war. The course of his talk will follow his belief in the eradication of these war mongering ideals by a system of supervising Japaneese schools, which he terms ' "indoctrination for peace." factually had to come from be- mna m tne closing minutes to tie the score at 23 all at the end of the regulation game. Dick Elliot, roving sailor cen- down the Tin Can's roof in yes terday's tilt, tapped in a beauty after forty-five seconds of the first overtime to give the Town Dorm champs a temporary lead, but it was short lived, as Phil Taylor, brilliant Zete forward, hooked a beauty from mid-court a minute later to deadlock the count. This same Taylor put the winners ahead with another two 'pointer after 2:30 and it looked j like the fraternity team had cop ped the title right then and there, until Dick Bennett tallied on a beautiful set shot to tie the con test at 27-27. In the third overtime event it was all Zeta Psi as Ike Wright made sure his fraternity's, name would be inscripted upon the beautiful intramural cup by scor ing two field goals in a span of less than a minute to put the game on ice that finished with a final score of 31-27. Elliot, who is making a strong ia lor tne all-campus team, led Dotn teams with fourteen points, I Wright was: top-man for Zeta Psi with eight. ART (Continued from first page locked themselves up even from their most valuable clients. Bye journeyed to England where he met the English master restorer. Fearing no competi tion from the American, the old timer took Bye to live with him and schooled him in the slow and oftentimes delicate processes of the art. ' since tnen I5ye nas risen jthrnh f(ioh7,:0J fl1visnr f. jthrough technical advisor for Since then Bye has Princeton and principle restor er at Vassar until now he spends his time almost completely on private practice. The work Bye has done for the University since he came here in early January will be kept hanging in Person hall for the next several weeks, open to the public between 10 a. m. and 6 p. m. week days and 12 to 6 p. m. Sunday. Come By and See Us Today TAR HEEL BARBER SHOP iBinmiHWHtuMr 'Tvinir I Unless . I I you are a VJ'j I I maestro, f I the best idea 1 1 Jte is to V I JgM cut it I - f f 1 I I
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 2, 1943, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75