Newspapers / Elon University Student Newspaper / Jan. 27, 1940, edition 1 / Page 6
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Daughtrev. Keame. Summae Phil lips. Wall, Hall. Wray, Riggs, Smith. Much enthusiasm has been FTiown in basketball this winter. Many students were excellent players in high shool and have school letters. Since more girls i«re familiar with this sport the tournament will be much faster and much more interesting. Watch out. everyone. The girls have thr hall and they are going to show Elon exactly what they can do with it. AVTNTER FOOTBALL DRILLS STARTED Winter football drills got under way here last Monday w’ith tales-1 thenics being on the menu for the' first week. Coach Hendrickson \ ftnnounced that “weather permit- iing, the team will hold their drills on Comer field, beginning next Monday”. *“ Twenty-one lettermen. eleven reserves, and twelve newcomers, a total of forty-four boys, having been working out in the gymna sium all this week in preparation for the hal'd drills that will take place for the next six weeks. Mis-sing from the drills were. Max Zyvith and John .Henry Pearce, a letterman, and Zyvith, a reserve, are members of the var- .sity basketball team, and will not take part in the practices until the current basketball campaign is over. Douglas Russell, experienced lineman and veteran guard, is expected to enter school this week, .and should boost the line strength. Lost via the graduation route were Fritts, guard. Captain Lea. end. and Charlie Pittman, full back and high scorer of the team last fall. I In attempting to fill the posi- [ tions, left vacant by these boys j Coaches Brunansky and Hendrick son will probably use Palantonio. veteran guard and letterman, in yritts’ position, Joe Hopkins, who saw much action last fall at the end post, while the fullback spot, left vacant by Pittman, will be a wide-open affair. Sauer is prob ably the number one candidate for tJ-sis position. Tomanchek. letter-' man. is also being counted on to' help fill this vacancy. | The lettermen reporting for the [ drills are: Askew, Boone, Brj'an. Castura, Causey. Daher, Donato, Fones. Gatcheck. Hopkins, Laws. Magnatta, Piberg, Palantonio, Sauer. Saecker, Shaw, Showfety. Tomanchek, Wilkinson and Yan- rvuwsni. xvcstii ves: ASKm, fyve. i Krukin, Mansfield, O'Toole. Pamp-; lin, Routh,. Utsey, Visoskey. Wi!-i liams, and Weant. New members I on the squad were: Herbert, Rog-. ers, Staten, Wingard, 'Cerscivits. i Looney, Comaninaki, Baldwin. \ Adair, Marchbum, Casey and ( Continued on page 4 ) ii.Bi.svti b gyni c«asses j Those pretty lassies really know I how to play the various sports be- , lieve it or not. I had the pleasure I recently to watch those girls go I about their gym activities and it I was surprismg the* way they j play. (Ccnti-ujJ on page 4^ 1&A.CU tnem woat iney were goin.. .0 do with their little gold foot- oall. Ex-captaii-i Lea will lay his jway lor sonw lucky girl. “Has- oeen” Fritts is going to save his tor his twin boys to fight over, and “Little Boy” Pittman plans fo become the champion chain- twirler when he adds the gold football to his key chain. second floor — Ruth Anderson; third floor — Lillian White Captains of Ladies Hall are; first floor — Betty Hoyt; second floor — Evel>Ti Lilley. After this intramural tourna ment, the sororities will play. This hasn't been done in quite a few years at Elon and it will cause a great deal of excitement. w he smokes a slow.burn.ag cigarette for .extra mildness My JOB IS SPEED— BUTMY SMOKE IS^ SLOW-BURNING CAMELS THE CEf^^TURY READY TO "HIGHBALL," as they say in railroading! Engineer Walter L. Bronson (abot’e) swings up into the cab of Number 5*i-49, one of the big Hudson t^’pe locomotives which flash at SO miles an hour across the landscape be tween New York and Chicago in a day*in, day-out epic of modern railroad speed. HERE'S EXTRA MILDNESS, EXTRA COOLNESS, AND EXTRA FLAVOR, and here’s why: Camels are slower-burning. T*hey have thoroughbred qualit>' through and through. Finer, more expensive tobaccos are used, in the first place. And these choice tobac* cos are combined into a matchless blend. Smoke a Camel. Notice how slowly it bomi. That is your clue to true cigarette enjoyment— the ’'extras” of mildness, coolness, ^axot—and — extra smoking in every cigarette. Camels burned 25% slower than any other cigarette in recent tests (full details below). You’ll always rejoice over the day you switched to Camelst TAKING IT EASY, Engineer Bronson says: *’No speed for me in my cigarette. That slower-burning feature makes sense to me. I’ve been a Camel smoker for years. I know Camels are milder and always taste swell. And—on the side—I don’t object a bit to getting those extra smokes per pack." amels FAST BURN- IN6—creates hocfliitusteia oke...ruins deL'catedavor, SLOW BURN- INO—protects Datura] quati ties that mean mildnesi, thrill- tug tasit, fra- granu...i.cooV‘ er smoke... In recent laboratory tests, CAMELSburned25% slower than the average of the 15 other of the largest-selling brands tested —slower than any of them. That means, oa the average, a s.'nok- lag plos equal to PACK.' C«>P7rictU. I9i0. &. S. aeyooUi Tab>ct-«C«apuir. WitutoO'Stlen, X. C c/^are^^e ^Gar^/ier
Elon University Student Newspaper
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Jan. 27, 1940, edition 1
6
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