Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / March 1, 1928, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thursday, March. 1, 1928 THE TAR HEEL Page Three riiMTilEN TO PUT FORTH STRONG BID FOR CHATilPIONSHIP B&tler and Shuford Nucleus of Team That Enters Southern Conference Tourney Friday. UNIVERSITY. MM The Carolina boxing team will a gain this year make a strong bid for the Southern Championship crown in the Southern Conference meet to be held at Charlottesville, Va., Friday and Saturday. For the past three years the Carolina aggregation of leather-pushers has been contend ers in the Southern Tournament, and last year it barely missed copping the Conference Championship. This year the team has made a very credi table showing, and officials express their hopes that the Carolina mitt men will nose out ahead. The Carolina pugmen of last year, undefeated by any Southern team be fore the Conference, having whipped every team they fought, barely lost the Southern Conference Champion ship. The University of Virginia won out over Carolina' at the Conference, while in the previous Carolina-Virginia dual meet held at Chapel HUl, Carolina handed them a.K5 to 2 vic tory. Captain Ed Butler and "Ox" Shu ford are the nucleus of the Tar. Heel boxing team this year, and were the mainstays of the last year's aggre gation. Both won Southern Confer ence crowns in their respective weights last year. Not only have they accomplished this feat, but, in three full seasons of collegiate fight ing, neither has lost to another col legiate opponent. This record will be backing them when they face their opponents at Charlottesville in March. The remainder of the team will be led by this undefeated pair in the contest for the 1928 Southern Cham- FAVOR WORSTEDS OF GRAYISH HUE For Sport Suits, Stout Tweeds Will Be the Choice; Two-But- ton Coat Accepted. r :- (By Fair child News Service) Among the problems that rise to vex the undergraduate this time of the year is the purchase of a Spring suit, and for some students this will involve buying more than oni suit, in order that their wardrobes may be complete for the social duties of Com mencement time. Many college men will order this Spring their old favorite, the four piece suit, and an additional suit with out knickerbockers, the latter for city wear and the other occasions when they desire to be a bit "dressed up." But whether he wants a four-piece suit, or both, the college man will not be interested in. bold patterns this Spring. Moreover, the "ice-creani cheviots have run their course and will look out of place when the new, more subdued worsted fabrics have begun to appear. For the sports suits, however, good stout tweeds will be the thing. The time has come when the university man buys a four-piece suit strictly for campus or sport use, and Harris tweed, the rough, peat-smelling Irish cloth which is woven into such beau tiful brown and green .heather mix tures, and the harder and more famil iar domestic tweeds will be used for these clothes. Lovat fabric, a soft loosely woven cloth somewhat re sembling Harris tweed, also will be liked by university men. 1 For the three-piece or lounge suits conservative worsteds, some with The Carolina team has "worked widely.- spaced but faint stripes in oiotontw wc r aA h irnved gray-blue, blue-gray, slate, v,0 v1p Tn gray and gray-brown will be in de , . - v. otto. mand. These worsteds have been the six meets of the season four nave 1 , . . . j 4. ' i,, worn m the East in ever-increasing - -i, v4ronift'Tiil I numbers for the past five years. V.P.I. In the Duke meet, Carolina nnn nuorir Virnif OTPTlt. on P. ' atlfl IT! the return engagement with Duke the lounge - suit this Spring will be rather The cut of the smart university defeat was repeated. Georgia conquered by the score of 5 to 2. was more severe than in former years. .As WINTER CARNIVAL M TRACO00KED The annual Winter Track Carnival of the Intramural Athletic Depart ment will be run off on .merson Field on Tuesday af terhoon, March 6, at 4:00 o'clock. An outdoor meet at this time will be an innovation in the Intramural program, for the Win ter Carnival has always been held indoors in previous years. The change this year has been made after consultation between the Intramural officials with Coach Rob ert A. Fetzer and Coach Dale Ran son. The change was considered ad visable because the - outdoor facili ties are better Nand allow competi tion in more of the regular track and field events. Too, it does away with any possibility that inexperienced runners will be hurt by indoor com petition. Indoors the facilities prevent hold ing the pole vault, the shot put, the discus or the ' javelin. Outdoors all those events can be run off. Several distances will be modified in this first meet. A special 50-yard dash will be run for those sprinters who are not advanced in training enough to go the full hundred. Both the low and high hurdles will be run over shorter than regular distances. This meet , will be open td all bona fide University students who have not won a letter in varsity track. Last year's freshmen and varsity re serves will be allowed to compete, as will the varsity cross-country men who have not made varsity track let ters in previous years. Letters will be mailed to all, Dor mitory Athletic Managers this week asking them to appoint their track managers. This will be done as early as possible to enable the dormitories to get their teams organized. In past years there has been hot competition for the dormitory title. Fraternities may also enter their men and run as a team. In past years any man rooming in a fraternity house or out in town has been allowed to run" for a dormitory team. That rule will be changed for this meet, and no man may run for a dormitory if he does not room in that building. Men rooming in the fraternity houses may run under the colors of Wardlaw Organizes Two New Orchestras Jack Wardlaw, director of the Car olina Banjo Boys, and a student of Commerce at the University, has or-' ganized two dance orchestras which will play under the name of "Jack Wardlaw and His Orchestra." One is a ten, and the other a six piece combination. These orchestras have played recently in Raleigh and other towns in the state and are booking engagements for fraternity and other dances in Chapel HilL The services of M. B. Medlin, a senior at the Uni versity, have been secured to manage the combinations. Capable musicians have been obtained. Wardlaw returned here last quarter from Paris where he played at the Follies Bergere Cabaret and at the Hotel Palais d'Orsay. Heis recog nized as one of the best banjo players in the south, and his group of four players, all Carolina students, have played on the Publix-Saenger circuit and radio station WPTF, in Raleigh. ;ON THE SCREEN "What Price Glory" From playing John Wilkes Booth in the first great film spectacle, The Birth of a Nation," to directing "What Price Glory" the epic war drama at the Carolina Theatre, Raoul Walsh boasts a colorful sexven ca reer. Apparently, acting as a pro fession did not interest him, for im mediately after appearing in th- Grif fith film, he dropped histrionics fct the megaphone, and has been direct ing ever since. Meanwhile Fox had bought the screen rights of "What Price Glory" for a huge sum, and without a mo ments hesitation they chose Walsh to direct it. For seven months he slaved at his task, at times direct ing thousands of men in the big bat tle scenes. Walsh worked with his players, not over them, and the re sult of his method is effectively ap parent in the finished picture. There were trying hours and nerve-wracking trials, but Walsh caried on with out once giving way to temper or temperament until he was through, NOTICE There will be an important meeting of all the Hoover sap porters today at 1:30 in Gerrard HalL The opposition is strong and all Hoover men mast be at if the Hoorer CJnb is to present the strength at the Phi and Di meeting tonight of which it is capable. The meeting will last frcm 1:30 until 1:53. Airplanes are now used vast numbers of reindeer Artie stock farms in Alaska to on herd bisr STYLE TIPS When your Ladye Fayer adorns her best dress, gallan try whispers to her escort, "Match formality with courtly Black-and-White." W0 worn at present in the East this suit . fraternity. Non-fraternity a rur.a Arx has trousers" with roomy knees, twen- roomine- out in town may run Coach Rowe is whipping his men into ty and one 0 twenty one and unattached, entering as an individual U oftU QYli f ATTT1 I "lit: HULL ill,UCO, ULL Liu; w .. -"-" 1 J Vol There are nine men who are in the " elimination series, but Coach Rowe nes, at most, ku cuu. v.: c. ,vf r.an. nineteen mcnes is permu-uju m v. tain Butler and Shuford.. Each will cases uuxu u. . more than likely win out in the Con- tie grave when this is requested f erence. Charlie Brown, last year letterman, will be primed to hgnt in the middleweight limit, Rufus and Archie Allen, sophomore pugilists, will be on deck with their bags full of fists. The waistcoat may have five or six buttons and a nice touch here is to leave the lowest button of the waist coat unfastened. This of course means that the trousers must be cut higher. Gone are the days of trousers dragging at in as many events as he may wish The Events to Be Run The Winter Carnival will open with . . i i t r a 44u-yara reiay, eacn oi iour meu on a team running 110 yards. This event will count in the scoring for the teams that place. The closing event will be a half-mile relay, with each of four men running 220 yards. The remainder of the schedule will include the following events: 50-yard dash, 100-yard dash, 220-yard dash, 300-yard run, 660-yard run; three- quarter-mile run; and and one-half - mile run, 70-yard high hurdles, 120 COMING Charlie Chaplin --in THE Dr. C. P. Harry Speaks I j - i I lllllc X Laxly J j ta. va. augia uxuvw v the hipbone te the 1 suspender ' J? yd low hurijes pole vault,' high " i.Z ;f I.tW.n church, who nas. come, Kr " jump, broad jump, shot-put, javelin a - . unaergraauate s trouaeia aic .j mcjfino. tiip. mllee-es and schools in , , w throw, and discus j- "--"c - - moorea nign ana uauusumc, vilw the south, talked to ,tne sopn tong Qr safety pins, to his braces. and freshman cabinets oi tne x. iu.. C. A. Tuesday night. Dr. Marry also trousers are cut to swing free presented an address to the students f hQ soetoVr with no break. This in chapel. is contrary toa widely accepted, but The speaker declared tnat tne omy incorrect notionfand will be regarded way to lead men to Christ was to live ag unorthod6r by those who preach in the Christian way. ."The exam- ... fr.nss must break over the pies that we set m our daily me, sno top, come'" fair, come foul, he stated, "have a powerful influence on those about us. We cannot cheat a delicate point arises m connec- and blaspheme the name of God and tion with the cut of the new jacket expect to persuade others with mere When the three button jacket worn words." Dr. Harry pointed' out that wjth all its buttons fastened was in it was the duty of each member of its heydey, a number of smart young the cabinet to try to lead the other C0Uegians appeared in the two button men on the campus to the Christian jacket, worn with the lower button j religion. i open. I a. a. There may be atheists and douot- , I on U r,f S era." he declared, "but every man on The result was that 90 per cent. Hf the University campus has some sort of the three button jacket wearers of a religion, something in which he began to roll their coats to the sec- believes." He urged the members to ond button. Now ye have the two W clean, sportsmanlike lives, and button jacket -?d ase rt "CIRCUS" i i I TOistle b7so iZ'S W end a. to help those thing and the three button jactet I uy 6 - . L .j0 TOn-fV, hfi soft front so it can be around them to live in the same way, wnm in this manner without commit- tn anvthiner too ad- tUlg " vanced." Either way, the correct uni versity jacket now has easy shoulders X i Charlotte High Five Will Meet New Hanover Quint and a slight fit at the waist. -wi nf wiimiTi: Coach Fetzer Urges All Track w Ch high school Possibilities to Turn Out j in-the Tin Can, Saturday night at 8 - -.i. thA"1928 cham- (Continued from page one) ?: S IZ M.rth Carolina high Lur track season must be laid during , i,.:-. oocriatinn tourna- the next month Duke When you hear the fire whistle do you wish that you had seen about the fire insurance policy on .your fraternity house? It is too late after the whistle blows j to think, about such things. I Let our representative call ! on you today and discuss m m 1 I rlT' . fhe are the only Regular practice is daily oetween contest, - buu jx. , wv flno hnur a schools which have not oeen rr: : " u,, Mrt now! " 'f wav to the Renort to the Stadium, Emerson ryoTir Manuver vru" ww i: . . , V- 0 Ftern cham- Field, for definite mstrucviuu. pionship by defeating Ellerbe 25 to J your .fraternity insurance. " : , Af thA in Toi05o-v Tuesday niguw -i,Qfint.t.fi defeated Candor came tixiiu vufcv--" - j F.llerbe and 4U lO CO in iyj.uiiJ-v,- r.j. nuv,n,Th thev were defeated have made an enviable basketball mnrH f. ma11 hish schools of the NOTICE The Woodberry Forest Club wiU meet Thursday morning at 10-30 at the rear entrance of South Bmlding for the Yackety Tack Picture. This the on time that the picture may be taken. Service Insurance Agency, Inc. Macitae Bldg. Phone 5721 IT'S HERE ! The World's Greatest Motion Picture TODAY and TOMORROW Story by. Laurence Stallings fliil: X If DI I SI I It. Mb VICTDR MCLAGLEN- EDMUND 10WF DOLORES DEL RIO and a superb caB An epochal picture in which two strong men and a beautiful woman work out their destinies on tne Fields of Glory. T7Zni. 4-:mA Ka cltnurn in rifal time iu ilto oxivf " the South for 30c '"iiiiiiiiiiieiiiiiiiiiiioiiiiiiiiii! Tai.a;M. " - .--..yyA liritffr,;. im mi ff., jn.:-' Galley Slaves Chained to their seats, cringing under the lash, the galley slaves slowly propelled the heavy hull of a Roman warship. Today, the electric motors of an American battleship have the energy of a million men, and drive thousands of tons of steel through the water at amazing speed. Man is more than a source of power in civilized coun tries. Electricity has made him master of power. In coming years, the measure of your success will depend largely on your ability to make electricity work for you. Com petition everywhere grows keener, and electricity cuts costs and does work better Wherever it is applied.' In industry, transportation, the professions, the arts, and in the home, you will find General Electric equipment help ; ing men and women to wards better economies andv greater accomplish- s ments. 176-5DH i 'ml, TTT KLICTMIC sUte; they went to the semi-finals in contest in which 1U niga GENERAL ELECTRIC COMPANY S C H E N F C T A D Y Hrtic)ted.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
March 1, 1928, edition 1
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