Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 9, 1930, edition 1 / Page 3
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Thurcy, Jcniry 0, ICSD THE DAILY TAIt HEEL Winter . Football --Practice . Will . Begin Nest;. Week-: Vith Return ' Of Head Coach Ghucfi Collin Annual Monogram Dinner and Issuance cf Equipment Will Occur -Middle of Week. Work Begins January 20 No Plans Yet Announced for Winter Work; Expected to Be Same as Last Year. Chuck Collins, head Tar Heel football coach, is expected to re turn to the Hill on Sunday and plans will go forward imme diately for the Tar Heels' win ter football training. The annual monogram din ner is to be held the middle of next week. Equipment for the winter practice will he issued during the latter part of the same week, and formal practice will begin on January 20. Coach Collins has not yet dis closed his plans as to the win ter work, but it is understood that the plan of daily practice with regular games between four teams from the squad, will be followed. This was the sys tem used last spring, which bore fruit in the Tar Heels' fine per formance of 1929. NEW FORWARDS TO FACE GREENSBORO 1930 Tar Heel Basketball Cam paign Begins With Two Games This Week; Davidson Saturday. The 1930 edition of the Tar Heel basketball team will make its formal bow to the sports world tomorrow night in . a game in Greensboro with the Qreensboro Y cagers. The Greensboro Y contest will be in the nature of a first course on a Tar Heel menu' that shows a long, hard line of Big Five and Southern Conference con . tests, to be capped by participa tion in the annual tournament. The following night the Tar Heels will meet Davidson on the Wildcats' floor. Coach Ashmore hopes to pre sent a much stronger team than faced Greensboro before Christ mas. The Tar Heels won a de cision in that game. But Greens boro was playing afier but two nights of practice. The Gate City boys have gotten in valu able work since, and the Tar Heels regard them as a tougher assignment. Return of Neiman and Ed wards has bolstered the Blue and White offense considerably, and it is more than likely that these fast youngsters will start at forward over such men as Slater, Cleland and Hutchinson. Veterans will start at' the other posts, Coach Jim Ashmore said yesterday, with Puny Har per at center and Billy Brown and Artie Marpet at the guard posts. , ; This is the same combination that Coach Ashmore has been using in most of the hard scrim mages since holiday practice was started just after Christmas, and has shown better than any yet developed. Complete Wrestling ' Schedule Announced Due to an error in Tuesdays issue of the Tar Heel, the latter half of the varsity wrestling schedule was omitted. The schedule is exceptionally difficult, as is easily seen. The stiff est tests of the team's abil ity are the matches with the Navy at Annapolis, with Prince ton University at Princeton and the Southern Conference tourna ment at Lexington, Va. Prince ton and the Navy regularly turn out mat teams which rank among the best in the country. Duke has a very excellent mat squad this year. ' Coaches Quinlan and Abbot are working hard in an effort to develop men to fill the places of Thompson, Cowper and Moore, lettermen in 1929, who will be away at least part of the season doing engineering co-op work. The Southern Conference tournament has been officially awarded to V. M. I. and will be held there on March 7 and 8. The schedule: Jan. 18 Duke at Chapel Hill. Jan. 1 5 Navy at Annapolis. Feb. 1 V. P. I. at Blacksburg. Feb. 8 Princeton at Princeton. Feb: 12 Davidson at Davidson. Feb. 15 Virginia, Chapel Hill. Feb.. 22 V. M. I. at Lexington. March 7-8 Southern Conferr ence tournament, Lexington. University May Have Hard Tennis Courts If - Harper Injured A sprained ankle may keep "Puny" Harper, the Tar Heel gigantic center, out of the opening college game : with Davidson at Davidson Saturday night. The injured limb was sus tained in practice. It was much better yesterday, but there is a chance that Coach Ashmore may take no chances at running the big, dependable pivot man. Congressman La Guardia has filed a report showing that he spent nothing in his New York mayoralty campaign. So the report balances. Detroit News. Consideration is being given the proposal to build two or more all-weather tennis courts by the University ' athletic au thorities. At the present time the University has the finest tennis equipment in the state and ranks well up in the south in that respect. Should hard courts be built the players would be able to continue work1 with a greater degree of consistency throughout the year than is now the case. J. P. Kenfield, tennis coach, went to Nashville, Tenn., during the Christmas holidays to in spect courts made of a composi tion in which two of the ingre dients are tar and, sawdust. A concrete court costs around $1,200, but it is said that one of these composition courts can be built for $200 or thereabouts. And some tennis experts think this type gives a better footing less rigid and therefore more friendly to the feet. The main question is whether or riot the composition is durable, and Coach Kenfield is now consider ing that. If it is decided to build the all-weather courts, the hard surface will probably be laid upon some of the present courts east of the campus. Intramural Program To Getv Started Soon .1 ! m - The opening of dormitory and fraternity basketball leagues on Monday, January 13,; will mark the start of the winter program of the intramural department. The department has requested each dormitory and fraternity to enter one of the leagues as soon as possible, in order that all entries may be in the intra mural office by Thursday night. The department is especially anxious for all men living out in town to participate in the winter program and to form in dependent teams. These teams will be allowed to enter the dor mitory league if their managers guarantee that they will fulfill the schedule requirements. Three Frosh Stars Keturn; Prospects For Tennis Better The return of three men from last, year's freshman squad has greatly improved the chances of the University's tennis team. Hinkey Hendlin, freshman No. 1 man; Sonny Graham, No. 2, and Phil Lisken No. 3, have re turned to school and are 'busily working daily at the tennis courts. : An attractive schedule has been planned; the team making a southern tour winding up with the Southern Conference meet on May 8, 9 and 10 at New Or leans. Games have been ar ranged with the leading south ern schools such as Georgia, Georgia Tech and Alabama. Tentative dates have been ar ranged with Johns Hopkins, Maryland, University of Rich mond, Hampden-Sydney and Sewanee. The stretch of sunny weather has enabled the squad of about 20 men to have daily workouts, and the team is fast rounding into a well balanced machine which should rival last year's club, which won 15 out of 16 matches, pnly losing to Prince ton which was considered to have the best intercollegiate team in the nation. Frosh Quintet To Scrimmage Tonight With 75 candidates reporting for practice, Coach Rex Enright is planning to send the Tar Heel freshman basketball squad through its first scrimmage to night. The yearlings have had three days of practice with the work consisting chiefly of drills in fundamentals of the game. No regular schedule has been arranged for he Tar Babies but games will be arranged as the season progresses. About ten games will be played with North Carolina teams and the quint will probably journey into Vir ginia for several contests. The first game will be played in the Tin Can January 14 with Leaksville high school as oppon ents. J Icy Make-up Tries Charlie Farrell's Endurance in Films Basketball Mentor 1 J im Ashmore, coach of varsity basketball and baseball, has de veloped state championship quints here for two successive years, but is faced with a stiff problem in whipping a mediocre squad into a team equal to those of former years. He has only three lettermen with which to work this winter, and must fill the two forward positions with rookies.. Student Notice Students may get their ath letic association pass books for the winter quarter by bringing their receipted bills to the busi ness office today. :( A man in Brooklyn, sentenced for wife-beating, was instructed to kiss his wife every morning for six months. After all, it is the woman who pays and pays. Bennington Banner, Denmark has refused to let Trotsky light there. He has still to hear from the Galapagos Islands. St. Louis Post-Dis patch. Football lien Out - For Track Squad Football men will- form the bulk of the weight heaving ros ter on the 1930 track team. Most- likely prospects for the shot include Adkins, Brown, Gil- breath, Fysal and Koenig, all grid stars. In the discus will be the same men, and also Thomp son. In the javelin will be Mc Alister, Brown, Remsen, Par sons and Blackwood. A Correction Owing to an error, the name of Beatty Rector was omitted from the executive committee of the High School Debating Union which was published in the issue of January 6. Wool ought to be cheap this year in view of the large num- uer oi iamDS neecea. Debate Squad Notice The debate sqtnd will held its first regular meeting of the quarter tonight at 7:30 in 201 Murphey halL It is necessary that all stu dents who intend to present themselves as candidates for the debate teams of the quar ter be present. Plenty of Vaulters The 1930 track team prom ises td boast a wealth of ma terial in the pole vault, despite the loss of Vernon Cowper, who set the University record up to 12 feet 5 several inches above the state mark. Neiman vault ed 11 feet 6 and better last year. Arnold, Dry and Ruble have been vaulting approximately the same in fall practice, and all these boys are improving steadily. Start The Nev Quarter Right, Then Keep Right ! If You Haven't Found How Already, Here You Are: Buy a meal ticket at the University Cafeteria. You'll find the best eats in town and the best crowd. You'll get 6 tickets for $27.50 and you'll stick on and on. It will make a difference. UNIVERSITY CAFETERIA Six 5.50 Tickets for 27.50 - Special effects in motion pic ture make-ups are not without accompanying discomforts, ac cording to Charles Farrell, who is co-featured with Mary Duncan in Frank Borzage's romantic Fox Films production, "The River," now ; showing at the Carolina Theatre. .. In one of the interior scenes of the picture Farrell is supposed to have just come from a blind ing blizzard. His face is par tially encrusted with snow that has turned to ice. This desired effect was accomplished by the important art of screen make up but with plenty of trouble for Farrell. With the effect obtained, Charlie found that his face was drawn taut, and the hot light made matters more complicated. It was particularly annoying, due to the fact that in ordinary scenes Farrell does not resort to screen make-up at all. 1 "The River" is from the ro mantic novel of the same name by Tristram Tupper. Included in the cast besides Miss Duncan and Farrell are Margaret Mann, Ivan Linow and Alfredo Sabato. Slater Leads Scorers John Slater, lanky forward, is leading the Tar Heel scorers for the first four practice games. Slater, a forward, and reserve from- last year's team, has 26 points. Bill Brown, letter guard, is second with 21, trailed by Hutchinson, forward, with 18 ; Harper, veteran center, with 15, and Marpet, veteran guard, with the same number. ARE PLEASANT T PUNCTUATION MARKS What with one thing and another jk) each "day brings its sequence of moods and i ...... changes of activity Make Camels your connecting links or pleasant interruptions between this and that Each freshly-lighted Camel means a dash of pleasure a period of pure enjoyment Ml Punctuate your day by pausing now and then w for a Camel! L CTC ETTES ' The extra measure of pleasure in every Camel Cigarette comes from the expert blending of the choicest tobaccos grpwn. You'll- find the fragrance of Camels always pleas ant, indoors and out . . and their mellow-mildness never tires the taste never leaves an unpleasant after-taste. 1930, R. J. Reynolds Tofcaee Company, TTinsta Saleat, N. C
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 9, 1930, edition 1
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