M Pzs Four THE DAILY TAU HEEL ANDIDATES FOR mter sports m a urn tit a nrrifW? Boxers,, Wrestlers and Basket eers Working Hard in En deavor to Snare Champion , ships. The Tin Can presents a scene of unusual activity in the line of early practice for winter sports for such an early date this year. There is a goodly crowd of wrestlers engaging in strenuous practice under the guidance of Coach Abbott. Competition is keen among the varsity men, several letter men, being eligible for competition this year, and in addition several freshmen are practicing daily on the fun damentals of the,game. Several nights. each week see the , varsity basketball men working hard in an.efforlto get into such good form for this year's season that they will wipe out all memories of last year's! poor season. V Every afternoon, varsity and freshmen boxers are working out, and of late the presence of Add Warren, former Tar Heel heavyweight, who is training here for his fight with Jeff Car roll in Charlotte Monday night, has added interest to the after noon's sparring sessions. Add looked much improved in his workout yesterday over those of Monday and Tuesday. In addi tion to working out for several rounds on the , bags, shadow boxing, and taking calisthenics, Add boxed five rounds, one each with Wilson and Miller, sopho more heavies, Obie Davis, var sity middleweight, Archie Allen, last year's . captain and welter- , weight, and his brother John Warren, varsity lightheavy weight last year. Despite the good sized crowd . out for practice, Coach Rowe is . not satisfied with the number of .freshman candidates. A great many showed up at first;V but several have become discourag ed and stopped. The intramural tournament wU be held after Thanksgiving, and it is expected that this will bring out a good many men, who may eventually try for the team. Coach Rowe .. pointed out in his interview with the Tar Heel reporter yesterday that Archie Allen, Southern Con ference champion lightweight j in 1929 and Tar Heel captain in 1930 had never had on a boxing glove before the intramural tournament in the spring of his freshman year. Noah Goodridge, this year's captain, is another star who never boxed before his freshman year at Carolina. Coach Rowe feels that in the light of the brilliant success of men such as these, and especial ly since boxing is now a major sport, every freshman physically and mentally able should report ' for practice at least for the in tramural tournament. Gym Excuses Through the courtesy of Dr. Laws on all the contestants in the cake race will be ex cused from gym if they give their names and gym-numbers to the manager at Emer son field before 4 o'clock. GROSS-COUNTRY TRIALS DELAYED Cake Race Today Will GiveXine On Prospective Freshman Material. Intramural Schedule Thursday, October 23 3:30 (1) Kappa Alpha vs. Zeta Beta Tau; (2) Kappa Sigma vs. Zeta Psi. , ' 4:30 (1) Tau Epsilon Phi vs. Phi Gamma Delta; (2), Delta Psi vs. Pi Kappa Alpha; (3) New Dorms vs. Graham. Friday, October 24 s 3:30 (1) Grimes vs. Lewis ; (2) Old West vs. Everett. 4:30 (1) Mangum vs. Old East; (2) Manly vs: Law School; (3) Ruff in vs. Cam Varsity Track Men All'varsity track men are to report to Coach Dale Ran son in the stadium office be fore 4:00 o'clock to receive in structions in regard to offi ciating for the cake race this afternoon ; Varsity cross-country work is settling down to more substan tial things, now that the fall quarter has gotten under way. The men are working out on the cinder path down at Emerson field daily, and are coming around to the style of "pound ing" the turf they used to have. Last Friday the varsity cross country time-trials were to have been held on the practice field. Tliey did not materialize, due to the fact that several members of the squad were out with minor injuries and - slight colds. "A number of the men had their time checked to get some esti mate as to the length of their progress so far this season. The members of the squad who showed up well were : Captain Baucom, Cordle, Jones, Wat kins, Pratt, J Hubbard, Jansen, Farris, Lumpkin, Hunter, Petty, and Allen. These men have been showing the most consistent work so far, and the heart of he squad is formed around them. An official time-trial will be. held this coming Friday or Saturday at the practice field to get a definite line on the .effi ciency of the team as a whole The cake race which will be held today will serve to give the coaches a real line on thq fresh man material of this year, and will afford the first real compe tition for the runners. HASKELL INDIANS DANCE ON NIGHT BEFORE GAME Lawrence, Kans. (IP) The beat of tom-toms and chanting of braves echoed over the cam pus of Haskell Institute here as more than 1,000 Indians, at tending a nation-wide pow-wow incident to the game between Haskell and the University of Kansas, and participated "fn the war dances of their forefathers. The spectacle was held in the athletic stadium of the govern ment's Indian school. The braves tramped across the chalk lines of the institution's football field, the modern battle ground of Indian youths. x Following the dances the In diansparticipated in a colorful pageant depicting the history of a number of Indian tribes. The following night, a . band of present-day Indian warriors, Haskell's football team, went on the war-path against the ; Uni versity of Kansas eleven, and lost by a score of 33 to 7. It was the first meeting of the two teams in 10 years. The pow-wow, called in celebration of the resumption of athletic re lations between the two schools, was intended at first only for graduates and students of Has kell. It was made nation-wide, however, when Indians from all parts of the country announced they would attend. Paris (IP) With the pur pose of establishing a center of instruction and study with a view to introducing scientific methods in a field heretofore left to the teachers of gymnas tics, the University of Paris has created, an Institute of Physical Education. A strange fish which was sucked up through his-newly in vented electric, power tube from the bottom of the ocean, has been named after Professor George Claude. VIRGINIA COACHES DISPLEASED WITH SHOWING OF LINE Bob Warren Named I Barthelmess In Air Backfield Coach At N. C. State College Earl Abell Sending Cavalier Forwards Through Heavy Workouts Pre paring for W. and L. University, Va., Oct., 22. Virginia's guards and tackles and ends will have plenty of work to do this week before the Cavalier squad starts out to play Kentucky in Lexington, Ky., on Saturday. Earl -Abell, Cavalier head coach, is still a long way from being satisfied with the play of the linemen. He knows they'll have to do a great deal better than they did against V. M. I., if they, are to outplay the Wild cat forwards. Bob Kimball, veteran lineman who was injured in the V. M. I. game will probably be out for several weeks according to Ar chie Harn, Cavalier trainer. In his place will be Buck Poss, who was the line star of the '29 first year eleven, Poss was hurt in the Randolph-Macon game and was kept from practice for 10 days. ; Madison, Wis. (IP) "No practice until further notice hit the books," is a sign recently posted on the training room door of the University of Wisconsin football squad by Coach Walter T. Meanwell, who seldom loses & member of his team through low grades on their part. (Continued from page three) An attempt was made to ob tain William McK. "Bill" Fet zer, former University of North Carolina coach, for the State backfield coaching position, but negotiations with Fetzer were terminated today. Dr. Warren is an alumnus of State college and of the Ameri can School of Osteopathy at Kirkville, Mo. During his stu dent days at State he was a three-letter man and wTas a member of the basketball team that won the Southern confer ence championship in 1928. V The new backfield mentor served last year as basketball coach and trainer at Virgina Polytechnic institute, Blacks-burg. Oberlin college students of zoology were treated recently fb the rare sight of fresh water jellyfish, discovered by Dr. R. A. Budington, head of the depart ment, in the Vermilion River, west of here. Dr. Buddington told his classes this was the sixth time in zoological history that jellyfishfregularly found in salt water, had been found in land. s Richard Barthelmess, First National-Vitaphone star, makes his first appearance in an air story in "The Dawn Patrol," which comes to the "Carolina theatre Thursday. John Monk Saunders wrote the original screen story of "The Dawn Patrol," which was adapted and dialogued by Seton Miller and Dan Totheroh. It is a highly dramatic mirror of those early years of the World War "schoolboy" flyers in the British air service were com pelled to face highly organized German aces, when their own mediocre equipment was forced to fight against the more mod ern enemy planes. The neighborhood cynic says it is his belief that the women have purified politics just about as much as Will Hays has purified the movies. Louisville Times. The Wild Potato If times get too hard in Chapel Hill, residents can perhaps maintain themselves on the wild potato, which grows hereabouts. W. C. Coker has the root of one dug from the edge of. the golf course along Rocky Ridge road. The wild potato, as well as the tame one, is closely akin to the morning glory, and "-this one bears blooms which to the lay man look much like a morning glory's, being white with a purple center. This particular root is roundish, four inches or more in diameter, and went down so far into the hard ground that the diggers were unable to reach the end of it. Mr. Coker is not sure this species is edible. Thursday, October 23, 1930 RATINGS OP HIGH SCHOOL FOOTBALL TEAMS PUBLISHED E. R. Rankin, of the extension division of the University, an nounced yesterday the football standings of the class A mem bers of the state high school football conference. The stand ings are as follows: Team W L T Pet. Rocky Mount 1 0 2 1.000 Goldsboro -!l 0 1 1.000 Wilmington 1 0 1 1.000 Wilson .:, 0 1 1 "-.000 Fayetteville ...Lo 1 0 .000 Durham .... -.-..0 2 1 .000 Team W L T Pet. Charlotte:. .2 0 0 1.000 Asheville 2 0 0 1.000 Salisbury 1 0 0 1.000 Winston-Salem ...1 0 0 1.000 Greensboro - 0 11 .000 Gastonia L.0 2 0 .000 High Point ...0 2 0 .000 Orange, N. J., and East Orange, N. J. have different laws about Sunday movies. A theater owner whose building is located on the dividing line be tween the two cities ropes off the East Orange side of his au ditorium, and thereby obeys the law in that city, while he puts ' on his Sunday movies in the Orange side of the theatre. In a last effort to make runt golf both difficult and simple, they might roll the ball down a hole and dig it out dog-fashion. Wheeling Intelligencer. A ' . : TP .'X-Xs.:-X'.':v.- ONE: 1 f4)zll CllzDClZIS J-HE favorite whose flashing hoofs have brought him in ahead so many times! Again he-' shows his mettle ! Again he leads the field. - 0 'ii'iS..." stand out . KEEPING UP THE PACE... never letting down . . . that's what wins on the track and in a ciga rette, too. Chesterfield smokers stick to Chesterfield, because here they find those essentials of true smok ing enjoyment which never tire, never vary: MILDNESS the wholly nat ural mildness of tobaccos that are without harshness or bitterness. BETTER TASTE such as only a cigarette of wholesome purity and better tobaccos, can have. Chesterfield Cigarettes are manufactured by if Liqg LIGGETT SC MYERS TOBACCO CO. 1 1 t

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