Tuesday, I larch 3, 1931 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Parrs Three 1 G .DOS -x. Greek Basketball Champs Held! To Lone Field Goal In Final Three Periods. VICTORS LEAD AT HALF E. Beam Leads New Title Hold ers With Eight Points; Brandt, Wells, Good For K. As Led by E. Beam, flashy for ward with eight points, the Question Marks defeated - the Kapap Alpha's, 15-8, to win the campus championship and score one of the biggest upsets in in tramural basketball this year. The Kappa Alpha's, top heavy favorites to win the title after their defeat of the strong Phi Gam's and Phi Delt's in the play-offs for the fraternity title, started off with a iriish scoring six points in the first quarter while holding the Question Marks to one point, a free toss by E. Beam. The highly touted K. A. atack semed unable to get going after their first quarter spree ana" the Question Marks coasted through the last three quarters to win easily. E. Beam, with eight points, and Barnwell, center withvthree were the big guns of the Ques tion Marks. For the losers Wells, forward, and Brandt, guard, were best, scoring an action toss each. House played a good floor game for the K. As, although once tucking the ball under his arm in true football style and crash ing into two or three men under the basket. The score at the half was 10-8 . in favor of the Question Marks. The officials were: referee, Artie Marpet, varsity basketball captain; scorer, "Mac" Gray, as sistant director of the intra mural department; timekeeper, Wallace Shelton; assistant direc tor of the intramural depart ment. The lineups: Question Marks FG FT E. Beam, rf ........ ...... 2 4 H. Beam, If . ... 0 .0 Leonard, If 0 0 Barnwell, o. 1 1 TP 8 0 0 3 2 2 15 TP ;. 2 0 2 0 2 0 2 8 Smith, rg 1 0 Stuart, lg 1 0 Totals 5 5 Kappa Alpha FG FT House, rf 1 0 H. Phipps, rf 0 0 Wells, If ;. 1 0 Cole, If ..... 0 0 Oliver, c 1 0 J. Phipps, rg 0 0 Brandt, lg 1 0 . Totals :.. ..........:.:.... 4 0 CHARLOTTE MEETS RALEIGH IN HIGH TITLE CAGE GAME Class A Champions Play in Tin Can Tomorrow Night at 8:00 O'clock. Four undefeated teams will get into action in the Tin Can tomorrow night at eight o'clock, when the finals of the state high school basketball tournament will be played. In the Class A contest, Charlotte, undefeated m their ten western conference games, will endeavor to halt the march of Raleigh's courtmen, victors in their six eastern games. The other members of the eastern division were Fay- etteville, Wilmington, Goldsboro, Durham, Rocky Mount, and Wilson, the last named being the runner-up. Gastonia took second place in the west, other teams being Salisbury, Win ston-Salem, High Point, , and Greensboro. The unbeaten Rose Hill quin- tet will represent the east in the Class B contest, meeting the winner of the Spencer - Bakers ville game, being played tonight. Q a; ;e ii i tie I s Best Distance Bet & . Cliff Baucom, cross country captain last fall, will be Caro lina's best bet in the distance events here Saturday. SOUTHERN INDOOR TRACK MEET The most outstanding sports event of the winter quarter is now less than a week off. We, of course, refer to the Southern Conference indoor track meet at the Tin Can Saturday. Three hundred entries, six teen conference colleges and universities, forty non-conference, freshman and prep school teams. That will be a real array of athletic talent. Our own Charlie Farmer rac ing against a field of the finest dash men in the south, will offer One of the feature events of the meet. DeColigny of Tulane will be - here to take the hurdles at a fast clip, and Maddox of Geor gia has made it known that he will give Tulane's star a race for the honors. Maddox was outdoor winner on the low hurdles last spring. Dickens of Georgia will be here to demonstrate his ability at pole vaulting, and Carolina will present Arnold and Ruble to compete in this event. Georgia Tech hasn't Ed Hamm to broad jump this year, but Doug Graydon has learned to jump 24 feet, so it looks like some stellar per formances will be witnessed in this event. These are only a few of the i i ' 1 T ZM many star cmaermen wnu wm be here to race on the hardwood track. Almost every school and college entered boasts at least one individual star. . FULL DAY OF SPORTS SATURDAY The Southern - Conference track meet will not be the only event on tap. for Saturday! Monograms' meet Rookies m Kenan stadium for the closing event of the winter football sea son. It will be the last time that such stars as Ned Lipscomb, Captain Strud Nash, Jim Mag ner and others will don foot- ball uniforms for Carolina. And the winter practice has developed a smooth wonung machine of no individual stars but plenty of fellows who are canable of working wen w Jgether. Some of the best foot j ball played at Carolina has been - ' nlaved in these Monogram RnnViV cames. Indications o Virginia Poshes Four Men To ' - Finals To. Annex- Boxing Title . t l - Intercollegiate Sports I Soccer, a rising sport in the collegiate athletic field, has been made an official minor sport at Emory University. This action was taken by the athletic asso ciation in response to appeal of forty-five students interested in the sport. . Among promising collegians signed recently by big league baseball clubs was Dallas War ren, catcher, a University of Arizona product. Dartmouth College, students are vigorously contesting the re cent decree of the athletic asso ciation to abolish water polo in that institution. Against the statements of three Hanover physicians that water polo par ticipation might lead, to defects of the ear, students based the nucleus of their arguments. Said Knute Rockne, Notre Dame's gridiron mogul, mentor of bone-crushing, line-driving, Southbend elevens, at a recent football banquet in Berkeley, "I have noticed that the Western schools still retain a certain manliness that is disappearing in the East ... I mean this in all seriousness . . . In the East we are inclining to be the least bit effeminate." Trailing, 6 to 0, Wake Forest's black, shirted winter football team threw aside all hopes of scoring on their more experienc ed white jersied opponents. Came a pass, black quarter back to one of hisown ends from the thirty yard line to the twenty. The end received the pass, was tackled, and the elusive pig skin escaped from his hands to hur tle through the air into the arms of h the other end who skipped across the goal for a. score and a 6-6 tie. Prominent among intramural activities at the University of Indiana is the age-old "barn yard sport," horseshoe pitching, seventy-six teams, comprising 152 players have entered the an nual horseshoe tournament at that institution. Colleges of the present gen eration have gone conservative, if a recent editorial published in the "Depau," campus publica tion of Depau University is any criterion. "Coaches may bemoan the lack of school spirit in the stu dent body and tell how the 'slackers' refuse to yell them selves hoarse at every game just to spurt the team on to another victory. Students still have school spirit but they do not be lieve in expressing it that way (Joliege spirit as evidenced m pep meetings, celebrations be fore and after big games, snake dances, and the like has disap peared," the editorial averred. point to a repetition this year. WRESTLERS TO MAKE BID FOR TITLE The wrestlinsr team broke V M. L's three-year string of vie tories Saturday night, and seem likely contenders for the con ference title at Lexington thi week. V. M. I. probably ranks as first choice for the title be cause of past records, and the fact that they have not been beaten in the south, - but then the Tar Heels also have not los in the south. They at least wil rank second choice. With Cap tain Stallings, Mayne Albright, Conklin, Tsunias, Fred Fergu son, and Marion Cowper in form, Carolina should be able to boast of some individual con ference title holders next Sun day. : Carolina Places Third As Noah Goodridge Wins Lightweight Title; Warren Second In Heavyweight Division. (By PhU Alston) The University of Virginia won the Southern Conference boxing championship Saturday night by pushing four men through to championships ; Tu lane took second place with Carolina third. Tulane's eleven points came by way of one cTiampion and two finalists while the Tar Heel points were earned when. Captain Noah Goodridge won the lightweight title and John Warren took second place in the heavyweight division. Carolina lost four men in the semi-finals after having pushed six men through the opening bouts of the tournament. Son Young, bantam lost to Riddick of Duke in the preliminaries. Goodridge won his title by taking a decisive victory over Graves of the Mississippi Ag gies, Smith of Virginia, and Barrow of L. S. U. Goodridge showed his usual brilliant form in all three of his matches, and put a fitting end to one of the greatest boxing careers " ever known in the South. John Warren scored two knockouts before losing to Hill of Tulane in the final round. The Warren-Hill fight was one of he best of the tournament. Both men were on the floor several times and the decision was close. Hill weakened War ren with a hard left to the body in the second round and scored heavily with blows to the head in he third round to take the.fight after Warren had almost knock ed him out in the early part of the second round. Warren's first fight ended in the open ing round when John caught Bacon, W. & L. with, a right hand punch that put the General battler out for the count. War ren met Proctor, Florida, m his second match and knocked his opponent out with a ter rific right uppercut to the chin at the onening of the third round. Marty Levinson was the first Tar Heel to fall m the semi finals when he lost a very close decision to Martin of Duke. Both boys battled hard for three hectic rounds, but the Blue Devil carried off the decision. Levinson had previously won a decisive victory over Jones, Mississippi A. &. M. After winning over McKin- ney. YV. cz; u.. Juan ttoiaerness lost to DeBuys of Tulane by technical knockout in the first round of the semi-finals. Hol- derness started off well, but De Buys landed a hard right to the jaw that dropped the Tar Heel. (Continued on last page) c .DEBATE- THE UNIVERSITY OF GEORGIA - .. ' ' ' VS. "V.. THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA on the proposition that The United States Should Adopt a Policy of Free Trade G C1 ' : . A JL Is- H T utters hauliers 'Abundant For naoor... frames Saturday e Miss Fiditch Our Old School Teacher? Tar Heel fans in Atlanta this past week-end have been endeavoring to offer various conjectures as to the identity of a basketball player, snap ped by Atlanta Constitution cameramen on the tourna ment court Saturday, and whose likeness appeared in a huge two-column picture in that newspaper under the cap tion "Artie Marpet, Tar Heel Captain." News bureau and Daily Tar Heel sports scribes were of di versified opinions, one stating that the player was a Tulane man, while others upheld the argument that he was a Ken tucky basketeer. The identity of "Artie Mar pet" is still unknown. Plans Made For High Athletic Meets Plans are being made by the University extension division for the state high school con tests in baseball, tenni3 and track to be conducted this spring. Extension circulars con taining rules and information concerning the contests are be ing mailed to North Carolina high schools. The tennis tournament will take place in Chapel Hill April 16 and 17, with the track meet April 17. Support those who advertise in the Daily Tar Heel. SPRING HOLIDAY DELIVERY One of the largest assort ments of the finest woolens ever assembled in our store to select from. $25.00, $29.50, and $32.50 Tailored to Your In dividual Style. Come in and inspect our many samples before you buy and you will soon realize we will save you money. Jack LipmaiTs University Shop Free Pressing n iriT vsji ii sua ui ii T.OM1 Gl 1 ':' ' AT ' ' '" Id a S I i South Has Bumper Crop This Year In Shot Put Division; Many Stars Entered. CH AMPIQNS COMING Tulane Javelin Hurlers Will En ter Pole Vault Event Also; Arnold Highly Touted. The Southern Conference is having a bumper year for shot, putters, .and it looks as if this event will prove one of the ex traordinary features of the Second Annual Southern Confer ence Indoor Games. The twenty-six event pro gram will be run off here next Saturday afternoon and night, and will draw forty Non-Conference, Freshman and Scholas tic teams, along with sixteen Southern Conference teams, which is two more than partici pated in the outdoor champion ships last spring. Fatty Oelkers, of Tulane, who holds the Southern Conference record, will be here, and likewise Cox, of Mississippi A. & M., who won the event at the Southern outdoor meet last year. But that's only a starter. Jim Swart of V. P. I. holds his school record of forty-five feet five and three-quarters inches. Grinus, a Gobbler soph, is almost as good. Hickman of Tennessee and Cole man of Auburn wrere second and (Continued on latt page) LAST TIMES TODAY Douglas Fairbanks in "REACHING FOR THE MOdN" TOMORROW WARNER BROS, frtsent XjL.i.JiiiCI 1; uiu fix ' "' J" ' w 0 1

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