I Tuesday, November 3, 1931 COLONS DRILLS SECOND TEAM ON PASSWENSIVE First Team Rests as Collins Out lines Fundamentals of Pass Defense From A to Z. Coach Chuck Collins, getting the Carolina Tar Heels ready for Georgia Tech, took his sec ond team to one side today and went through the pass defense beginning at "A" and ending at The Tar Heel mentor is afraid heart failure, for himself and a number of alumni, would result if there were a recurrence of last Saturday's exhibition. The Tar Heels, it is recalled, scored eigh teen points on N. C. State in the first sixteen minutes of play last Saturday, and then the second team almost threw the game away with its unprecedentedly poor pass defense. Carolina won 18-15, holding State to four first downs, two on penalties, with "Rip" Slusser gaining more yards than all State's backs put together, but Collins wasn't a bit proud even if the first club did show punch and drive in quantities that have previously lain dormant. Johnny Peacock, quarterback ; Tom White, Kay Thompson, and John Phipps, halfbacks; Hanes Lassiter, fullback ; and Tom Alexander, center, were the boys on whom Collins concentrated as he outlined the 'history and theory of pass defense from Napoleon down to Carideo, and illustrated the lecture with a good practical drill. Collins was only trying to. get his first team rested up a-bit for Georgia Tech, Walker, Gil breath, and Underwood, in the line, had played every minute of the Georgia and Tennessee games. Fysal and Brown had seen; only slightly less service and the whole first string had literally been "on the spot" four hard and gruelling weeks. The rest came near to being costly. The second line, with Cozart, Strickland, and Alex ander leading the tacklers, stop ped every State line thrust, but ' Alexander and the backs failed miserably at defending against State's last-hope passing attack. xFysal and Walker, line reg ulars, got banged up a bit in the angry battle that the Wolves put up, but they are expected to come around with a little rest. and the whole team is doped to be ready to show its best, and its new-found punch, - to Georgia Tech. . Vanderbilt beat the Yellow Jackets last Saturday by a con siderable larger margin than Vandy beat Carolina, but Caro lina isn't paying any attention to comparative scores, not-after last Saturday. The Tar Heels , are expecting a tough game, as Carolina-Tech games have al ways been, and are preparing for the worst. - Intramural Schedule Tuesday 4:00 p. m. (1) Phi Kappa Sigma vs. S. A. E. ; (2) Delta Kappa Epsilon vs. Zeta Psi; (3) H Kappa Alpha vs. Pi Kappa Phi. 1 ' 5:00 p. m. (1) Chi Phi vs. Alpha Lambda Tau; (2) Kappa Alpha vs. Theta Chi; (3) Manly vs. Ruffin. Wednesday 4:00 p. m.(l) Lewis vs. Steele; (2) New Dorms vs. Ev erett; (3) Mangum vs. Grimes. 5:00 p. m. (1) Delta Psi vs. Zeta Psi ; (2) Old West vs. Best House ; (3) Aycock vs. Question- Marks. Thursday 4:00 p. m. (1) Chi Psi vs. Theta Chi ; (2) Kappa Sigma vs: Tau Epsilon Phi; (3) A. T. O. vs. Pi Kappa Alpha. 5:00 p. m. (1) Phi Delta Varsity-Fresh Meet A track meet between the var sity and the freshmen will be held the latter part of this week. The events will consist of the quarter mile relay, half mile re lay) all the field events, and the hurdles. The squads have been working out for some time and are in good condition. However, it is not too late for other candi dates to report. Coaches Ran son and Dameron are on the field every day at 4:00 p. m. The schedule of practices is: pole vault, high jump, javelin, 3:30 p. m., Monday, Wednesday, aifd Friday ; shot put, discus, 4 :00 p. m., Monday, Wednesday, and Friday; broad jump, 4:00 p. m., Tuesday and Thursday ; Hurdles, sprints, and middle distances 4:00 p. m. daily. SIDELIGHTS By Phil Alston Everyone who saw the State Carolina game Saturday should be willing to admit that it was a wild affair. It was really more than just a football game. It was about the best three-ring circus to perform in North Carolina in a long time. As if the game it self couldn't furnish sufficient action there were the'usual num ber of drunks and some of the best riot scenes we can remem ber. Any time that fighting died down on the sidelines, one of the players usuallycame to the res cue by taking a sock at his near est neighbor. And that brings us to the part played by the referee, Mr. Flow ers. Things were so uproarious out on the field most of the time it was pretty hard to see exactly what the excitement was and who was causing it, but it cer tainly seemed to us that the referee lost control of the situa tion about the middle of the third quarter. Roughness was prevalent all through the last half, but the worst situation oc curred in the third quarter just before Stroupe, State's right tackle, was banished from the game. It took the referee so iong to make his decision and enforce his order that we weren't sure whether Flowers was order ing Stroupe from the field or vice versa. From the way the boys had been running over Mr. Flow ers all afternoon, it wiuld not have been surprising to see them order him out of the game for cluttering up the way. To add to the confusion, an the spectators at the ends of the field came running down to ex press their opinions. Had it not been for the actions of the State college cadets in restoring some semblance of order, the game would have probably ended in a free-for-all right them "We feel that the State regiment should be congratulated and thanked for the work it did in trying to restore Order. - J.- f ' r a 11 Another game that must have been a thriller was the Yale Dartmouth game which ended in a 33-33 tie There is bound to be excitement any time that 66 points are scored in a football game, but when the two teams Theta vs. Sigma Phi Epsilon; (2) Phi Gamma Delta vs. Sigma Nu; (3) Phi Alpha vs. Sigma Phi Sigma. Friday 4:00 p. m. (1) Phi Kappa Sigma vs. Sigma Chi; (2) Phi Sigma-Kappa vs. S.A.E.; (3) Manly vs. Steele , 5:00 p. m. (1) Lewis vs. Mangum; (2) New Dorms vs. Graham; (3) Question Marks vs. Best House. Here are the ball-carrying records of the leading Carolina backs in the N. C. State game : Slusser fifty-seven yards f or4ele ven tries; Phipps twenty-seven for eight ; Croom twenty-five for nine; and White twenty for nine. THE DAILY CAROLINA LEADS BIG FIVE LEAGUE "Rip" Slusser Second in Race for State Scoring Honors; Heels Top Team Scorers. - Rip Slusser's three-touchdown drive against State Saturday served not only to put Carolina's blond veteran back in thfe race with Brewer of Duke "for state' high scoring honors, but gave the Tar Heels their first Southern Conference win of the season, and made Carolina's position at the head of the Big Five stand- W8 more secure. Slusser's eighteen points also returned Carolina to the lead tam scoring with a one-point margin over Duke. Having won over the Wolf Pack, Carolina stands at the head of the Big Five loop with two victories and no defeats. Duke still holds a mathematical tie with the Tar Heels with one vic tory and no defeats, but has a scoreless tie against Davidson to mar its slate; Although Kid Brewer went scoreless against Tennessee, his total of fifty points scored in pre vious games keeps him ahead of the other scorers and leaves him a fourteen point margin over Slusser. Slusser's touchdowns against Wake Forest and State while -Brewer made two touch downs each against Villanova and Vi M. I. and scored four touchdowns and two extra points against Wake Forest. Four men are now tied for third place with twelve points each. Pearce and McQueen of Davidson were held scoreless for the third consecutive week and were forced to share honors with Wilson of Wake Forest and Cum- iskey of State. Wilson scored two touchdowns against Erskine Friday, while the Wolf pack full back scored 'his second touch down of the year' on a plunge through the Carolina line for State's last score Saturday. McQuage, with a touchdown and two extra points, ranks fifth. McQuage broke into the scoring column a .week ago last Friday with a point after touchdown against Catholic university, and then added a touchdown and ex tra point against the Tar Heels. Don King of Davidson added his fourth extra point of the year Saturday to head the list of point kickers. Flinn of David son, with a touchdown, and Green of Wake Forest, with an extra point, were the new addi tions to the scoring brigade this week. After leading in team scoring for a week, Duke fell again into second place with sixty-one points to sixty-two for the Tar Heels. State's ' fifteen points against Carolina drew the Wolves up to a tie with Davidson for third place in scoring, each team having forty points. Wake Forest continues to be last with twenty-five points. The Big Five' team standings including games follow : of October 31 Team W 2 1 1 1 L 0 0 2 2 1 T 0 1 0 0 1 Pet. Carolina Duke ....... 1.000 1.000 Wake Forest State ...... ...... J.. .333 .333 .000 Davidson . ....... .... 0 split the points equally, it must be nerve-wracking. Albie Booth contributed to the excitement with a touchdown run from kick off, but a Mister McCall of Dart mouth seems to have furnished the major "portion of the fire works. McCall booted two field goals . (quite an unusual thing this year, tieing the score with his last one. On top of that he outdid Albie Booth by galloping 93 yards for" a touchdown on an other kickoff. Yes, that game must have been a thriller, but we still insist that it would have a hard time beating the Carolina-Virginia game of 1928 for action. V. TAR HEEL FALL BASKETBALL PRACTICE OPENED Four Lettennen of Last Year's Squad in School; Sixteen Games Scheduled. Fall basketball practice .got under way yesterday afternoon at the Tin Can as Coach Bo Shepard, who succeeds Jim Ashmore, put a fair sized squad through their . initial workout, prior to the hard work they will face in preparation for the 1932 schedule. Four letter men" will be on hand this winter, along with every member of last year's f rosh team except Fanny Fisher, forward. The letter men will in clude Jimmy Moore and Wifmer Hines, forwards, Paul Edwards, center and forward, and Cap tain Tom Alexander, guard. At present Moore is out with in juries and Alexander is playing football, and neither is likely to see any action on the court until after football season is over. The best prospects up from the 1931 Tar Baby squad are Dave McCathren and Virgil Weathers, both of whom played brilliant ball last year. Collet, McGlenn, Poe, and Harris are other promising men who saw service with the f rosh last year. Practice this fall will be only three days a week, Monday, Wednesday, and Friday, accord ing to Coach Shepard who piloted the frosh to a state, champion ship last winter. The 1932 schedule calls for nine games at home and seven away, and includes ten Southern Conference battles. The season will open January 6 with Guil ford playing here, and will close with the conference tournament in Atlanta, February 26: The complete schedule fol lows: . January 6 Guilford here. ( January 9 Davidson at Char lotte; January 12 Furman here. January 15 V. P. 1. here. January 23 Wake Forest at Wake Forest. January 26 N. C. State at Raleigh. January 30 Duke here. February, 3 Wake Forest here. February 5 V. P. I. Blacksburg, Virginia. February, 6 Maryland College Park, Maryland. February 8 Virginia at at at Charlottesville, Virginia. : February 11 Davidson here. February 13 Duke at Dur ham. February 19 Maryland here. February 20- Washington and Lee here. February 23 N. C. State here. . February 26 Southern Con ference tournament at Atlanta, Georgia. 1 V. The student congress of the University of Maryland, at a meeting last week in the Ritchie gymnasium, adopted a resolu tion to prohibit the enforcement of freshman regulations by phy sical means. All seniors are re quested to call attM Yackety Yack office in Graham Memorial building this week in order to make ap pointments with the photographer. Local High Loses, 6-0 Last Friday Apex high school defeated Chapel Hill high at Apex 6-0. Roughness charac terized the game. Rogers, who starred for the victors went over for the lone score early in the second quarter. The heavier Apex outrushed the losers get ting ten first downs to two. In the line Durham, Ray, and Pen dergraft starred for the invad ers. Dashiell intercepted two Apex passes and punted well to gain backfield honors for Chapel Hill. This game was the first in the "B", class eastern high school state championship for both teams. Next Friday Apex will probably play Whiteville. Tennessee, Tulane Georgia, Maryland Lead Conference The standing of the Southern Conference football teams, in cluding games of Saturday, Octo ber 31, are as follows : Team W L T 0 0 0 Pet. 1.000 1.000 1.000 1.000 .800 .667 .667 .667 .667 .500 .500 .500 .500 .333 .333 .333 .250 Tennessee,. ............ 5 0 Georgia 4 0 Tulane 4 0 Maryland 3 0 " 1 Alabama 4 11 Florida 2 1 1 Kentucky 2 1 1 Louisiana State 2 1 1 Sewanee 2 1 1 U. S. C. .. 2 2 0 Vandy 2" 2 0 Auburn 110 W. & L. ..... 1 1 0 Duke ......... 1 2 0 Clemson 1 2 0 V. M. I. 1 2 0 U. N. C . . .. 1 3 1 Georgia Tech ... 1 3 0 N. C. State 0 3 0 .250 .000 Miss. A. & M. ... 0 3 0 V, P. I. ......... ......... 0 3 0 Mississippi ... 0 3 0 .000 .000 .000 .000 Virginia . ... .. .... 0 4 0 Between Meals . and After Supper Drop in for a cup of our FAMOUS HOT CHOCOLATE and a DELICIOUS SANDWICH at the Carolm Club( Breakfast Regular Dinner and Regular Supper ETSONI Nationally Known VOL. I NOVEMBER 3, 1931 Published in the interest of Uni versity of North Carolina stu dents and for the promotion of better dress. STETSON "D" "Red" Foister, Editor Cigar storje sign: "Come back prosperity.. All is forgiven." - sd ' , Saturday was homecoming down at State College, and we made our selves quite at home for a while. Late" in the afternoon the "pack" became hungry and were no longer hospitable to the visiting team. It took Mr. Collins' first team to drive the "Wolves" from our door. sd ' . It' is not birth, nor rank, nor state, 'tis get-up-and-get that makes men great. sd It seems to be fate for all of our rivals to be at their best against us; keeping this in "mind we are looking for a hard game in Atlanta Saturday. ' sd .. MANHATTAN SHIRTS in white, blue, tan, green and grey broad cloth or oxford at $1.95. . sd We have just received a ship ment of Topcoats and Overcoats in all shades, made up in single and double-breasted models; to sell at $19.50 and $24.50. sd . Secretary: What did you wish to speak to Mr. Smith about? Wife (of Mr. Smith) : You. . ' . sd "Well, dad, I just looked in to say hello." "To late, my son. Your mother iyi STETSON "D" clothes pressed absolutely Free at our store Read Stetsonian Every Tuesday ' Pae Tfcrcs BETAS LOSE TO A.T.0.'SINHARD FOUGJTFBATTLE Phi Gam, S. P. E., Sigma Nu, Delta Psi, ajid Sigma Zeta Win ; Many Close Games. In a game that was a fight from start to finish, A. T. O. eked out a narrow victory over Beta five first downs to four. Neither team had been defeated before this game, so it may be a deciding factor in the race for top position in the fraternity league. , . Both lines fought hard and charged the opposing backs fast which resulted in a small score. The game was a nip and tuck battle throughout with no one sure which team held the upper hand. The Wilson brothers and Webb led the attack for the win ners, while the best form for the losers was shown by Rand and Rose. Phi Gams in Narrow Victory Coming from behind in the last quarter the undefeated Phi Gams won a fast game from Sig ma Chi by the margin of an extra point after touchdown, the final score being 7 to 6. The Sigma Chis scored in the first quarter on a short pass over center. From then until the last quarter neither team was able to push across a marker, al though both made several threats. In the closing quarter, the Phi Gams scored when Baucher threw a long pass over the goal line into the hands of a teammate. Barclay wasf. a thorn in the sides of the Sigma Chi players both on defense and offense. Brown and Way starred for the losers. Phi Alpha Loses Scoring in the last quarter, , - (Continued on lart page) Justly Famous NO. 7 looked in to say hello and got all my change," sd DOBBS HATS six, seven, and eight dollars. sd Salesman: I'm writing a hot love letter to a sweetie I just met. What would be the best thing to end it with? - Merchant: A lighted match. sd - The well dressed Carolina man will have at least one double breasted suit included in his ward robe this winter. The six-button coat, two-to-button, with peak lapels and rope-shoulders is the smart thing. " sd Dress up for class and impress the Prof. Save your sweater, and knickers for sport wear. Use the cords for field trips and for hunt ing. ' -' sd Stetson "D" Clothes are made only of rich woolens, fabrics, tail ored and designed by Master Craftsmen in our ultra modern shops. Clothiers and Furnishers For College Men Suits and Topcoats Tailored to Your Measure $24.50 $29.50 $34.50 AN