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Saturday, November 7, 1931 THE DAILY TAR HEEL. Pajre Three Tar Heel Gridde Tech At Atlanta Today Carolina Favorite to Win Battle at Grant Field; Alexander Predicts Tech Victory. Carolina will be facing its sixth Southern Conference foot ball team in succession when the Tar Heels meet the Yellow Jackets of Georgia Tech on Grant field, Atlanta, this after noon, and if history means any- thing, there will be plenty action' Waye wnen ..xnese two ieams, uotn 01 whom have taken plenty of jolts this season, lock horns. Coach Bill Alexander of Tech freely predicts a win for his team in spite of the fact that six men are on the injured list, but Tar Heel supporters who saw the Carolina first stringers run wild in the first quarter against State last Saturday are unwill ing to concede v the Georgians anything. The Carolina back - field looked better than at any other time thisv year last week, and if the line, functions against Tech as it has all season, the Tornado will have its hands full holding Slusser, Croom, and the rest of Coach Collins' ball carry ing stars. Carolina will probably present the same team that started against State with' Walker and Brown, ends ; Hodges and Un derwood, tackles; Mclver and Fysal, guards ; Gilbreath, cen ter ; Ferebee, quarter, Croom and Slusser, halfbacks ; and Chand ler fullback. Carolina and Tech have each won one game and lost three to Conference opponents this year, and will be fighting to get out of the second division. At present they are tied for seventeenth place with a percentage of .250. Sport Is Sideline For Green Wave Football Leader Jerry Dalrymple, All-American End Last Year, Was "Hobo" Before Entering Tulane. T A "hobo" is'leading the unde- Ifeated Tulane university Green ave this fall. For that's what Jerry Dal-! rymple, All-American end, ad mits he is. And he laughs as he tells how he "grew up" from a grimy-handed and blackfaced oiler on an excavating machine to the position of positions at Tulane. ' Three years ago m hadn't a thought in his mind of entering college, rle wasjbotheredxmly by the thought of getting a job on a ship and working his way around the world when Dr. Ed McGhee discovered him working in a Hammond, Louisiana, straw berry field. He had worked his way from Little Rock, Arkansas, his home, to Hammond through TENNIS TEAM TO ! PLAY -FRESHMENI Meet Is Scheduled Tuesday as Warm-up. for the Virginia Match Thanksgiving. In preparation for the annual tennis meet with fhe University of Virginia, the only net match scheduled for this fall, to be staged the day before Thanks giving, the Carolina J931-32 edi tion racquet wielders will "scrim mage" an impromptu freshman net team in a handicap tourna ment, next Tuesday, November 10. . I Bryan Grant, former national clay court tennis champion and four times winner of the south ern title; Wilmer Hines, holder of numerous southern titles ; and Lenoir Wright, runner-up to the southern champion last summer; i all members of last year's na tional champion Carolina tennis team, will see action in the handicap tournament.. Grant will be paired with Harvey Har ris, winner of the annual fall freshman tournament, in the feature match of the meet. Hines will play "Ricky" Willis, finalist in the f rosh tourney, while CANDIDATE FOR ALL-SOUTHERN various jobs oiler of a machine, Wright will cross racquets with Dr. the Ever Willis Tennis Victor The fall intramural tennis tournament was brought to a successful close during the past week. Both the singles and the doubles tournament were won by dormitory entrants over fratern ity teams. In the singles tournament, E. laborer in a box factory, night engineer in an ice plant, and general all-around worker. Be tween towns he hitch-hiked, hop ing to get to New Orleans where he wanted to catch on with some steamship. Dalrymple's physique sparkling youth impressed McGhee. He approached boy with the question : " play football?" "Some all-state one year," was the indifferent reply. It -doesn't really matter what the doctor said to that, but late in September, 1927, Jerry Dal rymple, slipkened up and with a new job to help along, was reg istered as a Tulane student. The rest is not only Tulane history, but Southern Confer ence football history. Dalrymple developed into one of the great est players in Tulane's three de cades of football competition. He's a great end, a type of player - : v ' ' rj o x ' ' A vr I I 'V ' Ellis Fso " )i Right guard -north ce$ousn FOOTBALL GAME FEATURES SPORT PROGRAM TODAY Oak Ridge-Frosh Game Starts at 1:00 O'clock; Cross Country Team Meets Duke. Walter Levetan, Massachusetts!, state junior champion. Luke Abels. No. 7 on last grid team. Ellis Fysal (pictured above) will be a big contender for All Southern guard this year. Fysal is the only regular left from the 1 n on i'A rnvnlmo'c vfrrlit mioril Tiac Koon nlavinor u ViMTirr-llii war's varsitv smiad will be rat Same and together with June Underwood, right tackle, has been year s varsity squad, will be rat- & tower of gtre tn in the Tar Heel line ed No. 4 m the tourney and will - ODoose Laurence Jones, state I high school champion. Dave and Morgan and John Dillard will be STEELE, SIGMA CHI MURAL WINNERS C. Wilhs, representing Lewis , mJITialwl; to TCt into every dormitory, won a decisive vie- play- And he's also an inspira tory over W. N. Dixon, the Pi tional captain for the undefeated Kappa Phi entrant. Willis seem- Gren Wave. ed to have had - an .easy time : throughout the tournament, as Charity Contests he downed everv onnonent bv a safe margin. Southern Conference football The final match in the doubles teams have full authority to pro tournament .was just the oppo-.ceed in arranging post-season r.haritv erames. Professor C. L. be selected Monday afternoon by special elimination play. , The following men, who made a good showing in the freshman tour ney, are asked to report to Coach Kenfield at the tennis courts Monday afternoon: Paul S. Jones, Robert Sutton, Fred Dos- senbach, R. W; Weesner, Robert Lovill, Jimmy Cope, and Fred Shulman. Fifteen points will be given the freshman player in every game of each singles match, fif teen points to the freshman team in every game of the double tilts. Although the handicap is not a large one, Coach Kenfield said he believed that the number of points allotted the f rosh play ers would be enough to assure some real competition and a number of interesting matches. "Sonny" Graham, captain of last year's undefeated net team, is not practicing tennis this fall the varsity's No. 5 and No. 6 men, respectively. The last two men to represent the frosh will Only Two Games Played Yester day; Question Marks and Mangum Forfeit. In 'a close game in which the extra- point was the margin of victory, Manly emerged the win ner over Steele, 7 to 6. Manly scored first when Laws caught a pass thrown by Kav eny early in the first half. The Steele marker came late in the game when . Peacock produced the only long run that was made for Steele all afternoon. He BULLDOGS MEET N. Y. U. TODAY AT YANKEE STADIUM crossed the croal line with no one near him. Kaveny was the in-, at an extra pace Thursday after r Special Several new faces will prob ably be seen in the New York university varsity lineup today when the Violet takes the field against the, crack University of Georgia outfit at the Yankee sta dium. . Coach Chick Meehan has been changing his varsity candi dates back and forth between the first and second teams all week in an effort to obtain the proper group for the meeting with the Crackers. The Violet gridiron mentor again drove his Violet charges The doubles went the full dis- f tance of fiye sets, and it was only after a long and hard fought battle before the winners could be named. Bfaley and Huskins, of New Dorms, finally emerged victories over Minor and Water house, who represented the S.' A. E. fraternity. , After the matches, the win ners were presented with medals' donated by the intramural de dividual star of the contest, his noon in the workout on Ohio all-around play being the feature field. Ever since Monday the of the winners' attack and while N. Y. U. coaches have been work on the defense, he was a bother ing the Violet gridders extra to the losers throughout the hard in order to correct the game. For Steele Peacock and ftaws that were apparent in the I'll 't -V 1 L 1 J Griffin starred. UiJj wim uregon last weex-enu. The practice sessions this week TROJAN WAR FLAG STOLEN For the third time in the his tory of the University of South tern California at Los Angeles' existence, the Trojan war flak 1 1 i 1 fill ' 1 . tm nasoeen stolen, ine Banner wBelf and play any team, in ttuuuctea aunng a iootuau lmij before the California game. Ap parently no one saw the deed, for, in spite of the frantic efforts of the student body, no clue has been discovered concerning the emblem. The Squires, a sopho more honorary group, intrusted with the care of the war flag, re ceived the blame for allowing the theft to occur. Tiora r"F Anhnm president of the Conference, by the action he took a few days ago, obviated the necessity of a vote by Conference members. "I took the bull by the horjis," Professor Hare declared, "and after announcing that Confer ence teams might engage in post season contests for charity, I wired the faculty chairman of my action. Indications point to aU Conference members coope rating in the movement." Carolina was one1 of the first to notify Professor Hare of its willingness to meet any member of the Southern Conference. The wonder team of 1929, has al readv offered to reorganize it- y team, in tne south for charity. Sigma Chi Loses Led by the defensive and of fensive play, of Odum, Phi Kappa 3 ill i- 4-- i i4-V.v CS'o-mn won rt rlprnsivp vif.tnrv r . ! rv in j. rv iWOrJi. the handicap tourney or tne over aigma oni v 10 v. Cross country meets, varsity and freshman, with Duke, a freshman football game with the strong Oak Ridge Cadets, and a grid-graph report of the Carolina-Georgia Tech game in At lanta will give Carolina sport goers a heavy program today. The freshman game with Oak Ridge, which held State's frosh to a slightly lower margin than the Tar Babies, will be played in Kenan stadium at 1 :00 o'clock, so as not to conflict with the grid-graph reports from Atlan ta, which Will begin coming into Memorial hall at 3:00 o'clock. The two cross country runs will finish between the halves of the freshman game, so visitors to Chapel Hill can make all three events for the afternoon. The Carolina cross country team beat Florida in one preced ing meet, but will have tough competition from Duke, which beat Davidson, with Bray, Miles, and ' Bradsher showing real speed and endurance. Groover is still out with a bad foot, but Carolina can run Mark Jones and Bob Hubbard, who tied for first against Florida; Captain Clarence Jensen and McRae, who tied for third ; arid Sullivan, who was fifth, with the other two men to be picked from the ranks of Cordle, Pratt, and Hen son. Another good meet is expected between the Carolinaf rosh, who finished seven men ahead of the nearest Guilford freshman in their last meet, and Duke's frosh, who beat Davidson's first-year team easily. Williamson, cake race winner, Waldrop, Haywood, Curlee, Eskola, Litten, and Gold man will probably carry Tar Baby colors. The Tar Baby gridders will be playing their second game of the year, and will be striving for a comeback." State's Wolfcubs beat them 25-6, but it was the Tar Babies' first game, and the coaches used sixty players in an effort to get a line on their strength. Schaffer, Behringer, Ogburn, Jackson, and Martin - (Continued on last page) have extended until after dark and at the same time the coaches have increased the amount of Looks as though a lot of sum mer vacations are going to last through the winter. Dunbar s Weekly (Phoenix, Ariz.) "Civilization is under con struction," says an editorial. Many of us have noticed that we proceed at our own risk. Life. Virginia meet. Harley Shuford, star freshman player last year, is on the shelf with a sprained ankle and will not see action in the matches Tuesday. jA total of . nine matches, six singles and three doubles, will be played. Grant and Wright Odum seemed . always in the way of the ball when thrown by the Sigma Chi players, and on many occasions intercepted pass es. Twice he got loose for touch downs on intercepted passes. The winners scored in each of the first three quarters, while Sig- Ernest Vavra, Violet reserve tackle, has been making a strong (Continued on last page) HALF SOLES GOOD BETTER BEST 65c 75c $1.00 Lacock's Shoe Shop will play No. 1 doubles for the ma Chi made very few threats varsity. Hines and Abels will be during the contest. For the win rated No. 2, while Morgan and ners, aside from Odum, Wilmer Dillard will compose the third played the best game. Newbold team. Harris and Levetan will was the biggest opposition of be matched against Grant and f ered by the losers. Wright. The second and third freshman doubles combinations will be determined Monday. To . western eyes it seems, strange that China and Japan should fall to fighting over a rail road. In this enlightened, coun try, owning a railroad is the worst thing that could happen to anybody except striking oil. The New Yorker. Anyway, a lot of us will soon be on our feet again our shoes have about worn out. Thomas ton Times. Two Forfeits The Best House won their sev enth straight game in seven starts when the Question Marks forfeited a game the two teams were scheduled to play yester day. - Mangum received a forfeit from Lewis this afternoon. Two Games Postponed Because of a mixed schedule, the game between Graham and New Dorms and also the game between Phi Sigma Kappa and ,S. A. E. was postponed until a later date. - Your Fellow Students Wear Hose Take orders for their requirements in Hosiery. Make that extra cash you need this 'season. Wonderful opportunity. Write Fashion Hosiery Company Box 715, High Point. N. C. Have Your Printing Done at The J Orange Printshop If You Want the Best in Service and Quality Phone 3781 - 1 , " I ! .L L III . I . - -.. vlTT IWJldi. MUJ -Ua rii;!!: iUL CAROLINA vs. GEORGIA, TECH Play by Play Account Direct From Field in Atlanta Admission 25c MEMORIAL HALL V 3:00 P' M- The Grid-Graph Will Follow the Freshman Game M J l -yf . ""- , H ' m ' j . g!rz2rzz tn-f: i n i " "-' ""' " Tl'jT. " ' "' " ' ' 1 "'"' ' " t ' , - - s . 4- . k
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 7, 1931, edition 1
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