Tuesday, February 2, 1932 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Pare Threa VHITE PHANTOMS TIE BLUE DEVILS IN STATE RACE Carolina Places Four Men in First Six High Scorers; Weathers, Hines Lead. STANDINGS W. L. Pet. 1 1 1 2 3 .750 .750 .666 .000 .000 BIG FIVE Team Carolina 3 Duke 3 State 2 Davidson 0 Wake Forest 0 The Carolina Tar Heels re gained the leadership of the Big Five race for cage honors with their smashing 37-20 victory over Duke university here last Saturday night. It was the White Phantoms' first win over a Duke basketball team in three years. Three teams, North Carolina, Duke, and North Carolina State, are now in a three-way tie for loop leadership, although Duke and Carolina have each won three games to State's two. The biggest surprise of the Tar Heel victory was not the vic tory itself, for the Heels were conceded an excellent chance to win hut the rharmn nf vipfnrv. 1 - - . Even the most enthusiastic of j Carolina fans hoped for victory by one or two points. No one, least of all the Blue Devils, was expecting a walkaway. The White Phantoms also made a substantial gain on the Devils in team scoring. Duke to date has a total of 259 points in nine games to the Tar Heels' 256 points in seven games. Last week the Blue Devils held a sev enteen point advantage over their Chapel Hill rivals. Virgil Weathers, diminutive forward, continued as leader in the race for state individual scoring honors, although he is closely followed by his-teammate at the other forward post, Wil mer Hines. Weathers has gath ered a total of 74 points in seven games to Hines' 67 in a like number of games. Following the Tar Heel forwards are two Blue Devils, Alpert, with 58, and J. Thompson, with 47 points. There will be very little action in the Big Five cage race this week. Duke met Davidson in Charlotte last night and Carolina will meet Wake Forest in Ral eigh Wednesday night in the only Big Five games " before State, Carolina, and Duke begin an invasion of Virginia during the latter part of he week. Team Scoring Duke 259 Carolina 256 State ; '.. 144 Wake Forest 104 Davidson .6 43 Individual Scoring (Ten Leaders) Weathers, Carolina, f . 74 Hines, Carolina, f 67 Alpert, Duke, c 58 J. Thompson, Duke, f 47 Alexander, Carolina, g 43 Edwards, Carolina, c 39 Morgan, State, c .... 36 Shaw, Duke, g .: 31 Carter, Duke, i ...!.. -. 30 Rose, State, g 29 Umstead Is Chosen Local Scoutmaster The last steps in the organi zation of the community com mittee on scouting were com pleted yesterday with the selec tion of President Frank P. Graham as president of the court of honor. Dr. E. R. Mosher and O. F. Richardson ere chosen as chairmen of the troop committees of Chapel Hill and Carrboro, Dr. W. C. Caldwell, chairman of the court of honor, H. D. Meyer for the committee on training, ,H. : F. Comer for inter-racial, Dr. LC. McKinney for camping, and C. h- Mcintosh on rmblicitv. At McLeod Winner x Pool Tournament . Professor W. M. McLeod, by virtue of his play last night, was winner of the faculty pool tournament which has been sponsored by the management of Graham Memorial. Profes sor McLeod will receive as prize for winning the contest a free pass for himself and a guest to the pool tables in the game room. HEEL WRESTLERS LOSE TO CADETS Idol and Captain Tsumas Gain Southern Titles in 175 and 155 Pound Classes. The University of North Carolina matmen were sub dued by the V. M. I. wrestlers by the decisive score of 19 to 9 last Saturday night in Lexing ton. The only Tar Heels regis tering victories were Hussey, Captain Tsumas, and Idol, all three winning by time advant ages. Tsumas and Idol's victories gave Carolina the Southern Conference championship in the 155 pound, and 175 pound class respectively. Captain Tsumas SIGPtlA NU BESTS ZETABETATAU Betas, Kappa Sigma, Kappa Al pha, and Mangum Also Win ners in Intramural Play. Mangum downed New Dorms 25 to 16 in the closest battle of yesterday's intramural games. The contest was on even terms during the first quarter, but in the second the winners took a narrow lead which they held throughout the game. The play ing of Barbano was the best for the winners while Anderson, also of Mangum, played a fast game and led the scoring with twelve points. Sigma Nu Wins Fifth Sigma Nu, using a fast pass ing offense, easily triumphed over Z. B. T. 49 to 7. Allen (scored twenty-two of the win ners points, while Long and Griffith were making twelve and eleven points respectively. Blount of the winners played a fast floor game and stopped many of the loser's scoring threats. Chi Psi Loses First The Betas won over Chi Psi 58 to 16 in the fastest contest of the afternoon. It was Chi Psi's first loss and the Betas CALENDAR Assembly 10:30. Speaker, Dr. E. W. Zimmerman. Lamar Stringfield lecture 4:00. Institute of 'Folk Music. Choral room, Hill music hall. College Editors Voice Opinions Of Dry Laws Pennsylvania, the Daily Texan of the University of Texas, tho Baylor Lariat of Baylor univer- (Continued from fint page) Sltyf tne university Of WCSl- California, the Daily Cclifor-gton Daily of the University Philological Club 7:30, p.m. Speakers R. P. Bond and R. Adams. Graduate lounge. Lecture on Canadian Liquor Con trol 8:00 p. m. Ben H. Spence. Gerrard hall. GRAHAM MEMORIAL Amphoterothen 9:00 p. m. Room 215. Socialist Club 8:00 p. m. Room 210. PITTS AND SUMMERVILLE CO-STAR IN SHOW TODAY the most accurate that has been this year. Barnett and Dresslar, crack forwards of the winners, tied for scoring honors with seventeen points each. Kappa Sigma Victors Kappa Sigma were victors over Phi Kappa Sigma 31 to 18. The losers rallied in the third quarter. Barnhill of the losers was high scorer with thirteen and was followed closely by Eagles who had twelve. Kappa Alpha, led by House, Everette, and Webster, took an ""I""-1 fifth win out of five starts. The ing Landis of V. M. I while . shooting of the Beta team was xrtjicy iuoi easily ueieaieu Neem. By far the most thrilling and exciting bout of the evening was the Woodward-Will match. Alter ten minutes ot vicious, gruelling wrestling, the time keepers . indicated that the Tar Heel held a time advantage of fifty-seven seconds, just four counts short of a victory. As a result, the bout had to go an ex tra period. Coach Quinlan, however, realizing that Wood ward was unable to continue the fight, conceded the bout to V. M. I. ."- Summary: 118 pounds, Hus sey (N.C.) defeated Marshal (V.M.I.) , time advantage 3:48; 126 pounds, Decamps (V.M.I.) threw Matheson (N.C.) in 3:43; 135 pounds, Will (V.M.I.) won from. Woodward (N.C.) by a forfeit; 145 pounds, Smith ( V.M.I.) defeated Hiller, time advantage 8:43; 155 pounds, Tsumas (N.C.) defeated Lan dis (V.M.I.) , time advantage 8:37: 165 pounds. Turner m. ' (V.M.I.) defeated Greer (N.C), time advantage 6:06; 175 pounds, Idol (N.C.) defeated Neem, time advantage 5:53; unlimited, Dorrier (V.M.I.) de feated Auman, time advantage 1:44. Universale "The Unexpected Father," produced by Carl Laemmle, Jr., features the pro gram at the Carolina theatre to day. The film, co-starring oiixu ouiiiiiici vxut; anu. zjaou Pitts for the first time, con cerns the situation of a newly rich bachelor who finds a strange young lady of f our years calling him "daddy," i which ruins the scheduled mar riage of the bachelor to a schem- seen on the intramural court iinS Sld-digger. Miss Pitts a nian of the Northern Branch of the University of California, the Yale Daily News of Yale uni versity, the Daily Maroon of the University of Chicago, the Northwestern Daily of North western university, the Daily tllini of the University of Illi nois, the Daily Iowan of the University of Iowa, the Purdue Exponent of Purdue university, the Indiana Daily Student of the University of Indiana, the Butler Collegian of Butler col lege, the Harvard Crimsan of Harvard university, the Rod cliff e Daily of Radcliffe college, the Michigan Daily of the Uni versity of Michigan, the Minne sota Daily of the University of Minnesota, the Daily Nebraskan of the University of Nebraska, the Daily Dartmouth of Dart mouth college, the Daily Prince tonian of Princeton university, the Columbia Spectator of Co lumbia university, the New York University Daily News of New York university, the Cornell'. Daily Sun of Cornell university, the Daily Orange of Syracuse university, the Daily Tar Heel of the University of North Carolina, the Ohio State Lan tern of Ohio State university, the O'CoUegian of the Okla homa State A. and M. college, Cardinal of the University of Wisconsin. The Daily Tar Heel voted opposed to prohibition, in favor of state-control and national supervision, and was of the opinion that no prohibition would be successful. Marlene Dietrich's former German understudy, Tala Bir rell, is in Hollywood. She is bet ter known abroad than Marlene. nurse from the dog hospital is the Oklahoma Daily of the Uni- recruited, quite by mistake, to quiet the confusion. Dorothy Christy plays the gold-digger, and Claude Allister, Allison Skipworth, Grace Hamp ton, Tyrell Davis, Tom O'Brien, and Richard Cramer complete the cast. Student Pool Tourney Because the students showed so much interest in the progress of the faculty pool tournaments, easy win from Delta Sigma Phi a contest in which all students FENCERS LOSE TO V.M.I. Saturday afternoon at Lex ington, the Carolina fencing team went down before the crack V. M. I. swordsmen by a 7-2 score. F. Wardlaw, D. Wardlaw, E. Eagan, and F. C. Litten represented Carolina. V. "M: I. won two of the first three bouts, but F. Wardlaw won the' fourth fight to even the Tn the next five bouts the V. M. I. men won decisively, taking the match. The defeat was a great disap pointment for Carolina as the fencing team has been unde feated for three consecutive seasons. However, in the opin ion of experts, V. M. I. has the best fencing team in the south this year so this defeat should not greatly discourage the Tar Heels. : On the thirteenth of Feb ruary, Carolina meets Virginia here. Both Virginia and Caro lina defeated Baltimore in a 5-4 match. William Cain Society Makes Contribution to Loan Fund The William Cain chapter of the American Society of Engi neers voted to give $25 to the same tiW Tf P. Umstead -1 Student Emergency Loan Fund was appointed scoutmaster. ' at its meeting Thursday night, j large a part of the people." 45 to 22. Both teams passed wild, but the winners recovered theirs on more occasions. The trio already named scored all the K. A. points while Mauney made fifteen of the losers' points. INVESTIGATORS OF PROHIBITION GET VARIED FINDINGS (Continued from first page) William S. Kenyon who favored a further trial and an amend ment if it proved a failure ; and Paul J. McCormick who stated "absolute repeal is unwise." Henry W. Anderson of Rich mond said that the abolition of the saloon was 'one of the great est steps ever taken by the na tion and added that the effort to make all people total abstain ers run counter to the funda mental social and economic principles beyond the control of government. Frank J. ' Loesch, Kenneth Mackintosh, Roscoe Pound, and Kenyon and Mc Cormick are all substantially behind the opinidn of Anderson although differing in the de grees to which the present law should be revised. Ada L. Comstock, the only woman member of the commis sion is of the opinion that the Amendment should be modified immediately but still hopes that national regulation may prove more successful. Newton D. Baker, formerly secretary of war, is in favor of unconditional repeal of the Eighteenth Amendment. He has said, "In my opinion the Eighteenth Amendment should be repealed and the whole ques tion of policy and enforcement with regard to intoxicating li quors remitted to the states." He has added: "The problem is insoluble as long as it is permit ted to require nation-wide fed-! eral enforcement of a police regulation at variance with the settled habits and beliefs of so are eligible to take part has been scheduled for next week. Any interested undergraduate may take part in the tournament. versity of Oklahoma, the Ore gon Emerald of the University of Oregon, the, Oregon State Barometer of the State College of Oregon, the Daily Pennsyl vanian of the University of Come in and Laugh Your Head Off! pA uih V "'JK J Also Bing Crosby Comedy "I Sur- render Dear" And a "Strange as It Seems" CAROLINA Grail Dance Tickets Go on Sale 10:30 Friday Morning at Pritchard-Lloyd's and Book Exchange Carolina Club Orchestra Bynum Gym Speeds classroom notes X ' , jwyrtT 4r This white J dot identifies 1 IT - J&7. X 4 - Sheaffer's.the and all writing .jns. The ONLY genuine Lifetime0 guarantee is Sheaffer's; do not be deceived! Other, pens may be guaranteed against defect, but Sheaffer's Life time3 is guaranteed against everything excepting loss for your lifetime. 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