Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 21, 1932, edition 1 / Page 3
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Saflday, February 21, 1932 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Carolina Capers Defeat W.AndlLGe nereis 27-19 fl"hite Phantoms Count Twelfth Victory of Season as Generals Drop Listless Tilt. EDWARDS LEADS SCORERS Freshmen Win Preliminary Over. Darlington Prep of Georgia 45-10. From The Bench By Thomas H, Brougkton v .Carolina's White Phantoms lived up to their names Friday night, and Kentucky leads the Southern Conference loop with Led by Paul Edwards, veteran I a perfect record. The play of center who scored five field goals , Carolina's guards was at times sensational. Konkm, Maryland's LATE SPORTS and two foul shots for twelve points, 'the. Carolina White pfcatoms counted their twelfth victory of the season in fifteen starts as they defeated the Gen erals of Washington and Lee by a 27-19 score. Edwards and Weathers coun tered to start the Tar Heels on the way to victory from the start. With the score 6-1, Jar rett sank a field goal to give the Generals their first action toss of the game. The Tar Heels sank three action tosses and one foal shot in quick succession to lead the Washington and Lee five 13-7 at the half. Although rough, the game held little interest because of slow play, especially noticeable after the Maryland game of Fri day night. Edwards, with, twelve points, and Hines, with six points, led the Carolina at tack while the floor-play of Mc Cachren was outstanding. The Generals' attack was led by Sawyers with six points. Mos ovich gathered five points to take second place honors. Freshmen Win, 45-10 Carolina's freshman quintet easily defeated Darlington Prep of Georgia in a loosely played contest, 45-10. The Tar Babies led 21-8 at the end of the first half. In the second period the visitors failed to count a single action toss. The play of Kaveny, who gathered ten points, was out standing for the Tar Babies. The box score : Carolina ' fg Hines, rf 3 Chandler, rf 0 Weathers, If 1 Markham, If ........ 0 Edwards, c 5 Brandt, c 0 Capt. Alexander, rg 1 Henry, rg , 0 McCachreny Ig 2 Total 12 W.&L. fg Sawyers, rf 2( Capt. Jarrett, If o' Wilson, If ... 1 Griewank, c 0 Bailey, c 0 Steinberg, c 0 Holbrook, rg 2 Violett, rg .... 0 Mosovich, lg 2 Total .. 7 all-southern forward, was held to three field goals, at least two of which were of the long shot variety, by Captain Tom Alex ander. Which reminds us that Coach Shepard is going to have a hard time finding a guard of Alexander's calibre for next year's quintet. The Tar Heel cagers will close their 1932 season against North Carolina State here Tuesday night. The result of the game will not affect the final standing of either team, but it will def initely decide the guard berths on the all-state basketball team for 1932. Right now Alexan der and McCachren of Carolina, and Rose of State have the guard berths practically sewed up between them, and Tuesday's game will decide the first team line-up. , The annual Southern Confer ence basketball tournament gets underway in Atlanta next week. After their defeat of Maryland, the White Phantoms will enter the tourney co-favorites with the Kentucky Wildcats, unde feated this season, and the Old .Liners. Friday nignts game proved to the south -that the North Carolina five will have to be reckoned with in the tourna ment. ft tpl 0 6 0 - 0 1 3 0 0 2 12 ' 0 0 ", 0 2 0 0 0 4 3 27 ft tp ,26 11 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 1 1 4 0 0 1 5 5 19 Chick Haf ey, Cardinal outfield er, won his race with Bill Terry of the Giants for the holdout championship of the major lea gues when New York officials announced yesterday that the star first sacker had signed contract for 1932. The salary was not made public, but it is our guess that Terry had the better end of the argument. First basemen of Terry's class are not easy to find. Comparative scores received another upset Friday night when North Carolina State de feated the Washington and Lee cagers decisively after the Gen erals had beaten Duke, 21-12. Previously the Devils had de feated State on two occasions. Moral Don't bet on compara tive scores. Carolina's wrestling team tied the Army matmen last night by the score of 16-16. Captain Tsumas and Percy Idol won by falls while Hiller and Hussey gained time advantages over their opponents. The Maryland quint defeated Duke last night 20-18 in an ex tra period game. VARSITY TEAMS FACE HARD WEEK Winter Sport Season Closes With Southern Conference Tourna ments Which Begin Friday. , Carolina teams will face one of the busiest weeks of the sea son this week, with both South ern Conference boxing and bas ketball tournaments scheduled for the latter part of the week. Monday night the varsity wrestlers meet Brooklyn Poly in New York City in the final match of the Northern triD. Wednesday night the matmen close their 1932 season against the Davidson varsity and fresh men in the Wildcats' lair. While the team as a whole hasn't made a very good record, Percy Idol and Captain Harry Tsumas are claimants to the Southern Con ference championship in their respective weights. Neither have been defeated this season. Basketball Carolina's White Phantoms meet North Carolina State here Tuesday night in their final game of the pre-tournament season. The Red Terrors de feated the Tar Heels in the Frank Thompson Memorial gym. nasium in Raleigh in an early season game, and after their decisive defeat of Washington and Lee Friday night, the final outcome of 'the game1 is uncer tain., - - . Thursday afternoon the Tar Heel cagers will leave for At lanta for the Southern Confer ence tournament wnich opens Friday. Returning home after their match with Navy last night the Tar Heel boxers will begin a week of strenuous preparation for the annual Conference tour nament which will take place in Charlottesville, Virginia, Friday and Saturday. Although defeat ed by Penn State and V. M. I., the Tar Heels, who placed third Ruffin Takes Lead In Dormitory League 'As- Season Nears Close o Four Clubs, T. E. P Sigma No, Beta Theta Pi, and S. A. E. Keep Clean Records in Fraternity Division of Intramural Bas ketball Race as Final Week Approaches. -o Ruff in took an undisputed lead in the dormitory league of the intramural basketball race as a result of Manly's win over Best House and Old East's win over the Question. Marks. This left the leaders the only un defeated team,' although the race may end in six, way ties for if the Question Marks defeat Ruff in Monday, Ruff in, the Question Marks, Swain Hall, Best House, Manly, and Grimes will each have only one defeat. In the fraternity loop, four clubs, T. E. P., Sigma Nu, the Betas, and S. A. E. went with out defeats this week but the lead will be narrowed down to one, as T. E. P. will meet Sigma Nu Monday and if S. A. E. and first setback in two years. The game went to an extra period at which time the winners tallied four markers to the Question Marks' two. The next best game was on the same day and was the contest in which Manly handed Best House their first defeat of the year. The standings at the end of last week are as follows : Fraternity League Team WT. L. Sigma Nu . - 7 0 Betas 7 0 S. A. E. ... 6 . 0 T. E. P. : 6 0 Kappa Alpha - 6 1 Phi Delts .... 5 1 Kappa Sig .... 5 2 Delta Sig 5 - 2 the .Betas are still undefeated . Chi Psi ,. 4 Thursday, they will meet eachjZeta Psi ............ 3 other, the winner to meet the .Theta' Chi : 4 winner of the T. E. P.-Sigma Nu Phi Sies 4 contest Friday to decide the fra ternity championship. Scoring Lead As a result of a 60 to 8 win, Sigma Nil increased their scor- A. T. O 3 Pikas 2 Phi Gams : l- 2 Phi Alpha .,1- ; .. . 2 S. P. E. 1 1 ing lead over Kappa Alpha twen i Delta Tau Delta 1 ty-eight points. The former had a total of 277 points, while the latter had 240. No other f rat team has reached the two hun dred mark yet. In the dormi tory league Best house still held a wide margin in scoring. The leader had 347 points and was followed by the Raihblers, Old East, and Manly with 284, 238, and 202 points respectively. The team and individual scor ing records were both broken during the week. Old East got eighty-one" points to top Best House's record of eighty in club scoring. In individual scoririg Weathers, of Ruff in got thirty two points to , break the record of thirty made by Everett oi Kappa Alpha. Weather's high score was tied by Fox of Old East in Friday's contests. The feature battle of thq week was the one in which Old East Z. B. T. .... Dekes Delta Psi Chi Phi 1 1 1 0 Sigma Zeta 0 Pi Kaps .'. 0 Sigma Chi 0 Dormitory League Team W. Ruffin ... 7 Grimes 7 Manly 6 Question Marks 6 Best House :.. 6 Swain Hall 5 Old East 6 Aycock 5 Ramblers 4 Tar Heel Club 3 Everett 3 , Lewis 1 Lawyers ....... .. 1 Basketeers 1 Mangum ........ 1 New Dorms 0 handed the Question Marks their j Steele . .... 0 2 3 3 5 4 4 5 4 4 5 6 6 5 5 b 6 L. 0 1 1 1 1 1 '2 3 4 4 5 5 5 5 6 6 7 COLLEAGUES PAY HIGH TRIBUTE TO EDWIN GREENLAW Golden Fleece Favors Abolition Of College Iniation Horseplay Northwestern President Seeks "Child Wonders" President Walter D. Scott of Northwestern university ' has sent a letter to the leading high schools of the state of Illinois asking them to aid him in an en deavor to search out the leadinjg "child wonders." According to President Scott, si youths between thirteen and fifteen years of age will be ad mitted to the university and pro vided a special course to offer the correct stimulous for carry lnff them on. It is planned that these precocious youths should Hye together in a suitable en vironment with every opportun- for intellectual advancement. President Scott defined a "pre cocious" youth as dne who had an I.Q. of more than 130 or had attained anything that puts him head of his age. " Of the two Si amese twins pIayiner in "PrVs " 'the nne on Ihe left professes to like Bob QUICK RESPONSE GIVEN LOAN FUND DRIVE BY ALUMNI (Continued from first page) mittees are. going forward un der the supervision of the alum ni loyalty fund. Similar meet ings and committees are being formed at the rate of two or, Thomas Jefferson preferred to three additional cities a week.'send his grand-sons here for This week, on Tuesday a meet ing has been arranged for Winston-Salem and Thursday, for Philadelphia, following which soliciting committees will be formed. (Continued from first page) (Continued from first page) ods, free from pedantry and de- ship, Golden Fleece, having first void of charlatanism, and his questioned its own justification, nower. as Professor Howell ureres the members of other or- in the tournament last season, phrasd it to "bring literature ganizations to carefully consid will enter among the favored ft lifp lr tli rmrmarativft worth of Dr. Taylor presented a force- their present activities, f ul estimate of Dr. Greenlaw as ! Believing that the use of a scholar, a subject on which he horseplay, particularly that in was especially qualified to speak, volving corporal punishment, in since he shared with Dr. Green- initiation ceremonies, is in no law a keen interest in Milton and way compatible with university is an outstanding authority on life, is conducive neither to dig the subject. . jnity nor impressiveness of Dr. Pierson dealt with Dr. j ritual and is detrimental to the Greenlaw's activities as admin- spirit of the organization istrator and executive. He re- Golden Fleece, having first rid viewed Greenlaw's monumental its own ceremonies of such prac work of reorganization of the tices, calls upon all other social graduate school, his subsequent and honorary organizations to and ceaseless efforts in the consider the abolition 6i any and cause of raising standards and all horseplay in their initiation fostering research, calling at- ceremonies. JASON. tention to the fact that he was , ebruary 20, 1932. few. Levinson, 129 pounder, and Williams, 119 pounder, are among the outstanding entries in their respective divisions, and will carry Carolina hopes in the tournament. With Contemporaries (Continued from page two) discredit. Years ago the University of South Carolina ranked at the top of the educational institu tions of the United States. ORANGE TEAT.I IS VICTOR m THIRD VMER CONTEST Behringer Scores Only Touch down of Game as Blues Are Defeated, 6-0. Scoring the only touchdown of the game early in the first quarter, the Orange team won from the Blues, 6-0, in the third game of winter football here yesterday. The team, which was formerly the Blue squad, recorded its first victorv of the winter season as the other group had taken the former encounters. The Orange kicked off to open the battle. After two line plays failed the Blues kicked, the ball going to the Orange in mid field. On the second play Jackson shot a thirty yard pass to Frankel who-wTas downed on the Blues twenty-yard marker. Behrin ger then .took the ball and twist ed through the entire Blue team for . a touchdown. A placekick for extra point failed. The Blues held? a seven to five lead in first downs although both teams gained about the same amount of ground. The Blues first downs came from the run ning of Croom, the passing of Phipps and Croom, and the re ceiving of Woollen and Phipps. Most of the gains registered by the Orange came from off -tackle runs with Behringer doing the ball carrying. The losers threatened to score twice. The first time came when Lassiter intercepted an Orange pass but was tackled from be hind as he was breaking into the clear. The other threat come in the last few minutes of the con test. With the ball on their own thirty, yard line Croom threw a twenty yard pass to Phipps who was tackled on the Orange thirty-five yard marker. Wool len then caught two passes for a nrst down ana rnipps maae another on a line buck. The Or ange then held for three downs after which the game ended. In the Orange line the work of Daniels was the feature, while Barclay and Strickland also starred. For the Blues Lassiter was a tower of strength backing up the line on defense and the play of Philpot and Smith was best in the forward wall. The game was conducted un der, the new -rules. The main differences were that the teams punted on kickoff instead of the usual placekick and the careful play of the linemen on defense. The lineups : their education rather than send them to any ryther institution. Such was the status of our university in the old days. May she return to her rightful rank. . f S. C Gamecock. WINTER SPORTS SCHEDULE WEEK OF FEBRUARY 21-27 . ;. Basketball ' February 23 Varsity vs N. C. State, home, 8:30. February 23 Freshmen vs N. C. State, home, 7:30. February 26-March 1: Southern Conference tournament, Atlanta. v Wrestling February 22 Varsity vs Brooklyn Poly, away. February 24 Varsity vs Davidson, away February 24 Freshmen vs Davidson,, away. Boxing February 26-27 Southern Conference Tournament, Char lottesville. , occupied not only with the ap plication of regulations, but in the early years, with' their form ulation. While praising Dr. Greenlaw as administrator, Dean Pierson stated that it was as executive that he attained highest distinc tion, pronouncing him an edu cational statesman. He quoted Dr. Greenlaw's conception of the graduate school of the Uni versity, expressed in 1921 and widely quoted in the press of the country, that the school should become "a great laboratory in which experimental work should be done for the benefit of the state as a public enterprise and for the benefit of private eco nomic and business organizations." The Y. M. C. A. cabinets meet tomorrow night at 7:15 o'clock in the Y. Orange pos. Blues Frankel le Walker Tatum It HodgeS Barclay lg Philpot' Daniels c Mclver Oliverio rg Newcomba Strickland rt - Smith Manly re . Allen Jackson qb Woollen Burnett lh Phipps Behringer rh Croom Shaffer fb Lassiter Sidney Fox says that a girl instinctively . knows "plenty" about ' love. "She need not have gained it through actual exper ience, since it is a part of the mental equipment of every wo man. She need only let Nature take its course." WE STAND FOR RELIABILITY: - SERVICE: QUALITY: Our pressing tickets are bonded. Our management always has your interests at heart. Our truck will call upon you regularly. Our representative will call imme diately if you phone us. Our pressers are expert and efficient. Our. presses and dry cleaning equip ment are of the most up-to-date type. The ill Dry Gleaner "Superior Service To All" PHONE 5841 ? 1 1 i: i i Montgomery the best.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 21, 1932, edition 1
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