Wednesday, January 18, 1933 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Page Thre Carolina Expects To Face Stiff Test In Tilt With State Tonight White Phantoms Will Play Third Big Five Contest Against Red Terrors. DOUBLE BILL IN TIN CAN State Team Regarded as Impres sive Despite Unsuccessful Northern Invasion. Tin Can Tales by Marling Spike The Carolina quintet encoun ters a third Big Five opponent and a second Southern Confer ence team tonight when it meets the Red Terrors from N. C. State in the Tin Can at 8:30 o'clock. The frosh teams meet at 7:30 in the opener of the double bill. The White Phantoms have a record of two wins in the Big Five race and they have con quered their only conference foe, V. P. I. Their unbeaten string is up for another stiff test to night as State will present a strong and speedy outfit. The Red Terrors have not played any Big Five members but they looked equally as im pressive as the Tar Heels against V. P. I. Though they were set back on their northern trip, the State boys reversed their form and against Furman and the Gobblers sounded a warning that has been heard and respected all over the state. Team Works Hard Coach Bo Shepard had his men working hard on their defense against the shifty State attack yestrday and are set to bid fair for their third Big Five victory and their fifth of the season. Coach Shepard was pleased with the work of Earle Beale at cen ter against Wake Forest and has been using him with the second combination. He plans to start Captain Hines and Weathers at forwards, Brandt at center, and Aitken and McCachren at f guards. Coach Sermon of State will have Johnson and Jay as for wards, Beaghen center, with Captain Clark and Nelms at guards. Jay and Beaghen are sophomores while the other three men are veterans. - Jay is the flash who has been doing most of State's scoring this sea son. ' The election of Marty Lev inson as captain of the Caro lina boxing team last Satur day night comes as a well earned tribute to one -of the most colorful fighters this in stitution has ever liad. Lev inson has done much to make the ring game popular here and wherever he fights there are sure to be at least a por tion of the crowd on hand for no other purpose but to see him in action. MAT TEAMS TAKE LIGHTW0RK0UTS Varsity and Yearling Squads Will Meet in Gerrard Hall Tonight at 7:30 O'clock. Veteran Track Coach Voices Plea For True Carolina Sportsmanship Marty lost one bout his fresh man year, three as a sophomore, and one last year, and all of them were' close. His record speaks for itself. Saturday night Marty started off his final year of intercollegiate competi tion with a knockout in exactly one minute. Not bad ! ! Levinson's captaincy will mean a great deal to the team and to Marty. Watch those boys go from now on. Their 6-2 win over V. P. I. was any thing but displeasing and the team will improve as the seas on progresses. A certain person tells us that Max Frucht, Tar Baby feather weight, won a four round de cision over Campbell although somewhat out on his feet from the second round on. The same (Continued on last page) Carolina's varsity and fresh man wrestling teams took light work-outs yesterday as Coach Quinlan offered his mat proteges a brief respite following their disastrous invasion of the State Wolfpack's lair, in Raleigh. i The Tar Heels' wrestling men-! tor was disappointed m his charges' showing against State, but is expecting his men will do better work against the V. P. I. Gobblers who come to Chapel Hill Saturday afternoon. Although the Tar Heels did not do any hard work yesterday afternoon, the grappling candi dates got a load of conditioning exercises in their opening calis- thenic drills. These were fol lowed by some light work on the mat. May Change Line-up The Carolina mat mentor may juggle his Jine-up in the meet Saturday with several new faces appearing on both his freshman and varsity teams, unless mark ed improvement in spirit and work is shown by some of the men now out. Coach Quinlan has called a Lmeeting of both varsity and yearling wrestling squads in Gerrard hall tonight, with the time of the gathering set for 7:30 o'clock. It was definitely announced by the Tar Heel wrestling coach yesterday that Carolina will send a team representation to (Continued on last page) Bob Fetzer Points Out Duty of Students Towards Visiting Teams During Winter. Coach Bob Fetzer, "grand old man of Carolina athletics" and veteran builder of winning track teams, yesterday made a plea for true Carolina sportsmanship at winter athletic events. His statement follows : "Sportsmanship is the Golden Rule applied to athletics; it is that ideal practiced in athletic contests which insures fair play ; it is that indefinable something which pervades athletics, lifting it. from the plane of a sordid struggle for physical supremacy to a contest where fair play, re spect of the rights of others and a spirit of gallant competition outweigh mere victory; it is an opportunity to cling to an ideal in an age when civilization is calling on the schools to help hold up its tottering ideals. "Sportsmanship is not limited either to the contestants. Its development and practice are just as noticeable and essential among the student body and the general public who witness the contest. Because of their su perior advantages and back grounds, and the fact that the student body is really the host to all visiting teams, it is their responsibility and duty to crys tallize this sentiment of real sportsmanship, to exemplify it in their own behavior, and so create an atmosphere that will pervade the whole audience. "Again, the display or the lack of display of sportsmanship VICTORY FAILS TO IMPRESS MENTOR Boxing Coach Has Charges Hard at Work in Preparation for Meet With NVC. State. PHI KAPPA SIGMA LOSES FAST TUT TO PI KAPPA PHI Cecil Longest Amasses Twenty- Two Points to Set New Intramural Record. Coach Rowe, not as much im pressed with his boxing team's victory over V. P. I. Saturday as the spectators were, sent the boys right back to work Monday and he has had them at it ever since. "State," he said, "has a strong team and will give us - much tougher opposition than V. P. I. did. My boys, will have to work hard right up until the gong rings to be in shape. And the meets with Duke, Virginia, and Penn State, which are not far off, will be even tougher." Apparently the boys realize the truth of Coach Rowe's words, for they have been working doubly hard ever since Monday. is more noticeable during the winter sports season than at any other time, on account of the smallness and compactness of the crowds and the proximity of spectators and contestants. The slightest indiscretion in conduct at an indoor contest is magni tied and may easily be mistaken for gross rudeness. At the same time the indoor season offers us tne oest opportunity to exem plify and practice our high code of sportsmanship, and the Uni versity of North Carolina will have no better chance to show its hospitality and respect for the visiting teams who are its guests." A new fraternity scoring mark for an individual intra mural player was set yesterday as Cecil Longest, of Theta Kap pa JNu, amassed twenty-two points in his team's victory over Phi Delta Chi. In the most exciting contest of the intramural program yester day, Pi Kappa Phi won a nip and ' tuck battle from Phi Kappa Sig ma, 19-18. With thirty seconds to play the score was 16-15 in favor of Pi Kappa Phi. Reid, of Phi Kappa Sigma, sank a spectacular goal at this point to put his team in the lead, but Pendelton countered with a bas ket which passed through the ring with one second remaining, giving the victory to Pi Kappa Phi. Poole, of the winners, led the scorers with ten points, while Dossenbach with nine, and Reid with six, were the high men on the losing outfit. T. E. P. Wins Again Tau Epsilon Phi continued on its way undefeated by. downing Theta Chi, 28-19, in a slow game. Kanner, T. E. P.'s center, ac counted for thirteen of his team's points. Jacobs, his team mate, added five more, while Kelly stood out for Theta Chi with seven points. Cecil Longest's scoring was the feature of the Theta Kappa (Continued on last page) eoo. .mow - A A o o TAR BABY QUINT WILL MEET STATE Frosh Play Wolflets Here To night at 7:30; State Engages In First Big Five Game. With a decisive victory over Wake Forest's yearling team in their opening contest, Carolina's Tar Baby basketball team is all set to meet the first year team from State in the Tin Can to night at 7:30. Both Bill Rankin and Murray Kanner, centers who were ab sent for the game with the Baby Deacons, are back out and ready to go. Rankin has been in the infirmary for the last week but is fully recovered and will prob ably start at center. Frank Orr and Kanner will be' held in re serve in case Rankin is unable to go the full route. The rest of the starting team will be the same that played most of the contest last Satur day. Melvin Nelson, who has sixteen points to his credit for the first game, and Bill Moore vol! hold down the two forwards 66 .Tu rn McCachren and Red Phelps are slated to start at the gaurd Positions. 1 In their only contest of the year so far, State's freshmen ran wild over Jim Magner's Mt. Pleasant team. This will be the .first start for State yearlings against Fig Five and they will be ut to take it. You can trust majorities as a rule. If they aren't right, they TI7 WW iasfe Jjeiter PE HAVE been telling the pub lic for a good many years that Chesterfields taste better. They satisfy! That wouldn't mean a thing if smok ers found out that it wasn't so. No body can fool the people very long. But a great many smokers have smokecl Chesterfields for a long time, and they know that they taste right. And so they say to their friends, "If you want a cigarette that really tastes better, try Chesterfields!" Chesterfields taste better because they are made of mild tobaccos that have been aged for two years. And there is just enough Turkish in them , . . but not too much. We are sure that you, too, will en joy their Mildness and Better Taste. f iSSr 'SSfe ceriieie fe THEY'RE MILDER THEY TASTE BETTER soon cease to be majorities. Daily Trojan.

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