Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 6, 1934, edition 1 / Page 3
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OCTOBER 6, 1934 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE THREB tip1 Carolina will meet Mi Test Aaiest Strong ols In Kenan This Afternoon THEY FLANK FOR "THE MAJOR" Major Neyland to Bring Another Tricky Club; Kickoff at 2:30. s- Carolina Pos. Tennessee Buck l.e. Pounders Tatum l.t. Austelle Barclay (C) l.g. Hatley (C) Daniel c. Claxton Kahn r.g. Warmath Evins r.t. Bailey W. Moore r.e. Rose Snyder q.b. Krouse Dashiell l.h. Vaughan Shaffer r.h. Palmer Hutchins f.b. Lippe 0 . 'OlU.'if J m m III 72 FACTS AND GUESSES By Bill Anderson Officials: Referee, Strupper (Georgia Tech); Umpire, Mumma (Army); Headlines man, Black (Davidson) ; Field Judge, Darwin (Virginia). r Carolina's football team will meet its first real test of the 1934 season this af ternoon when it battles Tennessee in Kenan stadium. The kickoff is sched uled for 2:30 o'clock. The Tar Heels, who opened their season last Saturday with a fairly easy 21-0 victory over Wake Forest, will really have a chance to demonstrate what their new coach, Carl G. Snave ly, and his modified Warner sys tem has taught them, against the powerful Vols. Major Bob Neyland's boys also had no trou ble getting an opening victory, when it rolled over Centre, 32-0. Same Lineup to Start Coach Sna vely will start the same lineup which took the Dea cons and will in addition have Don Jackson, passing halfback, and Gene Barwick, letter end, both on the bench last week with injuries, ready to go. Punchy Joyce, veteran guard, will also be in top condition for the con test. Carolina's iron wall will like ly have its hands full in stopping Coach Neyland's Army forma tion which features several clev er lateral passes plus some fine power plays over the tackles. Manv Stars Back The Vols have a long list of I brilliant backs including . Pug Vaughan, an expert passer, To by Palmer, who punts both far and high, Henry Krouse, Fred die Moses, Phil Dickens, Dick Dorsey, and Johnny Paty, who are all shifty runners. The Tar Heels will depend much on "Slippery Dick" Da shiell, sophomore back, and (Continued on last page) Today Carolina will tackle one of the hardest football con tingents on their 1934 schedule in the Volunteers. Major Bob Neyland will make the trek to Chapel Hill for. the last time in his coaching career. I After Christmas, Neyland will report for active duty in the Canal Zone orders of the U. S. War Department. During his score of years at Tennessee, Neyland's proteges won 69 games, dropped five, and tied :-:-:-x-:-::--;::w'-::-:-:::-x- rs.yyiyy.y mm five, establishing a most enviable record. Last Saturday, the Vols beat the thunder out of one of the strongest teams Centre College has boasted since the great days of "Bo" McMillan & the "Pray ing Kentucky Colonels," 32-0 . . . (by the way Coach Walter Skid ore played on the same great team with the immortal McMillan). At any rate "Coach Bob" Fet These two hef ties are two of Major Neyland's last edition of Tennessee Vols. By the shades of Andrew Jackson, these fellows and their teammates have sworn to make this year the best yet for their "Major Bob." The pair of men above are the two regular ends for the Vols Louis Pounders and Roy (Mighty Lika) Rose. Louis weighs 182 pounds and is one of the best Dass-snasgers in Dixie. Rose is the heaviest wingman in the South with his 205 pounds. Both flankmen are looking for a good day today, and these f el lows who came from over that thar mountain will give the Tar Heels plenty of double-trouble. . VARSITY BOXERS TO START WORK Only Four Lettermen Return to Scrap for Coach Rowe. FR0SH GRIDSTERS GET INTO SHAPE i Coaches James and Fysal Work Yearlings Overtime Daily. Cardinals Beat Detroit, 4-1, With Daffy Dean Twirlie; Detroit's Daffy DETROIT White, cf Cochrane, c ..... Gehringer, 2b Greenberg, lb Gbslin, If Rogell, ss Owen, 3b 1 Fox, rf Bridges, p Hoggsett, p .. , Totals AB R .51 3 5 4 4 4 3 4 1 2 35 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 H 2 0 2 1 1 1 0 1 0 0 PO 4 6 3 6 2 1 1 1 0 - 0 8 24 A 0 3 2 0 0 2 0 0 0 1 8 E 0 0 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 2 AB R H PO .3 2 2 2 A 1 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 World Series Shorts Manager Frisch will more than likely send Tex Carleton to the mound today to face either Al Crowder or Elton Auker. The "Dizzy" Dean will be ready for action today but may be saved for relief work or to start tomorrow's game in which he will hook up with "Schoolboy" Rowe. Joey "Ducky" Medwick has secured the most hits, 6, and is tied with "Pepper" Martin for the most total bases. Martin, Gehringer, and Goslin have se cured 5 hits each. . Rowe .leads in times struck out for one game when he fan ned four times in the second game. Medwick, Greenberg, and Owen have also whiffed four times each. The Detroit pitchers have been struck out seven times, while the Cards' mounos men have only four whiffs against them. Jo-Jo White has taken in 14 fly catches in the three games and Jack Rothrock has mothered 9. Both fielders have turned in remarkable fielding games. Coach Crayton Rowe said yesterday afternoon that he was having boxing equipment rigged zer, along with Coach Skidmore, in the Tin Can and that he scouted Tennessee and think the expected to issue a call sometime Vols have a potentially brilliant next week for candidates to re ball club. In fact, they were nort for fall workouts. much impressed with the fine Announcement concerning the blocking, timing, and precision intramural boxing matches will that the Vols worked against be forthcoming shortly. Centre. They believe that we This year only four lettermen are in for a hard game tomor- are returning around which to row. We believe that U. N. C. build the pugilistic team. These Will be very much m the money I (Continued on last page) tomorrow. Win or lose they will give the Vols seven fits! Such will be our opposition, but speaking of opposition let's scan over the list of ball games, involving Dixie ball clubs. Heading the list of great con tests will be Vanderbilt-Georgia Tech game. We might be ready for a padded cell, but we pick Georgia Tech. Coach Bill Alex ander's bovs are hard to beat any time in Atlanta., Then, too, Coach Alex has this speed mer chant, "Sun Dial" Martin, who is hard to stop in anybody's backyard. How Martin got his nickname is another story, but we think it worth relaying. When he enter ed Tech, a green freshman from the mountains of South Caro lina, Martin spent almost an hour trying vainly to get water from the horological campus ornament thinking all the time it was a tricky gadget to give off water, one of the city slick er's drinking fountains ! The intersectional contests: Kentucky over Cincinnati ; Navy will find no trouble with Vir ginia; Notre Dame over Texas;! Cornell over Richmond; Army over Davidson. The Purdue- Rice contest will be hard-fought one, but Purdue has one of the best backfields in the nation. We pick the Boilermakers. Southern Conference : Duke over Clemson; W. & L. over Maryland ; South Carolina over V. M. I. ; N. C. State over Wake Forest; Florida over V. P. I. Southeastern Conference : Al abama over Sewanee ; Tulane over Auburn ; Georgia over Fur- man ; and L. S. U. over Southern Methodist. The Tar Baby footballers are working hard and overtime to get in condition for the fast and heavy Wake Forest yearling eleven which comes to the Hill next Friday. Coaches George James and Ellis Fysal are gradually de veloping the togmen into a well drilled squad, along the lines of the modified Warner system. Blocking is taking the biggest part in the drilling while the tomplex spinners and other War- ST. LOUIS Martin, 3b Rothrock, rf 4 115 Frisch, 2b . ... 4.02 2 Medwick, If 4 0 13 Collins, lb ... 4 1 2 2 DeLancey, c 4 0 19 Orsatti, cf .. 2 0 0 2 Durocher, ss 3 0 0 2 P. Dean, p 3 0 0 0 Totals ...31 4 9 27 Summary: Runs batted in: Roth rock (2), Frisch, P. Dean, Greenberg. Three base hits: Martin, Rothrock, Greenberg. Two base hits: DeLancey, Martin, Gehringer. Left on bases Detroit, 13; St. Louis, 6. Double plays: Cochrane to Gehringer, Rogell to Gehringer to Greenberg. Earned runs: St. Louis, 4; Detroit 1. Struck out: by P. Dean, 7; by Bridges, 3; by Hoggsett, 2. Base on balls: off P. Dean, 5; off Bridges, 1; off Hoggsett, 1. Hit by pitcher: Owen (by P. Dean), Orsatti (by Bridges). Hits: off Bridg es, 8 in 4 innings; Hoggsett, 1 in 4 innings. Score by innings: R H E Detroit 000 000 0011 8 2 St. Louis 110 020 OOx 4 9 1 ner offensive tactics are being put into the yearlings' heads. The best feature of the prac tices so far is the punting. Sev eral men have the toe for long spirals which sail for forty and fifty yards. Practices on the aerial attacks have brought out some quite capable performers. Bengals Score in Ninth But Rally Cut Short; Martin Is Star. Sportsman's Park, St. Louis, Mo., Oct. 5. With "Pepper" Martin up to his old tricks and Paul "Daffy" Dean twirling su perb ball in the pinches, the Cardinals of St. Louis turned in a thrilling 4-1 victory over the American league Detroit Tigers : here today, to take a 2-1 lead" in the World Series. The Bengals attempted to put on one of their typical ninth in ning spurts but it was all in vain. Hank Greenberg connect ed with one of "Daffy's" fast ones and sent it to the pailings for a three bagger scoring Jo-Jo White. But Mr. Greenberg died on third as the younger. Dean settled down to force "Goose" Goslin, who knocked in the win ning run yesterday, to pop up to Manager Frankie Frisch. Paul Gets Hot Paul today more than followed the pace which brother "Dizzy" set in the first game. "Daffy" scattered out eight hits over seven innings, but was in some real messes more than once. In the third and fourth innings the Bengals had three men on base only to see their scoring chances fade out of sight. "Grammar Schoolboy" Paul was wild at times, walking five men, several times as diamond strategy, however. Sharing honors in the minds of the hometown folk was pep py "Pepper" Martin, hero of that series back in 1931. He poled out a triple to open the (Continued on last page) it mac e ippacco; act iiPJM m a proeoiqm In the manufacture of Granger Rough Cut Pipe Tobacco the Wellmari Process is used. The Wellmart Process is dif ferent from any other process or method and we believe it gives more enjoyment to pipe smokers. ... it gives the tobacco an ex tra flavor and aroma . . . it makes the tobacco act right in a pipe bum slower and smoke cooler ,,,it makes the tobacco milder ,,.it leaves a clean dry ash no soggy residue or heel in the pipe bowl Liggett & Myers Tobacco Co. h mm w t f i if jkft fja fr ti v. its . V in a package 10e LE CONTE RETURNS Joseph Le Conte, formerly connected with the University, has returned to the chemistry department to carry on post doctoral research on "quinolines" with Dr. A. S. Wheeler, acting head of this department. wtsti m some wav z&e coma pet mmymmmmmmmmmmyymmm . ever? man wh w smokes a fiipe ?- . . .'.v.v.v.v.v.v.v.-. ....... . . . . ... .. -.:..... .-a. v .. to msf fry srmnper .'.V.V.'A'AYJ 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 6, 1934, edition 1
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