THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28, 1935
iTHE DAILY TAR, HEEL
PAGE THREB
White :Ffiahtom$: Battle- ;
-South Carolina Tonigbit:
le Tournament Prelims
N. C. State-VMI to Open
Play at 3 O'clock;
UNC-USC at 8.
Tar Heels Will Face Tough Op
position in Opener.
LINEUPS
N. C. Pos. S. C.
Aitken f.. Henderson
Nelson f. Laurie
Glace c. Craig
McCachr.en g. Gooding
Harris g. Rowland
Carolina's White Phantoms
took their last practice session
of the 1935 season yesterday af
ternoon in the Tin Can and are
now all set for the Southern
Conference basketball tourna
ment which gets underway at
Raleigh this afternoon.
The Tar Heels will start' their
bid for the championship to
night at 8 o'clock, meeting South
Carolina's big five. Eight teams
are entered which means that
seven tilts will be played before
the title is decided. All the bat-
ties will take place in Memorial
auditorium.
Eight Clubs Battle
Besides the two Carolinas,
Duke, State, Clemson, V. P. I.
V. M. I., and Virginia are out for
the crown. State and V. M.
will open the fireworks this af
ternoon at 3 o'clock.
. The White Phantoms appeared
in top shape as they went
through a fast peppy drill yes
terday. Coach Bo Shepard will
depend mainly on his first club
to hold up all the way; the re
serves can hardly stay on even
terms with any likely opponent,
and the initial five hardly ever
runs up a big enough margin to
retire safely.
In the Gamecocks, the Tar
Heels take" on a club that they
have already beaten twice dur
ing the regular season, once by
(Continued iOn last page)
Tourney Schedule
1 TODAY
3 p. m. N. C. State vs.
V. M. I. - -
4:30 p. m. Duke vs. Vir
ginia. 8 p. m. -North Carolina
vs. South Carolina.
9:30 p. m. Clemson vs.
Washington and Lee.
TOMORROW
8 and 9:30 p. m. Semi
finals. SATURDAY
8 p. m. Finals.
Mural Table Tennis
Entries Completed
Old East and Sigma Chi Advance
In Bowling Tournament.
W.&L. FAVORED
TO RETAIN TITLE
ATMiMOURNEY
r
Three Champs Back; Umstead,
Ward, and Efland Meet
Strong Opposition.
BONNER TO FIGHT AT 145
The intramural table tennis
entries for the tournament were
completed yesterday, and play
will open today. Medals and
mural points will be awarded
the teams as in bowling. The
drawing of games for this week
are as follows :
Today
3 :30 Sigma Nu No. 1 v. Chi
Phi. n
,4:15 Mstngum v. Battle.
5:00; Phi Kappa Sigma v.
Z. B. T. No. 1.
5:30 Delta Psi v. Phi Delta
Theta. :
Tomorrow
3:30 Sigma Nu No. 2 v. Z.
B. T. No. 2.
4:15 Ruffin v. Lewis No. 1.
5:00 Phi Alpha v. Alpha
Epsilon.
5:30 A. T. O. v. Kappa Al
pha. In the bowling elimination
tourney yesterday Old East and
Sigma Chi advanced. The for
mer outpointed Zeta Psi No. 2,
980-945, and the latter won over
Ruffin, 930-854.
Coach Chuck Quinlan and
four Carolina wrestlers will
leave this morning from, Emer
son stadium at 10 :30 o'clock by
automobile for Lexington, Va.,
where the Tar Heels will com
pete in the Southern Confer
ence tournament beginning to
morrow. Frank Umstead, 118,
Melvin Ward, 135, Allen Bon
ner, 145, and Captain Sim Ef
land, 165, will be the represen
tatives of the Blue and White.
The four men took their final
doses of hard work yesterday
and were pronounced to be in
good physical shape. The group
will taper off in a light session
this, afternoon at Lexington be
fore the events get underway.
Generals Defend
' Washington and Lee, defend
ing champions, are sponsoring
( the 1935 mat tournament. Other
entries are Duke, V. M. I., V. P
I., and N. C. State. The Gen
erals, who nosed out V. M. I. by
a mere three points for the
Southern Conference title
boasts. another strong team this
season, rne General aggrega
tion is undefeated in six contests
this season and among their vie
tims have been Carolina, Duke
and State.
There will be three past con
ference champions in action to
morrow. Bonino, W. & L. heavy
weight, easily copped honors last
year in this division and is the
overwhelming favorite to repeat
again this week-end. Bonino,
who weighs 230 pounds, has
won all matches except one via
the fall route in dual mat' com
petition, f -i
Captain Currence, sterling V.
M. I. 165-pounder, was title-
(Continued on last page)
i
alelil
ores Campus Cage Title;" v
Ive Wins State Gbtovee
i -Mi
i
DORM KINGS TOP
DEKE FIVE, 32-29,
IN BRILLIANT WIN
-
Vick and Henson Lead Man-
gumites to Spectacular Vic
tory; Moore High Scorer.
DEKE RALLY FALLS SHORT
Eampus Kings
A great first, period offense
and the ability to keep pace with
an almost successful D. K. E.
rally enabled the great Mangum
No. 1 basketball team to capture
the 1935 campus title by a 32-29
count, yesterday afternoon in
the Tin Can. ,
The eventual winners broke
into the scoring column first,
were almost immediately tied
up, then went out in front by a
12-2 margin for the first quar
ter and . were never overtaken
throughout the entire contest.
Mangum played every bit the
role of a champion, starting off
with a beautiful passing attack
that accounted for its early lead,
and then successfully eombatted
every desperate thrust that the
opposition made for the remain
der of the contest.
With Vick, Barnwell, and
Henson finding the basket with
uncanny accuracy, the Mangum
quintet pushed its score up to
19 for the half, but the Dekes
had started to come up, and with
Montgomery pushing in a single
field goal and Bill Moore add
ing three and a foul, its total
was brought to 11. ,
D. K. E. continued to force
the issue in the third period,
tallying 8-6 for the period and
bringing its score to within six
points of the blue-clad Man
gumites. The fourth period
saw an abundance of rough play.
Moore, Willis, and Montgomery
gave 10 more points to the Deke
total, but scores by Vick, Free
man, and Barnwell staved off
the rally until the final whistle.
Bill Moore climaxed a season
MANGUM NO. 1 FG F T
Henson, f . 3 1 7
Vick, f .. .... .:...... .... 5 1 11
Fox, c .............. 0 0 0
Barnwell, g 4 19
Rhodes, g ... 0 1 1
Freeman, g . 1 2.4
Totals .: 13 6 ' 32
IX K. E. FG F T
Patterson, f 0 0 0
Montgomery, f 2 15
Willis, c 12 4
Warren, g 0 0 0
Moore, g 8 4 20
Totals ... . : 11 7 29
Score by periods :
Mangum ......12 7 6 732
D. K. E 2 9 8 1029
CAPITAL QUINTET
TOPS HIGH POINT
IN FINALS, 25-1&
Raleigh Captures Class "A"
Championship to Climax
Great Cage Season.
WOOD IS HIGH SCORER
Officials: McCachren, Fergu
son, Markham.
High Schoolers
RALEIGH HI FG
Fuller, f 1
Mangum, f 1
Riddle, c 0
Kelley, c ..: 2 ...
Page, g 2
Wood, g 4
Totals ..,..10
H. POINT HI' FG
Whitley, f 1
Diffendale, f 2
Hilton, c 1
Spry, g ."........ 0
Meiskey, g 1
Totals 5
Score at half: Raleigh 10;
High Point 4. Non-scoring subs :
High Point Hartley, f ; Work
man, c ; Hinkle, g. Official
Knight (Durham Y.)
F
0
3
0
0
1
1
5
F
0
4
0
2
0
6
Before a crowd o'f several
hundred madly cheering enthu
siasts, the Raleigh High quintet
swept to victory over the High
Pointers by a score of 25-16, to
win the state class "A" scholas
tic championship for 1935. Ral
eigh gained the lead after the
first quarter and from then on
steadily increased the pace.
The game started off . with
both teams appearing very
much frightened and playing
rather poor ball. For over five
minutes neither team was able
to tally any points until finally
Diffendale of High Point made
the initial score of the game
T when his long shot zipped
2
5
0
4
5
9
25
T
2
8
2
2
2
16
of brilliant play by taking in
dividual scoring honors with 20
points. Vick of Mangum was
runner-up with 11, while his
teammate, Barnwell, came next
with nine. Twenty personal
fouls were handed out.
through the net. A foul shot
made good by Page of Raleigh
was the only other marker made
during the first quarter.
Raleigh Takes Lead
Mangum and Wood of the vic
tors, with two well timed shots,
tied the score in the second
quarter, and their teammates
soon placed the capital boys in
the . lead which they kept
throughout the game. From
this point on both teams seemed
to have forgotten about their
original stage fright and played
hard, bang-up ball.
High scoring honors went to
Wood of Raleigh with nine
points, while Diffendale of the
losers was runner up with eight
Meiskey starred for the losers
by his hard fighting while the
good offensive work of Page of
the Raleigh five placed him in
the spotlight.
Patronize Our Advertisers
jv iLLiiiimu, ivib mail ju-ycy j 7 I '
V.vVSVSW
m your Ups oil
owns
IT
V.'.-.-V''-'SSSSj -JO
X
.V.V.V.'A
.ys.-.
n
X N
X
T.-."..' -
-1 u-r aa
-tt 4, Mis
AV,'
,-0
.'.V-
1
.- ffX ; 1.-:
CEm ER LEAVES .
. si
-: i.- -".-:: -!'.::-::-:.:-:.::xx;
Maybe you'wonder why I appeal more than
others. Listen. Do you know that the top
leaves of a tobacco plant are unripe and
biting? Do you know that the bottom
leaves, trailing the ground, are grimy and
coarse? I know all that and for that reason
I am made from the fragrant, expensive
center leaves . . . the leaves that give you
the mildest, best-tasting smoke. There
fore, I sign myself " Your best friend.,,
1
S3
w.v
9
m
LUCKIES USE ONLY
CENTER LEAVES GIVE YOU THE MILDEST SMOKE
Copyriebt 1935, The American Tobacco Company,