Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 27, 1938, edition 1 / Page 3
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PRINT TO Stoey, It Is Rumored, jstltl TjSr frfrT fettnrfriff Mural Football Men ...FIT Might Play This Year tUl JLtti pZZi pOltjo Set For Big Season - e-a - . ; . - - SHEIXEY ROLFE ; ' ' " : ' ; ' ' CHAPEL HILL, N. O, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1933 This is Tuesday morning, and by all odds Saturday's games should be past history, but if Georgia alumni were going around with red faces you could hardly blame them. For Satur day night Ole Miss sprang the biggest upset the South has seen in years by beating LSU 20-7. Ole Miss is coached by Harry Mehre. Last fall Mehre was master mind at Athenstown. At the end of the season the alumni groups promptly rose on their heels and announced that Harry Mehre was a nice fellow who was prob ably kind to animals, but he was no football coach. They made it hot for Mehre. So hot, that Harry pulled stakes at the end of the season and an nounced he was through. Some body else could have the task of telling Bulldog fans just why the team wasn't higher in the football ladder. " Mississippi was looking for a football coach about this time. Mehre was out of a job. Result he got the Ole Miss berth. Not much was expect ed from Mehre this year. Mississippi had long had the best material in the South, but no coach had ever been able to make the team click. Mehre wasn't supposed to either, not in his first year anyway with a new system to introduce. Saturday night Ole Miss went to Baton Rouge on a journey most folks 'Uowed was useless. After all LSU was bidding for. "first ten"' honors in the nation. Ole Miss promptly beat the Tigers in .one of the most stun ning upsets of tne day. All of which emphasizes the ntrp-nld nlaint. it isn't the coach who makes the team, but the material that makes the coach. Clemson threw- a bombshell into activities at New Orleans by upsetting Tulane 13-10 Sat urday. In winning the Tigers reemphasized the fact that their football team would and could hold its own against all comers this year. Coach Bill Lange, dean of Southern scouts, saw the game and came back to Chapel Hill yesterday convinced this Clem son crew had something.. Today's Intramurals 5:00 Field No. 1, Chi Phi vs. Sigma Chi; Field No. 2, Z. B. T. vs. Zeta Psi; Field No. 6, B. V. P. vs. Old East.. , tam wcefiss 9 " Inn UnuldDirinm 9 Wmlm nnfl Mhpffln IBdDw Tdlffly Aft MUCH IMPROVED TEAMS EXPECTED By RICHARD MORRIS With the sound of the opening whistle and impact of six foot ball teams on mother earth, at 5 o'clock this afternoon, intra mural touch football will be off to " one of its biggest and most successful seasons. Sigma Chi playing Chi Phi, and ZBT meeting Zeta Psi, will open fraternity regattas while BVP and Old East will be the starting teams for the dormitory league. Strong Teams Managers or players of every intramural team have indicated that they will have vastly im proved ball clubs, and that they expect to put up tough fights in every contest in which they par ticipate. Pete Beattie, manager of the campus champions Phi Delta Theta, stated last night that his team had been hurt by the loss of several good players due to the coaches eligibility ruling, but that he expected to have just as good a team as they had last year, and that they would be striving hard to retain their crown. The runner-up in the frater nity league; Beta Theta Pi, indi cated that they had been .weak ened by the loss . of two All Campus men and several other outstanding players, but that the new prospects were good and that they expected to again be a contender for the fraternity crown. Dorm Champs Observation- of the dormitory champions, Lewis, practice yes terdav afternoon proved one thing that they will not be as weak as they have indicated. In fact they appear to have just as strong a team as they had last year. They are paced by Berini, H. Jennings, and Faircloth, all of whom are stars from last year's team. Willis Kimrey, All-Campus, manager of Everett dormitory stated last night "Everett will be a greatly improved team over last year's aggregation, and we expect to be one of the outstand- First Carolina Score .xl N " - Z"ir - 1 y f 2 Jim Mallory is shown scoring the first Carolina touchdown of the year in Saturday's Wake For est game won 14-6 by the Tar Heels. The sophomore end caught a pass thrown by Jim Lalanne to tie the score in the first few minutes of the second quarter. Courtesy of the Raleigh News and Observer. Ranson Wants Reserves For His Harriers; Tar Heel Scouts Observe As Season Opens v lutumn Individualized college styles and smart new fabrics in suits and topcoats. From $22.50 n THAMES CLOTHING SHOP Runners Go North In Early November Having been tested and found ready, Carolina's cross-country squad resumed practice yester day at Fetzer field while Coach Dale Ranson looked about for reserve strength. , , ; , . j The Tar Ileels jQurney, north ward during the first week of November for two successive days of campaigning against Navy and Maryland. Believing that only one or two of his men will be sufficiently strong to run in both meets, Coach Ranson has announced that he would like to develop about 12 or 14 first string men to take on that trip! The squad would be divided evenly, with only eight men run ning in each meet. Both Navy and Maryland are well stocked in distance runners. Chronister, Kehoe, and Peaslee, who ran for the Old Liners in the Conference track meet last" spring, are still in school and still running. J Ffve-Mile Jog Seven of the Carolina varsity squad took their first formal workout over the local five mile course Saturday. These, Tom Crockett, Jim Hall, Bill Hendrix, Joe Russell, Drewry Troutman, Bob Doty, and Dave Morrison, were timed in 31:50, which was more than two minutes recorded by the Tar Heels at the same stage of practice last year. Clif ton , James, Red Wagner, and Clarence Fink covered the course Friday afternoon, in about the same time. Several of the varsity men were unable to run because of foot sores. -S INQUIRING RE-SPORTER Lange, Skidmore Get Inside Dope THE ONLY HARDWARE OF CARRBORO AND CHAPEL HILL o Guns, Shells and Cartridges o Furniture For Rooms o Sherwin-Williams Paint HARDWARE and FURNITURE of All Kinds LLOYD arid RAY Carrboro : Out of his air-conditioned, sound-proof cave comes that gentleman journalist with the top Jiat and gold.knob cane, the Inquiring Re-Sporter, with news of last week's winners and the games for this week. Number one on last " week's parade was Tom Bost, the news bureau man, who sends out those inspired stories about Carolina's athletes. Harry March, the not ed timber topper, was second, while Andy Bershak, the All American fellow, was third. All three picked three games right, and it took the Inquiring Re Sporter many long hours an an adding machine to figure Mr. Bost was first. Still On Loose This week the Inquiring Re Sporter will once again beat his way around the campus looking for victims, unsuspecting or otherwise. The games this week will be Carolina-State, Columbia,Yale, Nebraska-Minnesota, Oregon State-USC, and Clemson-Tennes-see. ing contestants for the dormi tory crown." Intramural Director Herman Schnell stated yesterday after noon that the last year's intra mural season was the biggest in the University history. He said that there were 3,963 , partici pants in last year's program and that this represented 1,793 dif ferent individuals. This is his seventh year as director of intra murals and from all indications it will be a more successful one than ever before. Fencers Practice Tonight In Tin Can The first organized practice session of the fencing team will be held tonight at 7 o'clock when the squad gathers in the Tin Can to start fall preparations for the coming season. Wallie Dunham will coach the swordsmen this year and Allan Bloom will cap tain the team. Both have request ed that all members of the squad who were at last week's meeting attend tonight's opening drill on time. Since there are no dressing facilities the members of the squad are asked to dress in their rooms before coming to the Tin Can tonight. Further arrange ments for sweat suits and locker facilities are being made now. DON'T FOOL YOURSELF! There's a lot you haven't read. Come in and well prove it. BULLS HEAD BOOKSHOP West Door of Library By SHELLEY ROLFE The football season is official Last Saturday Carolina opened fire with its 14-6 win over Wake Forest, and yesterday the scouts came back ' from their duties bearing mudh' woe for the Tar Heels witlf news of future' foes Walter Skicimore viewed Davidson and State at Charlotte and anounced that the Wolfpack met Saturday at Raleigh by the Blue and White, would be plenty touge. Bill Lange, whose scout ing helped conquer Tulane and Duke last year, saw the Green Wave lose to Clemson, but he was far from ready to sell the club short. Between glances at some var sity backfield men he was put ting through their paces, Skid more said, "State has a fast and poweriul line. JNo one man stands out, they're all good. They have seven or eight backs, and Doc Newton can interchange two complete backfields without weakening the club. State didn't (Continued on last page) STILL UNKNOWN ff HEILPLAY By WILLIAM L. BEERMAN" For the first time since his illness four weeks ago, George Stirnweiss, the Flying Dutch man who they all said would be out the rest of the season, ap peared on Fetzer field dressed for practice yesterday. Looking as well as ever, Stirn weiss said that he was "feeling fine but still on a diet." An X-ray of his stomach was made in Durham yesterday morning, but the results were not available late last night. Works Out The chunky quarterback worked out lightly, participated briefly in punting, and threw a few passes. He ran at an end position as assistant coach Skid- more put one eleven through an extensive signal drill. Coach Wolf, obviously glad to see his supposed star for the year back out, declined to say if he expected to be able to use Stirnweiss. "It all depends on the outcome of the X-rays," Wolf stated. "We sure can use him and we only hope he will be able to play." The -varsity, with a portable blackboard set up on the edge of the field, reviewed in detail the mistakes made in the Wake For est game, -Wolf, though speaking favorably5 of the -way. his men performed in action, was never theless certain that drastic pol ishing was needed in spots be fore the coming game with State Saturday. He particularly stressed the fact that good down-field block ing was absent in the Deac en counter, and that at times ir- (Continued on last page) Leave Subscription Orders For Charlotte Observer With Dormitory Managers or Y.M.C.A. JESSE LEWIS, Agent PHONE 5241 if W5jinMsfe j. . VTM0 5250- EI0DERN STYLING . . .Supcrstteamed". Mod. ern colors. Grip fits your fingers. CONSTANT INK CONTROL . . . One stroke fills pen. Fast-starting. Steady ink-flow, INK-WINDOW YOUR PENPOINT . Handcrafted, 14 kt., solid-gold, indium-tipped points, suit, your writing. feCBEMBEK THERE IS SO SUBSTITUTE FOR WATERMAN'S INK
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 27, 1938, edition 1
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