ptamtomnis AUto eciniffl-Wfina wen3 Clemnisoini Tcdmcdetow
SheUeyRolfe
'ONTHE
CUFF
n a VIS-CHRONISTER
rIvalby BETTER THAN
BINGO OR BANK NIGHT
It is all very well to send up ecstatic
smoke signals about the supposed
closeness of the team championship
lace in next Saturday's Southern con
ference indoor track party at Woollen
eym, but the chances are the cash cus
me'rs will conveniently forget the
pretty words and disregard any
thought of how dear Old Broken Toe
Aggies is coming out in the conflict
against its traditional enemy Sprained
Back Teachers.
Team contests are all very inter
esting, but it's man to man conflict
that causes the customers to fight
their way to the box office for the
privilege of laying money down and
for the added honor of spending a
pleasant evening sitting on back-
less-uncomiortaDie seats. conse
quently while everyone will have an
academic interest in the Maryland-Carolina-Duke-W&L-W&M,
et al,
conference title race, the chances
are the mile will bring out more
citizens than all the relays, sprints,
et al, combined.
Seems as if there is an honest-to-goodness
rivalry between two men in
the mile. Nothing like the Cunning-ham-Fenske-San
Romani business,
understand, but very warm just the
same. Jimmy Davis of the Tar Heels
and Mason Chronister of Maryland
have been running against each other
ever since their first indoor meet their
sophomore year in 1938. The rivalry
has been blown up by artful words
until now it is the biggest thing in
southern track history.- - ; .-.
Davis and Chronister have run
against each other five times their
college careers and Li'l Mason has
beaten Davis exactly once last
winter. That was a cute mile they
had too, everyone ran an extra lap
and no one ever figured out what
happened. Dale Ranson, of the local
track masterminding department, is
still looking for the guy who couldn't
count laps and any mention around
Mr. Ranson of the race is a cute way
to invite disaster and a firing squad.
. Chronister took the lead toward the
end. Davis looked like he was holding
back. Jim was probably waiting for a
bell lap finish. The only trouble was
that the bell lap came when the race
should have been over and the boys
were supposed to be trotting around
in their sweat suits, smiling for the
photographers and perhaps wishing
for a nice cool bottle of suds.
There was much consternation at
the muddled bookkeeping. The Weils
of Goldsboro, Davis' home town, had
gone to the trouble of putting up a
cup. What could be more fitting than
to have a local boy win ? He could carry
the cup back to Goldsboro, and per
haps even exhibit it at some local hock
shoppe. Chronister won and Mason is
from Baltimore which is a long way
from Goldsboro. It was all very dis
tressing. Jimmy gave Mason his lumps in
the outdoor mile at Fetzer field.
Jim, turning in one of the best col
lege miles of the year, took first in
4:112 and was immediately marked
as a gentleman to be remembered
when it came time to pick Olympic
teams. Look what happened to the
Continued on page 4, column 1)
Duke 28
W&L27
Many
Car 7zzl ports
Gates And Gang:
Were Red Hot
CHAPEL HILT,, N. C, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 18, 1940
The University Of Maryland Running Crew Five Champions
'P- ..i . v
1 r j
"I
4 J
The University of Maryland has long been famed for its distance runners. Five of them won individual champion
ships last year in the Southern Conference Indoor games a nd four of these combined to form the winning one-mile
relay team which gave the Terrapins 30 points, their total score. These five men are pictured above in the usual
order: Joe Murphey, 60-yard dash; Alan Miller, 440; Jim Kehoe, 880; Mason Chronister, mile; and Tommy Fields,
two-mile. All are back to run in the games in Woollen gym February 24.
Matiinen Come Close To Victory
Over Generals; Frosh Also Bow
By FRANK GOLDSMITH
Carolina's surprising wrestling
crew yesterday put on one of the fin
est exhibitions of fighting seen around
Chapel Hill in many a year, and in the
process almost pulled the upset for
which Coach Quinlan has been wait
ing for eight years. But a rugged,
experienced Washington and Lee con
tingent eked out an 18-12 victory on
two falls to remain dominators of the
conference. In the preliminary fresh
man afair, the Tar 3aby grapplers
dropped a 19- 13 decision to the Little
Generals.
Pressing the highly favored Gen
erals throughout the afternoon, the
Carolina matmen took four out of
eight battles, but Washington and
Lee's fall wins in the 136, 165, and
175 contests told the story of defeat
for the Tar Heels. Getting revenge
for the defeat last winter, the W&L
frosh had matters pretty much in
their own hands, and sewed up the
Tar Babies' winning streak with de
cision wins in the 175, and unlimited
affairs.
Carolina Gene Devant's 121-pound
victory over Jim Hammett of the Gen
erals proved to be the feature bout
of the afternoon. Rallying after be
ing injured in the first three minu
(Continued on page a, eotumn 2)
8-
M aryland Trackmen
Dominate Running
In Conference Meet
By HARRY HOLLINGSWORTH
The story of Southern conference
indoor meets has usually been the Uni
versity of Maryland in the running
events, Duke in the field events, and
Carolina with a well-balanced team.
The meet this year will be held here
in Woollen gym on February 24.
And that story is again true this
year. At least, Maryland has the run
ners. The Terrapins have five of the
best trackmen in the south, all of
whom won first places in the 1939
conference indoor meet in running
events from the 60-yard dash through
the two mile run.
Leading the Terps is Jim Kehoe, one
of the ranking middle distance men in
the south and east. Kehoe won the
880 in last year's meet, setting a new
record of 1:56.8, and ran a leg on the
one mile relay team, which also set a
new conference indoor record of
3:29.3. In his best shape ever, Kehoe
has been blazing the boards in the
early winter meets, and has turned in
(Continued on page 4, column 3)
CAGE OUTCOME
DEPENDS AGAIN
ON TWO CENTERS
Bonnie Banks McFadden, the most
magnificient" piece of basketball flesh
in the Southern conference who has
not exhibited his muscles in Chapel
Hill since his sophomore year when
The Carolina freshman basketball
team, leaders in the state freshman
race, play Campbell college tomor
row night at 7 o'clock as prelim
inary to the Phantom-CIemson game.
he was first acquiring a reputation,
comes into Woollen gym tomorrow
night at 8:30 to lead Clemson against
(Continued on page 4, column 4)
Clemson Numbers
Here are the Clemson numbers.
First team: Forwards: Moorman 24,
Buchanan 27; center: McFadden 23;
guards: Coyle 26, Lancaster 29.
Chief substitutes: E. Coakley 21,
Abee 25, Bagnal 27.
STONE BROTHERS
WIN THREE RACES,
SET TWO RECORDS
By LEONARD LOBRED
Carolina's varsity mermen gained
at least a tie for first place in the
Southern conference season standings
when they defeated Washington and
Lee, 40-35, here yesterday with a
group of second stringers accounting
for a good share of the Tar Heel points.
Although they didn't mathematical
ly cinch the meet until the next-to-the-last
race, the Tar Heels stayed at a
comfortable distance in front of the
W and L lads, who until yesterday had
split two conference engagements. Car
olina took an early lead and coasted
through the closing events taking" sec
onds and thirds while the visitors won
the firsts.
Carolina took only four individual
first places, one by George Coxhead iii
the diving, two by Billy Stone and
another by Fleming Stone. Coxhead
captured his fourth first in six meets
while outscoring two W and L divers
Billy Stone, with his two first places,
one of which was a new school record,
was high scorer, hitting the speed he
showed all last winter and in early
season meets this year. Billy went out
in front in the 200 to win in 2:33.3
over Shultz of W and L, former Ohio
interscholastic champion, and '' team
mate George Meyer, a converted back
stroker. He came back later to beat
Shultz again, this time with a long
lead. His time of 5:44.8 bettered the
Carolina record by 6.4 seconds. Tom
McQuade was third.
Fleming Stone set the second new
Carolina record when he beat Farber
of W and L in the 100 in the time of
1:03.1, an improvement of .7 second on
the old mark. Fleming had lost to
Farber in the 50 and unofficially bet
tered the University record in that
event. Buzz Mitchell and Bill Peters)
got third places in the 50 and 100.
After the medley relay team of Lou
Scheinman, Murray Drucker and Whit
Lees, and the Stone brothers and Cox
head had put the Tar Heels out in front,
Coach Jamerson inserted his second
stringers in the line-up, and they didn't
fare so badly either.
Thompson took the backstroke for
W and L, and Lamar Gudger and Herb
Langsman pulled into second and third
positions. Warner won the breastr
stroke, and Noel Woodhouse and Ben
Lee were second and third there.
Then Billy Stone turned in his record-setting
race in the 400, and the
meet was won. Washington and Lee
won the free style relay, the final
event, over a Tar Heel team of Haw
ley Funke, Billy Thompson, Otho Ross
and Ed Mueller, a combination of
sprinters, distance men and breast-strokers.
Leading Scorer
-YY
I-.'-- I
j
Fleming Stone has led the Carolina
swimming team to victories in six of
its seven meets. High scorer on the
team with 60 points, Fleming won the
100-meter free style sprint yesterday
from Farber of W&L and established
a new Carolina record of 1:03.1. His
second in the 50 and Brother Billy's
two firsts netted the Tar Heels 18
points.
SABREMEN ,GIVE
FENCERS MARGIN
OVER HOPKINS
BALTIMORE, Md., Feb. 17 In as
close and tense a meet as this fine old
university will probably ever witness,
the University of North Carolina fenc
ing team outfought and bitterly at
that a game Johns Hopkins outfit,
15-12. It was a three-hour, meet that
was a toss-up until the third from the
last bout of the sabre meet, when the
lar Heel sabremen proved just an
iota better than the Jays and that
fraction of a difference in the slashing
technique meant a win for the visitors.
This afternoon it was Dave Ma
lone's day as far as the records are
concerned for he adroitly went unde
feated in foils to contribute greatly to
the Carolina 5-4 win in foils, a sur
prising but most satisfactory result
But it was Co-Captain Allan Bloom
who brought home the bacon, so to
speak, as he cinched the meet for the
Tar Heels in the twenty-fifth bout of
the contest, when he defeated the Hop
kins captain, Al Agrin, a second
string sabreist, 5-2. But Agrin ac
quitted himself well when he led his
epee team to a most shocking and up
setting 6-3 epee decision by going
through undefeated in that weapon.'
Along with Bloom, Larry Payne also
(Continued on page U, column 5)
jmj iuhmiiHTh nrmiT
Ti
Bonnie Banks McFadden, left, was
highly amazed recently at Durham.
Duke beat Clemson, point one. A tall
dark gentleman CAME UP to him and
started talking basketball. Banks
recognized the fellow faintly and
began asking about George Glamack.
The tall dark gentleman was George
Glamack, right. How'd you guess it?
Well, McFadden had an opportunity
to find out about Glamack. Carolina
beat Clemson earlier in the month at
Clemson, Glamack made 17 points,
McFadden only had 12. The two meet
up again tomorrow night. It will be
the same old story. The game depend
ing on the two ...
Can Glamack outwit and outplay
the faster, better floor man again? Or
will Bonnie Banks hop all over the floor
and give George the medicine he usual
ly administers to opposing pivot men?
: p n ( i
) - tit
V , J '
....w .', v.v.v.v.v.v...v:..:o::.vvv.&.v.j
Mural Foul Shooting Begins
For All Eligible For Cage Play
Mural Editor Morris
Names All-Stars In
Week Of Basketball
Marking its first appearance in in-
tramurals since 1937, foul shooting,
which starts tomorrow afternoon, will
steal the thunder of intramurals while
both basketball leagues take a badly
needed rest during the coming week
Running in conjunction with the " foul
shooting wil be the continuation of vol
ley ball and table tennis.
Tomorrow and Tuesday team tourna
ments will be held in the new sport
while on Wednesday and Thursday the
one eligible to compete in intramural
compete for individual honors. Any
one eiligible to compete in intramural
basketball is eligible for the foul shoot
ing tournament which will serve as a
minor sport on the intramural pro
gram this quarter. On either tomor
row or Tuesday the competitors will
take 50 shots each with the five high-
est on each team making u ptnat team s
score. Out of these contestants the
ten highest in each league will be select
ed to shoot 50 more times on Wed
nesday or Thursday to determine the
individual champions of both leagues.
Chief basketball competition of the
past week ensued in a merry race for
the fraternity title as four more trains
took their first tumble leaving defend
ing champions, Phi Kappa Sigma No.
2, Phi Delta Theta, ZBT, and Zeta
Psi No. 1 as the only undefeated quints.
Sigma Chi, Chi Phi, DKE No. 2, and
fall by the wayside.
Standings remained the same in the
dormitory race as Manly, Everett No.
1 and Lewis No. 1 added to their un
defeated records and Law School No. 2
had an idle week. Manly and Old West
furnished the thriller of the week by
playing into two extra periods before
Monly finally maintained their unde
feated record by winning 31-29. The
(Continued on page 4, column 1 )
NO
RENTAL
FEE'
II
11 E LEND lOD A
8 Hours Finishing Service
FOISTER PHOTO COMPANY
H
NO DEPOSIT
REQUIRED FROM
STUDENTS