FRIDAY, JANUARY 29, 1943 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE THREE H OTLO -r"l "TV tsiue uoipnms Oppose Cadets In 1943 Debut Six Rookies See Action Tomorrow An unknown quantity at pres ent, the 1943 edition of the Blue Dolphins, potentially the strong est in Carolina swim history, leaves this morning at 10 o'clock for Lexington and the inaugural swimming meet with VMI tomor row afternoon. Coach Dick Jamersqn and 12 swimmers hit the bus lanes for the lengthy trip to Lexington, ex pecting to arrive there around 8 p.m. The mermen will return Sunday night. Strength Unknown btrengtn oi xne ml swim mers is not definitely known but they figure to give the Blue Dol phins one of their toughest meets of the season. Last season they were good enough to gain" 29 points off the Carolina mermen and this season are reported to have another strong team in the making. Pervading the general current of optimism yesterday in the fi- ? Varsity Teams . . S . """' PikasMTO Win By High Scores; SAE Takes Upset A strong Pika No. 1 basketball team turned in an impressive 68- J.I victory over Phi Kappa Sig ma. Capel and Moore, Pikas, shared the scoring honors of the day with 18 points apiece. In the second high-scoring game of the day, ATO took an easy win from Sigma Nu by the score of 48-20. Porter and Long, of the victors, and Harris of Sig ma Nu divided the high-scoring with 14 points apiece. Kappa Psi racked up a 46-27 win over the boys from Steele dormitory. Stallard, Kappa Psi, rang up 17 tallies, while his teammate Bardus srarnered 14 Lewis, with 13, and Teddy, with 8, led the Steele scoring. Paced by Goldfarb, with 12 points to his credit, Phi Alpha took its second straight intramu ral win by trouncing ZBT 42-22. Stammler, Yuder and Atran, with 10, 10 and 8 points respec tively, were instrumental in the victory. SAE No. 1 defeated Kappa Sig No. 2 in a close 25-15 win, TEP bowed 27-22 to Phi Gam, and Sigma Chi took Sigma Nu nal practice was a feeling that if No 2 in a low-scoring 19-16 vic- they can get by this meet suc-it0Iy; cessfully, the Dolphins chances for another unblemished season's record will be very bright in spite of the tough schedule loom ing ahead. After tomorrow's meet, the Dolphins will be home next weekend entertaining the VPI Gobblers. Tomorrow's test will deter mine how well the Dolphins can get, along without their star sophomore sprinter, Percy Malli son, who has dropped out of swimming, and Snooky Proctor, freshman ace, whose injured knee has not sufficiently healed See SWIMMING, Page U Phi Delta Chi rang up 37 points, which was enough to beat District No. 2 with only 31. Phi Delt No. 2 trounced SAE No. 2 by a 31-13 score. Zeta Psi, District 3, and the NROTC No. 2 teams won on for feits from Chi Phi, Carr No. 2 and BVP respectively. Frosh Swimmers Any freshman who can swim or dive is urgently asked to re port to Coach Willis Casey after five-thirty at the pool. ; Thev are badlv needed. 11 Matmen Seek State Title In Raleigh Wrestlers To Miss McKeever, Gibbons By Westy Fenhagen Undisputed Big Five title holder will be the goal of the Tar Heel wrestlers tonight when they battle State at Raleigh. The rival freshman squads will meet at 7 p. m. with the varsity encounter slated to go on at 8 :30 p. m. Since Davidson has dropped wrestling from their athletic pro gram, only State, Duke, and Caro lina are left to fight it out for the Big' Five crown. The Tar Heels have already whipped Duke, 23- 3, and a triumph tonight would clinch the championship. The Terrors have had only one pre vious match this season and on that occasion were solidly trounced by VPI, 20-6, a team which tied Duke. State Weak The State aggregation man aged to win three bouts last year when they lost to Coach Quinlan's men, k-ijl, out tnis season tney don't even figure to do that well. Mat veterans at State this year are mostly a thing of the past and it will be mostly green timber that steps out on the mat tonight. Only in the 145 and 155-pound classes do the Terrors appear to be strong. Two starting veterans will be missing from the Tar Heel line up tonight. Hobie McKeever, Southern Conference 128-pound champ, will be away taking a Naval exam while Lem Gibbons, veteran 175-pound ace, had to go home for the weekend. Coach Quinlan is taking full squads of eight frosh and eight See WRESTLING, page 4 yo For Weekend .Battles Boxers Leave For Citadel Ring Meet Carolina's hustling Blue Bombers hit the open road this morning at 7 o'clock on the long ride to Charleston, S-. C. for battle with Citadel's punching cadets and their first victory of the season, perhaps? In excellent shape after a week of grueling workouts, the 16 fists representing Carolina's power in the Bulldog ring, are out to show some more of the stuff that gave Virginia coach Southall gray hairs and bald spots last weekend. Coach Joe Murnick said last night that he had no informa tion whatsoever about Citadel, but that after the showing of his squad last week, he antici pates victory. Pre-Flight Meets Norfolk Air Base Outfit Tomorrow Navy vs. Navy! That's what happens here tomorrow after noon when the Norfolk U. S. Na val Air Station basketball quin tet tangles with the "in-and-out" Navy Pre-flight Cloudbusters. Game time is 2 o'clock, and game site is Woollen gym. One of the top service teams in the South, the visitors are ex pected to handle the Cloudbust ers and then some. They have won 10 of their 15 games, two of their losses coming in overtime tilts with the undefeated Norfolk Training Station. They hold vic tories, among others, over Appa lachian State Teachers College, a team which defeated the Pre- ! See PRE-FLIGHT, page 4 Jim White, Dan Marks Will Start for Bantams Tonight Lange Confident Club Is Ready To Play Its "Best Ball So Far" By Don Atran Twelve men carry north today the rejuvenated Bantams' hopes of returning to the victory column when they meet the VMI Cadets, number two team in the conference, in Lynchburg tonight. De scribing this evening's contest and the one tomorrow night against Wake Forest as the crucial point in the Bantams season, Coach Lange added that he felt his team "ready to play its best ball." Announcing a starting team of White at center, Marks and Hart ley at the forward posts, and Freedman and Lou Hayworth playing the guards, the mentor seems to have leaned more toward his vete- i mi llliill Mil' l"T HlT-"!! mip"l JIM WHITE, sterling new comer to the White Bantams squad this year, will be given his starting chance tonight at center against VMI at Lynch-, burg. K ''. v-X ' Xv-;-Xv:y;;I ,v '.; A f . . . . - v : : ... . . f 1 11 L N TH they say: SNOW BUNNY for beginner UEGG BEATER" for head-over-heels spill "GHOST SUIT" for white ca mouflage uniform CAM EL for the Army man's favorite cigarette '7J 4 f ft ft f V.1- -J "' 1W N ft fit. rf X V;' ' h v-k mm fo: fx j : h'l "si t - I - Lm. CAAAELS tep4 -. -V VJ HAVE WHAT IT k m$m X V TAKES.' THEY'RE fj r": H THROAT AND A Ury ' V":1 V TREAT TO MY ) :. J I-.--;.; ;V ( TASTE! J , . - 1 ,.:;X jf . i , . j rans than ever before. In Ed Lougeeand Fritz Nagy, who is tied for fourth place honors among the -league's individual high scorers, he has, however, two first year men who admitted ly will see a good deal of action before the evening is over. VMI, with victories over Wil liam and Mary, VPI, and Mary land, and only a two-point loss to Duke to mar their record, will take the floor tonight heavy fa vorites. They're a big experienced club, and in Emil Sotnyk, they have a guard who made All-Southern in his junior year. Yet George Washington had a mnre formidable record and a more sizeable team, and the Colo nials were hard put to eke out a one-point victory. If the Bantams can play the ball they played that t night, and use a little pf the ex perience which four early season losses have given them, there's a good chance they'll face the Deacs tomorrow with another win to their credit. Leaving for Lynchburg by car this morning, the club will return in time to play Wake Forest to morrow night at Duke. Two wins would bring their record up to the .500 mark, and a victory over the high-flying Davidson Cats on Monday, would put the Bants j right back in the thick of the con ference race. Those making the trip include Captain George McCachren, Hartley, Seixas, Lougee, Marks, Altemose, White, Freedman, Rodman, Lou and Jim Hayworth, and Nagy. Freshman Mermen Hold Time Trials In an effort to get a starting ine-up for the meet with Staun ton Military Academy on Febru ary 12th and the AAU champion ships on the 13th, freshman swimming coach Willis Casey held time trials for the Baby Dol phins yesterday. For the first time since he lost his frosh stars to the varsity due to the South ern conference ruling, he was smiling over the work of Herb Bodman and Al Rayner, two of his backstrokers. Bodman turned in the best See FROSH MERMEN, page 4 With men in the Army, the Navy, the Marine Corps, and the Coast Guard, the favorite cigarette is Camel. (Based on actual sales records in Post Exchanges and Canteens.) ! M ttt.. ! pin i wamm " i 1 4 J -x-jv-r i The'T-Zone yhere cigarettes are judged TURKISH Cr DOMEn: ms' BLEND The "T-ZONE" Taste and Throat is the proving ground for cigarettes. Only your taste and throat can decide which cigarette tastes best to you . . . and how it affects your throat. For your taste and throat are abso lutely individual to ou. Based on the experience of - j - millions of smokers, we believe Camels will suit your T-ZONE" to a "T." Prove it for yourself! B. J. BOToldJ Tobee Coatptay. Wlnsica-Salea. North Cuolia ii Mural Schedule Basketball 6:00 Woollen Gym Court No. 1: DKE vs. Kappa Sigma No. 1; Court No. 2: St. Anthony No. 1 vs. Zeta Psi No. 2; Court No. 3: Phi Gam No. 1 vs. Beta No. 1; Court No. 4 : Carr No. 1 vs. Lenoir Dining Hall. Tin Can Court No. 1: Chi Psi vs. Chi Phi No. 1; Court No. 2: District No. 3 vs. Delta Sigma Pi. 6:45 Woollen Gym Court No. 1: Kappa Alpha vs. ATO ; Court No. 2: Sigma Nu No. 1 vs. Beta No. 2; Court No. 3: Independents vs. Old West; Court No. 4: Zeta Psi No. 1 vs. Phi Delt No. 1. Tin Can Court No. 1: Smith vs. Kappa Psi; Court No. 2: SAE No. 1 vs. Chi Phi No. 2. a W ii iiiiii mil III III I iiiii 1i i T

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