! 1 Papre Three JAY, JANUARY 26, 1947 IDlk y Middle Five. 11(01111 w -s If i white ms Toppled B mg m .with BOB GO LD WATER Sports jIN RESPONSE TO the many queries we've received regarding when Carolina's 1947 grid schedule will make fts appearance,, we dropped in to see Chuck Erickson again yesterday and placed the question directly before him. And the answer we received made our own troubles sound small indeed. tiS- T T T- T71 J i t t-. - -oacn duo retzer ana 1 win sure be glad when that schedule finally. does come out, the assistant director of athletics began. "We're more anxious to get it out of the way than the students are to see it. But to make the best possible schedule involves making switches and that takes time." "As for who we'll play," he continued, "you might say that well face some old opponents and some new ones. We'll release the schedule as soon as we finish arranging all the dates, which may be this coming week. And," he concluded with a smile, "I will go on record as saying that Carolina will play Duke in 1947." Also along the grid sidelines, our morning mail yesterday included a copy of the University of Georgia Red and Black, in which staff reporter Dick Pipes tells of the "vicious attack that the staff of the Daily Tar Heel made on Georgia's unbeaten football team." Mentioning the articles written in this newspaper on the "Great Sugar Bowl Robbery" (he didn't call it that) Pipes lashes out at colleagues Irwin Smallwood and Billy Carmichael for their words as to the capabilities of the officials as well as criticizing Editor Bill Woestendiek's editorial on the gallant showing made by the Carolina team. All of which, according to friend Pipes, "causes bitter results." Our only response to this is to ask if the movies of the Sugar Bowl game have been shown down in Georgia. If so,' we wonder if the two scenes so offensive to our eyes could have been deleted for special showings down there. Speaking of colleague Carmichael, we received an unpleasant long distance call from Billy yesterday afternoon, the unpleasantness coming when he told us the score of yesterday's Carolina-Navy contest. "Except for Dillon," be related, "things looked pretty bad." As for the loss to Maryland, he ex plained that the officiating, which was fine at Navy, had gone pretty much against the Phantoms at College Park. Last night he went over to Wash ington to view Bones McKinney in action with his professional club, the Capitals. The cage loss to Navy, incidentally, was the first time during the present school year that a Middle team had taken the measure of a Carolina outfit. The Tar Heel cross-country team finished ahead of Navy twice and varsity and jayvee gridders scuttled the future Admirals on .two other occasions. At that, it took a former Tar Heel, former Carolina mentor Ben Carnevale, to turn the trick this time. Tar Heels in the news: Maryland appears to be lining up a Carolina coali tion on the gridiron for next fall. Jim Tatum, head coach here in 1942 and w v -a a v -l V' -m All A now directing Maryland s grid tortunes, added nis .lormer Aii-American teammate George Barclay, to his staff two days ago. Barclay was the first Tar Heel to make All-American, being named in 1934 when both he and Tatum were sparking the Carolina forward wall. . .Bryan "Bitsy" Grant, one of the many outstanding tennis stars developed here by Coach John Kenfield, is the third ranking player in the South according to ratings announced this past week. . .In the latest of Dick Dunkel's weekly basketball ratings, Caro lina ranked 22nd in the nation and. fourth in the South, ahead of both Duke and N. C. State. Wonder where Mr. Dunkel will have us this week. . .Wofford college plays the Carolina junior varsity in football next October 4, accord ing to the Wofford schedule released recently. . .George Stirnweiss baseball sschool seems to be pretty successful, with nine of its recent graduates being signed by the Pittsburgh Pirates for their farm system. Ramon Picks Millrose Team R With the Millrose mile team race less than one week away, Coach Dale Ranson picked what, looks like his starting team for the event after sending his runners through time trials yesterday morning. As it stands now, the team that RECAPPING SERVICE PATTERSON TIRE COMPANY W. Franklin St. DIAL F-2841 will represent Carolina in the Madison Square Garden event will have Jimmy Miller, Jack Milne, Alvin Smith and Julian Mackenzie. Milne turned in the best perform ance in yesterday's trials, running the mile in 4:24. The result was es pecially gratifying to Coach Ran son, since Milne's bruised heel, in jured in the Georgia Tech cross country meet last fall, had been slow in, healing. His showing yes terday clinched a berth for him on the mile team that will oppose NYU, Manhattan, and Penn State teams in the special mile event. Monogram Club Meets The Monogram Club will hold a mtine- at 7:30 o'clock Monday evening and lettermen in football. All members are urged to attend and bring their wives or dates. Football movies will highlight the evening, Secretary Charlie Tietjen . announced. will induct the Cross Country fall and ngmen Mittmen Score First Victory Young, Green, Rose, Sumas Capture Wins By Jim Pharr Carolina's boxing team took four of eight bouts in Woollen gym last night to pound out a 4 to 3 victory over the Gamecock leather-pushers from South Carolina.. The Tar Heels scored one win on a TKO and three by decisions in achiev ing their victory. The Gamecocks had two TKO's and one decision. The 145 pound, bout ended in a draw. Leonard Green took a decision over Chuck Spann, of South Carolina, in the 165-pound class, in what was rat ed the best bout of the evening. William Sumas, using a powerful right hand to great advantage, stop ped his opponent, Watson Dawes, of the Gamecocks, in 49 seconds of the third round and was awarded a TKO in the 125-pound class. Conway Rose proved to . have too much experience for Fletcher Dena, of South Carolina, in the 135-pound class, and went on to take a decision after a nine-count knockdown in the first round. Charlie Norton fought Marion Watson, of the Gamecocks to a draw decision in the 145-pound class, in a close bout that could have gone either way. Dick Young, of Carolina, was awarded a victory by forfeit in the 175-pound class. The summary: 125 lb Sumas (NC) TKO over Dawes (49 seconds 3rd rd). .,. 130 lb White (SO decisioned Lambeth. 135 lb Rose (NC) decisioned Dena. 145 lb Draw between Norton (NC) and Watson. 155 lb Avant (SC) TKO over Dyal (35 seconds 1st rd). 165 lb Green (NC) decisioned Spann. 175 lb Young (NC) forfeit over Kinsey. Hvywt Ruttledge (SC) TKO over Varney (1:37 2nd rd). Frosh Play Tomorrow Coach Frank Murray's freshman cagers go after their seventh tri umph of the season tomorrow evening when they take to the road to play Fayetteville high school. Probable starters for the Tar Babies are Charlie Nichols and either Pete Peters or Junie Idol at the for ward posts, Sandy Hoft at center, and Bill Harrington and Bill Walker in the guard berths. . i Mural Schedule Fl DOT South Carolina, 4 " 3 2 Nineteen Mural Cage Clubs Still Unbeaten; Fraternity, Handball Play Starts Tomorrow Nineteen intramural cage teams still remain among the unbeaten, according to figures released yesterday by intramural director Walter Rabb. Twelve of the undefeated outfits are, in the six fraternity leagues while the other seven are in the four dormitory loops. At least two of the spotless-record clubs will leave the unbeaten ranks tomorrow afternoon when SAE No. 1 and Phi Gam No. 1, both with 3-0 slates, clash for the leadership of fraternity league two, while Sigma Chi No. 1 and Chi Psi tangle to see who remains on top of loop six. In the other fraternity leagues, Chi Phi No. 2 has a 3-0 record in loop one, as do Beta No. 1 and Pi Lamb No. 2 in loop three. The closest fight in any of the leagues is in loop four, .where PiKA No. 1, Phi Kappa Sig No. 2 and Phi Delt No. 2 are deadlocked with 3-0 slates. Sigma Chi No. 3 and ATO No. 1 have 2-0 records in league five to round out the unbeaten fraternity aggregations. The toughest battle in the dormitory leagues is in loop one, where the Grads and Locals are tied with 3-0 performances. The Independants rule alone on top of loop two with the same record, while Oakwood Drive has 3-0 and Everett has 2-0 in league three. Emanon heads loop four with 3-0, followed closely by another undefeated quintet, the Med School, with a 2-0 record. Fraternity competition in handball gets under way tomorrow afternoon with two matches on the card. Dormitory competition will start next week. Grapplers to Encounter Davidson Here Tomorrow BASKETBALL Monday, 4:00 Court No. 5: Chi Psi vs Sigma Chi No. 1; court 7: Zeta Psi No. 2 vs Kappa Sigma No. 3. 5:00 Court No. 5: SAE No. 1 vs Phi Gam No. 1; court 7: Sigma Chi No. 2 vs ATO No. 2. HANDBALL Monday, 4:00 Sigma Nu vs Del ta Sigma Pi;. 5:00 Phi Delt vs PiKA. John Stoioff. Navy (39) f g f pf tp f tm Shugart, f 3 Robbins, f 3 Searle ;....... 1 Waldrop, c 2 Quinn : 0 Barrow, g 1 Dick, g 0 Durham 1 Claitor 0 4 2 1 0 0 4 5 0 1 0 1 3 5 0 2 5 0 3 10 8 3 4 0 6 5 2 1 'Totals .11 17 19 39 6 Tar Heels Seek Second Straight Victory; First Bout Gets Under Way at 7 o'Clock Carolina's wrestling team will seek its second victory in as many starts tomorrow night, when the local grapplers meet the Davidson matmen in Woollen gym. The first match is scheduled for 7 p. m. The Tar Heels will be led by Co- : Captains Tommy Hearn and Dick , Jfcft fjg Hookl ies in downing their opponents in the 136 and 145-pound classes respective ly,, in the opening match against the VPI grapplers. Other outstanding matmen on Coach Chuck Quinlan's squad include Doug Thompson, who took his match at VPI over Williams, who had been undefeated in nine previous bouts, and Irv Zirpel who lost his match against VPI but turned in the best bout of the evening in the process. Little is known of the Davidson grapplers but Coach Charlie Parker is expected to bring a strong team here tomorrow to engage the Tar Heels. Carolina opened its season with an impressive 18-10 victory over the Gobblers January 18. Coach Quinlan's men are scheduled to engage in two more home bouts this season, follow ing tomorrow's clash here. The Tar Heels meet Washington and Lee on February 8, and VMI on February 15. The followirtg Carolina grapplers are expected to start in the different weight classes: 121-pound Doug Thompson. 128-pound Tom Urquhart. 136-pound Tommy Hearn. 145-pound Dick Seaver. 155-pound Irv Zirpel. 165-pound Oscar Gupton. 175-pound Bill Kemp. Heavvweiffht Laurie Hooper or Carolina (35) fg Paxton, f 1 Scholbe 0 Hamilton, f 1 Hartley 0 Dillon, c 6 7 Nearman 0 White, g 0 Hayworth 1 Kohler, g 2 f pf tp ftm 14 3 0 3 4 0 2 0 2 3 1 3 3 0 19 0 0 2 5 Totals 11 13 19 35 11 Cagemen Drop Second in Row Dillon Registers 19 For Scoring Honors By Bill Carmichael Annapolis, Md.f Jan. 25 Despite a brilliant performance by hook-shot artist Johnny Dillon, Carolina's White Phantom cagers suffered a 39-35 set back at the hands of a strong Navy quintet here this afternoon for their second straight loss on the current jaunt. Dillon hit a new high for a Caro lina player this season, hitting the cords for six hooks and seven foul shots for a total of 19 points. The big center kept the Phantoms in the ball game all through the first half almost smgle-handedly, registering the first 10 points that Carolina made and 13 of the 18 that his team scored up to intermission. But his effort went for naught with none of the remaining Phantoms hitting for more than five points. Navy Takes Lead The contest started slowly, with Coach Ben Carnevale's quintet assum ing a quick lead which they held for most of the game. During the first half, the Phants went for seven min utes without making a field goal but finally started moving with four min utes left and the score reading 17-13, Navy. A late goal by Dillon put the Tar Heels at a 20-18 deficit at the intersection. The Middies kept a slight lead for the early part of the second half, but Carolina finally pushed into a 27-27 tie on two goals by Norm Kohler. Navy again pulled ahead but with five minutes remaining Jim Hamilton tallied a field goal and foul shot to put the Phantoms ahead for the first time, 33-32. Navy again moved out front but Dillon hooked another to make the score 35-34, Carolina. But that was all. Three fouls and one field goal in the last three minutes pushed the Middies way out front and that ended the scoring. Foul Line Decides The game was actually won at the foul line, with the Middies hitting 17 for 23 while the Phantoms made 13 for 24. Both teams had 11 field goals. For Navy, Kenny Shugart, five-foot, nine-inch forward who was named to the All-East quintet last year, led the way with 10 tallies. Next tussle on the Carolina slate will be Tuesday evening when the Phantoms run up against South Caro lina in their third Southern confer ence clash. GIVE YOUR TASTE A 'Steak-Break" with one of our , - fr- 4'" 4ri 1 1 VP XV. . ' ...:: KANSAS CITY STEAKS SUNDAY-MONDAY their love! the risk! 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