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BIRDS H ! 1j Intrami I Students To j Form Elevens Tenement Football Begins After Regular Football Season Closes j Fraternities To Enter Loving Cup Will Go To Winners Of Tourney; Suits To Be | Issued "Intramural football will be played 1 at the University after the close of j the regular season," said Jack Crawford, director of athletics at the University of South Carolina. Mr. Crawford has been formulating , elaborate plans by which he hopes to have a very successful season of tenement football. He said that there was only one thing that was making him hesitate before launching his campaign, and that was that so many people were afraid of injuries that might result from the games. He went on' to point out, however, that there was no excuse for injuries, and to insure this he is requiring that every man who plays has to have at least ten days of actual practice before he is allowed to play in a game. "No man who has not had at least ten days' of hard practice will set foot on the playing field," Mr. Crawford said "I have the students welfare at heart, and it is my purpose to eliminate all injury and further the physical well being of the students in these contests." No man who has at any time been a member of the varsity squad will be eligible to play in these games, and neither will any man who has ever f~ JUS JONES || "Biggest Little Place in Town" Central Union Building 'Phone 7000 cuSSenkth "EXCLUE Wesijlotin'st L , , Welcome St CAROLINA Breakfast 20c "Where Every 1204 Main St. I "The House < THE R. L. BRY, BOOKS, STATIONERY 1440 Main Street Jessamine $25.00 an With 2 Pair Trousers COPELAND . 1635 Mail UNIVERSITY CO-O] The Ca University 1 Gamecock Pr Operated for the Students and All Profits go into Stu If We haven't what you wai N "The Center of v?"???????? "i'' ' '' ??????? C X 1 p" 1W ^nmw ?; -J Hk. - OPrfOl iral Fo( . j Bird Captain '"j Captain Miles Blount, of Mullins, who leads the Carolina Gamecooks in their annual battle with Clemson Thursday in the State fair grounds wooden bowl as the feature attraction of the State fair. played a second or an hour in a fresh- ! man game. * ' At a later date Mr. Crawford will A issue a proclamation as to the num- t ber of teams that are to play.* It is i supposed that there will be a team to every two tenements in rotation. That t is there will be one team from tenements one and two, and so on down the line. There will also be one team 1 from every fraternity eligible, but there will be no team picked from the boys living out in town. The winner of this tournament will be judged on a percentage basis, and will receive a beautiful loving cup as well as individual medals for its members. There will be enough equipment issued to outfit the playing teams for the games. Columbia. S C. ( ... 3 - a f '? t udents To < SWEETS * ? __ .. Dinner 'body Goes" 30c Phone 9314 of Quality" AN COMPANY STUDENT SUPPLIES Columbia, S. C. ' -I t ??^ ? i t s Clothes I d $28.50 f( c ?Ask to See Them COMPANY i Street PERATIVE STORE nteen j Jook Store 1 easing Club v i . * Owned by the Student Body/ 1 dent Activities Fund nt, tell us, and we '11 get it the Campus" J i * ^ i BREAKl othall | Cock-A-Doodles I By ALLEN ROLLINS ONE OUT OF NONE Miles Blount, Carolina's blocking football captain, is the type of athlete who could probably play baseball and get one hit out of no times at bat. In three games played this year Miles hasn't run with the ball once, yet he has one touchdown to his credit. The score came when the Carolina captain pounced on the ball across the L. S. U. , soal line after Bryant Adair had blocked a punt. STATE WAR ON Carolina's schedule is so arranged this year that in one swift blow the Gamecocks may strike to the state football championship, an honor never before achieved in the history of the University. This blow takes in three state games, Clemson, Citadel, and Furman, all of whom the Birds meet within the next three weeks. CLEMSON FIRST The Gamecocks start bidding for the state gonfalon Thursday at the State Pair against Clemson and the Citadel i ray at Orangeburg will come one veek later. Carolina and Furman do jattle on November 7, and should the 3irds subdue Clemson and the Citadel, his game, which has been shifted to he wooden bowl at the fair grounds, vill probably decide the state charnjionship MAYBE WORSE An excellent example of a foot- < ball game without an attendant student body was given at Florence Friday when Citadel licked * Clemson, 8-0, and everybody 1 agreed that it was just like a hot stove league convention of deaf I and dumb souls. Citadel prevented c the game from developing into one ! of those stiff, formal affairs with a I drilling corps of about fifty cadets 1 who provided yells, while Clem- I son's Tigers had only alumni to ' cheer them on. < i CLEMSON'S IT Second-half lethargy has seemed | Carolina's chief trouble in games this | rear. Out of 31 points scored in three J james, the Birds have yet to tklly in i he second half. You'll pay for this , Clemson! , t I OUT-OF-DATE Duke University has already begun basketball practice, North Carolina has started fall baseball practice and the University of Florida is talking about the 1932 football team. South Carolina is still playing the 1931 football season. SAY NOT SO Paul McAbee, 220-pound freshman acklc, has predicted a tough time of t Wednesday for the Biddies when hey meet Clemson's Cubs. "Mac" has ieen the Cubs work out several times ind declares that about half of them footballically speaking) compare very avorably with him in size. He is :onfident of a Biddy victory, however. Not To Burn Tiger Tonight Breaking a precedent of many years, Coach Billy Laval has requested that < he Clemson Tigery not be burned in :ffigy Wednesday night. In making this request. Coach Laval isked that all celebration be postponed , intil after the game. A pep meeting , vill be held Wednesday night however, md freshmen will guard the entrances o the school the entire night while he fires are burning. Oberlin, with an endowment fund of nore than $14,000,000, is the most leavily endowed college in the United i States. | ? ' &" * / i - li mk >. iLEMSON To Star S x Tiger Captain 1 * I Captain "Red" Fordham, of Clemson, who will attempt to lead the Tigers to a fifth straight victory over Carolina in the Carolina-Clemson fair classic Thursday. "Red" has had a good season at center with the Bengals in spite of their unimpressive season. L. S. U. Tigers Defeat Birds - Garnering a touchdown lead in ^the first half, the Birds faltered in the last half and lost to a powerful Louisiana State squad, 19-12, in a night game last week at Baton Rouge. The Tiger jacks drove through the line time after time for long yardage. L. S. U. took a one point lead in the first quarter, 7-0 but the Gamecocks :ame back in the second period and the scoye stood 12-7 in their favor at the half. Louisiana came through.in the third period for another counter and the Tigers went ahead 13-12. Another Tiger touchdown late in the last quarter completed the scoring for the light. Clary was responsible for one of the Bird markers and Captain Blount fell oh a blocked punt back of the L. S. U. goal for the other Bird tally. Carolina's regular lineup began the ?amc, altho Hajek was shifted to center in place of the injured Joe Shinn. BIG GAMES THIS WEEK Pitt vs Notre Dame South Carolina vs Clemson Harvard vs Texas Penn vs Wisconsin Carolina Frosh vs Clemson Frosh Carnegie .Tech vs Purdue Fordham vs Drake Tempi e vs Haskell Michigan State vs Georgetown | Erskine vs Davidson Furman vs Oglethorpe P. C. vs. Chattanooga Georgia Tech vs Tulane v Tennessee vs North Carolina Georgia vs Vanderbilt W. & L. vs Virginia L. S. U. vs Arkansas Penn State vs Syracuse . Northwestern vs Ohio State Alabama vs Sewanee Auburn vs Florida Navy vs Princeton V. P. I. vs Kentucky Greek and Latin have been abandoned as entrance requirements at Harvard and Princeton this year. Sigma Alpha Epsilon once had a woman member in the days of the Civil War. A recent ruling at the University of Michigan makes it unlawful for a student to give rides to fellow students. A skunk has been adopted as the team's mascot at the University of North Carolina. j A ' * f f s . . ? \ ? A ? v ' V 'ilsAiL-VA-iS , *v,' ' t, ? \ wt JO 't Soon ' x ' ^. * ' ?- ? Citadel Cadets State leaders Bulldogs Outplay Clemson In Contest; Mcintosh Stars For Winners The Citadel Bulldogs, with two victories to their credit are leading the state football race to date. Upsetting the CHunson Tigers at the Florence fair Friday the Cadets took a dccided lead within the state. Wofford and Furman alone remain undefeated, although Carolina has not yet played a state rival. Ffcrman was tied by the Erskine eleven in another upset. x \' ' Erskine has won vone of its three games and tied one. Newberry is the only team that has not won or tied a game. ' , The standings: V Team Won Lost Tied Citadel ^ 2 0 0 Wofford 1 0 . 0 Furman 1 0 ' 1 Erskine 1 1 Cleinson 0 1 % Presbyterian 0 1 1 Carolina 0 0 0 Newberry 0 2 2 U. B. O. Biddies Meet Clemson Cubs Carolina's freshmen meet the Clemson Cubs Wednesday at 3 p. m., on the eve of the Carolina-Clemson varsity tilt. The Biddies defeated P. C.'s frosh 7-6 in their first game of the season several weeks ago. A much stronger team is expected to meet the Cubs Wednesday to the heavy drill work they have been put through the past two weeks., t . \ Clemson is expected to outweigh the Biddies and is conceded a good chance to win. Golf New Fad For Students Pat Nelson, prominent University student, has a move under way to encourage and improve golfing talent at the University of South Carolina.-. Pat has negotiated with the Forest Lake and Ridgewood country clubs to allow four University students to play at each club every day up to one o'clock. Up to date twenty boys interested in the proposition have handed in their names to Mr. Crawford, who will have charge of the final arrangements. Gene McCarthy, Forest Lake professional, has offered to give occasional pointers to the b.oys, but for obvious reasons it would be impossible to undertake to instruct beginner^ in the fundamentals of the game. Mr. Crawford will post the names of the boys who will play, at what club they will play, and when they will play. v U. 8. / If you re a man and you can, grow a beard", is the battle cry of the AntiShave League at Chapel Hill, according to a feature in the Daily Tarheel. "These boys contend that if the women can bring back the long dresses and the period bonnets, why can't the men fall back on the old Van Dyke, the side-burn, and the long curly Fran* Joseph mustache?" ' ^T. . . "T t | | | || | | - ? GAMECOCKS B THE COT.T. A Shop for Cat v College Novi i ; * StationeryToilet i 1008 Sumter Street *" r ^ - v " r. ' * ' : 0- : ? i . . i : ? ,.v? ' *? ' ' ' *' ' ' V 'J * - ;',x -..' ' *', ' ' ll . v iURSDAY Thousands To Attend Game Gamecocks Rule Slight Favorites* Tigers Hope To Win 5th straight Joe Shinn Still Out ? Jess Neely To Present Strongest Team Of Season Against Birds Carolina's Gamecocks stood ready ; tonight to break a Clemson streak of four consecutive victories in the annual State fair classic tomorrow, .and never in the past four years have the Bird s chances appeared .brighter to turn the tables. Whipped to a standstill by Tennes- *" see's Volunteers, tied by a stubborn P. C. eleven, barely ekeing out a 6-0 j victory over N. C. State for their only touchdown of the current season and beaten by a vetcrart Citadel team, the Tigers are given little chance of coming out of tomorrow's conflict unscathed. Joe Shityi, center, unable to play due to injuries received in the Tech game will be relieved by Chuck Hajek at the pivot position, with Raby and Laval holding down the end berths. The backfield will see Dick Shinn at quarter, Earl Clary and Fred Hambright, halves,, and Captain Miles Blount, fullback. Meers an^ Adair' will get the tackle jobs with Hughey and Freeman at guards. y, The game will begin at noon. u. B. # The Chief of Police of Cedar Rapids, where Coe College is located, recently ' complained that the town'p red lanterns are disappearing too fast. Twenty-five hundred were installed last year and not a one is left. TVA ! BOTVtfc f?D BABIES P J \\ ? -^ c t* o rt We carry a full line of Drugs, Holhngsworth Candy, Cosmetics. I ; Parker Pens and Pencils a v Specialty I ^ UNIVERSITY JDRUG STORE "Where the 'Gang' Meets" J ' fl !j Campus and Town Delivery I 1204 Green Phones 4331-4332 I _ -J | * ? I M I *> | I I ! ! ! , , II |~I i . I I ' EAT CLEMSON II EOE SHOP ! rolina Students , |j )lties?Soda *^11 -Pennants It Articles II Phone 9283 | I