University of South Carolina Libraries
BY Last Time For Me I'm quitting Or to put it an Starting next week this, colun ~handled by Paul "Scoop" Leag sports stafi. Paul will give yoi know the change will be welcoi I'm leaving a couple of thing .have liked to handle-the deel Finger Bowl-and best of all, t gdt rid of Tom Hutto, the one losing basketball combination. All that's left for me to do is So, I do itl Looking Over What Happened September 30-1 refuse to prn games and promise to stick to out so much glory about the 1: talking about God or the athlei cussed and many dramatic pos Enright's ex-connections with t and a very weak first issue. October 7-The Wake Forest the next day and all is dreary coach was supposed to have a - nine sophomore stars who reall right is gaining his reputation a ens to out-gloom any of the < Americans are discussed and tb up about some of the sentences not crooked, which I had insiste October 19-This is the week is not going to be a paper next trying to make excuses wher< Gamecocks have lost twb game Wake Forest, both by one point. upset Clemson. But you know November 4-Two things hal bring trouble and a funny sort some remarks about the David: which did not agree with a lot made some remarks about the ents day-how they were obvi, among the parents which is a g( looked as if I was to be well h eising. November 11-Yep! Sumter : blasted in print and the whole fight my battle. The loyalty to upset and Sumter got upset. special peace session over steahs are now friends. November 18-A couple of jo: None of them were very funny s< actions of the Clemson cadets irn dents at the Furman game in C cocks finally deflated the Pu: boys! December 2-The team had b and I had been staying at home a trip up to Washington to see th versity on the first play of the game and other things at Wash as I could because I was very s could not have beaten out a col December 16-This is the we tuted. Or at least talked about, a lot of interest could be worke, games if the teams had some pS( A lot of shorts about the post. column. I find it hard to chan a sport that does not interest hack does anything. January 6-I'm still beefing couple of teams in the tourname it's weak, very weak. I then g Two paragraphs of facts about tion department has to work, a: are shoved at the reader. And shorts-My reign is over. January 13-I quit ! I quit ! I saavmoG TED PUBLIG sINGE 180 Metropolitan Cafe "The Old Reia~ble" WHERE STUDENS MEET AND EAT Air-Conditioned OPEN Au, NIGHT 1920 Main St. - Phone 7849 Think of COLUMBLIJ .~ .Prod potts DOIT HENDLEY other way, my job has run out. n and these pages will be ue, long a silent member of the i people some good stuff and I ae. i on his shoulders that I would ining basketball situation-the e move by Ted Petoskey which man who didn't fit in with his to review what has happened. ,dict the scores of any football my promise. I resolve to beat oys that you'll wonder if I'm ics. The Georgia game is dis sibilities built because of .Rex 1e place. All went to no good game is scheduled to come off )ecause the nasty Wake Forest veak team but turned up with y can play football. Rex En the "gloomy one" and threat ther Palmetto coaches. All ree campus fellows get stirred They insist that spotters are d unconsciously in print. before Clemson. Luckily there week so I will be spared from there should be none. The by this time, to Georgia and It looks as if the Birds might what happened. )pened this week that were to of fame to me. First, I made ;on game and the Sumter fair of Sumter people. Second, I University's activities on Par >usly trying to work up trade )od thing but funny to me. It ated for doing too much criti resented it! My character was Gamecock staff turned out to uched me. The University got All was straightened out at a s at the Hotel Columbia. All' fes open this week's activities. > we made a note of the strange cheering for the Carolina stu ~reenville. Oh, yes, the Game ple breeze. Congratulations, een traveling a good bit lately But friend Ed McGrath took e Gamecocks whip Catholic uni game. So he writes about the ngton. I thanked Ed as much eepy that week and probably amn. ek the Finger Bowl was insti It's a pretty stupid idea but I up in the intramural football udo-famous object to work for. season honors completed the ge from football to basketball, ne very much. But a literary about the Finger Bowl. A nt have taken up the cry. But ~o in for reform in a big way. how hard the physical educa id how short handed they are, he is a reader no more. More quit ! Central Drug Co. 5197-PHONFAL-6198 OPEN ALL NIGHT Oolumibia's Most Oomplete SODA FOUNTAIN and LUNOHEONE3TTE 1204 MAIN STREET i DAIRIES~ ucts ie Canteen Play16 18 Tomorrow'' Intramural Teams -Reach Semi-Finals Kappa Sigma fraternity will meet Tenement 16 & 18 tomorrow after noon at 3:30 p. m. on Melton field in the semi-final round of the in tramural football tournament. The winner will go to the Finger Bowl as o.e of the contesting teams. The game between the other two teams still in the tournament, Sig ma Nu fraternity and Tenements 9 & 10, will be played Monday af ternoon with the winner meeting the Winner of the Kappa Sigma Tenements 16 & 18 game. According to J. A. Crawford di rector of physical education, the championship game will be played on Friday, February 3, after exami nations are finished. Tenements 9 & 10 were allowed to get back into the tournament because of a ruling by Mr. Craw: ford. Tenements 9 & 10 were de feated in the first game by a strong team from Tenements 21 & 04;2. Tenements 21 & 242 were dis qualified for playing .a man that was ineligible and Tenements 9 & 10 allowed.to take,their place. Before the , tournament started, Mr. Crawford announced that the eligibility rules would be strictly enforced and has had a very suc cessful season because of that rul ing. No man is allowed to play who has ever participated in a col lege freshman or varsity game at the University or any other college. NettersElect Bradham As '39 Captain Randolph Bradham, of Columbia, was elected captain of this year's Carolina tennis team at a meeting of the returning lettermen .Monday afternoon. At the meeting the vet erans also re-elected Sam Price, of Oswego, N. Y., as manager of the squad. The netters also decided to have a meeting of all candidates for the varsity team early in February. At that meeting the players will be ranked accorditfg to their records; and after that time continuous com petition for the five singles posi tions and the two doubles berths will exist, according to Prof. W. Y. Wagener, Coach of the University netmen. "Although we will miss the ser vices of our three top-ranking play ers of last year, we expect to have a good team," Coach Wagener said. "Heyward Belser, whom I con sider one of the leading collegiate players in the state will strengthen our team a great deal. Also, Car son, Bradham, and Harold Prince should be stronger this year be cause of their experience," he added. The three players that he referred to as being missed were Williams, Lipscomb, and Bryan, who ranked first, second, and third on last year's team. Carolina's tennis team has over the last decade been the outstand ing net squad in South Carolina. With the exception of last year when P. C. won the state title, the Gamecock netters have copped the state title practically every year. Before last year the winner of the state title was determined by the percentage of matches won against state competition. How ever, last year the ruling was changed so that now the state championship is decided by a state tournament in which each team is awarded a certain number of points for each time one of its players advances a round. The points are graduated so that the winner of the tourney is practical ly sure to win the state title for his team. Results of the duel matches are disregarded as far as a championship is concerned. The team will probably open the season in a match with Duke on our courts, Wagener said. The season will begin the latter part of March and continue until the end of school. The schedule has not been completed yet; however, the team will probably play about twenty matches in all. In the past the netmen played every team in the state twice on a home and home basis. This custom will probably be adhered to this year. The team also plans to make a trip into Georgia or North Caro lina, Coach Wagener said. The squad this year is expected to include: Courtenay Carson, Ran dolph Bradham, Harold Prince, Bob Greenfield, and Sam Price as lettermen from last year's squad; Heyward Belser; Bob Doster, Buck DuPree, and Clarence Kibler, who 'were ineligible last year; and Pru itt Abrams, and George -Prince from last year's frosh team. -- .Us. O. Out of Necessity A new glass bottle is being made, said to have the resiliency of rubber. Probably the invention of some um pire. -Van Nuys. Columbia Office Supply Co. P R INT IN G COMMERCIAL STATIONERY' - . OPPICI EQUIPMENT 1112 Lady St. Phone 5168 Son tar 4W. CZAR,~ V. CX. He's just another Clary and his first nahte~is Ed. His playing in the North-South.gne,on January 2 at Birmingham made tie yin4ees wish that he had. stayed: back at the University of South 'Carolina instead of playing .in, that all-star game. . Basketeers Play ThIree Ted Petoskey's b a s k e t b a 14 charges, back from a strenuous road trip through Tennessee and North Carolina, will face only Palmetto state opposition until semester ex ams are over, and take up the state campaign tonight in Charleston against the Citadel. With the smallest squad in years the Gamecocks are attemptipg to make an. about face to. the disas trous season's 'beginning. On Monday ofi next we . they come back to the field House to .face the Presb;yterian Blue Stockings atid the following night on the same court they face the Furman Pur ple quintet. . Exactly two weeks will be al lowed during the examination- pe riod before the Bird cagers again take to the hardwood, On Janu ary 31, the University of Georgia basketeers come to Columbia, fol lowed by Georgia Tech on the fol lowing night. Both teams are high in Southeastern conference rank. The next collegd team to play at the field house, Presbyterian col lege, boasts a scrappy cage outfit composed to a large degree of sophomores and built around a lanky junior center, Giles Batche lor. The sharp-shooting star of the Blue Hose aggregation is Dick Meisky,' a fast sophomore forward. Lester Holden is another star Hose shot. Furman, like P. C., has a great little forward to throw at the Game cocks. He is -Pepper Martin, famed Purple football man and a'member of the 1936 American Legion base ball championship team of Spar tanburg. He together with Wilmot Spires, center, will give the Game cocks plenty of trouble. A summary .of th.e games to -'be played in the immediate future fol lows: Jan. 13-Citadel at Charleston. Jan. 16--P. C. at Columbia. Jan. 17-Furman at Columbia. --U. S. O. Vols Swamp Bird Cagers University of South Carolina basketball team invaded the South eastern conference Monday night without Captain Tom Hutto and Tennessee's Volunteers immedi ately put a 44 to 18 plastering upon the hapless five. It was Carolina's fourth loss in as many starts. The Vols led by Wilton Putnam, push-shot artist from Greenville, S. C., limited the Gamecocks to only two field goals, both of which came in the last half. Juliani Hymson, sophomore guard who handled Hutto's position led the losing Carolina quintet in indi vidual scoring with a total of four points. The lineups: South Carolina (18) G F Pf. Tp. Wolfe,f ...........1 5 0 7 Kannuck, f........0 0 1 0 McCreight, f......0 0 2 0 Alexander, c.......0 3 4 3 Owens,c ..........0 2 1 2 Petty,g ...........0 2 2 2 Kroto,g ...........0 0 2 0 Hymson, g.......1 2 3 4 Eleazer, g.........0 0 0 0 Totals ...........2 14 15 18 Tennessee (44) G F Pf. Tp. Putnam, f .........7 3 2 17 Logan, f..........3 1 4 7 Higdon, f.........1 0 2 2 Kellogg, f.........0 1 1 1 Thomnas, c.........1 0 1 2 Schultess, c.......3 2 3 8 Huffman, g........1 0 1 2 Jennings, g.......1 1 1 3 Whitaker, g.......0 2 0. 2 Warren,g .........0 0 3 0 Totals ....,......17 10 18 44 Half time score,. Tenness.ee, 21; South Carolina, Q. Free throws missed, Wolfe (8), Owens (2), Hymnson ,(2), Putnam, Logan, Thomas (p), Schultess. (6) Hqffman, Whitaker. Referee, Olney (B6wer) Ohest~ Nashville. By"W. Va. University of West Virginia will furnish the .o#position for Rek En right's 1939 GAmteiapk gridders in the annual Orangebur county fair football game at Orangeburg, S. C. this fall, W. H. Harth, direc 'for of athletics at Cafolira, said Vilianova and Cardlina played to a 6-6 draw at Orangeburi t-At year. and Coach Enright feels tat' it is a lucky spot for him. si'olina goes to Philadelphia to play Villa nova this year however 'and West Virginia was secured to play in the fair game. Signing of West Virginia is an other step in. Mr. Harth's plans to arrange. a schedule containing a majority of state universities, ' --u. 2. 4. Because of The Gamecock deadline. it was impossible to get a - story on the b6xing matches last night with Florida into this issue. The forms are locked Thursday vight and the paper goes to press early Friday morning. Clary Star Of North-South Grid Battle Ed. Cl'ary, South Carolina's, star halfback, proved to be the outstand ing player for the 'defeated Rebels in the North-South football game, played in Birmingham, January 2. The first member of the Game cock squad ever to participate' in a post season all-star encounter, Clary quickly skyrocketed South Carolina's gridiron fame by distin guishing himself as' a real triple threat man. It was prnbhy his kicking abil ity which gained Clary his post on the South's stellar aggregation, and the eight thousand spectators, and his team mates did not go home disappointed. For one time, during the afternoon Ed booted a booming spira! into the Birmingham atmos phere and the pigskin finally came to rest on the turf. 72 yards from the point of the punt, and 61 yards from the line of scrimmage. This was. by far the longest kick of the game. Clary averaged well over forty yards from scrimmage, according to the compilation of non-vital sta tistics after the final whistle blew. The Second Earl of Gaffney also made the fans wonder if he really were Dave O'Brien in disguise. Ed successfully completed four out of five attempted forward passes, plact ing the Southerners within strik ing distance of the pay-dirt. tbe Gamecock halfback also toted the ball for good-sized gains, one time lugging the pigskin through the middle of line for 12 yards. Ed came back to Columbia full of praise for both elevens, cotn mending the clean, hard football exhibited, and mentioning, of course, that .tl-e North was lucky to win. "I know now," said Ed, "how the Southerners must have felt in 1865. The statistics show we outplayed the Yankees in almost every de partment, but we just couldn't push the ball across the .goal line. "We were outweighed about 10 pounds to the man. Don't get me wrong now, because I'm not knock ing those Northern boys. They are swell football players, and nice fel lows off the gridiron also. I got on the train at Greenville and met the Northern team coming down. We went to Birmingham together. Coach Carl Snavely, of Cornell, whom I met several years ago, in-. troduced me to most of the boys. And we became good friends quickly-that is until the game started." Clary rounds out his varsity ath letic career this spring, when he will captain and play left field for th.e state championship Gamecock nine. The stocky South Carolina ath lete, who graduates in June, will probably play professional football with the Pittsburgh Pirates. The Smoky City eleven chose Clary in the post-season draft. According to many* of the leading sports scribes of the nation, any player chosen in the draft by a pro grid iron team can call himself an All American. -U. 5. 0. A junk shop near a railroad cross ing bears this admonition to care less motorists; "Go. ahead, take a chance. We'll buy your car." It's s Mr-ers of Mirthi ...nhs Usput Iptue Earthl ..P OBitN - 0N PAYNE, M~aas LNDiSAY -bmant FIDLER' usitn-emsem-I*h sh. 3m,s-sens.. Not'Week' , .TUR. Co tainm - CARLEO A lad from New Jersey who is -a swing artist with his left band qn Frankie, DeMar's' great boxig ag gregation this year. He fights I the lightweight division. Ring Team Wins First From Duke History repeated itself last Sat urday night in Durham, North Carolina, as the University of South Carolina boxing squad opened its season with a 6 to 2 victory over Duke University ringmen, the team that Carolina polished off last year in their opening match by an iden tical score. Co-captain Jerry Hughes, 165 pounds and Herbert Bostain, soph omore lightheavy, led the Game cock battlers by winning technical knockouts over their. respective op po ents. Hughes, typical "Joe Pa lod a", put his man to sleep one minute and twenty seconds after the second round, and Bostain put his man out of the running after one minute and ten seconds of the second stanza. Duke's two points were garnered as Carolina forfeited the 120 pound match and by a decision awaided to the Blue Devil captain Chuck Kasick over Lou Carleo in the lightweight division. Dick Baxter, 192-pound heavy weight, had little trouble winning a decision over 'Pete Brooks, Duke. Other .Gamecock scrappers who opened the season with winns were: Bob McCrady, 127; Allan ...egare, 155; and Sol Blatt, 145. McCrady, Bostain and Blatt boxed for the first time under Gameco.ck colors and were a big factor in Carolina's opening bid for a Southern conference cham pionship. The summary: 115-Forfeited to Duke. 125-Bob McCrady, South Caro lina, decision over Faison Jordan. 135-Captain Chuck Kasik, Duke, decision over Lou Carleo. 145-Sol Blatt, South Carolina, decision over Bob ("Smitty") Lit tle. -155-Allen Legare, South Caro lina, decision over Joe Gardner. 165-Jerry Hughes, South Caro lina, technieal knockout over Ed Morel. One minute and twenty seconds of second round. 175-Herbert B o s t a i n, South Carolina, technical knockout over Tom Goode.. One minute and ten seconds of second round. Unlimited-Dick Baxter, South Carolina, decision over Pete Brooks. A HAPPY THOUG: -SENDy Right from your col yeconomically and fm our local college ag call for it prom trains, to yoi done produ. whole yes service are (only by I popular t Phone ou Branc ht In Raleigh Tomorrow Night Carolina boxers, with only one day of rest after -fighting the Uni. yersity of Florida, :mittmen, go to Raleigh tomorrow night to fight the- ring team, of North Carolina State and. re-enter tle ring Tues. day against the 'Blue 'iose war riors of Presbyterian college in Clinton. Last year Coach Frankie De Mars' squad met and 4efeated both teams, N. C. State by a 7 % to 2 margin and by a 8 tO 0 sweep of the P.. C. match. . The Gamecock scrappers will not appear in the local field house again untitFebruary 18, when they tan le with the Citadel. The Cit ade engagenient will be the last match before the Southern confer ence boxing tournament here, in Colishbia'February 24-25. According to Rex Williams, as sistant instructor, the glove team this year is the best- all-round ag gregation assembled at Carolina in some time and have a good chance of taking top honors at the toui nQy. Intramurals See Action Going into the semi-finla r6und, four campus football teams are fighting for places in the. Finger Bowl bt-awl. Games this week saw Sigma Nu, Kappa Sigma and Ten. 16 & is come out on top of the heap. Ten ement 9 & 10 will take the place of the potientally strong 21 & 24%2 team because of the disqualification of the Thornwell boys. In the game between these two teams', 21 or y24 woi 15-6. Kappa Sigma started the week off "With a 'clean cut 12-0 win over %Silma- Chi. The entire Kappa Sigma team played well, with the line showing unusual talent. In the second contest of the week, a surprising. Tenement. 16 & 18 team won from the defending champions, Pi Kappa Alpha, by a 6-0 score. Paul Brockington played the main role for the tenement boys by his line bucking and superb de fensive game. The last game of the week saw a well balanced Sigma Nu team establish themselves as tourna ment favorites, by running rough shod over a hard fighting Tene. ment 25 eleven, defeating them 28-0. John Spigner, piston-legged back of the Sigma Nu team, led his team to victory with his deadly blocking and line plunging. The schedule for the semi-final round finds Tenement 16 & 18 meeting Kappa Sigma, while Sigma Nu will meet Tenement 9 & 10. --U. 3. 0. Civilization Marches On' More Americans were killed in the first ten days of July by autos than died in the Revolutionary war. --Tribune. J For that toell-groomed ap pearance, 80 essential to success in everyday# life VISIT THE Arcade Barber Shop Operated By MAYFIELD BROS. Arcade Bldg. :-:. Main St. Tr FOR THRIFTY COLLEGIANS~ our weekly laundry ~ idy Railway Express{ lege rooms and return, conveniendly, t, with no bother at ali. Jnst phone at when to come for the bundle. He'll. >tly-whisk it away on speedy express r city or town and return the home .t to you-akb esgo artw ca,r-the through. Rates for this famous college ~ low. asa you can send 0itters you know allway Express, by the way). It's a very iethod and adds to the happy thought. s r agent todayHe's a good man to know. .1807 Main Street, 'Phone 5720 anuch Office: Union Station, 'Phone '1037 b Office: S.A.L. Pass. Station, 'Phone 33N Columbia, 5. 0. EXPR ESS# NATISN.IS MRI SEI