FKIDAY, AUGUST 7, 1942 The Tar Heel PAGE THREE Down I he All by Westy Fenhagen c y Twilight Baseball and Boos Twilight baseball, a brand new experiment in major league baseball this season, is doomed as far as New York fans are concerned. After two consecutive nights in which two such arch rivals as the Giant? and the Dodgers have had their nocturnal scraps called on account of the dimout law, Giant prexy Horace Stoneham has put his foot down firmly and decisively and Dannea any sucn an airs in the future as far as the Polo Grounds are con cerned. The fans certainly wouldn't stand for a recurrence of the proceedings which sent them home in an extremely unpleasant frame of mind last Monday and Tuesday nights. On Monday evening a huge crowd of 60,000 jammed the Polo Grounds and for the first time m the history of the ancient park were permitted to stand out on the field and along the foul lines. Trailing by three runs m the ninth, the Giants put two men on the bases with none out and the heavy end of the batting order due to bat. But it had just struck nine o'clock and according to coastal dimout regula tions the lights had to be turned off so they were and the cash customers, drowning out the "Star-Spangled fanner" with their boos, went home in dis gust. Once was enough but when the next evening after Brooklyn had scored four runs in the tenth to take a 5-1 lead, regulations called the game before the Giants had a chance to bat in their half of the f rame, it was too much. Such farcical exhibitions are unnecessary. Instead of allowing two hours and fifteen minutes for the game, club officials could move the time up and start at 6:15 instead of 6:45. It was doubly unfortunate that the incidents had to come during a Dodger-Giant series when the fans are not satisfied unless a very decisive outcome has been reached. But it is hard on New York club owners to have to give up so many potential gate receipts because of their proximity to the spooky waters of the Atlantic and harder still on the day workers who relish nothing better than a little early evening relaxation at the ball park. But defense interests must be served so the Dodgers and Giants will be forced to hie themselves to other inland sectors in the future if they want to play night and twilight ball. Dodgers Way Up in Front A few weeks ago we stated that the National League pennant chase was by no means a closed issue as yet. But just about now probably the Cardinals themselves would be the first to admit that they haven't a chance. With a full ten-game lead and pulling further ahead every day, not even a sucker would lay his money on anybody but the Dodgers winning their second straight gonfalon. Why it hasn't been a closer race in the National Leagu this season is a question that is somewhat puzzling. The Bums haven't even had anything resembling a little slump and those six old men gracing the center of the batting order haven't collapsed or fallen down at all. Despite the advancing old age of regulars like Galan, Walker, iledwick, Camilli, Riggs, and Herman, not to mention half the pitching staff and in spite of persistent rumors that internal strife was rife at Ebbets Field the Brooks are coming through in a way that delights even the most pessimistic Dodger fan. There is riot one thing specifically wrong with the prides of Ebbets Field They have a strong pitching, hitting, fielding, and all-around steadiness which is all a club could hope for. The Cards on the other hand are placing most of their trust in raw rookies who have a lot to learn yet about the big time. A year from now, barring unpredictable changes the armed services might cause, the Cards will be in a far more favorable position to dominate the senior circuit s pennant chase. Before we leave the subject of baseball, don't count those Phillies out! Al though they are thoroughly consigned to being the league doormats again this year, those Phils are actually ten games further ahead in the cellar than they were at this time last year. Last year John Lobert's aspiring charges chalked up their 27th victory after 77 defeats, but this season the club that even Kalamazoo doesn't envy nailed down Win Number 27 after only66 setbacks. Lobert is gradually building up his club, he hopes, to the point where they will be contending for seventh place. At least Lobert can say that he hasn't done any worse than any other Phillie manager in recent years. Big ma Ml Softfellers Take Close Win Over Pi Kappa Alpha In Intramural Play I - , " I .X - ' hi ' h X 4 rvsr ' 1 , wvi f J ;;::;:-- "-'f4 fty.0Cv.v.y.v.y.v.v:-:y.iy.v.vayCri:;w. f " " ' S i v i K, X-W. "W 1 :::;:f:;:x . ,J0 :-:-:-:-x- 5: I i Sigma Nu 4, Pi Kappa Alpha 3 Town 11, Chi Phi 6 Kappa Sigma-Zeta Psi 7, Town 1 Old West 10, SAE 3 Sigma Nu nosed out a close win over Pi Kappa Alpha to the tune of 4 to 3 yesterday, the game going eight innings. Joe Conger was the winning ED MICHAELS, husky 220-pound tackle whose play last season earned him a regular berth and makes him one of the mainstays for this year. BOB HEYMANN, veteran tackle who is expected to fill a big gap in the Carolina line wrecked by grad uated regulars. SHOT COX, sophomore star of a year ago twho is being counted on to fill a big spot in the Tar Heel backfield this year. Carolina Football Prospects To Be Viewed, At Opening of Fall Practice September 1 Here and there on the local front Two photographers from Grantland Rice's Sportlight visited the Pre-Flight school last week to complete work on the latest edition of the popular screen short. . . . Lt. Dan Partner, former Kansas City Star sports scribe, has arrived at the Pre-Flight school to take charge of sports publicity. ... A ball game worth seeing will be tne return contest tomorrow between the Goldsboro Athletic Club and the Navy Pre Flieht school on Emerson field at 3:30. In their first meeting last Sunday, Goldsboro romped off with a 10-5 decision but the Navy is looking for revenge and thpv atp tone-h to beat in their own baliwick Some of the best boxing seen around these parts in a long time comes to a climax tonight with the finals of the Naval Pre-Flight ring tourney. What makes the bouts so fast and inter esting is the fact that every contestant is in tip-top physical condition and con sequently the bouts are all fast and hard-fought. This is a great contrast to several of the University boxing matches last winter when lack of material and in some cases poor conditioning resulted m slow, dull encounters in wnicn the fighters did more pulling and pushing than boxing. WITH ALL THIS HOT WEATHER It's Hard to Think of Blankets BUT Now Is the Time for BLANKET BARGAINS Just a Few CHATHAM BLANKETS Left A DEPARTMENT STORE CHAPEL HILL, N. C. PHONE 6921 Be Sure to Visit Our Second Floor Tar Heels Lose 17 Lettermen With Graduation Late yesterday afternoon four men were working hard down in Woollen going over plays, drawing diagrams, and discussing systems. Those four men were none other than the first all-alumni coaching staff Carolina has had since 1918. Composed of acting Head Coach Jim Tatum, who is tak ing the place of Ray Wolf on leave in the Navy, Andy Bershak, a mem ber of the coaching staff for several years, Tom Young, recently appointed backfield coach, and Grady Pritchard, named yesterday as line coach, the four-man staff is working hard on plans to bring back a little Carolina football prestige after last season's fiasco. Fall practice will begin promptly on September 1 with' 45 hopeful can didates due to report here at that date. Strenuous sessions will be held twice daily from then until four days before the season's opener with Wake Forest on Sept. 26. A captain for the team will be elected by the squad one week before the first contest. The coaches will tell you that successful season this year depends on a great many iactors. r or in wingback Joe Austin and lineman Mt announced its plans to make soft- Pre-Flight Nine Meets . Goldsboro Tomorrow The Carolina Pre-Flight baseball team engages the strong Goldsboro Athletic Club tomorrow afternoon on Emerson field in a contest slated to begin at 3:30. The Goldsboro team handed the Navy squad its third defeat of the season last San day at Goldsboro. Last Wednesday the Pre-Flight team chalked up its eighth triumph of the summer campaign by licking the Alamance County All-Stars 5-1 in a contest abbreviated after five innings by rain. On Sunday the cadets travel to Burlington to meet the Burlington All-Stars who have marked up a very successful campaign this sum mer. League Slates Mural Playoff Softball Finale Begins August 19 The Intramural Activities Office has Tank Marshall have been plagued dur ing their college careers by injuries which have beset them just when the team needed them most. The status ball play of this summer session end in a grand finale with "lots of zing and bing." An Intramural league playoff for the first four teams will be held on of several other players is in doubt Wednesd a A uenist 19 ,nd Thursdav. because of their standing with the Augusf. 2Q Qn Monday four games Army and Navy, and one or two oth- be scheduled, and Tuesday will be ers have a shaky scholastic standing mar2ed as dav of rest so that. the at the University. teams mav be in the best of condition From last year's team, 17 letter- for the final tests. In case that there men out of 28 have moved on and are more than four teams in the play included in those 17 were the whole offs, Friday will be the day of the veteran line and two regular backs, finals. Harry Dunkle and Frank O'Hare. To Following the league playoffs an All- further the misery, captain-elect Dave Star Intramural team will be elected Barksdale, a sharp blocker and all- to play the Men of Mullis Saturday around defensive star, has been ac- August 22, at the Summer School Out- cepted into the Naval Academy and ing which will be held at Hogan's Lake. will not return here. The All-btar squad will consist of To replace these heavy losses, Coach 16 men and wil1 selected by Walter x -DoVK TAT Tatum has an unusually promising . ' joe ureen. Alter tne squaa is selected there will be a meeting called to elect group of rookies to fill out his lineup. Most outstanding in this group are TTotc v-nA Stravlinrn wntpr I tWO CO-CaptainS. m. TTi,; M, .t00 f The Mullis Men have only lost three x ii . , 0 ... . , , wu or four games since they have been tackle, Andy Smith at end, and Walt I TjrATTjr c a u a r.:n ht vvr, ic backs. For all those first-year men to blossom out into stars their first Mural Schedule year up with the varsity is too much to expect, but Tatum hopes to develop several budding regulars from them. In addition to this promising rookie crop, 15 lettermen, most of them un derstudies from last season, will re turn this fall. Of these only a few Tuesday are seasoned veterans. 5:15 Field No. 1--Pi Kappa Al The end nositions at this stage seem pha vs. Old West. Field No. 2 Phi to be well under control barring any! Gamma Delta vs. BVP. further mishaps. At the left flank ieia no. l uid iiist vs. will be Johnnv Miller and Jack Hus- Whitehead. Pritchard Named Coach First All-Alumni Staff Completed The University will inaugurate the 1942 football season with an all-alumni coaching staff for the first time in a quarter of a century. Grady Pritchard, well known Chapel Hill insurance executive, has just been added to the staff to complete the var sity setup for this fall, Athletic Direc tor R. A. "Fetzer announced yesterday It will be an entirely new but well- rounded staff. Coach Pritchard captained the great 1922 Carolina team which won the South Atlantic championship and lost only to Yale after crossing the Eli goal three times. After graduation he accepted a posi tion as assistant coach and as assistant to Charles T. Woollen, the graduate manager of athletics at that time. He resigned this job in 1930 to enter busi ness and for the last year he has been a Chapel Hill representative of the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Company. Jim Tatum, who returned to the University in 1939 from Cornell as di rector of freshman athletics and head frosh coach in football and baseball, will be acting head coach, replacing Ray Wolf who is on leave and is head football coach of the Navy Pre-Flight team at Georgia. Coach Tatum's other assistants will be Andy Bershak, Carolina's All American in 1937 and a member of the staff for the last several years, and Tom Young, who starred in football and Baseball at Carolina from 1925-28 and established an enviable coaching record at the Lexington, N. C, High School. Bershak and Pritchard will devote their attention to the line, and Young will be backfield coach. Bill Lange will be head freshman coach, and one assistant will be Henry House, an outstanding fullback on Carolina's 1928-29-30 teams. House coached at Rocky Mount last year. pitcher and although giving up eight hits while Charlie Ball limited the winners to seven hits, he gave up only one walk. Ball gave five passes, three of them coming in the eighth inning. The Pikas, leading off in the first inning, scored one run on hits by Bill Riggsbee and Bulluck. Sigma Nu tied up the score in the last half of the inning when Joe Conger, Tom Byrum and Adams singled. In the third inning the Pikas scored again. Walter Rabb, short-stop, sin gled, and Dolphin Jamerson doubled to drive Rabb home for the score. Sigma Nu, not to be outdone, came back in the bottom half of the frame to tie the count and then add another run to go into the lead. Ball gave up his first pass to Biggs, third, baseman. Joe Conger singled Biggs in for the score, and Tom Byrum singled to score Conger. The Pikas sent the game into an extra inning when P. A. Lee singled and later scored in the seventh inning. In the eighth the Pikas got one man on base with no outs, but couldn't drive in the run. When the Sigma Nu's came to the plate Ball walked three men to load the bases with one out. Adams, first baseman, made the . second out, and then Bill Loock hit a sharp drive to deep third base which was too hot to handle, and Biggs scored for the winning run and the ball game. Town Enjoys Slugfest Rapping out 17 hits, Town walked over Chi Phi Tuesday 11 to 6. Lefty Levin, the winning pitcher, gave up 10 hits, and Johnson was the losing twirler. Pacing the Town attack was Julian Miller who hit safely three times and scored two runs. Leading Chi Phi hitter was Lee Arning, hit ting two for four, a double and a home run. Town got off to an early lead in the game by scoring three runs m the first inning. Sam Sherman, Miller, Sam Arbes and McCathern banged out singles while Mike Cooke was safe on an error, and Mike Wise was given a pass. In the second frame Town tallied four times. Bricklemeyer led the bat ting with a triple, and Levin, Miller, Bill Hood, Arbes, and Wise all hit singles. Chi Phi scratched in a run in the last of the frame after Lee Arning had doubled. Mason scored another run for Town in the third inning when after sin gling he was driven home by Mike Cooke's blow. Lee Arning added another run for the Chi Phis as he boomed out his homer in the fourth inning. Town added its last three runs in the fifth . as Mason, Bricklemeyer, Cooke, and Miller singled. Chi ' Phi, aided by two errors, scored four times I in the fifth to end the scoring for the game. Sibley drove in Coslett and Mitchle with, a double. Edgerton pushed King and Sibley across with a single. On Wednesday all games were See INTRA M URA LS, page 4 Monday 5:15 Field No. 1 Whitehead vs. Town. Field No. 2 Chi Phi vs. SAE. 6:15 Field No. 1 Sigma Nu Old East. vs. sey, both of whom were out most of last season with injuries. Hussey, 200-pound all-around athlete, claims to be feeling fine now after an opera tion to remove, a small bone from his back and fates willing, he may Thursday become an outstanding end. Miller, 5:15 Field No. 1 BVP vs. White bothered with a trick knee, has taken head. Field No. 2 Phi Gamma Delta See CAROLINA, page U vs. Town, Wednesday 5:15 Field No. 1 PtKappa Alpha vs. Phi Gamma Delta. Field No. 2 Old West vs. Kappa Sigma-Zeta Psi. Improvement Noted in Tests Of Men 's Physical Ability A thorough program designed to in crease the endurance, speed, and mus cular coordination of undergraduate students to better fit them for duty in the armed services is being success fully carried out by the University Physical Education Department this summer. Two tests were given 205 students during the first term of Summer School and the improvement between Tests No. 1 and No. 2 was particularly im pressive. While the program is fundamentally the same as the one used by the De partment during the regular nine months school year, it has been step ped up considerably. There has been more emphasis on running, mat work, rope climbing, jumping, and hurdling events. The students also used the same 600-yd obstacle course used by the aviation cadets in the Navy's Pre Flight School. The new emphasis is not in the na ture of a calisthenics program, for the University's physical education in structors do not feel that calisthenics answer the needs of young men in the matter of physical conditioning. These instructors believe the sound physical education program of games plus em phasis on the fundamental skills of running, jumping, climbing and throw ing form a satisfactory and enjoyable way of improving physical condition and maintaining this condition. The tests, which were planned to measure the strength, coordination, endurance, speed and agility of the students, consisted of baseball throw ing for distance, standing broad jump, push ups on the parallel bars, bar snap for distance, running through a hurdle maize, and a 440-yard race. WE LEND CAMERAS FdDIISTIEM FEdDT CdD. WE LEND CAMERAS