THURSDAY, JANUARY 4," 1951
"THE -DAILY TAR HEEL
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Time Marches Wrong
THE JANUARY
1 issue. Time mapn7inp ocnoraiiv
a reliable source of information, points an accusing finger
University of North Carolina and threp ntw RoWr,
Conference schools. The weekly newsmag claims that "four colleges
are ... in open defiance of the (NCAA sanity) code" in the Southern
loop and names Carolina, Virginia . Tech, N. C. State, and VMI as
the code-busters.. -The
full story as printed by Time follows:
"For faithfully complying with the National Collegiate Athletic
Association's 'sanity code,' which prohibits the wholesale hiring
of football talent, University of Richmond had won its reward
defeat in 12 of its last 14 football games. Last week after wrestling
with the problem for three years, President George Modlin threw
in the towel. Richmond is abandoning the code, he announced, as
the only alternative to withdrawing froni the rough and ready
Southern Conference, where four colleges are already in open
defiance of the code." (At this point the Time editors have inserted
an asterisk which leads to a footnote reading: "The four: North
Carolina, Virginia Tech, North Carolina State, and Virginia Military
Institute.")
"Explained President Modlin: 'It is impossible for a student
to play football, spend sufficient time in study to make satisfactory
grades and, at the same time, work in a job at normal wages to pay
his room and board. There simply is not enough time in a school
year to do so, even if a sufficient number of jobs were available."
The True Story
THE TRUE STORY, IN case Time is listening in, is that the
University is not, has never been, and doesn't plan to place itself
in open defiance of the sanity code. President Gordon Gray ex
pressed Carolina's position on the matter last year in a letter to
the NCAA.
At that time President Gray stated that Carolina is following
the rules, stipulated, in the code, but added that the University does
not try to control the activities of its alumni. This, by the way, is
not a violation of the code. Gray expressed Carolina's stand in order
toavoid future misunderstanding and the policy of the University
has not changed since.
That Time was incorrect in its statement is only half of the
truth. The fact is that there are several members of the Southern
Conference and other loops as well who are not in compliance
with the far-fetched sanity code and who make no bones about
the matter. Why the company that publishes Time and Life mag
azines choose Carolina when pointing an accusing finger is hard
to understand. It will be remembered that Life carried an article
last fall that either misinterpreted or purposely misconstrued facts
given out by Football Coach Carl Snavely.
The NCAA is scheduled to open its annual winter meeting in
Dallas, Texas, next week. Maybe at that time there will be some,
sort of clarification of this matter of just who is and who isn't
within the law laid down by that body. One grows weary of reading
that Oshkosh U. and Mudflat Teachers are violating this and that
and the other especially when some paper, magazine, or periodical
carries such a story practically every other week.
The Big Ten
MAYBE IT'S A LITTLE late because of the holiday season, but
here goes with a list of the top 10 sports stories of the year from
the Carolina point of view, that is. "
1. Charlie (Choo Choo) Justice turns pro. There might-be-a
lot of controversy about this one, but from a newspaperman's
angle it was tops. After graduating in June, Charlie accepted a
job with the University Medical Foundation, later changed earlier
plans in order to play in the College All-Star game, hinted that
he might go pro, said he wouldn't go pro, and then in the style
for which he is famous reversed his field and said he definitely
would join the Washington Redskins
2. Carolina plays Rice in the Cotton Bowl. After losing only
to Tennessee and Notre Dame, the Tar Heels accepted an invitation
to play in the fabulous Dallas, Texas,' bowl game, but lost to the,
Owls, 27-13. . .
3. Bill McGinn pitches no-hitter. Anotner of the year's top
sports stories was McGinn's sterling pitching performance against
Duke. The little lefty had had only fair-to-middlin' success all
season until he goose-egged the Dukes for the first no-hitter by a
Tar Heel hurler since Vinnie DeLorenzo turned the trick in 1947.
4. Irvin (Huck) Holdash wins All-America honors. This would not
be too spectacular a story under ordinary circumstances, but when the
Youngstown, Ohio, defensive ace turned the trick while playing on a
team that won only three games, it was pretty hot news
5. Carolina retains indor and outdoor track titles. This was defi
nitely one of the finest team performances of the year by a Tar Heel
outfit. The Carolina trackmen retained their title in the Southern
rnnfprpnrp indoor meet in February and went on to cop their
fourth consecutive conference outdoor title in May
Rushing through the last five,
read 'em in this order: '
6. Carolina swimmers take
eighth straight conference title.
7. Bill Albans wins NCAA
200-yard low hurdles and places
second to Bob Mithias in national
decathlon.
8. Jimmy Thomas breaks record
after record during the summer
and makes extended tour, to
Japan.
9. C jlfing performances by
Harvie Ward who placed second
in Southern Intercollegiate Tour
nament, won Southern Confer
ence Tourney, and took honors
in several summer tournaments.
10. Performance by tennis team
which won 23 of 25 matches, los
ing only to powerful Miami and
Davidson.
Terps Hand
UNO First
Loop Setback
By Zane Robbins
Carolina's luckless cagers op
ened the new year Tuesday night
at Woollen Gym but it was the
same old story as Maryland's so
so Terps handed the crippled Tar
Heels their sixth consecutive loss,
67-59.
The Maryland outfit was in
command all the way after mov
ing into a quick 6-1 lead in the
opening minutes of the game. The
Tar Heels went into the game
without the services of Guard
Howard Deasy who has been
sidelined with a virus infection.
Co-Captain Hugo Kappler, still
handicapped with a fractured left
wrist, was used sparingly, and
Center Bud Maddie, out of action
with a shoulder separation since
early December, saw only limited
duty in his "return to action.
Lee Brawley paced the Terra
pin drive throughout the evening,
rolling up a total of 25 points on
six field goals and 13 free throws.
Brawley sank every attempt from
the foul line.
Sophomores Jack Wallace and
Vince Grimaldi paced the Caro
lina attack with 15 and 13 points
respectively. Grimaldi was the
leading threat from the floor for
Carolina, scoring five action bas
kets. The soph forward also
played a bang-up floor game for
the losers.
Jippy Carter, another sopho
more, took over the starting
assignment at center for Caro
lina for the first time since be
coming eligible in December and
netted seven points. Maddie tal
lied six markers for the Tar Heels
in his first game in a month.
Co-Captain Charlie - Thorne,
who led the Carolina floor play
throughout most of the first half,
fouled out early in the last half,
leaving Carolina with only one
of its five regulars in action.
The loss tq, Maryland was -the
first Southern Conference defeat
suffered by Carolina this year
and leaves, the Tar Heels with a
.667 loop record. Carolina defeated
Richmond, 69-46, and Davidson,
72-69, before the Christmas holi
days. The Tar Heels never could get
their fast break attack into high
gear as they dropped their sixth
game in 11 outings. The Maryland
outfit was by no means strong, but
had enough scoring punch to out
do the hapless Carolinians.
Rose Bowl
RIVERSIDE, Calif., Jan 3
C7P) Possibility that participation
of the Pacific Coast Conference
in annual Rose Bowl football
games might be discontinued
rocked the organization " at its
meeting here today.
Tar Heels
Christmas
Carolina's basketball team "re
turned home this week after a
disasterous, holiday road trip
which saw the Tar Heels lose
five straight games and drop from
the undefeated ranks after an
early season five-game winning
streak. . . :.
The Tar Heel , schedule was
divided into two parts. The first
was a two-game trip to . Ken
tucky where the Tar Heels bowed
to Eastern Kentucky and Xavier
of Cincinnati in games before
Christmas. The second part was
the Dixie Classic in Raleigh after
Christmas where the Tar Heels
finished eighth in an eight team
field.
Heels Bow Twice
Coach Tom Scof';'s charges
visited Pikeville, Ky., . for the
Eastern Kentucky and Xavier
games on Dec. 19 and 21 for their
first two losses. Playing without
the services of the injured Hugo
Kappler, Jack Wallace and Bud
Maddie, ' the locals were simply
no match for the two nationally
ranked clubs.
The first Carolina loss came at
the hands of the Eastern Ken
tucky State quint, 85-62. In that
contest, the score was tied at
24-all five minutes before the
half, but the Kentuckians pulled
away, never to be headed again.
Howard Deasy hit for 13 points
to lead the Tar Heels in that de
partment. In the game with Xavier, the
Musketeers ran up a 92-58 count
against the Tar Heels to set a
new record for scoring against a
Carolina basketball team. Deasy
again led the point making,
throwing in 13 points.
Christmas Lay-Off
After a three-day Christmas
layoff, the Tar Heels got back
in action at the Dixie Classic in
Raleigh against a formidable ar
ray of top ranking teams. State,
Colgate, Navy, Duke, Tuland,
Wake Forest and Rhode Island.
State , provided the tourney, ,opi-.
position.
- .-. $
Carolina opened the tourney
against Navy and rec3ived a
rude 60-49 upset at the hands of
the undefeated Middies and for-
mer Carolina Coach Ben Carne
vale. Vince Grimaldi and Ernie
Schwarz led the Tar Heels with
i
Edmundson Joins Up
One of ihe early athletic cas
ualties, resulting from the na
tional emergency here at Car
olina occurred over the Christ
mas holidays when Ray Ed
mundson. middle distance
swimmer, poined the Air Corps.
Edmundson was counted on
as an important cog in ihe suc
cess of the Carolina swimmers
this season and will be missed
a great deal by Coach Dick
Jamerscn and h:s squad.
Drop
Five
Hoop
Games
10 pdints each as Carolina trail
ed all the way.
Bow to Duke
: Moving, into the consolation
bracket, the Tar Heels found
their two-year five-game win
streak tjver Duke brought to an
barupt halt in a closely-fought
71-63. contest. Jack Wallace cash
ed in with 22 points for the Tar
Heels to press Duke's Dick Groat
for scoring honors. Groat finished
with 23. -
In a game to determine sev
enth spot in the tournament, the
Tar Heels bowed to Rhode Is
land State, 93-69, in a game
which saw the Yankees set a
new Dixie Classic scoring mark.
Vince-- Grimaldi dropped in , 22
points and Jack Wallace counted
is. '-v :-- o ' :- r
MURALS
Play in the Fraternity Division
of Intramural basketball begins
today with eight of the 65 fra
ternity teams participating.
Zeta Psi, with an entry of
three teams,, will be cast in the
roll of defending Fraternity and
campus champion.
Entries in the Dorm Division
of Intramural basketball will
close Tuesday, Jan. 9, with play
beginning Jan. 11. -1
Today's schedule:
' 4:00 court 1 Chi Psi 1 vs Kap
Sig 2; 2 Lamb -Chi 3 vs ATO 2;
3 Chi Phi 2 vs Phi Delt Theta 2;
4 Pi Kap Phi 2 vs Phi Gam A.
5:00 court 1 SAE 3 ys Theta
Chi; 2 Kap Alpha 2 vs Sig Chi
4; 3 Kap Sig 1 vs ZBT; 4 Chi
Psi vs TEP 3..
Basketball Officials -A
clinic for basketball officials,
conducted by the Intramural De
partment, will begin today at 4
p.m. in room 301-.B of Woollen
Gym. Students who are interest
ed and who have not . registered
rf or - officiating may qualify by
attending this clinic. . ..
-Frosh-
(Continued from page 4)
Highlighting the f r e s h m a n
swimming schedule is the South
ern Conference Meet The Tar
Babies will meet a strong State
Frosh team twice before the sea
son closes. -
The remainder of the freshmen
schedule follows: N! C, State, Jan.
19 here; Raleigh High, Feb. 2
here; Richmond High, Feb. 3
hers; VMI, Feb. 10 there; N. C.
State, Feb. 13 there; Georgia and
Stanton Military Academies, Feb.
16 here; Southern Conference
Meet, Feb. 22-24 here; William
and Mary (Norfolk Extension),
March 2 here.
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EXCERPT
"The CORE OF the EARTH IS NOT A MOLTEN mass of bubbling METALS.
But with CERTAINTY it can be a mass of dry metal of granular metallic salts,
loaded to the utmost with the Mowing energy of the SUN'S RAY and compressed
to a weight beyond anything that can be produced by the. art of the metallurgist,
or the chemist, or in the operation of the newest type of cyclotron."
"IT IS the GYROSTATIS BALANCER FOR THE EARTH."
FROM
Cosmography 1930
The Philosopher's Worksheet' (a Supplement)
Copyright
Thomas Maciver
However, ASK THIS of a professor does he know if it is TRUE or FALSE
that anything rotating at a very low speed, without friction, will stay cool; that it
is not possible to generate heat from the axis of the earth, which' hardly moves;
and that rotation of the core of the earth is so slow, at a thousand miles from the
axis, the greatest degree of possible heat could be ho more than that existing five
miles below the surface, along the loje of the arctic circle; that if any vent existed
to furnish a needed flow of oxygen to the axis of the earth, the fires of the
physicist's imaginationv would have burned completely through th- crust of the
earth long before the creeping start of life. DO NOT press the matter; TIME has
the ANSWER.
COSMOGRAPHY 1930 Worksheets was sent,, free of all charge, to college and
public libraries of all English-speaking countries, in 1944. (About twenty percent,
only, were acknowledged and in many places it may not have been nut on the
library shelves.) The Philosopher's Worksheet, a supplement, in 1949 was sent,
free, to nineteen hundred libraries. It is not a text-book and the author does not
permit its use for classroom study or discussion.
NOW OUT OF PRINT. NO CORRESPONDENCE WANTED.
ACCEPTANCE by present day teaching professors is not important. COS
MOGRAPHY 1930 is something entirsby. new. ... "The ENERGY RAYS that
reach the axis would take their departure through the ends of the core, evenly
divided in volume at the equinox, ssventy percent towards the hemisphere of winter
at the solstice." . . . "If it were not for the outflow from the core of the earth of the
essence of atomic energy, there would be no lush crops raised anywhere. This
outflow tempers the earth, all the way up the surface, and when the planter tills
the soil he prepares the way for a great increase, through his ground, of the outflow
ing energy." - "The speed of light is in the elasticity of the rebound of ENERGY
li AYS alter they have met with compression in the vapor of the earth, and it
varies according to the volume of vapor oi humidity through which they pass." . . .
"A continuous stream of ENERGY RAYS drives down to the ocean floor in daytime,
building up layer after layer of rays that pick up a maximum coating of vapor and
are slowed up as they start the rebound." ... "The Nares deep is a place of
accumulation through the long days of summer. The valleys of the lost Atlantis have
a surplus to discharge. The rebound from the telegraph shelf towards the Sargasso
sea is of greater force than all the artificial electricity simultaneously produced." . . .
that, perhaps, will be freely accepted by grandchildren of present day professors.
Published at the cost of
Thomas Maciver
P.O. Box 763, Washington 4, D. C.; r i v , -
Cagers Meet
NYU Tonight
In New York
Hoping to halt its six game
losing streak, the Carolina basket
ball souad entrained last night
for a swins through the north
where the Tar Heels will play
NYU in Madison Square Garden
tonight in the opening game of
a twin bill scheduled there.
. Howard Deasy, virus infection
victim, is expected to play to
night and seems to be in good
condition again after his recent
illness. Also making the trip are
Bud Maddie and Hugo Kappler
but both first-stringers are tab
bed for limited service. ." : :.
. Maddie separated hs left
shoulder early in the season and
Kappler fractured his left . wrist.
Maddie was back in action against
Maryland, here Tuesday night for
the first time, in a month..
Deasy should play the entire
game despite the fact that he
didn't even dress for the Mary
land game in the 67-59 trimming
that the Terrapins handed Car
olina Tuesday.
The Tar Heels will complete
their Northern swing Saturday
night against Temple University
in Constitution Hall in Philadel
phia as part of a twin bill.
The Carolina traveling squad
for this trip will consist of 12
men Charlie Thorne" Bill White,
Dick Patterson. Red Wells, Hal
Ferraro, Vince Grimaldi, Kap
pler, Deasy, Maddie, Ernie
Schwarz, Jippy Carter, Jack Wal
lace and Bob Phillips.
CarolinaGets CageStar;
Seixas Ninth In Nation
There was little action on the Carolina athletic front over thq
holidays, but several events took place that should prove interesting"
to Tar Heel sports fahs. ;
A big addition has been made to Carolina's basketball team, and
that could be taken either way. A promising prep school star, John
Thomas, enrolled this quarter. .
Thomas, who stands one inch
shy of seven feet and hails from
Ashland, ' Ky., will not play
freshman ball this winter but is
being hold out in hopes that the
freshman rule will be abolished
next. fall. Thomas will then have
fourryears of varsity eligibility.
, Former tennis great at Caro
lina, Vic Seixas, has made it back
into the- big lime. The Philadel
phian, who -, was once captain of
the Tar Heel net team, was re
cently ranked ; ninth in the na
tion by the United States Lawn
Tennis Association mainly be
cause of his sensational perform
ances in Europe this past summer.
'--"".
Three Tar Heel soccer players
Red Montgomery, Barry Kalb.
and Bud Sawyer were named to
the All-Conference team recently
selected by Southern Conference
soccer coaches.
When Coach Alan Moore meets
his lacrosse enthusiasts on Mon
day at the first practice session,
he will undoubtedly dkcuss ihe
major rule changes made at a
recent NCAA meeting in New
York. The one that will affect
the Tar Heel stickmen most is the
penalty rule. Players who com
mit five fouls in a contest will
J:
VIC SEIXAS
nationally ranked
be cxpeliud from the contest.
After finally straightening out
the financial end of last year's
Blue-White game, the Monogram
Club recently donated $1,700 to
the Educational Foundation's'
scholarship fund to be used "or
freshman football players. "
Wallace Is Leading Basketball Scoring,
Deasy Is Second And Grimaldi Is Third
Jack Wallace, G' 4" sophomore
from Elkins, W. Va., leads Caro
lina's basketball team in scoring
with 116 points in 9 games for a
12.9 average per game. Howard
Deasy is second with 108 points
in 10 games.
Wallace, a forward, has failed
to score in the double numbers
but once this season. His highest
total was 22 points against Duke
in the consolation bracket of the
Dixie Classic. .
Co-Captain Hugo Kappler, one
of the stars of past years, got off
to a good start in the scoring race
with 52 points in the first four,
games. He injured his wrist
against Hanes Hosiery and has
been under handicap in the
games cmce then. He has partici
pated in eight games and has
scored 5G points.
i Vince Grimaldi is third in
! scoring with 82 points in 11
iOtil1 '; I
fA " She's prettier I
tQ sfvL than The Fuller f
fO f' ' v Brush Man and
A -fool -X-?r
... , i
j COLUMBIA PICTURES ss' I '..T'V "
starrini n A I I .
LUCILLE DM LL wm.
B Carl Benton Reid Gale Robbins
ET P Jefi Donnell Jerome Ccwan
La I 1 Written by Frank Taslilin Directed by LLOYD BACON
Also
TOM AND JERRY CARTOON
. . . LATEST NEWS
games. Another sophomore, Gri
maldi has been the floor leader
in the absence of Kappler.
6 games. He joined the squad af-i
ter the first quarter grades were
released. Patterson has been al
ternating at one of the regular
JiDfw Carter and Dick Patter
tKu lonin.i c.t-r- i t .T-i er ! Dosts. He has 59 points :n 10
the subs. Carter has 48 points in 'games.
OUR
AMkIS I As
JANUARY
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