FRIDAY JANUARY , 1951 THE DAILY TAR HEEL Stmctfy Ad Lib Cy Zona Etobbiro NYU Out lasts Heels Win f at i 1 I Here We Go Again IT LOOKS LIKE NEXT week's annual session of the National Collegiate Athletic Association will see the renewal of an old battle when the association's members settle down to business at Dallas, Texas. It'll be the controversial sanity code taking feature honors at the NCAA meet. - . Last year the NCAA haggled for days about the code but little was done about it. The main feature in that skirmish was the debate about LSU's practice of paying its players a cash bonus of $250 after the Sugar Bowl clash with Oklahoma. The Sooners, on the other hand, stuck staunchly by the code and refused to give their players a penny extra instead they took them on a vacation cruise to Cuba. This year the NCAA's Constitutional Compliance Committee the policing agent has a big gripe about a number of schooLTwho are reportedly violating the laws laid down , in the code. A big flareup is expected when the business gets down to name-calling and school-naming. The NCAA looks with a cloudy eye upon certain Southern colleges and universities who seem Jo be on the wrong side of the law in this instance. . t The group probably will accomplish very little, but it seems that the best idea is to. scuttle the entire code and draft a new one one that has just a smattering of sanity about it. It has long been conceded by most colleges that the present code is unworkable- and has actually accomplished little in its tenure. Maybe the NCAA will drop its policing methods and resume its original status as an advisory body. :...' . Another problem that is certain to come up in the" big pow-wow is the question of restoring the collegiate freshman rule that permits frosh to play varsity ball in their first year. Crowell Little, former. Carolina frosh coach and present head man of the Davidson grid forces, stated recently that he will be unable to field a team worthy of competition next fall if the freshman rule is not re-adoDted. Sev eral other coaches hold the same opinion, and chances are that the NCAA bigwigs , will come through with permission for freshmen to compete with the varsity. Odds and Ends JUST RAMBLING ABOUT, HERE are a few interesting odds and ends gathered from here and there in the sports world: Temple University's Bill Mklvy is the current pace-setter in the nation when it comes to tossing a basketball through the hoop. Big Bill has threaded the net for 287 points and'a .28.7 average in 10 games so far this year. Coach Tom Scott relates an interesting story about the Temple ace. It seems the elongated center was in Chapel Hill a few years back looking over the local athletic setup. He seemed to be pretty interested in Carolina, but the Temple folks offered him a better scholarship and he naturally picked the Phil adelphia university to do his basketballing. The latest scoring roundup, by the way, shows that four Southern Conference aces are among the nation's top 10 scorers. Mark Work man of West Virginia is right behind JVlklvy with 190 points and a 27.1 average. He is followed by Duke's Dick Groat in third place with 244 points and a 24.4 average. Wham Bam Sam Ranzino of N. C. State is No. 10 in the national scoring race with 244 points and a 22.2 average. Local sports' fans crowded Chapel Hill's beer halls and eating places Wednesday night to see the telecast of the Joe Louis-Freddie Beshore - heavyweight match, and most of the onlookers ' were, im pressed with Louis' unexpected display of ability. The ex-heavyweight king looked like the Brown Bomber of old as he jolted the light-punching, outclassed Beshore. Louis finally pounded out a technical knockout in the final minute of the fourth round, but his showing started the boxing critics a-raving. It took Heavyweight Champ - Ezzard Charles 14 rounds to gain a TKO . victory over Beshore a few months ago, and Louis' ' performance is reported to have been much better than that turned in by Charles. Joe pounded the Harrisburg, Pa., scrapper with all he had from the opening gong. He still retains his old power punch and his tim ing was the best it has been since he started on the comeback trail. The ex-champ hardly worked up a sweat as he continually massaged his oponent' with a barrage of lefts and rights from close range. Even more impressive to some, perhaps, was Louis' weight. He weighed in at 210 pounds, the lighest he has scaled since fighting Billy Conn for the second time in 1946. It looks like one of the greatest heavyweight champs in the history of boxing is determined to show his -critics that he's far from washed up. , Deasy Scores 15 Points For Carolina NEW . YORK, Jan., 4 (") North Carolina recovered from an early 12-point deficit but tired in the waning moments.as New York University came from behind to trip the Tar Heels tonight, 66-60, in the first game of a Madison Square Garden doubleheader. Tar Heel Guard Howard Deasy led both teams in scoring with 15 points, but it was not enough as the injury-riddled Carolina team dropped its seventh straight game. v Trailing 52-47 midway in the second half after jumping away to a' 15-3 lead in the first, five minutes of play, the Violets pulled even, 58-58, at the 15 minute mark and went ahead on a free throw by Abe Becker. A pair of driving layups by Mark Solomon and Mel Seeman sent the Violets away to a 63-58 lead with two minutes remain ing. A jump shot by Vince Gri maldi "whittled two points off NYU's lead but that was the end of North Carolina's scoring. Seeman topped the winners with 14 points, two more than Becker rang up. Forwards Dick Patterson, Vince Grimaldi, Bud Maddie, and Center Jack Wallace each scored 10 points for North Carolina. . The" Tar Heels wind up their Northern tour by meeting Temple University in Philadelphia on Saturday night. NORTH CAROLINA Wallace F Kappler F : v 1 jiV M tV ) , j IN ' Mi mw -( CO-CAPTAIN CHARLIE THORNE and veleran Guard How ard Deasy were not enough last nighi as the injury-riddled Tar Heels dropped iheir seventh straight game. Deasy. a junior fr&n New .York City, scored 15 points before the home town folks lo lead both learns. Patterson F Grimaldi F Ferraro F .... Thorne F .... Schwarz C Carter C .... Wells G .... Phillips G Deasy G .. White G .. NEW YORK U. Bunt F Derderian F Dinegar F Solomon F Carrillo C Seeman C G F PF TP 4 2 4 10 0 0 2 0 4 2 2 10 4 2 4 10 0 111 0 0 0 0 3 4 4 10 2 0 2 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 0 7 1 3 15 0 0 0 0 24 12 23 60 G F PF TP 3 3 19 0 10 1 0 0 10 3.10 7 3 2 2 8 0 0 0 0 7 0 3 14 2 0 0 4 4 4 3 12 5 1 3 11 27 12 13 B6 Senior Bowl Stuff -MOBILE. Ala.. Jan. 4 (TP) Steve Owen and Alvin (Bo) McMillian dropped: a couple of hints today that all the heavy passing drills they've been staging with their Senior Bowl squads were slightly mislead ing. Both North and South squads are well fortified for running as well ts passing games. A ground contest will match Freshmen Cagers Speeding Up Practices For Thursday s Game With Wake Forest After a two-week lay off over the Christmas holidays, the Caro lina freshman basketball team is stepping up practice sessions for its second game of the season with the Wake Forest freshmen here on Jan. 11. In its last engagement with the Baby Deacs, the Tar Babies dropped a close and hard -fought game to the Big Four brothers, 49-43. In its other three games before the holiday 'vacation, the Tar Babies 'defeated Southern Tech, 64-33; Elon, . C5-32; and Davidson, 73-59. The game on Thursday night of next week with Wake Forest opens up a fifteen game schedule for this year which concludes with the Duke game Feb. 23 at Durham. The players that have seen the most action in past games and who are scheduled to start Thurs day night are Forwards Skip Winstead and Buell Moser, Cen ter Roger Kingsbury, and Guards Garland Holmes and Paul Brant ly. Eddie Mann, a Chapel Hill Busy Quarter Is In View As Murals Get Underway The Intramural Department has gone all out to provide Carolina. students with a busy but inter-- esting winter- quarter in raurl sports. Seven activities, three oil which count toward the all-yeaiN organizational championship, are listed on the winter mural calender. Besides basketball, which is al-! ready underway in the Fraterni ty division, table tennis, rifle marksmanship, badminton, hand ball, soccer and . swimming will be offered during the coming quarter. Basketball, table tennis and soccer have been chosen by the mural managers to count to ward the organizational champ ionship. J . Zeta Psi won the Fraternity and campus basketball champion ship last year, while the Sig Eps took the same honors in table tennis. Aycock won the Dorm table tennis crown. In handball, "B" Dorm will act as defending champions, while Phi Delt Theta will see ktd repeat as Fraternity champions. Zeta Psi and "B" Dorm won the soccer titles in their respective divisions last year. DANCE CI.TTB This club activity" meets every Monday night in room 302 of Woollen Gym and is conducted by Mr. & Mrs. John Lehman. There are classes for beginners.. Meet ings begin Jan. 8. BADMINTON The badminton club will meet in the Tin Can, where courts have ben marked off. The club will meet on Tuesday nights J an. 9 and 16. After that the meetings will take place on Monday nights intil Feb. 12 at which time they yvm return to Tuesday nights. ?Jhe same schedule and meeting place will be observed by the fencing club. An all-university tournament open to faculty and students will begin Monday, Jan. . 22. Entries may be made by contacting the mural office or by attending a club meeting before the tourna ment begins. Albans Drops From School; Heads West Bill Albans, Carolina's Olympic track man, who has been threat ening to leave school for some time, made it official yesterday at a conference with Athletic Di rector R. A. Fetzer when he re vealed plans to leave Sunday night for Occidental College where he will enroll. Albans, whose temperament made him widely known off the field as well as on the track, said he is leaving Carolina because he feels his track performances will improve in the faster Southern California circles. Since his arrival from Cran ford, N. J., two years ago, he has dominated Southern Conference track. He holds conference rec ords in the indoor high jump and outdoor low hurdles, and this summer won the NCAA low hur dles and was runner-up in the National AAU Decathlon. His outstanding single performance was in the 1949 Southern Confer ence Indoor Meet where he won blue ribbons in five events and set three records. Mural Results Yesterday's Intramural results in the Jratefnity division follow: 52 Kappa Sig 2 55 Lambda Chi 1 42 Phi Gam 4 39 Chi Phi 2 35 ZBT 29 Chi Psi 2 8 Chi Psi 1 21 ATO 2 11 Pi Kap Phi 13 Phi Delt 2 9 Kappa Sig 1 15 TEP 3 Frosh Wrestlers Open Season Here Tonight Carolina's freshman wrestlers open a seven-match card at 8 o'clock tonight in Woollen Gym when the Tar Babies go against the Raleigh School for the Blind in a practice meet. The frosh matmen have been working hard since October and have rounded into good condition in recent practice sessions. The freshmen have had particular stress laid on fundamentals and seem to be ready for tonight's curtain- raised against the Raleigh outfit. Miami Paper Claims Penalty Cost Hurricanes Bowl Game Harry Pawlik and Herb" Thorpe along with Clyde Watson and Larry Snyder show promise in the light divisions, while Henry Wilson, Joe Parrish, and Johnnie Kennedy are looking good in the 137-pOund class. John McLendon, Neil Satter field, Tom Stokes, Bill Dameron, and Dwight Cranfcrd are the top men in the 147-pound bracket, but chances are .that some of the boys will be shifted to another weight class. Gordon v Battle and Harvey Bradshaw top the 157-pound class, and Andy Holt has the 167-pound class all to himself. Holt, who wrestled for the Raleigh School for the Blind last season, is the Intramural dormitory champion in his weight class. The light-heavy and heavy weight divisions are sorely lack ing in seasoned material with only Harold Butts qualifying for com petition in the heavy class. There are several boys who were unable to join the squad for regular workouts during the fall quarter, but they are expected to report for full-time duty this quarter. The complete schedule follows: Jan. 5 Raleigh Blind School here; 20 VPI at Blacksburg, Va.; 23 WCTC at Cullowhee; 31 N. C. State at Raleigh. Feb. 7 Davidson here; 24 WCTC here; 28 Duke at Dur ham. Little Says Frosh Rule Is Essential DAVIDSON, Jan. 4 (JP) Coach Crowell Little said yester day that if the Southern Confer ence does not allow freshmen to play varsity football, "Davidson simply will not be able to field a team" next fall. He made the statement after learning that two of last season's stars, Fullback C. L. Runyan and Guard Jimmy Fasul have left school to enlist in the Air Force. More players reportedly are plan ning to enlist, and others are eligible for the draft. Little called a meeting of foot out how many expect to report for practice next fall. The coach said "of course if l the war gets much worse, then , college .football will not be very important. But if we are going to have a team of any kind, there will have to be freshmen on it." boy, has also been playing fine ball this season and could easily break into the starting lineup. Lost to the squad through the latest national emergency are Feno McGinty, who joined the Air Corps, Bryce Newman, who joined the Navy and George May, who went into the Army. BASKETBALL SCORES Wake Forest 74 Appalachian 55 Bradley 69 Detroit 65 DePaul 53 - Cincinnati 52 Lenoir Rhyne 82 Elon 71 Mural Managers All organized intramural teams are requested to have a representative present at z. managers meeting of the Intra mural Department at 304 Wool len Gym on Tuesday night. Jan. 9 at 7:30. MIAMI, Fla., Jan. 4 (JP) i Motion pictures of Clemson's 15-14 victory over the University of Miami in the Orange Bowl indicate the penalty which cost Miami,, the game "appeared un warranted," the Miami Daily News said today. . Guy Butler, News sports editor, viewed the films with Freddie Frink, former University of 111 nois end, who is president of Ball Productions which made the mo tion pictures. They concentrated on three 15 yard penalties in the dying min utes of the game. The third put Miami back on the four-yard line. On the first play after that Ster ling Smith of Clemson nailed Halfback Frank Smith behind the goal line for the two big points that won for Clemson. "The third penalty, filed against Ed Lutes, the University of Mi ami end from McKeesport, Pa., appeaHed unwarranied,". Butler wrote. "The sophomore end made one block, got off the ground and went for another Tiger. His initial contact was not a clip, Frank and I agreed. It was a 45-degree angle on the front part of the calf. The Clemsonite fell backward and made it appear as a clip." The sports editor said the first 15-yard penalty, which nullified a 79-yard touchdown run by Har ry Mallios, was for clipping. JUST RECEIVED Brand New NAVY PRE-FLIGHT JACKETS S6.95 ea. First Come. First Serve SURPLUS SALES 425 W. Main St. at Five Points DURHAM. N. C. Chicago College of OPTOMETRY Nationally Accredited AN OUTSTANDING COL LEGE IN A SPLENDID PROFESSION Entrance requirement thirty hours of Liberal Arts credits. Advanced standing granted for additional L. A. credits. NEXT CLASS STARTS FEBRUARY 12 Excellent clinical facilities. Rec- 3 Dormitories on campus. Ap proved for veterans. 2307 No. Clark St. Chicago 14. 111. VILLAGE TODAY TURN OF THE CENTURY! NOTHING EVER LIKE IT! 1UE PICTURE THAT WAS SO Ul THE fAAEIlPiC! YEARS rr. m TKE THROB OF THE THIRTIES! feg J if 11 J jf " J to Wj to "L::ri fi S W m ftlT J l E 1 1 HI "llfliPf . "LCM a 3t ok Also CARTOON NEWS nie.rfHTUBY AMD PLA EXCERPT . "In the BEGINNING there was NOT CHAOS, as the word is understood today, but a planned and orderly development of alternating HEAT and COLD expansion and compression and this alternating heat and cold was the physical agency responsible for the outlines of the continents, for the" growth and mental development of mankind, and for the food and protective materials of highly civilized peoples. - ..... - FROM Copyright Thomas Maciver Cosmography 1930 Worksheets The Philosophers Worksheet (a supplement) This is MODERN THEORY in the field of SPECULATIVE PHILOSOPHY. TIME AND PUBLICITY will determine the TRUTH. However, ASK THISof a professor does he know if it is TRUE OR FALSE that ALTERNATING HEAT and COLD was, and is, the PHYSICAL AGENCY RESPONSIBLE FOR the OUTLINES of the CONTINENTS. 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 -put on the library shelves.) The Philosophers 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 entirely new. . . . "At any place in the world, at any time of the year, a storm at sea means an outflow of ENERGY RAYS from deep water that is greater in volume and faster in speed than newly arriving RAYS that might have been slowed down by heavy vapor clouds in the sky." . The one, always existing, massive outflow that blocks the passage of storms and siphons off their fiercely flowing energy, during the months of accumulation, is the GULF STREAM of the north ATLANTIC." . . . that, perhaps will be freely accepted by grandchildren.of present day meteorologists. . Published al the cost of Thomas Maciver P.O. Box 763 Washington 4, D. C. short time only flaoes -A s Style 4304 BRISTOL Last Sale Price - 1 Tans . Ulacks Grains a; I5 MOST STYLES .45 to 18 .45 To induce new wearers to try the increased comfort and extra dollar-saving style-mileage made possible by Ankle-Fashioning, we offer REDUCED PRICES on a broad range of Nunn-Bush styles. . . . This is an opportun ity to buy Nunn-Bush shoes at truly worth while SAVINGS. Act now. Sale ends soon! Edgerton Shoes also Reduced! 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