During a lull in the trial of Dan iel Bryant, the Cat Man, in Crav en Superior Court last week, we got into a conversation with Jack B. Richardson. He is a fingerprint expert with the State Bureau of Investigation. It was Jack who took the New Bern burglar’s prints, after his ar rest here. And, on the stand, he testified that the marks made by Bryant’s fingers and thumbs were ^ ^ exactiy the same as those left at various homes robbed by the in genius 220-pound Negro. “Maybe it’s a stupid question,’’ the editor of The Mirror admitted whiie talking with Richardson, “but do monkeys have finger- prints?” The query brought no laugh. “They certainly do,” he re plied. As a matter of fact. Jack told us that a chimpanzee’s prints are so much like a human’s that even an expert can’t tell the difference. They are about the same size as a woman’s or a child’s hand, and have the same type patterns. All members of the ape family • possess markings on the tips of their fingers, but monkeys small er and larger than the chimps would never be mistaken for folks like us. For example, a gorilla’s prints are quite big and coarse. You can hope that no prints made ' by a man will Wer be that huge, w. If some of our readei’s subscribe to the theory that man sprang from the monkeys (and ip some in- stances dida’t spring 4ar enough) tbiSv^elationAtd^ut. similpIjiBger' .'^^^^^r l^ipts is additional fuel for argu- Nobody is going to get The Mir- ' » ■ roif into'a squabble over evolution, and for the sake of vanity, if ^noth ing else, we refuse to concede that i k: £ I r ■fr- ' our family tree was once chock full of chimpanzees^ orang-a-tangs '"or baboons. However, it’s a scientific (or should we say-zoological) fact that monkeys really do have hands. All four of a monkey’s “feet” are actu ally hands, with grasping fingers and more or less perfect thumbs. That’s v/hy they appear to be so clumsy on the ground. Most of them walk on the outside edges of the palms of their hands, with fingers and thumbs curled in. This gives them that funny bow-legged look. A graduate of the Institute of 'Applied Science, Richardson agreed with us when we speculated that a chimpanzee might commit a crime, and a human being could get blamed for it. Jack brought up an interesting point, however. “We would prob ably know if the fingerprints left at the scene were human,” he said, “by' observing the position^ in which the hand or hands had been plac ed,” V According to Richardson, humans invariably spread ’ their fingers apart when touching or grasping something, while a monkey keeps his fingers close together. There could, of covlrse, be exceptions, but this isn’t likely. And, monkeys be ing monkeys, their finger tips are ^usually dirty, dirtier even than the fingers of that small boy of yours after several hours of play. This would be a revealing factor too when the chimp left his prints. No duplicates have ever been found among the 140 million fin gerprints that are on file with the JBfederal Bureau of Investigation. Which, of course, bears out the fltmly established belief that there are no duplications. *tPerish the thought, but would n’t it be disconcerting if the FBI or somebody else found some fin gerprints that matched your own 'exactly, and they belonged not to .a fellow human but a monkey? It (Continued on Pago 8) The NEW I fit. «• C. 1SHBD WBIKLY IB HBART OF 'ERN NORTH AROUNA Her Copy VOLUME 3 NEW BERN, N. C., FRIDAY, MARCH 24, 1961 NUMBER 50 smif^MORE imc6tiTOd: who is vice-president of the Ifhtel Ricca^y in N( City, .^admires the Air Force Recruitihg'Service Class J award which he has just received for his outstanding sup port to the USAF Recruiting Service,and its mission. Seen with Ed is MSgt. Lee Rogers, Air Force RecruMer of i:he; year, and his wife, Vicki. Wallnau has been saluted count less times by all branches of the service, and his Cadet Lounge is a Gotham landmark. New Bernian's Son Builds Car r For Famed International Race “LET ME HAVE IT!” Chipper Spigner’s pet is impatient. —Photo by Florence Hanff. ♦ Designing and creating a race car that can qualify for an inter national event is easier said that done. Many fail, but Henry A. Grady, in, whose father is a well-known New Bern attorney, Henry Grady, Jr., has accomplished this feat with his co-builder. Gene Beach. To morrow, down in Florida, their highly praised vehicle will compete in the Twelve Hours of Sebring. Dubbed the Begra—a name coin- BescR imd Oradyi-it is scroduled for driving by John Bent ley, with Henry in relief. Bentley won the Index of Performance test last year, driving as OSCA, and this will be his eighth year in the world-famous Twelve Hours. It is said that no other driver can match him in experience. Challenging the Begra will be Europe’s best. It will run in Sports Category “C” as a protype Ameri can racing car, and with its 750 cc displacement will be vying with the long-successful OSCAS and D.B.s. Described as a 12-hour endur ance orgy, the Sebring Twelve Hours is going to demand the max imum of a vehicle that weighs just 630 pounds. Grady and Beach have no doubts as to its stamina and ef ficiency and it might well be that automotive history will be made to morrow. A mechanical engineer who grad uated from the University of North Carolina, Henry hails from Clinton. He manages the Motor Imports Part Co., of Miami, and has been enthusiastically and dt^gedly striving to perfect racing cars for the past five years. , He and Gene were both pilots in the Korean war. Beach flew single- engined fighters, while Grady flew the multi-motored jobk. They be came good friends, and teamed up when they returned to civilian life. Gene lives at Clearwater. It took them 16 months to trans form the Begra from a dream into a reality. Lee Lilley, one of the winners at LeMans last year, calls the car “knock-kneed, bow-legged, pigeon-toed and slew-footed” but he adds quite emphatically that “it works.” Last April, on a tricky 2.7 course near Cocoa, the Begra registered its first class win in the 10-lap event for Triumphs, Porsches, MGA’s, Alfa Normals and similar race cars. Later, it finished third behind two Porsche 1600 Supers, in a field of 33 outstanding vehicles. It was apparent that Grady and Beach had come up with something extraordinary, and the Begra oc casioned plenty of talk in racing circles when it finished first in two big meets at Daytona. The Begra’s lightness, to a con siderable extent, resulted from its all-aluminum body. An architect by trade. Gene pounded out the body over an old stump in his backyard. Henry assumed responsibility fbir fashioning the motor. He worked alon'e at Miami, while Beach was doing his laboring at Clearwater. When the engine and chassis had been completed by Grady, he tovr- (Continued on Pago S) \ I?