Baseball Schedule Is Announced n ee. Coed Tennis Team Points To Season TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1945 PAGE THREE UNC TTv O TED- ractice Connies Uwicile .A CAROLINA CHATTER it With A Over . Week-Emd. aciKBis FTP T lilie FTHI Jar TTT G A " A By CARROLL POPLIN Matters are getting plenty serious when a student can't go through a small portion of the Pre-Flight area to attend a Carolina baseball game. It certainly would save the student the trouble of climbing the fence or travel ing naif way around the campus to enter another gate. speaking from my own experience,? it is impossible to presuade a cadet to let you go through his .guarded area into ' the baseball diamond. You've either got to look through the fence or take the chance of entering another gate and possibly interrupt mg the ball game. It seems to me that it would be' much simpler to let the students go through the main gate whether it is a practice game or the real McCoy. I personally don't see the harm in passing over only around 30 yards of the Pre-Flight area to enter the so called Carolina baseball field. Some thing surely can be worked out be fore the regular season gets under way . . . Even a Tar Heel pass doesn't seem to be any good any more. Murnick At Bainbridge The war N hit deeper into athletics at Carolina last week when Coach Joe Murnick, varsity boxing coach for the past three years reported for induc tion into the Navy. 'Murnick istre-j celving his boot training at Bam-1 bridge, Maryland. Joe succeeded Mike Ronman as head ring mentor and has tutored his last two teams to the Southern conference championship. Murnick himself was one of the cleverest boxers in Carolina ring an nals. He captained the strong 1938 team and went undefeated in six dual meets. Intramural So ftbdll Starts Into Its Second Week Of Play iBaseball Schedule Intramural softball will launch into its second week of play as a full slate of games will be run off each after noon this week. Four mural loops have been formed with six teams participating in each league. Vance Is Hot Vance appeared to be the hottest George Stirnweiss Is Classified 1-A; Signs With Yankees George Stirnweiss, former Carolina second sacker and now a potent key stone nprfnrmpr -FnT Wdto Vnrlf Yankees has been classified 1-A and team in the ,tourney as they taUied ;f ,tA,i vtt. ii.. ai a grana joiai 01 bd runs m two diamond star will be able to finish the ?me Y?1Ch 18 newJsoni? '46 camnaW ' The V-12ers ran wild m their firsl 0.. . , : , . , two contests, but in Wednesday's tilt Stirnwdss has already signed toth'the Phi Gams, the Navymen are coiiuaci ana nas reported lor spring , , , . , -a.!. Zr , j r expected to run into some stiff compe- uoimug vy liii uic . jiauKees anu I tition handling second base duties, fitimv led the American leatrue in stnlen Phi KaPPa &ga pushed into the bases last season by edging out George Iead in the League A loop by trim GERMAN YOUTH (Continued on ?ast page) problems of postwar Germany': " ' "We have to go back in history to the years 1929, '31, '32 and '33 to un derstand why the German youth were psychologically ready for Hitler and his Nazi movement,"Mr. Hall stated, "at that time there were 30,000,000 unemployed out of a total of 63,000, 000 persons or approximately half of the total population of the country. He compared the conditions which ex isted then Jn the United States and Germany thus: "Here in America, with the same number of unemployed you only had one-fourth of your total population unemployed." Consequent ly, as Mr. Hall stated, the youth of Germany were much more disillusioned than the youth of the United States. He said that he had actually seen boys lighting cigarettes with million-mark bills on street-corners during those years. Mr. Hall stated that this time was especially ripe for Hitler's Nazj move ment because the people of Germany wanted a change any change, and they could not see how any change could be any worse. He divided the youth of Germany into two classes: those that were of college age when Hitler came to power. He said these were the most fanatical since they could remember the lean depression years, but he also said that we would have to worry least about Case of the Washington Senators. Gridders Don Heavy Togs In Rugged Drills Assistant football coaches Reid and Murphy have been busy trimming the spring grid squad down to a rea sonably convenient number to work with and at the present the squad is 70 strong. The f otball prospects will don heavy equipment this week and rugged drills are slated to get underway now since the squad spent the first part of the spring drils in calisthenics and shap ing workouts. ?r - Snavely Is Away, Coach Carl Suavely is still absent from the drills, but the newly appoint ed grid mentor is expected back soon to direct the spring practice sessions. Prospects seem bright for Carolina's '46 football team, but its too early to predict the outcome of this year's grid campaign. them because of the eight million Ger mans killed during this war, six mil lion were of this age class. Mr. Hall said that we would have to help those who have no memories of the lean depression years re-educate themselves. "This is important," he explained, "the German people must be educated from within and not from without." He frowned on Sumner Welles's idea of partitioning Germany and Morgethau's plan of destroying Ger man industry because he said that to rebuild a country you have to have a country to be proud of rebuilding and a country needs industry to provide jobs for the unemployed. Mr. Hall concluded his CRIL speech by saying, "The Bible says 'God cre ated Man in his own image' and if I remember right, it doesn't say 'All men except the Germans and the Japanese'." Crossword Puzzle ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE ACROSS 1 Contort 5 Swale 8 Flavor 12 Genus of olives 13 Part of "to be" 14 Wild ox 15 A season 17 Teacher ia Horse 20 Whip marks 21 Chew 23 Nothing more 24 Bishop's seat 26 Army rank 28 Fisherman's Implement 31 Symbol for silver 32 Possessed 33 Right (abbr.) 34 Cut hay 36 Females 38 Fix 39 Mountain (comb, form) 41 For fear that 43 City in Italy 45 Hawaiian farewell 48 Enter by force 50 Put on play 51 Poverty 52 Marshall Island 54 Scoff 65 Theresa 56 Flow out 57 Observed I p R Ami isl ROHE U O L A THN T U IE gFTn AG JTG !i iJ EX D O R LJg O A T S A gp I . g Eb A N T t ST E R Sr IT R UlSlT MAT .JS" G jSlTjg LI Ml ITlE U ToN ARE p T t Elj S O RlAj MET OS ROSS OA Cjcl PMLJ A L ATOPnTR jo a ned e l aii nTTeI eIrImm Nggec8lsl ming the Phi Delts and Med School No 1 for a good start toward league honors. Sigma Chi nosed out ATO and Steele lost to Zeta Psi in the other top battles. The schedule for the coming week is listed below. All teams are urged to furnish referees on days their team is idle. Tuesday, March 27, 5:30 Alexander 1 Zeta Psi vs. Phi Kappa Sigma. . - Alexander 2 Sigma Chi vs. Med School No. 2. Intramural 1 Pi Kappa Alpha vs. Sigma Nu. Intramural 2 Beta vs. Med School No. 3. , Intramural 3 Chi Psi vs. Med School No. 1. Intramural 4 ATO vs. Bainbridge Aces. ' Wednesday, March 28, 5:45 Alexander 1 Kappa Alpha vs. Smith Raiders. Alexander 2 ZBT vs. Battle Dorm. Intramural 1 Phi Gamma Delta vs. Vance Dorm. Intramural 2 SAE vs. Corsairs. Intramural 3 Kappa Sigma vs. Two Brews. Intramural 4 Zeta Psi vs. Chi Psi. Thursday, March 29, 5:30 Alexander 1 Steele vs. Phi Kappa Sigma. Alexander 2 Sigma Chi vs. Kappa Alpha. Intramural 1 Pi Kappa Alpha vs. SAE. Intramural 2 Beta vs. Kappa Sig ma. Intramural 3 ATO vs. Med School No. 2. Intramural 4 ZBT vs. Sigma Nu. Friday, March 30, 5:30 Alexander 1 Phi Gamma Delta vs. Med School No. 3. Alexander 2 Phi Delta Theta vs. Med School No. 1. Intramural 1 Hillel House vs. Cor sairs. Intramural 2 Delta Sigma Pi vs. wo Brews. Intramural 3 Zeta Psi vs. Phi Delta Theta. Intramural 4 ATO vs. Kappa Alpha. , April 7 N. C. State here. April 14 N. C. State at Raleigh. April 16 Cherry Point Marines here. April 18 United States Nava Academy at Annapolis. April 21 N. C. State here. April 23 Camp Lejeune here. April 28 N. C. Pre-Flight here. May 5 N. C. State at Raleigh. May 9 N. C. Pre-Flight. May lo Camp Butner at Camp Butner. May 17 Greensboro. i May 19 N. C. Pre-Flight here. May 21 Camp Butner here. May 23 Duke here. May 25 Greensboro ORD here. May 30 Duke in Durham. June 2 N. C. Pre-Flight. June 6 Duke here. June .9 Duke in Durham. Greensboro ORD at Inter-Squad Court Tourney Nears Finish Cliff Tuttle Is Heavy Favorite Tar Heels Win Sunday's Tilt By Score 7-4 Coed Tennis Team Selected From Big Number Of Players A large number of coed tennis aspirants answered Miss Blanchette's first practice call last Saturday and with the help of Coach Kenfield, a girls' net team was chosen. Shirley Dickinson, president of the 'Women's Athletic Association, headed the large turn-out. Others rounding out the varsity tennis team include Ann Christian, I z b In I I? b 17 I 18 19 k ji 5-" " ; is J77rr"iB ' 55 gfp T 5TT5 -77Z """M5" lL-5?"" 42 m . ii- 777yy777 45 Hfc m h5 5u si : 51 , Sfc 57 DOWN 1 Stage hits 2 Are 8 Fail to keep word 4 Holy plate 5 Sand spit Either 7 Stone 8 More rational 9 Horn 10 Plunder ' 11 Sailors 16 Dutch cheese 18 Jug 22 "Burning bush,' 23 Paragon - 24 Our ancle 25 Formerly 27 A preserve 29 Danish coin 30 Obstruct 35 Fierce canines 38 Travel 37 Precise 38 Long cigar 40 Electric catfish (pi.) 42 Smelter left-over 43 Coin money 44 Arrow poison 46 Goddess of Youth 47 British base 49 Formerly 50 Kindred S3 Siberian t1t Emma Lee Rhyne, Joyce Fowler, Tish Andrews, Betty Albergotti and Ida Prince. Miss iilanchette is working on a schedule for her team and already games have been arranged with Wil iam and Mary and the Women Ma- nnes irom unerry roint utner matches are expected to be added to the schedule in the near future. Besides tennis, the coeds are plan ning to start a softball tournament soon and a new Women's Athletic Council will take office this week and final "plans will be mapped. FRENCHMEN -' ' (Continued from first page) fighting. Once the camp was attacked by German soldiers of the mountain division and 30 of the group taken a f 1 1 prisoners, a iew aays later, wuru spread that two German high officials were going to tour that region. As Cadet B describes it, "We wait ed for them in a very, deserted part of the road, hidden behind rocks, and saw their grey car coming up the twisting road. "We jumped them and in a mo ment had them tied down. We brought them back to our camp, where with hair cut and old clothes they spent eight days with us working hard, cut ting wood or cleaning the 'chalet.' Then we sent spokesmen to the 'Kommendantur' asking for our 30 boys in exchange for the Nazi offi cers. We, won, our boys were free again, and we sent back the Nazis who had lost their 'German arro gance'." Later Cadet B Aeft the Maquis to begin work as an "agent de liaison." All day long he traveled on trains, carrying mail, orders, suppressed newspapers, arms and explosives. This became so dangerous that he changed his identification five times in escaping arrest. "You cannot imagine those nights in the waiting-room of stations," he says. "We could trust nobody. The old man quietly smoking his pipe' is ; probably a policeman. We became very clever in detecting them; it be came a sort of sixth sense. In the train, the stations, the movies we were always on guard. "Once in a restaurant, I was sit ting in front of a boy when Germans entered suddenly. In a twinkling of an eye, he put his revolver in the pitcher, and very innocently allowed himself to be searched by the Nazis, who found nothing. Of course he paid his check quickly and escaped in the street, for perhaps the manager was a Laval partisan. It was a gruelling life." These former members of the underground movement could tell many more incidents of their acts of outwitting the Nazis, but they are more interested in completing train ing here and returning to the fight in their country's struggle for freedom. FRESHMEN (Continued from first page) the full backing of E. L. Mackie, dean of students, went to President Benbow, who immediately agreed to issue the call for a freshman meeting. They agreed to define a freshman as a student who has not been here or in any .other college, more than two semesters. Realizing, the difficulty of this task under the present wartime program, the council issued this statement to the Tar Heel: "The organization of the freshman class CAN work and be a great benefit to the freshmen and the whole student body if the freshmen will give their full support and cooperation." CLASSIFIED Advertisements must be paid for In advance and turned in at the Tar Heel business office, 206 Graham Memorial, by 1 o'clock the day preceding publication. Fifty cents ($.60) each insertion. LARGE ROOM, semi-pnvate bath, suitable for couple or three boys. Near Inn and Medical Building. Phone 5551. BULL'S HEAD BOOKSHOP Ground Floor Library . Best New Fiction and Non-Fiction Browse - Rent - - Buy Tennis drills will step up this week in preparation for the Tar Heels first match with William and Mary which is just two weeks away. At the present the racquetmen are engaged in an inter-squad tournament which is now rounding into its final stage. Cliff Tuttle, a pre-tourney f avr orite, and the only experienced player on the squad is showing up to expec tations and is a heavy favorite to cop the championship. Others looking good in the engagement include Duke Wilder, Vernon Cartner, Bud Sand- lin and Larry Probstein. Coach Kenfield is expected to have his team pretty well picked out by the end of the week and at the present no positions are sewed up. 'A few practice matches with the Pre-Flight school might be on tab be fore the Carolina netmen face their first opponent next month. These practice encounters are merely de signed to experience the players. s UP COMPLETES , (Continued from first page) Heel, he was recently appointed Man aging Editor. He is a member of the Interfraternity Council and Secretary of the Alpha Tau Omega fraternity. Linda Nobles, Chi Omega from Ya zoo City, Miss., was Associate Editor and then editor of her high school pa per and writer of a weekly society column in the local newspaper. Her freshman year at Miss. State College she was on the staff of the college pa per and her second year she was an Associate Editor. A member of the Tar Heel staff since transferring to Carolina, Linda writes the column, RAM SEES, that appears in every is sue. Remainder of slate; Student Coun cil: Civilians Ed Wiles, Jim Booth, Bill Walston; NROTC Bynum Hun ter; Marine Jack Shaeffer; V-12 Blair Gammon; Student Legislature: Civilians Art Adams, Pat Kelly, Bob Koonts, Pete Pully, Warren Ficklen; Coed-at-large Margaret Burke; V 12 Aaron Jaffee, Pat Persons; ROTC With three practice games already behind them, Carolina's baseball team is preping hard for its first Ration League game of the 1945 season. The initial encounter is slated to be reeled off here April 7 with State. This game with State will be the first of 19 tilts on deck for Coach Bunn Hearn's charges, and included among the opponents will be the Naval Academy. The clash with Navy will be at Annapolis April 18 and will be the fourth game of the sea son for the Tar Heels. Also on the Carolina schedule for this season are Duke, Cherry Point, Camp Lejeune, Greensboro ORD, and North Carolina Pre-Flight. The schedule will run through to June 9. DiChiara Stars In Uuneup games over the week end, Carolina and Pre-Flight split honors, with the Cloudbusters win ning by a score of 4-2 Saturday after noon and the Tar Heels copping Sun day's battle, 7-4. Three Pre-Flight pitchers set Carolina back with five hits in the game Saturday while col lecting seven off five Tar Heel hurl ers. Cookie DiChiara was the big gun for the Tar Heels by collecting two hits in the setback and driving in all his team's runs. "Red" Hughes, first string player at the shortstop position, will miss action for a week or more due to a twisted ankle which he received in the Pre-Flight game Saturday while sliding into second base. McAlrath Looks Good The Cloudbusters rapped on Nelson or three runs in the initial inning lor a comi or tablet lead that was never threatened. McAlrath performed well in his short two-inning stay on he mound by fanning four straight batters. Haine, Forrest and Andrews shared pitching chores for the Tar Heels. Bosik was the man with the heavy stick for the winners as he pounded a triple to account for three tallies. Coach Bunn Hearn's charges gave re-Flight her first practice game icking Sunday afternoon ss the Tar Heels overcame an earlier lead to carve a 7-4 victory. The Cloudbusters touched Elliot for three hits and hree runs ' in the first two innings. Coach Hearn sent in Johnny Richard son to cool the firt and the side-arm twirler held the Birdmen hitless in his three innings on the hill. Flick had the Carolina batters puzzled for the first six innings and allowed only three bingles, until the Tar Heels put two runs across the plate in the sev enth. Still trailing by one tally, the Hearnmen put on a five-run scoring spree in the eighth frame to sew up the contest. Thompson, Elger, Bras ington and Chappell collected hits to count for the winning markers. Coach Hearn used four pitchers in the nine-inning tilt and the hurlers combined allowed the Pre-Flighters only five hits. Elliot opened the fracas and pitched two innings. Richardson followed and worked until the fifth when Allan Jones relieved him. Pete Lilloy finished on the mound and gave up only one hit and a run to gain credit for the victory. Walt Brinkley and Collins Brown; Marines Dick Johnson, George Lil ley; Debate Council Tom Redfern, George Lilley. "For Neatness9' TAR HEEL BARBER SHOP EASTER CARDS and NOVELTIES BRUCE'S 5c TO $1.00 STORE f e ie l e .10 is th u-m, i ! i