THE DAILY TAR HEED
PAGE THREE
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SATURDAY, APRIL 16, 1949
5
MONOGRAM MUSINGS
By Ronnie Basescu
Advent of Spring
With the advent of Spring a young man's fancy usually turns
to thoughts of love and leisure,, but not so in the Monogram Club
(it says here), for with the first; brisk wind of the new season
"King Carl" calls his boys together for the annual pasttime of
mangling wild onions on Navy Field in preparation for the annual
slaughtering of annual opponents in the annual fall football season.
This all brings us around to the annual Blue-White game which
this year is scheduled to be played on. April 30.
The game is a preview of next fail's football prospects. It is
the culmination of five weeks of Spring practice and one week of
winter practice with all hands in top shape for a hot battle.
Back in 1946 under the able leadership of Bill Pritchard, the
first Blue-White game was staged before some 3,000 enthusiastic
spectators. Since then the crowds at each succeeding game have
nearly been doubled. Last year the turnstile recorders hit a record
mark of 10,000 spectators.
This year marks the fourth in this series of games. Kenan
Stadium has seen many battles but none as hard played and fought
as the Blue-White game. It's in the game that the coaching staff
has its eye out for prospective starters in the Fall. The boys aren't
only fighting to win the game but also to get or maintain their
positions in the starting line-up in the Fall, so you can bank on
seeing a great contest.
J
Pi Phi's Rained Out
Last Monday the Club was scheduled to entertain the Pi Phi's
with an outdoor wiener roast and party at Hogan's Lake. But as
luck would have it Chapel Hill fog interfered so the party was
forced to be held at the Monogram Club. As it turned out the party
was a great success. With Joe Romano running the affair it couldn't
have been anything other than one laugh after another. And Joe's
main event of the evening, a bag race, turned the affair into a near
riot.
This Monday evening at 5:45 the Alpha Gam sorority is having
a lawn party for Monogramers. Although the Alpha Gam's lawn has
always been inviting, it is even more so with the addition of a few
new picnic tables. Since our spies report to us that they used im
ported "slave labor" in tidying up the back yard, we suggest that
they use more of the "same" to re-enforce their front porch swing,
lest some of our tender athletes meet the same fate as Bunny Davis.
j WOW!
Laddy Terrell, while acquiring a sun tan at the beach this
weekend, is looking into the prospects of a Club party down there
"Why couldn't we party and get a sun tan too?" we asked ourselves
We couldn't think of any reasonable answer so we decided to have
one. Plans for the Beach Party are still in their infancy but will
probably be completed at the next Monogram meeting.
Where Credit is Due
One of the most valuable members that the Club has ever had,
Bill Pritchard, leaves this Saturday for a short stay of. duty with
the Navy. He has been an active member of the Club' fdr the past
five years. He was president of the Club in 1947 and in the same
year was also Big Four Monogram representative. In 1947 and '48
he was president of the Carolina Athletic Association. With his de
parture the Club is losing one of its most active and able members
It , has been largely through Bill's efforts that the preceding Blue-
White games have been so successful. Our only hope is that this
year's Blue-White game meets with as much enthusiasm and Suc
cess as the ones on which Bill worked so hard.
x Jolting Joe' Di Maggio
Expects To Hit, Field Again
BALTIMORE, April 15.
(UP) Joe Di Maggio, the New
York Yankees', brilliant out
fielder, said today that "I have
no idea of retiring from base
ball" because of the ailing
right heel that has forced him
back to the hospital for treat
ment. "I've never said anything
about retiring and it doesn't
enter into my present plans,"
the poker-faced Yankee star
told a special press conference
at his room in the Sheraton
Belvedere Hotel. -
"These things have been
cured before," he said. "It's
just a matter of time."
Considering the prospect of
being out of baseball for the
whole 1949 season, Di Maggio
told the group of newsmen,
"even if I couldn't get back to
the Yankees this year, I feel
I could come back after a
year's rest.
"I have plenty of hitting
ability as long as my foot holds
out," he said.
Seated comfortably in an
easy chair Di Maggio said he
did not know just what was
the matter with the heel and
that he was entrusting treat
ment of the injury entirely in
the hands of Dr. George E.
Bennett of Johns Hopkins Hos
pital. Dr. Bennett performed
the original operation for the
removal of a bone spur at the
close of last season.
Di Maggio said that his cur
rent treatment consisted sole
ly of lying on a table "and
having them shoot an X-Ray
at me for a minute and three
quarters at a time."
He added that the treatment
would last six days, ending
next Tuesday, and that he did
not know what Dr. Bennett
would prescribe after that.
The 34-year-old San Fran
ciscan said that he wore a
block in his shoe under the
arch - of his right foot to re
lieve the pressure from his
heel while walking.
Di Maggio told the reporters
that there was little likelihood
that another operation would
be performed on his right heel.
Cassell Tosses
Neat Four-Hitter;
Gamecocks Next
, By Larry Fox
: Dozens of base hits didn't
rustle the bushes in the outer
reaches of Emerson Stadium yes
terday afternon nor did a multi
tude of runs pour across the
Well-worn plate, but Carolina
rriade judicious use of its vaunt
ed extra-base power to edge out
the visiting Maryland Terrapins,
2-1.
There will be no rest for the
Tar Heels today, however, for
they journey to Laurenberg to
meet South Carolina in a noc
turnal loop tussle originally
scheduled for Chapel Hill. Tom
my Andrew will be on the
mound for the Carolinians as
they sek their fourth straight
Conference win.
Yesterday's victory marked
triumph number three in Caro
lina's defense of its Southern
Conference title and came over
the team which had almost kept
the locals from winning . the
crown last year. It, was also Car
olina's tenth win. : C
Cassell Goes Route
Dean Cassell went all the way
for the Tar Heels,, scattering
four Maryland hits and four free
passes along the way. The New
Jersey speedballer was in trou
ble only twice during the contest.
Fine fielding and three hits by
Ed Lamb, who batted in both
Carolina runs, one on a tremen
dous homer; aided the Carolina
cause considerably.
Off his performance in the first
inning when he walked two men
in succession with one out and
added a wild pitch for good
measure, Cassell seemed' to be a
strong candidate for the title of
the man most likely to be tagged
with the loss, but he settled
down to hold the Terps in check
until seventh when they scored
their only tally of the game.
Fitzpatrick had a little diffi
culty in the first two frames, but
one pitch in the third lost him
his shutout. He grooved one for
Lamb and the husky rightfielder
blasted it to deep left field where
it landed about 20 feet from the
fence and proceeded to run and
hide in the foliage.
Terp Twirler Triples
That seemed to be the ball
game, but in the seventh, Fitz
patrick struck a blow in his own
behalf, that blow being a long
triple to rightcenter field with
two men gone.
A running one-hand catch by
Lamb had robbed Tony Sileo of
an extrabase hit immediately be
fore the Terp hurler came to bat
and saved Carolina a run there,
but Stan Goodman, who has
been playing great ball, offen
sively and defensively, for Caro
lina; committed his first error of
the season on Al Tuminski's
Third Loop Win!!!
McKinney To Quit
WASHINGTON. April , 15
(UP) Horace "Bones' McKin
ney said loday he will qui!
Ihe . Washington . prof essional
basketball team and return Jo
North Carolina University io
work for a physical education
degree.
..' "You've got io quit . some
lime and I want to quit while
I'm on top,", the 31 -year-old
court star said. "Frankly, ihe
pace is getting too fast for
me and I'm gelling loo old lo
go at lop speed."
McKinney, who played in
57 of ihe Washington Caps'
60 games this season,' said he
would become a player-coach '
of a Durham, N. C. semipro :
team.
He was one of ihe key men
of ihe Washington team which
won ihe Eastern division BAA
championship. The Caps lost
lo Minneapolis in ihe playoff
series.
King Carl Named
To Coaching Staff
BETHANY, W. Va., April 15.
(UP) Head football coaches
George Sauer of Navy, Art Mor
ton of Mississippi State and Carl
Snavely of North Carolina today
were named to the staff of the
Ohio Valley All-Star game.
The three will join Stuart Hol
comb of Purdue and Charley
Caldwell of Princeton, who will
pilot the Ohio and West Virginia
elevens respectively in the an
nual game at the clinic.
The coaching school opens
Aug. 15 and runs through Aug.
19, the night of the seventh in
terstate tussle at Wheeling.
Holcomb will instruct in the
T formation on the first day of
the school and Caldwell will
present his ideas on the single
wing the second day. Sauer,
Navy's first civilian coach, will
instruct in forward passing the
third day.
Morton, who moved' from VMI
for the 1949 season, will explain
the "Split T" the fourth day
and the closing class will be
turned over to Snavely, North
Carolina's veteran mentor. He
will explain his version of the
single wing.
Sapp, Brooks Star
As Linksmen Win
Over Gamecocks
By Buddy Vaden
The , steady . playing of Oliver
Sapp and Frank Brooks brought
victory number six to the Caro
lina golf team here yesterday as
they defeated the University of
South Carolina, 21 to 5..
Harvie Ward tied ' for . medal
honors of the match with South
Carolina's Fred Smith, both men
carding a 73 for the Hope Valley
course. Ward scored 36 on the
first nine, and 37 on the way in
to halve the hole with Smith at
iy2-aii.
Bob Cox gave Carolina best
ball points with a 2-1 win over
Bill Thome. Cox carded a 76 to
Thome's 78, winning the first
nine with a 38 and the match to
give Carolina best ball, 21A-1A.
In the second foursome Tar
Heel Roy McKenzie split with
Jim Dial,. 1-all. McKenzie won
the first nine by two strokes and
dropped the back nine by the same
margin. McKenzie and Dial split
match point with a 76 each.
Jack Brantley's five stroke win
over Jim Clemmons gave Caro
lina's second foursome best ball
(See GOLF, page 4)
Wildcats Tie
Hillsboro Nine
Chapel Hill High School and
Hillsboro High played5 to an
eleven-inning 9-9 tie in a four-
hour marathon on the local field
yesterday afternoon.
Darkness finally brought a halt
to the loosely played ball game
after Hillsboro pushed across the
tying marker in the ninth and
neither team was able to break
ice in the two extra innings.
Twelve errors by the locals
greatly aided the visitor's cause.
The Hillsboro nine committed
eight miscues.
Score by innings:
C. H. 000 323 100 00-9-1012
Hillsboro 012 050 001 00-9- 9 8
Lloyd, Heffner (5) and Kirk,
Walker (7); T. Maultsby, Cheek
(5) and Butler.
0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0
m
i
Hz
"00 0 0 0 --mi-ws&
University of North Carolina
Versus
University of South Carolina
Ai 4:00 in Emerson Stadium
TODAY
Come Down To
rcfir s
AFTER THE GAME
1
And Enioy The Excellent Food And Fine Company
Maryland
Tuminske, 2b
Brewer, ss
Smith. 11'
Moeller, lb ....
Miles, o
Crescenze, 3b
Cesky. ci
Sileo, rf
Fitzpatrick, p
AB R H O A
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
0
1
Totals -. 31
Carolina
Allen, et
Goodman
Ryan, ss ...
Hobbs, lb ..
Lamb, rf ....
Gurganus, c
Senter, 3b ..
Ward. If
Cassell, p .
2b
AB
3
4
3
4
4
3
4
4
2
4 24 11
H O A
0 i
0 3
1 0
1 16
3 1
0 4
1 1
1 0
0 1
Totals 31 2 7 27 16 3
Score by Innings:
Maryland 000 000 1001
Carolina 001 000 0102
Runs batted in: Lamb (2): left on
base: Maryland (7), Carolina (10);
two base hits: Hobbs: -three base hits:
Fitzpatrick; home runs: Lamb; stolen
oases: Crescenze, Moeller; bases on
balls: Fitzpatrick (5), Cassell (4);
strike outs: Cassell (5); Wild pitch:
Cassell (1); double plays, Tuminski
Moeller, Ryan-Goodman-Hobbs: um
pires: Arrtngton and Carr; Time: 2:10.
sharp grounder and the run came
home.
Another individual streak was
broken in the eighth by Will
Hobbs to score Carolina's second
and winning run. Hobbs, in the
throes of a batting slump which
had seen him go 0 for 14, poked
a double down the right field
line to start the inning and ad
vanced to third when Terp
oatrher Hank Miles threw the
ball into center field on an at
tempted pickoff play.
Lamb came through again with
his final hit of the day to score
Hobbs and sew up the ball game.
Hobbs, whose batting average
was close to ducking under the
.200 mark when he came up in
the eighth, really showed the old
college trv. His double, which
set up the winning run, came
just after the strains of Hark the
Sound had wafted down from the
bell tower. Lamb, incidentally,
is now hovering near .500.
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SUNDAY MONDAY
tar Heel Netters Notch Ninth Win
With 8-1 Triumph Over Cincinnati
By. Joe Cherry
j Carolina's varsity tennis team,
receiving much-needed coopera
tion from the weather for the
first time in a week, chalked tip
victory number nine here yester
day afternoon with an 8-1 de
cision over the University of
Cincinnati netters.
j Coach John Kenfield's high
t iding netmen were slated to
rneet Wake Forest here on Mon
day of this week, and the locals
yere to play host to touring Ald
tright College on Tuesday, but
the weather was the deciding
factor again, with both meets
washed out.
Captain Victor Seixas, Carolina's
automatic first point, started the
Tar Heels off on the right side
of the scoreboard by defeating
Gregg Thomas in straight, sets
in the opening match.
The Tar Heel ace limited
Thomas - to only two games in
the'fi&t set, but the Cincinnati
number 'one netter managed to
take four games before dropping
the second set to Seixas, 6-4.
Old reliable Clark Taylor, play
ing his usual steady game, was
forced to the limit before edging
Appel in two nip-and-tuck sets
8-6, 6-4. Stan Gruner, playing
in the third position, had to go
six sets before disposing of Jim
Kieter, 6-0, 5-7, 7-5.
Tar Heel Charlie Rice made
a brilliant comeback after losing
the first set, 3-6, and limited Con
way to only one' game in each
of the next two rounds to win
3-6, 6-1, 6-1.
In the fifth singles match, Paul
Anderson provided the visitors
with their only tally of the after
noon by defeating Duke Wilder,
7-5, 3-6, 6-4, in a long contest.
In the singles finale, Jim Win
stead routed Crandel in straight
sets, 6-1, 6-2.
All three Carolina doubles com
binations were victorious, with
Seixas-Wilder, Taylor-Rice, and
Gruner-Dameron wading through
their opposition without much
trouble.
The locals will attempt to open
their Big Four and Southern Con
ference competition again Mon
day when they take on Wake For
est's Demon Deacons weather
permitting in a replay of
Monday's rained out match.
last
VILLAGE PHARMACY
WE HAVE CANDY BY
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(6 At The 9)
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Whitman, Nunally, & Norris
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ANYWHERE IN TOWN & VICTORY VILLAGE
In the doubles matches, the
Tar Heels came out on top with
out much trouble. Seixas and
Wilder combined forces in the
feature match and easily topped
Thomas-Conway, 6-0, 6-2.
Taylor and Rice were forced to
fight for every point in their
.opening set Appel ana is.eiier
before winning, 7-5. The local
tennismen experienced little dif
ficulty in the second and final
set, however, winning, 6-2.
Gruner and Dameron added
the finishing touches to a great
afternoon by stopping Anderson
and Yeager, 6-2, 6-love.
The Summary:
Singles: Seixas (CI defeated Thom
as. 6-2, 6-4; Tavlor t,C) defeated Ap
pel, 8-6, 6-4; "Gruner (C) defeated
Kieter, 6-0, 5-7, 7-5; Rice (D) de
feated Conwav. 3-6, 6-0, 6-1; Ander
son (Cin.) defeated Wilder. 7-5, 3-6,
6-4; Winstead (C) defeated Crandel,
6-1, 6-2.
Doubles: Seixas-Wilder (C) defeat
ed Thomas-Conway, 6-0, 6-2; Taylor
Rice (C) defeated Appel-Kietei , 7-5.
6-2: Gruner-Dameron (C) defeated
Anderson-Yeager, 6-2, 6-0.
ASTOR THEATRE
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Southern Premiere
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April 17th 21st.
BUPOWT
For Students of Science and
CJ
Engineering
Chemists in
Pictures
How Du Pont and studio scien
tists solved the problem
of noisy film
Who'd ever expect to find Du Pont
chemists in Hollywood? When mo
tion pictures suddenly started to talk,
a whole new series of perplexing sci
entific problems was born, not the
least of which was "noisy" film.
As you know, sound is usually re
corded directly on film. If you hold
a strip of motion picture film to the
light, the sound track lis seen as a
narrow band of irregular lines. A
light ray passing through the mov
ing sound track falls on a photocell
with rapid interruptions or changes
in intensity. The photocell converts
these interruptions into electrical im
pulses which, amplified, reach the
theater audience as voice and music.
If the film has a coarse grain struc
ture, it tends to give lines that are
not sharp and uniform in density.
Such irregularities interrupt the light
ray come out as distracting noise.
What could be done about it?
Du Pont scientists of the Photo Prod
ucts Department started a program
of research, in cooperation with tech
nical experts from the studios in
Hollywood. They made and tested
scores of film coatings. Finally there
were developed films of exceedingly
fine grain structures.
M-G-M and Paramount were
among the first to use the hew type
Du Pont films. The development was
heralded by the press as "another
milestone in the technical progress
of the industry , "and in 1943 Du Pont
': '
W. I. Fy, Ph.D. in Physical Chemistry,
Clark University, 1947r and A. C. Lapsley,
Ph.D. in Physics, Virginia, 1947, discussing
details of Color Densitometer Wiring Diagram
used in connection with research on color
photography.
outstanding achievements, two of
which have been recognized by
"Oscars."
Of - '-.I
Voic and music appear as a continuous band
4)f irregular lines on this movie sound track.
Any irregularity means noise.
' received an Academy Award of Merit
for its achievement. Now the use of
fine grain films is practically uni
versal in Hollywood . Actors, actresses
speak their lines, with no technical
restrictions to cramp their artistry.
You may have a place
in Du Pont research
Had you been a member of a Du Pont
Photo Products research team since
1931, you might have shared in many
r
Don't mil reading this new
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Send for your copy of
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and the College Gradu
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research,, production,
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recognition of ability is assured. For
free copy, address: 2618 Nemours Bldg.(
Wilmington 98, Delaware.
I r
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In coarse grain film, the particles of silver are
large and scattered. Compare with Du Pont
finegrain film, right. (.Magnified 1000 times.)
The Photo Products Department,
however, is just one of ten Du Pont
manufacturing departments, all of
which engage in continuous research.
Operated much like separate com
panies, each holds challenging oppor
tunities for young, college-trained
chemists, engineers and physicists.
Du Pont not only tries to select
young men and women of promise,
but makes a conscientious effort to
help each one develop as rapidly as
possible. Whatever your interests,
you will find here the cooperation
and friendly interest you need to do
your best. As a member of a small,
congenial working teamj your ability
can be seen, recognized and rewarded.
Achievements of Du Pont scientists over the
years have won two "Oscars" from Academy
of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences.
BETTER THINGS FOR BETTER LIVING
i i THROUGH CHEMISTHY
More facts about Du Pont Listen to "Cavalcade
of America" Monday Nights, NBC Coast to Coast