WEDNESDAY, MARCH 16, 1955
THS DAILY TAR HER.
Athlete Of The Week!
Krepp Captured Firsts
In j do And 200 Back;
Winning Relay Team
; By BOB COLBERT
Charlie Krepp, sophomore star of the Tar Heel swimming
team again has been selected by The Daily Tar Heel sports
stall as "Athlete of thr- Week "
Rimners-up. to Krepp were teammate Phil Drake, wlio.
... .Kt m taiviiig tut; wunu recora
in the 200-yard butterfly breast
stroke by three-tenths of a second,
and Gordon Hudson, who took first
place in theside horse competition
at the Southern Gymnastic Cham
pionships held in Atlanta last
weekend.
Krepp set new Atlantic Coast
Conference records in both the 100
and 200-yard backstroke events in
The KILLINGLY funny story
of a guy who tried to
grab a hot fortune, but
caught a wild widow
end seven merry
murderers instead!
8 dG&Sf.
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ALLIED ARTISTS presents
DAVID NIVEN
YVONNE DE CARLO
BARRY FITZGERALD
in
cJfT I X! If
eo stirring GEORGE COLE
NOW PLAYING
IffiEJ
the ACC Championships held here
last weekend. His time in the 200
yard event was 2:08.7. There have
been only two swimmers to do
faster than 2:07 for the course.
Krepp will run into both of them
next week at the NCAA Cham
pionships in Oxford, Ohio. They
are Oyakawa and Wiggins of Ohio
State. Oyakawa has been the 200
yard backstroke champion for
three years and holds the intercol
legiate record with 2:05.1. Wiggins
had gone the distance in 2:06.
Krepp's fastest time in the. 200
yard backstroke was against Michi
gan here on February 3.2 He set a
new pool and University record,
gping the distance in 2:07.8. This
was after he had led-off the 300-;
yard medley relay team consisting
of himself, Drake, and Dick Baker,
which broke the intercollegiate
record.
BROTHERS RALPH and Willis
Casey, who rarely agree on many
things, both think that Charlie i
will develop into the best back
stroker in the country. Said Willis,
coach of N. C. State's ACC cham
pions' "Man, they're going to have
a hard time beating him in the 200
at the Nationals." Ralph, after the
meet, added, "It will be interesting
to see how well heil do against
great competition in the Nation
als." - -
Krep is just a sophomore and
calls Baltimore, Md., his home
town. He is 19 years old and is
majoring in Business Adminstra
tion. HE BROKE HIS own record of
2:09.4 in the 200-yard event Fri
day night going 2:08.7. Saturday
afternoon, he broke the record held
by State's Tom Dunlap of 60.0 by
going 58.4 in the trials. In the fi
nals, he was paced by State's Bill
Sonner. Sonner had Krepp after 75
yards, but Krepp poured it on and
finished first by two-tenths of a
second, breaking the record he set
in the afternoon by nine-tenths of
a-second. His new record is now
57.5.
Charlie also was lead-off man
on the winning 300-yard medley
relay team. This is the same ream
that holds the intercollegiate rec
ord. This gave Krepp three firsts
in the meet.
COACH RALPH Casey is now
pointing toward the NCAA Cham
pionships to be held at Miami Uni
versity, Oxford, Ohio March 24-26
and the National AAU meet to be
held in New Haven, Conn., on
April 1-3.
50 million times a day
at home,
at ivork or
while at play
f
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CHARLIE KRKPP
No siceat. Doin' tvhat comes naturally
Freshman Track Schedule Boasts Five Meets
By RAY LINKER
All candidates for the freshman
track team have been asked to
meet Coach Joe Hilton in 304
Woollen Gym at 4 o'clock this aft
ernoon to discuss this year's sched
ule and to fill out eligibility
blanks.
Many boys who were on the in
door team as well as several oth
ers have alreadv started working
out daily on Fetzcr Field. Hilton
would be glad to have more stu
dents come out for the team, however.
1
Five meets have been carded so J
Tar, and a few more may be added 1
1
to the schedule. The Tar Babies
will open with State here on April
2. One night meet, also with State,
is planned for April 16 in Raleigh.
Virginia's Buzz Takes
Point Title With 32.1 ;
Rosenbluth Makes 2 5.5
m
GREENSBORO, March 15 (JP North Carolina State
won the championship, but all but 011c individual or team
statistics crown for the 1 )." 1 -.")." basketball season went to the
AVolfpack's Atlantic Coast Confercme challengers.
Virginia's : Buzz Wilkinson claimed the big individual
jge title with a 32.1
scoring average
mark.
Wilkinson also won the lndi
vidual total points crown with, j
898, giving his Cavaliers a big
assist as they .won the team scor- '
mg title with an average of 89.8
points per game.
N. C. State, according to final I
ACC Service ' Bureau figures for f
the season, placed second in scor- j
ing at 88.7 and won its only ACC
statistics honor by averaging 58.2
rebounds per game. '
The other major title, for team
defense, went to Maryland with
out a close challenge. The Terps'
average yield for the season was
only 61.8 as compared to 72.7 for
second place Duke.
Wake Forest's Dick Hemric, al
though he set a national major
college scoring record at 2,687
points, wound up third in the fin-
fc al ACC individual scoring race.
Clemson's Bill Yarborough gain
ing second with a 28.3 average to
Hemric's final 27.6. North Caro
lina's Len Rosenbluth at 25.6 and
N. C. State's Ron Shavlik at 2.1
rounded out the first five scor
ers for the season.
The individual field goal shoot
ing crown wrent to Virginia's Bob
McCarty, who hit 236 of 444 shots
for a 53.1 accuracy percentage.
Wake Forest's Jackie Murdock
won the free throw title with an
83.5 per cent accuracy mark on
101 free throwrs made in 121 at
tempts. A minimum of 100 field
goals and 73 free throws scored
was required for title contention.
Hemric won individual rebound
. 1 The Majors!
"New" Alston
Expects Bums
To Be Better
Duke will furnish the oppositibn James Varnum (100 and 220) and
on two occasions, in Durham on Ronnie Austell (220 and 440) have honors with an average of 19 per
Anril 22 and in Chapel Hill on been outstanding in the shorter game. Shavlik was second with
Mav 7. Durham High School will i distances, although Varnum is in 18.1.
MIAMI, Fla., March 11 (P)
Sophomore Skipper Walter Al
ston today cited several reasons
why 'his runnerup Brooklyn Dod
gers will be better this season,
not the least important reason
being that he expects to be a
better manager.
"I think it will be easier for
me this year," said the man who
was criticized in some quarters
last year for being indecisive,
''because I know my own club
much better and because I am
more fatniliar with the rest of the
league."
Already they're calling the
quiet, scholarly gentleman from
Oxford, Ohio, the "new Alston"
because of the way he has taken
charge in camp here. A year ago
at this time he was a man grop
ing in strange surroundings, . un
decided just how to deal with
such established stars as Jackie
Robinson, Peewee Reese, Gil Hod
ges, Roy Campanella, Duke Sni
der, Carl Furillo and the rest.
Today, he is giving signs of be
coming a take-charge manager.
The players have felt it, too.
As a result, the team appears
in shape to open the season right
now despite the unusually late
spring training start.
BOB and MO N K
TOWN &
CAMPUS
SALUTE
CHARLIE KREPP
pay the Tar Babies a visit on April spring iootball practice at tne Wake Forest claimed both team
28. j present. Cledith Oakley in the efficiency crowns, posting a 46
javelin and Gene Drury in the j per cent figure in field goal shoot-
hurdles have also been impressive mg and 7o.b ver cent irom the mg average, led the nation tor
in practice. . 'foul line. Virginia was second in the second straight season.
A meet with Greensboro High is
being discussed at present. The
UNC frosh may meet a team com
posed of runners from two near
by high schools.
There's (S
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Coqe Semifinal
Slated Today
At 5 o'clock this afternoon in
Woollen Gym the Town Mens As
sociation will meet Battle-Vance-I'cttigrew
and the Medical School
will take on the Dental School in
the semifinal round of the dormi
tory championships in intramural
basketball. The winners of the !
two games will tangle at 7 o'clock
Friday night to vie for the dorm
trophy.
In the fraternity division the
Dekes play the Sigma Nus at 5
o'clock and at 7 the defending
champions, Phi Gam, tangle with
the SAEs. Friday evening at 8
o'clock the two winners will meet
for the fraternity crown.
The quarter-final round Monday
saw Med School stage a comeback
drive to defeat Joyner-1, 53-50, in
an overtime battle. Lineberger
had 19 points for the winners but
Arlis Denny of the losers turned
out to be the day's top scorer
with 27 points. BVP edged Law
School in a mild upset, 32-25. TMA
had too much class for Joyner-2
and ran up a 32-9 halitime lead to
win going away 63-22. Gene Smith
had 20 points for the winners. In
the fourth game in the dorm
league Dental School' "dropped
Alexander 51-42.
A small nucleus is forming
around a few talented thinclads,
with the distance men showing up
well in practice. Three boys who
were outstanding in cro'ss country
and indoor track have just about
secured the top spots in each of
the distance runs. Ben Williams in
the 880-yard run, Everett W-hatley
in the mile, and Richard Rigsbee
in the two-mile are the top runners.
field goal accuracy with 44.2 per
cent, also second at charity row
with 72.8. Wake Forest, with its
75.6 per cent free throw shoot-
'fllWilll BMMK.atf
for his outstanding performan
ces this -past week-end in the
Atlantic Coast Conference
Swimming Tournament. Krepp
took firsts in the 100-yard and
200-yard backstrokes and was
a member of the winning med
ley relay team.
We want him to drop
TOWN & CAMPUS and pick out
a shirt to his liking compli
ments of the house
We want the old and young
alike of Chapel Hill to make
TOWN & CAMPUS their head
quarters for the finest in men's
clothing. Drop in today.
town a
CAMPUS
ft
mm
What young people are doing at General Electric
1. I OR TASTE...
bright, bracing
ever-fresh sparkle.
2. FOR REFRESHMENT...
a welcome bit
of quick energy that
brings you back refreshed.
10TTLED UNDER AUTHORITY Of THE COCA-COLA COMPANY Y
DURHAM COCA-COLA BOTTLING CO.
Duke Vill Hold
Football Clinic
DURHAM, March 16. Coach
Bill Murray and members of the
Duke University football staff will
hold a spring clinic for coaches
here Friday and Saturday as the
Duke gridders complete the 20 al
lotted days of off-season drills.
This informal event was started
three years ago and has attracted
high school and prep school
coaches from all parts of the south
and east.
BERMAN'S
KHAKI PANTS
2.98 and 3.93
ANVIL ARMY TYPE
CHINOS
4.93
BLUE DENIM
PANTS
2.98
CROSBY SQUARE
Black loafer 9.98
CROSBY SQUARE
Saddls (Oxfords;
Black and White
s Brown and White
9.98
New Black Loafers
$5.95
LEE RIDERS-Western
Were 4.50
Now 3.98
U. S. PRO KEDS
White Court King Oxfords 6.95
Other Tennis Oxfords 2.98
MEN'S PAJAMAS
New Shipment'
Bright new patterns
2.98
Black Gabardine Slacks
Ivy League 4.98
Huskies Moccasins
Were 5.00 Now 3.98
BERMAN'S
DEPT. STORE
Young engineer
is responsible for
design analysis
of $3,000,000
turbine-generators
The average large steam turbine-generator
costs $3,000,000 and takes tw o years to build.
It is one of the biggest pieces of electrical
equipment made. Yefits thousands of parts,
are put together as carefully as a fine watch.
Even a small change in design can affect the
stresses and vibration of the turbine, and
the way it performs. At General Electric,
several men share the responsibility of pre
dicting those effects before the turbine is
built. One of them is 29-year-old E. E.
Zwieky, Jr.
His job: analytical engineer
Here's what Ted Zwicky does. He takes
a proposed mechanical design feature, de
scribes it mathematically, breaks it down
into digestible bits, modifies it, and feeds it
to electronic computers. (It may take two
months to set up a problem; the computers
usually solve it in twenty minutes.) Then
Zwicky takes the answers from the com
puters, translates and interprets them so they
can be followed by design engineers.
23,009 college graduates at Genera Electric
. This is a responsible job. Zwjcky was readied
for it in a careful program of development.
Like Zwicky, each of our .23,000 college
graduate employees is given a chance to find
the work he does best, and to realize his full
potential. For General Electric believes this:
Whea young minds are given freedom to
make progress, everybody benefits the in
dividual, the company, and the country.
"WT 7- j-?T- syrs !
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r-V fj? y J-jJ? y 4 TED ZWICKY, B. S. in EE f.om die Uni-
, sy JSjTjFS vet-itv of New Mcxic o. "ld.-s of IV I
L'P A ,J'r jy yy' joined General I. lei trie alter a year j
yJf Jy y' t-ysd' 'n tiie .dy, f ompleted ,ur dvam:ed j
f( Engineering Program in 1950.
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