Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 16, 1941, edition 1 / Page 3
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1 1 H He Witt o i r n u f f I 1 V I j. 1 Jb J Ja Q2 Tar Heel Harriers Seek Sixth Title UNC Favored In Tomorrow's Circuit Meet Kappa Sigs, Town Team Vie Tomorrow The championship mural tag f octball game will be played , tomorrow afternoon on the mural field at 4 o'clock when the Kappa Sigs, champions of the fraternity league, and the Town team, champion of the dormitory league, clash. The Kappa Sigs reached the championship finals by licking Zeta Psi, 13-12, and Town gained its berth by beating Graham, 8-0. Statistics By Bill Woestendiek The Southern conference cross coun try championship will be at stake in College Park, Maryland, at 11:45 to morrow when the defending cham pions from Carolina attempt to annex their sixth consecutive conference ti tle. . , The Tar Heel harriers are favored to retain their title but individual hon ors and second place are wide open. Rich Van Wagoner, Doug Moody and Mike Wise of Carolina; Bill Chewn ing of VMI; Hank Profenius and Windy Lockwood i Duke; Stirling Kehoe and Gene Ochsenreiter of Mary land and Phil Thomas of William and for the individual crown. Maryland! is figured to be the runner-up to Caro- j lina. A strong VMI team, champions of Virginia, must be considered the dark horse outfit of the meet. Dangerous Men Arthur Truxes, Frank Hardy, Tom Jewett, Chuck Howe and Sim Nathan are the other Tar Heels running to morrow. Truxes and Hardy, along with the top three, have been pacing the Tar Heels all season and will be very dangerous. Profenius and Lockwood .oi Duke were both beaten by Van Wagoner and Moody in the Carolina-Duke dual meet, but are always dangerous. Och senreiter and Kehoe are the main hopes of the Terps.. Carolina shut out Maryland in an' earlier meet, but the Terrapins have improved immensely since and defeated Duke badly in a recent meet. Carolina boasts of an undefeated record and will be attempting to main tain its perfect season!s record as well : triumphs. Captain Wise has been in the infirmary, but will probably be set to run tomorrow. Coach Dale Ban son is leaving early this morning with his squad of eight men. William and Mary and Richmond, which is sending only three men, are not considered to" be very dangerous ii :1 'PViil TVinmas- over ine iuux-muc " - i , rii-'ll XT j W & M, is a dangerous man for indi- Schliell otlll IN eeuS vidnal honors. Ochsenreiter, ace sen i. lira . . s - . ..- .' r -rwM. -, . li 3 'Duke's Chances Rise For Rose Bowl Bid J (Continued frorm ftrti page) XAvT?7 "nd iourtn out were never aoie xo muster enougn scoring pyer to push over a touchdown. - - I j Duke broke into the scoring column early in the second period -f after Harry Dunkle had kicked, the Tar Heels out of a hole from ! ' the two-foot line. Steve Lach, Duke's All-American halfback, who j provea toaay tnat ne deserves xnai name, uasueu jaius u a it- verse on the scoring play. Pro thro' : t '. V k ""HI JOE AUSTIN, with the help of a block by Frank O'Hare, who is re moving Steve. Lach from the play, gets down to Duke's six-yard line in the second quarter. On the play Austin lacked one foot , of making a first down for the Tar Heels. Austin, who played one of the best games of, any Tar Heel back, was stopped by Piasecky on this play, This climax ed a drive from the Carolina 35 during which O'Hare and Austin com bined talents to push the ball down to the six-yard marker. Duke suffer ed a five-yard penalty after it took over the ball and Lach kicked out to Johnny Pecora who made a 20-yard return. Photo by Morton Tar Heels Furnish Thrills for Fans By Fighting Devils to the Finish Duke UNC First downs 13 11 Rushing 13 10 Passing 0 1 Net yards rushing 194 186 Yards lost '27 7 Net yards forward 24 25 Forwards attempted 8 11 Forwards completed 1 3 Behind line 0 1 Intercepted by 1 2 Yards interception returned 1 20 Punts, number 7 7 Returned by . 7 4 Punts, average 45.6 42.6 Kickoffs, number 4 t 1 Returned by 3 1 Kickoffs, average 37.5 50 Yards kicks returned 81 57 Punts 61 32 Kickoffs 20 25 FumbIes 12 Ball lost 0 Penalties 5 6 Yards -lost on penalties 35 30 Summary scoring kicked the extra point. Siegfried Scores Duke's second score, which came in the first part of the third quarter, was the result of a 35-yard advance on sev-jline. Blue Devils drove down to the two-yard line before Carolina stiffened and held and again when Steve Lach kicked out of bounds on the Tar Heels' two-foot ior runner, will lead the Terps in their effort to outrun Carolina. Bob Condon, Jud Lincoln, Stan Kihn, Bob Mont gomery, Stewart Cooley and Ted Stell are the other Terrapin runners who will be at their best for tomorrow's performance. . Van Wagoner and Moody have tak en turns winning the Tar Heel meets this season, while "Little Hot" Wise has always been close on their heels. Arthur Truxes and Frank Hardy will round out the "Big Five," and if this quintet of runners lives up to past records, the Tar Heels will continue their dominance of the conference hill and dale meets. Hockey Tourney For Coeds Starts November 25 Workers for Game Herman Schnell announced last night that he still needs workers ushers, gatemen and fence guards for the Virginia game Thursday. Anyone interested should see him in his office 307 Woollen from 9, to 11, 12 to 1, and 3 to 4 o'clock. Mural Schedule HANDBALL Tomorrow Bete Theta Pi No. 2 vs. Alpha Kappa Delta. Tuesday Mangum vs. Med School. r - WATER POLO Tomorrow 5 o'clock: Steele vs. BVP and Pi Kappa Alpha vs. SAE. Tuesday-5 o'clock: Grimes, vs. Ay cock and Pi Lambda Phi vs. DKE. Pos. UNC LE Hodges Sieck Nowell Suntheimer - Faircloth White Richardson Austin Corn RHv Dunkle j FB O'Hare Score by perysds: North Carolina 0 Duke 0 Scoring touchdowns: Morgan, Lach, Siegfried. Points after touchdowns: Prothro 2. Substitutes : North Carolina Ends : LT LG C RG RT RE QB LH . Burns Barnett Goddard McDonough Prothro T. Davis Lach Siegfried 0 7 0 13 0 0 020 Rival Students Tell Each Other Where to Go By Sylvan Meyer DUKE STADIUM, Durham, Nov. 15 Would anybody volunteer to write this story? Can anybody write anything but a trite lead for a game like the one at Duke today. We can only say that a valiant Car olina team, fighting, twisting, plung ing, exhibiting better football than in any game this year, gave the blue devils a young fit lost on steady drives, bad breaks, and the hungry need for a final scoring punch when poised on the rim of pay dirt. An hour and a half before game time 300 people were in the mammoth duke stadium but when the -whistle finally blew 45,000 people jumped to their feet to watch a badly tossed lateral spoil Carolina's much rehearsed "coup de Tn Reciprocal yells sprang from either side of the field as the opposing stands told each other where the other could go for a tropical vacation. Sun in Eyes Seems the tobacco-fed lads always nlant Carolina men at an undesirable nart of the stands . . . sun in their eyes, I however, didn't stop Carolina's inde- off. Also glaring was the fact that DUKE fatiguable fans from yelling themselves -they stood not while the UNC Alma piayer no arse, anu reu aim wuue uuu iiuixc i"iw;i na.o f-"j because although licked in score, the Tar Heels fought and scratched to the last, providing thrills aplenty for the admittedly thrill-hungry Chapel Hill spectators. " "Tarzan," vociferous defender of Carolina cheering made his first ap pearance of the current season with en plays. Winston Siegfried supplied the scoring power from the two-foot line. Prothro again kicked the goal. The third score came a few minutes later when Tom Davis fired a spot pass to Ralph Morgan. The drive start ed from the Carolina 35 and the scor ing play from the Duke 41. Prothro's kick was wild. There's no doubt that Carolina play ed its best game of the year. Even better than the Fordham game, but scoring punch inside the Devils' 10 yard line was lacking. The Tar Heels threatened no less than six times. Once they were stopped on the five yard line, another time on the 14-yard line and twice on the seven-yard line.. O'Hare Stars Carolina star of the day was Frank O'Hare. who after changing to full back for the third game of the season, Duke TTo sDarked nearly every Carolina drive Akax niacin , , with his running and played a Dig part in the Tar Heels' defense. It was easi ly O'Hare's finest game of his career. But Frank wasn't the only Carolina Smith ! man who stood out for the Tar Heels. Dick Sieck, Carl Suntneimer, uave Barksdale, Joe Austin, Shot Cox, Gwynn Nowell and Stu Richardson all played top-notch football. In fact, the entire Carolina line probably played its finest defensive game of the season. That can be seen from the statistics, for the Tar Heels gained practically the same number of yards as did the Blue Devils. Great Punting by Dunkle ' Not to be overlooked, however, in - 1UL W VC UYCIIUUI"-", . , Stallings, Turner; Tackles: Michaels, tne performance of the Tar Heels was Heymann; Guards: Marshall, Cheek, the unusuany "last ditch" punting of Wolf, Byrum; Center: Benton; Backs: Harry Dunkle. Nearly every time he Barksdale, Pecora, Serlich, Cox, Jr-(pUnted he was backed up deep in the dan. Carolina end zone, and it was either Duke Ends: Morgan, Piasecky, get the kick off or. . . . Not once did Gantt; Tackles: Redding, Nanni, he ail to get as much as 55 to 60 yards Thompson; Guards: Poole, Lipscomb; from the point from which he was kick Backs: Long, Storer, Bokinsky, Hoov-,ing er. I Twice in the first quarter he kicked Officials Buck Cheves (Georgia), Carolina out of danger once when the referee; Gus Tebell (Wis.), umpire; Maurice Frew (W&L), head linesman; Gabe C. Hill (Wofford), field judge. Carolina's most threatening quarter was the fourth. Four times the Tar Heels reached scoring territory, but each time something happened and the Ray Wolf's men lost the balL Carolina Drives The initial fourth quarter scoring opportunity was engineered by Joe Austin. The drive started from the 26-yard line, the point to which Pinky Elliot ran the kickoff after Duke had scored its third touchdown. Austin got away for a 22-yard jaunt on a fake . kick to start the drive. The play was one of the best executed Carolina plays of the day. Dunkle faked a kick and held the ball out behind him. Austin grabbed it and was off while two' Duke linemen piled into Dunkle. The play carried to the Duke, 48. - A pass from Austin to Fred Stallings moved the ball to the Duke 36 and a first down. In two plays O'Hare cracked the line to the 26, but here the first drive stopped when Corn failed to gain, and three passes netted one yard. After O'Hare made a first down to the 26 Dic Sieck left the game for the first time. He was slightly in jured, but was able to get off the field under his own power. Cox Shines The second fourth quarter drive started when Shot Cox returned Steve Lach's punt from the Carolina 38 to the midfield marker. O'Hare on two plays made a first down to the 41, and then Cox shot off left end and fought his way to the 16-yard line. Carolina really appeared on the move to a score, but the drive. ended after Cox, O'Hare and Serlich got the ball to the seven yard line. Dunkle with a slight injury left the game for the first time after Cox's run. Dave Barksdale intercepted Tom Da vis' pass when he attempted to cross up the secondary by passing with the ball on the Duke 16-yard line to give Carolina another chance in the fourth See VARSITY FOOTBALL, page 1 Individual Statistics nenty oi inreais . . Threat after threat and still no score oieglliea . . . if we 'could only get that final Storer punch . i . duke's big hand to Sunthei- Davis mer as he left the field when injured ionff . Stallings has glue on his fingers"rrwnl that's two out of two cut into the sideline grass CAROLINA Barksdale O'Hare . and the a rebel yell and general strain of the shavedT Chi Phi noggins ... catchy vocal chords. ... Tarzan is an omen of catching by Barksdale but out of bounds Carolina belli per ence. thoueh. so may- . . . what is tnis incomplete pass: . . be his presence has supernatural emi-' should have been called a fumble oi ran V- 1 i. J intanfi'nnolllT rrwin Tl Ofl hv t.VlPSe I AUSllll nence. uuvious inat ue uas uuiievucu . jukumvubuj e - . opinions . . . but then we're prejudiced ' oenicn the blue devil at any rate. To see what it feels like .to go the entire distance the duke team walks the length of the field before the kick- band playing "Anchors Aweigh1 and forming an anchor on the field . . . our band seems better somehow Next week Carolina's coed hockey teams will begin an elimination tour nament to determine the champions of the campus. - Monday afternoon will begin the play when Kenan meets Alderman Smith. The AD Pi's clash on Tuesday afternoon and then playbill be halted until the return to Carolina after the Thanksgiving holidays. On Tuesday, November 25, cm u tangles with Spencer and Wednesday Pi Phi engages Mclver. The semi-finals round will begin November 27 with the winner of the AD Pi contest encountering the win ner of .the Kenan - Alderman-Smith battle. The second round of the semi finals will see the champs of the .Wrr-rhi O matched against the champion of the Pi Phi-Mclver game December 2. The winners in the above matches will then meet December 3. t -A 1 v V t ? Sweaters Yellow, Camel, Blue & Maroon Carolina Men's Shop U i i ....... fe' VV -' A ...vi-! - 1J6&2I2 1 M ? . ---- Z-tl , J 4 v Cox Corn Hodges Totals Times Car. Yds. Gd. Yds. Lost Net Yds. Gd. Ave. 8 63 2 61 7.6 19 64 2 62 3 2 6 8 2 1.0 13 54 9 45 3 8 28 0 28 3.5 50 215 r 21 194 3.9 2 3 0 3 1.5 14 63 2 , 61 4.4 5 25 0 25 5.0 10 50 0 50 5.0 1 1 0 .1 i.o 8 ' 42 , 5 37 4.6 1 10 1 i.o 1 6 0 6 6.0 42 193 7 186 4.5 puleeze make it a first down ... if the grass had been planted in the other direction that would have done it . . . Nowell breaking through and stopping duke on our two . . . backfield is liter ally hurling itself at the duke line. . . See COLOR, page U Trousers Flannels, Coverts & Tweeds Carolina Men's Shop rx- niTVKi F'S GREAT KICKING got the Tar Heels oat of two holes in the first quarter and he is shown i tilniT off a 43-yard kick alter me iar iieeis nai oeen pusneu io i.tt-Wi t UJ here Selun Players shown are Dunkle kicking, Frank O'Hare, No. 40, blocking L. E. Dempsey, No. 66, Duke fin-corner doo . j CaroIina piayer sandwiched between Jim Smith, No. 40, Duke end, and Bob McDon end; Joe Aus n, . Karmazillf No 42 Duke tackle Photo by Morton During the day a football hero night as navnilv dressed gentleman To Be At Your Best, Look Your Best Community . Cleaners 31 l l
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 16, 1941, edition 1
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