Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 3, 1946, edition 1 / Page 3
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SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1946 Pasre Three THE DAILY TAR HEEL Justice Journeys 73 Yards Harriers Top Georgia Tech In Dual Meet Six Runners Cross Finish Line Together (Special to the Daily Tar Heel) Atlanta, Nov. 2 Coach Dale Ran son's Tar Heel harriers continued their winning way at the expense of Geor PORT For Initial Tar with IRWIN SMALLWOOD Heel Score THEY WERE talking about the Tar Heels here todav hpfnrP game time, and with plenty of respect in their voices. As was the case against Navy two weeks ago the weather was near perfect, with more than one person in his shirt sleeves. The turf was dry, the sky was hazy, and there were some 35,000 fans waiting to see what Charlie Justice and the Carolinians were going to do to Tennessee, and vice versa. There was plenty to talk about. What about these Vols? Would they be back on the ball after the shellacking Wake Forest handed them last week. Yes, said the loyal Tennessee rooters, although that affirmative was with a little hesitation, for East Tennesseeans have read full- well of the prowess of the Carolina Choo-Choo and Company. The Volunteer cheering section just lost their heads in the air for their vaunted Vols just ran out on the field for last-minute limbering-up exercises before the game gets underway. The big orange jerseys shone brilliantly in the sun, and the Tennessee lads look as though they mean business. At the same time, the Carolina band, attired in its bright blue uniforms, is sitting directly across the way 100 strong striking out with martial music regularly. And now they're filing out for a pre-game show. It is the first trip since before the war for the Carolina band and Earl Slocum, director. The following of the Tar Heels to this, their toughest game to date, re sembles somewhat the droves that made their way to Baltimore two weeks ago to see Carolina knock off Navy. They came by all conceivable means, car, bus, train and plane, with the team having arrived at 4 o'clock yesterday afternoon in time for a practice session here in the Tennessee stadium. ' One group of Carolina rooters, arriving by plane last night with yours truly, was holding a big discussion of the prospects in the Hotel Andrew Jack son in the wee hours this morning. Somebody mentioned the name of Blanchard, Doc I believe. "If we only had him," the guy said. "I can re member when I was at Carolina before the war and that guy used to about kill the SAE's when they played Sigma Nu in water polo." The cheering section of Carolina fans just let out a roar that could be heard five miles up the lazy Tennessee river. The Tar Heels just made their appearance on the field, clad in the dark blue jerseys and light pants. They go through the same pre-game workout, and Justice just got off a 60-yard punt and Max Spellman followed with a 70-yard boot. The Tar Heels fade out for their last pep talk, and we rushed through a few facts while across the way the Carolina fans come through with "We Don't Give a for Duke University." The last time Carolina defeated Tennessee was in 1936, when Ray Wolf beat the Vols, 14-7, in his first year of coaching at UNC. The year before Snavely's great 1935 team beat Tennessee, 38-13 Last year the Tar Heels were beaten, 20-6, making the series to date read eight wins for Tennessee, four for Carolina, and one tie. Earl Slocum mounts the podium in the middle of the field to direct the com bined Carolina and Tennessee bands in the National Anthem. They march off and in a minute the game will start. Ted Hazelwood is acting captain today and goes to the center of the field with Tennessee Captain Walt Slater for the coin toss. Tennessee wins the toss and will kick off. And they're off! It's halftime now, and we run over quickly the sensational happenings of this torrid first half here in Knoxville. During the first period, Tennessee completely dominated things, both run ning and passing. The Vols hit paydirt twice to hold a 13-0 lead as the first quarter ended. But the Tar Heels made a comeback, one never to be forgotten, even if the Vols take this ball game. It all started when Charlie Justice ran from deep punt formation through the entire Tennessee team for the first Carolina touchdown, injured Bob Cox adding the point. The Tar Heels kicked off, Tennessee punted, and Carolina started a sus tained drive from their own 46 over the goal to tie up the game. Walt Pupa's bulling, Bill Maceyko's passing, and Billy Myers' off-tackle slants led to the score. Cox did it again and the Tar Heels took the lead. Tennessee threatened on one long pass after that, but Jim Camp made a nice pass interception to stem the bid for a score. The half ended with Jack Fitch taking a 24-yard pass and running to the 28. Maceyko threw it. And the Carolina band made an outstanding performance between halves, as did the Tennessee band- WHEN YOU CAN'T SEE YOUR TREAD, SEE US! The Best Rubber And Workmanship Available Complete Bicycle Repair Service PATTERSON TIRE COMPANY WEST FRANKLIN ST. IT'S A SURE WINNER So Try This WEEKEND SPECIAL TASTY Black Walnut ICE CREAM Available in Insulated "Carry-home" Bags FARMERS DAIRY COOPERATIVE MMBAR AND RETAIL STORE W. Franklin Street Dia, F.33n i mm Myers Registers Second Touchdown (Continued from page 1) from there to go ahead at halftime. Walt Pupa made a first down through the middle. Maceyko missed a pass to Art "Weiner and then rifled one to Johnny Clements, who ran the ball to the Tennessee eight. Billy Myers was sent in for the do-or-die punch, and he cut off tackle for six yards on the first try. Pupa got one more and then Myers sliced off tackle again for the score, Cox booting, twice because of an offsides penalty, for the point that sent Caro- olina out in the lead. And just before, half time, Maceyko passed to Jack Fitch for 24 yards, and Fitch ran on to the Tennessee 28 just as the horn sounded. It was six minutes and 20 seconds into the third period that disaster struck and the Vols won the ball game, which was one of the best played in this or any other stadium in quite sometime. Carolina was on the 34 in Tar Heel territory, and on third down Justice punted to Slater on the Tennessee 22. Slater took the ball, slipped through to the safety, and got by Justice about 10 yards out from paydirt. as he faked a lateral to a man running with him. Pritchard kicked this time to make the score 20-14. Shortly after the touchdown, Car olina started on its own 19 and drove to the Tar Heel 49 before the threat was stymied by a pass interception. In the series of plays, Bob Cox made a sensational catch of a Justice pass just before being flipped out of bounds on the 49. The last chance for the Tar Heels was with about a minute and 10 sec onds to go. They were on their own four yard line, but Maceyko punted on first down and Tennessee took over to freeze out the remaining sec onds and win the ball game. Carolina's line, after the first few minutes of play, did a good job of stopping Tennessee on the ground with Ted Hazelwood, the acting cap tain, and Chan Highsmith leading the pack. : The starting lineup : Carolina Pos Tennessee Weiner . I.e. Hubbell Jarrell l.t. Huffman Strayhorn ' l.g. Price Highsmith c. Stephenson Varney r.g. Meyer Hazelwood r.t. Crawford Cooke r.e. Jordan Hartig q.b. Hillman Justice l.h. Slater Camp r.h. Mitchell Pupa f.b. Major Georgia Tech Trims Duke With Tricky Attack, 14-0 Engineers Tally in First Two Quarters; Broyles Stars in Razzle Dazzle Display By Bob Goldwater Duke Stadium, Nov. 2 A touchdown in each of .the first two quarters carried a strong Georgia Tech eleven to a 14-0 triumph over Duke here today in a homecoming clash played before 38,000 fans. ' Displaying a powerful offensive 17" "x" n X Dotn on tne ground ana xnrougn me First UeteQl Lir, the Yellow Jackets strengthened a claim to a post-season bowl invita tion by handing the Blue Devils their fourth defeat of the season. Directing the Tech razzle-dazzle operations from his quarterback post in the "T" for mation was Frank Broyles, whose triple-threat tactics led to both touch downs. Broyles performed most of the j passing, some of the running and made several sensational punts. First Score Almost the entire first quarter was played with Tech in possession of the ball in Duke territory. The Engineers scored midway during the quarter when Dick Bowen plunged over from the one-yard stripe after two passes to George Matthews had estab lished the scoring opportunity. John ny Mcintosh converted for a 7-0 lead. A fumble by Duke fullback Buddy Luper, giving the Engineers posses sion on the Blue Devils' 16-yard line, almost resulted in another Tech tally shortly after the start of the second period. Tech's second touchdown came in the second quarter when Mcintosh crashed over from one yard out after Broyles had passed to Matthews to set up the score. This time Bowen con verted and the score was 14-0. The Blue Devils spent the remain ing part of the game in fighting back, but to no avail. Just before the end of the first half, they pushed to the Tech nine but three passes into the end zone failed. In the final period the Blue Devils, with George Clark doing most of the carrying, reached the Tech two before losing the ball on downs. Broyles' sensational punting ap peared miraculous on two occasions. . Tenn. First downs . 12 Net yardage rushing JL257 Passes attempted 13 . Passes completed 7 Yards gained passing 108 Number of punts 6 Average distance punts 38 Number of punt returns 5 Yards punts returned 105 Number of kickoffs 1 5 Average distance kickoffs Yards kickoffs returned Number of penalties Yards penalized . 53 .147 . 6 . 60 UNC 11 187 9 4 74 9 39 3 117 2 57 74 4 30 Football Results Wake Forest 32 N. C. State 49 W&L 25 William & Mary 41 Clemson 14 Georgia 14 Richmond 19 Vanderbilt 19 Notre Dame 28 Cornell 12 Princeton 17 Yale 33 Syracuse 28 Rutgers 13 Army 19 Penn State 68 Holy Cross 21 Ursinus 13 Boston College 72 Ohio State 39 Illinois 7 Indiana 20 Michigan 21 Missouri 21 Texas 19 Arkansas 7 Oklahoma 14 Rice 41 So. California 43 California 47 UCLA 46 Oregon State 0 . Chattanooga 14 VMI 7 Davidson 6 Maryland 7 VPI 7 Alabama 0 Virginia 7 Auburn 0 Navy 0 Columbia 0 Penn 14 Dartmouth 2 Temple 7 Harvard 0 West Virginia 0 Fordham 0 Brown 19 gia Tech here this afternoon by trounc ing the Yellow Jackets, 15-49, on a low point scoring basis. Running over the 3.2 mile course in a slight drizzle, Captain Jimmy Miller, Jack Milne, Mark Bumham, Sam Ma gill, Alvin Smith and Walt Francis, all of Carolina, finished hands to gether in the time of 17:14 to give the Tar Heels their third victory in as many starts. Julian MacKenzie, an other Tar Heel, finished eighth by crossing the line in 18:35. First across for the Engineers were Couridion, who came in seventh in 17:44, and Hunts, the possessor of an 18:35 mark that enabled Him to fin ish ninth behind MacKenzie. Strait and Holden, running unof ficially for Carolina, crossed the finish line after Hunts in 18:44. Penn Military. 0 NYU 6 Northwestern 27 Iowa 0 Pittsburgh 6 ; Minnesota 0 Nebraska 20 SMU 3 Texas A&M 0 TCU 12 Texas Tech 6 Oregon 0 . Wash. State 14 St. Mary's 20 Stanford 0 Intramural Standings (For Week Ending November 3) Dorm White W Grads L Steele 1 1 . Brockwell Med Sch No. 2 Stacy Grimes Pharmacy Everett Dorm Red Aycock BVP Graham Med School No. Alexander Manley Miller Ruffin 1 Dorm Blue Lewis Mangum Law School Old East Emerson Independent Old West Frat Blue Beta No. 1 Phi Delt No. 2 7 5 4 3 4 2 1 0 W 7 4 4 3 1 0 0 0 w 6 5 4 3 3 1 0 W 5 5 " L 0 2 2 4 3 4 5 6 L 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 6 L 0 1 2 3 3 5 6 L 1 1 SAE No. 1 Chi Phi ATO No. 1 DKE No. 2 St. Anthony Frat White Zeta Psi Kap Sig No. 1 PiKA Phi Gam No. 1 Sig Nu No. 2 KA No. 2 ZBT Frat Green DKE No. 1 Phi Delt No. Beta No. 2 . SAE No. 2 Chi Psi , ATO No. 2 TEP Frat Red Sigma Chi Phi Gam No. 2 . Sigma Nu No. 1 Kap Sig No. 2 . KA No. 1 - Phi Kap Pi Lamb Delta Sig 5 2 3 1 2 W 6 3 3 2 2 2 0 W 5 4 4 2 2 1 1 W 7 2 4 4 3 2 1 0 1 4 3 5 4 L 0 1 2 3 3 4 5 L 1 1 2 2 3 5 5 L 0 2 2 3 3 3 4 6 Shortly before the first score he kicked out of bounds on Duke's one foot line and later registered a 56 yard quick kick that rolled dead on Duke's four. PRESCRIPTIONS FILLED o GLASSES REPAIRED o Durham Optical Go. 215 W. Mala St. Phone F-2141 Diretan SALES and REPAIRS On Watches and Jewelry Watch Crystals Fitted in One Hour. GODWIN Jewelry Company Beneath Sutton's Drag Stor BE COMFORTABLE RIDE IN A CAROLINA CAB DIAL 4811 DIAL I There's No MiSTEAK About It You can't buy You can't enjoy Better Steaks than our famous KANSAS CITY STEAKS ' QUALITY AT REASONABLE PRICES THE UNIVERSITY RESTAURANT Next to Post Office Clinched league crown. Last Performance Tomorrow Night at 8:30 P. M. The Playmakers Theatre LINDSAY & CROUSE'S PULITZER PRIZE COMEDY tot Of .He Uiniioe RESERVE SEATE NOW AT LEDBET TER-PICK ARD'S OR SWAIN HALL Dial -33ti
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 3, 1946, edition 1
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