Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 27, 1951, edition 1 / Page 4
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PAGE FOUR THE DAILY TAR HEEL TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 27, 1951 - Duke Whips Carolina ,79-7 Eight? Tar Heel Loss For By Zane Bobbins ""-:. The Big Bay Blues of Duke University applied the finishing touches to an already-miserable season for the Carolina footballers Saturday afternoon at Duke Stadium by handing them a 19-7 lick ing. -: The Tar Heels closed out the 1951 campaign with an unimpres sive 2-8 record, the worst since 1944's 1-8 mark. Duke took an early lead when : james utea; smitn ouiiea one yard over right tackle for a six pointer after seven minutes and 15 seconds had elapsed in the first period. Smith had set up the Uachdpwn one play earlier when h had taken a pitch out from Quarterback Jerry Barger and scooted 39 yards around his own left "end, going all the way to the Carolina one-yard line where he was chased out of bounds, Carolina got the ball on the Duke 44 early in the second pe riod and drove all the way to the 10-yard line on five plays. Then, after picking up a first down, a buck lateral play back fired and Carl Holben plopped on the ball for the Blue Devils to squelch the drive. The. Blue Dukes managed to cling to their 6-0 lead throughout the first half but .the fired-up Tar Heels came back with blood in their eyes after intermission. After Larry (Peanut) Parker had engineered an early drive that gave out of gas at midf ield, the fine punting of Bud Wallace put the merry men 'of Murray in a hole deep in their own territory and Carolina got the ball on the Blue Devil 44 after Glenn Wild had punted out on second down. Then the Tar Heels struck sud denly. After Bob White had pick ed up 12 yards at center, Connie Gravitte passed to Tom Adler for a first down on the Duke 21. Then Gravitte picked out Bud Wallace on the Duke 10 and dropped a perfect pass into the arms of the huge end. Wallace shook off Half back Worth Lutz at the eight and hot-footed it into the end zone. Abie Williams' kick from place ment was perfect his 16th con version in 17 tries and the Caro linians led, 7-6. Determined Duke was not to be denied, however. After taking the ensuing kick-off, - the Blue Devils marched 63 yards- in" 14 plays to go ahead, 13-7. : ; The Blues added their final tal ly in the last quarter on another 68-yard drive that was climaxed by Piney Field's six-yard trip around left end. Ray Green miss (See FOOTBALL, Page 8) Br iff Leads Carolina JVs To 51-41 Win The Carolina junior varsity football team uncovered some thing its varsity brothers have been lacking all season, a brill iant offense, and the underclass men romped to a 51-41 victory over Duke's jayvee on Thanks giving Day. Some 6,Q00 fans sprinkled" mas sive Duke Memorial Stadium to witness the annual Turkey Day contest. They saw the highest scoring game in the history of Duke Stadium, and , a fourth quarter, that .was straight from the movies. 54 points were scored in the last period .which saw Car olina go in with a safe 31-7 lead, and then have to battle for their very, lives before a tremendous Duke surge. .: Louis Britt, sophomore, Tar Baby tailback from Glen Cove, New York, tallied three times, and Maurice Young, a junior from Belief onte, Pa. scored twice. The game's big star was Duke freshman Charlie Niven, a 160 pounder from Wilmington, who scored four touchdowns for the Blue Imps, three times in the last quarter. It was the long runs by Niven that kept Duke in the ball game. "Score by periods: Carolina 12 13 6 20 51 Duke 0 . 7 0 34 41 Touchdowns: Duke Niven 4, Mozin go. Eller. Carolina Britt 3, Young 2, Liberati, Medlin, Motta. Points after touchdown: Duke Sebastian, 5. Caro lina Marcinko 2. Foy Makes All South Inside right Eddie Foy has been elected io the All South soccer learn and will play with the Southern squad in the annual North-South soccer game in Philadelphia on Dec. 8. , . The Tar Heel senior has played excellent soccer for the three years and was elected co-ceptain this past season by his teammates. Suwi sonite "7f- JLuggage Ma tched Sets -FOR- i : EVERY MEMBER OF THE FAMILY!! m irm i r a t t 5 ! J tiHI; UNCCa gers Qbeir With i Citadel Dec. 1 r With the season's opener against the Citadel only two weeksawayy Coach Tom Scott's Carolina basketball team is in its final stage of preparation. The Tar Heels miss the services of Co-Captains Hugo Kappler, a former All-Southern Conference star, and Charlie Thorne from" the first team. .Many seasoned re serves, are also missing from early drills. j However, the Tar . Heels will floor one of the fastest and tallest teams here in recent years. Only one senior, Captain - Howard Deasy, is in the starting five. Teamming with the lanky guard are forwards Bud Maddie and Jack Wallace, guard Vince Grimaldo and center Paul Likens. Maddie, Wallace and Grimaldi are rising juniors, while Likens is a freshman from Elkhart. Ind. The- tentative starting five averages six feet, five inches in height, with young Likens, an All-State high school star four inclies taller,. Wallace, Grimaldi, Maddie are the fastest Tar Heels. -'' Century-Fox ' lx 1 14 Carat. liV 2& Musical Salute! iMITZI. Ipf ifw T DALE: ; ; ' singW so swelll ' I shufflm' along! with Una Merkel naymona waiDurn . s Prdduced by ' ! ; d V; f? I : GEORGE IFSSFI! f i Directed by LLOYD BACON Screen Play by , , WALTER BULLOCK CHAFES O'NEAL ...GLADYS LEHMAN from artery by Albert and Arthur Uwi$ and Edward Thompson .'- - : r HHUfr ilttti a- .'111 i 'I i f l r i .. "I 1 I it - A -
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 27, 1951, edition 1
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