Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 23, 1952, edition 1 / Page 3
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The Daily Tar Heel Page Three I QGIYI To mrcjniniiiaj Thursday, October 23, 1952 Soccer Staves OJUL W Win By J Down In Front By Biff Roberts On Publicity Directors IT'S ALWAYS INTERESTING tr iv . , r,f mr- nt, U to l00k ver the footbaU bro- ZZ Zrj:1? fee how the rts publicists I .. rtf ;,7SJir 3 1UnD Pick great things for the strong points and PoinSg treme there are those whxch flood the pages with tears of rernoxJe L!1Z j!l yS Wh WiU be make it off the field cti. lei j aiiit. Notre Dame, whose fine cnarVi Wo-l- t , . . uccuiy nas ions heen a1 member of the crying-towel school, has put out a brochure that xaces uic M udllun realistically, it's not too full of enthusiasm nor shackled with pessimism. You get a pretty good picture of the fight ing Irish by reading it. To begin with the Irish have 31 lettermen bark from ,r-c team which won seven, lost two, and tied one. Such stars as Jim Mutscheer, Bob Toneff, John Pettibon, Billy Barrett, Johnny Mazur, and Paul Burns are no longer around. Of course, the vast number of lettermen returning can be contributed in part to the use of the platoon system, but still they have 31 to our 21 returning for duty. Questions and Answers BEFORE THE SEASON started the Notre Dame question marks were at end, tackle, and quarterback. Coach Leahy has had his quarterbacking problem eased, however, by the work of Ralph Guglielmi. Guglielmi has sparked the Irish to two wins (Texas and Purdue), one narrow loss (Pittsburgh), and a tie (Pennsylvania) He is only a sophomore but his generalship and passing have eased Leahy s situation tremendously. The end problem seemed so acute last spring that Art Hunter, the regular offensive center last year, was switched to the wing post. The greatest loss was that of Jim Mutscheller, a great pass catcher, who caused us so much damage in our games with Notre Dame last year and in 1950. The tackles too, offered a little worry, Leahy had big men to put into the position, but all were green f: r fer Sf' SMfMli JOHN LATTNER hard-running Irish halfback Football Team Works Long And Hard In Last Practice By Tom Peacock North Carolina's football team worked long and hard yesterday in its last ronsrh nrnrtip hefnr His answers have come from such behemoths as 212-pound Fred meeting powerful Notre Dame at Poehler, 203-pound Joe Bush, another 203-pounder, Bob Kelly, and South Bend in one of the country's 203-pouna noo neaay. leadine intersectional battles. The euard positions are nrettv well handled with team caDtain i rrn r.i tt- i; .Tsrlc Alessandrini. Tom Seaman, and Vireil Bardash well exDeri- Ane ANOtre ame-dround con- fenced. With Hunter shifted from center to end the pivot position test m be the Bist ame between wos lft fnirlv wpII nnen. Jim Rchrader. on offense, and Dick a miawesiern ana souxnern team. " j -x ' - 1 mi. - m Ti-.i. 1 i . Texas, a southwestern school, and " TTT1 T7. i 1 1 T- 1 wane ruies i. nas yiayeu oayior Backing the Backfield so far this year and both Bis Four teams came out on the short THE BACKFIELD, with Guglielmi pleasing so well at quarter- end cf the score, back, hasn't bothered Leahy too much. Neil Worden, who was last year's higb. scorer , and leading ground gamer, is back at tullDacK At richt halfback the Irish have one of their most powerful runners ; ion--itnri .TnVinnv Ttt.ner and also a eood reserve in Paul Hi, SJ twmiv w t Rpvnolds. The left half offers more of a problem because or mex perience but Frank Paterra and Joe Heap are both capable runners, nf the nlavers are young, so even wiui oi leiienucu iC- tumincr tv, Notre Dame boosters still "like to point out that they are building for future years. Admittedly they are but, as has been i t odV.tr anH romnanv. thev haven't done at all a pisascmi. sen. pi. ioc " r bad this season. u lost one this year, however, oA ?c mp nf the touehest m tne counxry ana aiuiuu. thP Trih have done well thus far the worst is yet to come. After Carolina s offense is workmg .. ,ri. cm miicf fanp Naw. Michigan btate, much smoother smce last weeks rMa. Tnwa and Southern Cal hardly a breathing schedule, narrow defeat by Wake Forest, Notre Dame is a heavy favo rite, but if results of previous years mean anything, the Tar Heels will give the Irish as hard a fight as they have had all year. Notre Dame beat Texas, 14-3, the week after the Longhorns came to Chapel Hill and took Carolina in its opener, 28-7. The Irish have been tied and have perience he needs at split-T quarterback. The North Carolina . defense continued to work on Notre Dame plays that line coach Jim Camp brought back from a scouting trip. Leading the defense was tackle and last week's game captain, Tom Higgins, who was nominated by a screening board as a candi date for All-America. Higgins is considered by Carolina head coach Carl Snavely as the best man on the field in the Tar Heel Wake Forest game. Carolina's pass defense went through a thorough drill in pre paration for the excellent passing of Notre Dame's quarterback, Ralph Guglielmi. The defensive secondary had a few lapses last week, allowing the Deacons to get a first down on the Carolina one yard line once, but is ex pected to be ready for the Irish. Randolph, Russell Star For Carolina By Paul Chaney The Carolina soccer squad staved off a fourth quarter rally by the Virginia Cavaliers to take a well-earned 3-2 victory yester day afternoon on Fetzer Field. The Tar Heels scored once in the second period and twice more in the third stanza, before the visi tors from Virginia came up with two tallies in the final quarter. After a scoreless first period, Carolina got their first marker late in the second stanza. Center forward Gerry Russell, high scorer on last season's eleven, made the score, with the aid of a neat assist by inside left Rennie Randolph. , Shortly after the half Randolph added the second Tar Heel tally. A moment later Rawleigh Tre main racked up a goal to give the local booters what seemed to be a comfortable lead. Virginia got its first score mid way in the fourth period. Nils Trulsson scored it on a penalty boot. With less than five minutes left to play in the game, Trulsson added a second goal to narrow the Tar Heel lead to one point. Randolph, Tremain, Russell, and Harry Pawlik all played well in the Carolina forward wall. Co Captain Barry Kalb did some outstanding defensive work from his left fullback spot. Goalie and Co-Captain Ben Tison played well also. He shut the Cavaliers out for the first three periods. Trulsson was the whole show offensively for the visitors. Until he got hot in the last quarter the Tar Heel defense held the Cavaliers at bay. Goalie McGin ley, and fullbacks Blanchard and Vest were outstanding on defense for the losers. This is the first victory of the season for Coach Al Moore's Tar Heels. They dropped a 1-0 de cision to State in the season s opener last week. This Is Virginia's second loss of the season. The Cavaliers were shut out by Duke, 4-0, at Durham last week. meet Roanoke College on Mon day and the Washington and Lee Generals on Tuesday. The Tar Heels return here for a scrim mage against the Cherry Point Marines on Oct. 30. Virginia G LF RF CH RH OR IR C IL OL McGinley Vest Hutchinson Caskee Dudley Moutinho Mundee Krusen Trulsson Lederer Score by Quarters: Virginia Carolina Carolina Tison Kalb Younts Cole Hopkins Barnes Tremain Pawlik Russell Randolph 2 3 4 0 0 22 1 2 03 URALS TODAY'S SCHEDULE Tag Football 4:00 Field 2. Steele vs. Alexander-it: Field 3. Everett-1 vs. Mangum-1: Field 4, Bet-2 vs. Chi Phi; Field 5. PiKA Phi Gam-2. 5:00 Field 2, Aycock vs. Emerson; .Field 3, Manley-1 vs. Joyner-1: Field 4i "PI Lamb vs. Phi Gam-1; Field 5, KA -vs. Phi Delt-2. ! Volleyball 4:00 Court 1. DKE-1 vs. TEP-i; Court 2. Graham-1 vs. Old West. : 5:00 Court 1. ZBT vs. Delta Psi: Court 2. Stacy-2 vs. Everett-1. TUESDAY'S RESULTS Tag Football Hmerson def. Med School-1, 18- Chi Tsi def. Theta Chi. 33-0 Zetes-2 def. Phi Delt Chi( 21-0 Phi Kap Sig def. ATO, 6-0 "Sigma Chi-1 def. TEP. 34-0 ' Med School-2 def. Everett-2. 1-0 $igm Nu-1 def. Lamb Chi. 12-0 A Like Good Food? Then You'll Certainly Like . . . MICHAEL'S GRILL fez Reverse English NOTRE DAME has come along well in the early stages of the season with their players performing better J Irish have shown their chlorophylic complex m cm .of tt gaxnes especially in the loss to Pittsburgh and the first half play in tne especially in uie apt in0 Lonehorn territory until Texas game when they didn t get oLong the third period, aui iney . ua1f nnd almost LUG O-x-v-'' i iP wav they beat Texas in rallied to take rm oeiuxe uf, -- ; dirted a not- But before the so? J eTas t oW and the too-brieht picture for the Irish. The scneauie w season was called what "could ,0 0" fulfill cause of the Irish's surprising play little . has . Daxnerg OVr e this W LX1 lid V w Saturday. Send The Doily Tor Heel Home Freshman Marshall Newman has concentrated on line plays, and this week's practice plus last Saturday's game should give the Swimming Practice Swimming Coach Dick Jamer son has announced that 30 boys reported for the Swimming team meeting yesterday. Practice be gins at 3:45 today in Bowman Gray pool. Anyone who missed the meeting and would like to former single wing star the ex- come out is invited. mam "&J . .... u mm rrrrrnT granger pmrkia roc TODAY ALSO COLOR NOVELTY "7 MM JOCKEY Carolina takes to the road next week. Leaving Chapel Hill Sun day they journey to Virginia to mv it :f " $ i ''v - A f k sz '" ' t 'A -' if S - . - " 1 t , , - - s'l , - ; is V! ?i I JANTZEN SWEATERS OF WASHABLE KHARAFLEECE WITH THE LOOK ; AND FEEL OF COSTLY CASHMERE! 11.95 pullover . Looks so rich, feels so soft, cloudlight, luxuriously 'warm! Thrives on soap-suds, keeps its vibrant new colors, shrugs off wrinkles! You'll want more than pne in silver, navy, golden, camel, sky, and russet. Sizes 36 to 46. llt j l iif MMfirihBMiittiinaitfiriM-Tirrfrnnritfiil.li nmm f -mm See how you can get a Quicker, Closer shave in LESS TIME than any other method, wet or dry JUST THE GIFT FOR CHRISTMAS Factory Rep. In Our Store Thurs. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 23, 1952, edition 1
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