Sunday October 2S, 1352 The Daily Tar Heel Page Tfcrea it n n p I air Inleels Sn II Winl Irish Backs Are Too Much For Overpowered Defense (.Continued from page 1) til the final minutes of the sec ond period with neither team able to do much with the ball. Most of the half was played near mid field with Notre Dame having somewhat the better of the play but still unable to get the ball deep into Carolina territory. But then with jonly a few minutes left in the half, the Irish nnWMn lm 4. T A TXT-1 ojjircu uic ucai k uj.ccm.ei. .n. vv cu lace punt out of bounds had given Notre Dame the ball on its own 25. After Dan Mainer had spilled alternate quarterback Ralph Guglielmi back to the 21, the home team began to move. With Guglielmi's passing lead ing the way, Notre Dame moved to the Carolina 34 yard line in eight plays. After an offside penalty had set them back to the 39 the Irish renewed the march. Guglielmi hit Heap on the 20 yard line and the Notre Dame halfback spun away from two tacklers and stumbled to the 10. Then the chunky quarterback ran to his left, spotted big Art Hunter in the end zone, and let the ball fly. Hunter made a diving catch to haul the ball in for the TD. Arrix also made his second try good and with just 16 seconds remaining the Irish had clinched a 14-7 half time lead. Carolina made the mistake of coming out one play too early in the second half. Williams kicked to open the period and Heap grabbed the ball on his own 16. Cutting to the east side line, Heap outran the Carloina team 84 yards for a touchdown. Only 10 seconds had elapsed in the half. Arrix made good again and it was 21-7, Notre Dame. v . The Tar Heels looked as though they might pull the same stunt which had carried them to their first period score. After tak ing the kickoff, Newman passed - to Keller on the Carolina 36. A long pass to Adler carried the ball to the Notre Dame 20 and perked up the few Carolina fans in the stadium but a penalty on HERE IT IS! Ulj Meetfte Boss! alec Guinness In ummw h hi. STAN LEY H OLLOWAY Produced by Michael Balcon A J. Arthur Rank Organization Presentation A Universal-International Release I- ' Si- mm l!liP?ilIliPIl I ni III : f i : ' ;4 1 N. ; '.IVi..1 & na NEXT TUESDAY & WEDNESDAY NIGHTS PARKVUE THEATRE Greensboro Road 5 Minutes from Chapel Hill the play made their joy prema ture. , Not to be denied, however, Newman got Larry Parker loose on a good pitchout play and the Carolina halfback, executing some exciting broken field running, danced to the Notre Dame 33 for a 34 yard gain. A penalty for illegal use of Notre Dame hands moved the Tar Heels 15 yards closer but then Newman's arm went erratic and after three straight pass plays failed the Irish took over on downs. The Notre Dame running at tack opened up full force then and with Lattner and Paul Rey nolds pacing the drive the Irish moved to the Carolina 13. From there Carey hit Lattner on the three. But then it seemed the Tar Heels might hold. ' The Carolina line knocked Tom McHugh back to the five only to have an offside penalty put the ball on the one: Carey tried to sneak it over and lost a half ' yard. Lattner got that back, but no more, on the next play, and on another try at the line got no gain. But with fourth down and one to go McHugh cracked over right i tackle for the fourth Notre Dame score. Arrix's kick was wide this time, however, and the Irish lead stood at 27-7 with 6:20 left in the third period. Notre Dame kicked it up to 34-7 shortly after the start of the fourth quarter. Lattner inter cepted a Newman pass on the ess Afeir G :-:::::;:::::-::: . h 'i i liiililllliiillilllli - Vv : With Moire D 4 E::$?2:":::::;::::::: 1- 5t:W5;::::::;:;:; i . - 5? ; - : ,w.:.,.,.v,,:,v,.; '"mm: f I vs-v..:.:::;.f., ' .: : rM''f4&?' - ?C ' ;"Vi It jt vwxv . ?Vf ro1' ' v . , ' , A FEW PRINCIPALS IN NOTRE DAME'S 34-14 WIN OVER CAROLINA Above left to right, is Notre Dame's speedy back. John Lattner. and Carolina's freshman star. Ken Keller. Lattner had a field day against the Tar Heels from his right half spot and at safety. To the left are two Notre Dame guards that proved to be a thorn in Carolina's side all afternoon. At the top is Tom Seaman, left guard who has been mentioned for. All-America, and underneath him is the Irish captain. Jack AlessandrinL who also is All American material. Below, left to right, is tackle Virgil Bardash, center Dick Szymanski, and tackle Joe Bush. Bardash and Bush, the "Big B's". have had excellent success at stopping opponents line plays, and were largely responsible for the Tar Heels being held to 32 yards rushing. Szymanski is one of the best centers in the Midwest. He was named on a good many all-opponent squads of teams that the Irish played' last year, and is a stalwart in the middle of the line for Notre Dame this year. With such a Conglomerations of stars, it is no wonder that the Irish swamped inexperienced Carolina. H.V-r-w.vvASvW:::: te:wwxw:-w: jjMjlig!jgiWgiijtilj Jl"' " " "" FLOWERS GIFTS IN ALL THEIR FALL GLORY FROM ALL OVER THE WORLD i THE BEST OF BOTH FOR YOUR SELECTION AT UNIVERSITY FLORIS ''Robbins Bldg. first play of the final period and returned it to the Carolina 40. Reynolds cracked to the 30 and two more plays brought another first down on the 15. After a penalty had dropped the Irish back to the 20, McHugh took a handoff and sliced through the line 20 yards for the last Notre Dame score. Arrix's kick made it 34-7. The second and final Carolina score came in the same fashion as the first. Lattner lost a Wallace punt in the sun and it bobbled off his shoulder into the arms of Bill Kirkman. With the ball on the 16, New man aimed at Ken Keller but missed. On the next play, how ever, the Carolina quarterback hit Benny Walser, standing on the one, and he stepped over for the score. Adler made good again, keeping his record perfect for the year and that ended the scoring, 34-14. The rest of the game found open substitution and neither team was able to move with consist ency. The Irish, in substituting, were penalized frequently for delaying the game and their penalties added greatly to their final total of 140 yards. Carolina lost but one fumble all afternoon, a great come down from last week's game in which the Tar Heels lost six to Wake Forest. But the team was still unable to match the Irish in strength. The Carolina offense was a little better than before, but the Notre Dame attack was still even better than that. STATISTICS Notre North Dame Caro. First Downs 21 7 Rushing Yardage 301 32 Passing Yardage 168 123 Passes Attempted 24 ?9 Passes Completed 15 11 Passes had Intercepted i '1 Punts 7 12 Punting Average 31.1 38.9 Fumbles Lost 4 1 Yards Penalized 140 87 LINEUPS: Notre Dame Left Ends: Penza, O'Neil. Cabral. Wei thman. Left Tackles: Varrichione, Palumbo, Poehler, Murphy. Left Guards: Seaman, Lee, T&ylor. Centers: Schrader, Szymanski, Frasor. Right Guards: Alessandrini, Mavraides. Ripht Tackles: Bush, Ready, Pasquesi, Bardash. Sight Endst Hunter, Kohanowich, Matz, Mangialardi. Quarterbacks: Carey, Guglielmi, Mar tin. Left Halfbacks: Heap, Flood, Whelan, Joseph, Galardo. Ripht Halfbacks: Lattner. Stephens, Reynolds, Psterra, Morrisey. Fullbacks: Worden, Arrix, Shannon, McHugh. North Carolina Left Ends: Kocornik, Norris, Newton. Left Tackles: Opitz. Higgins, Fredere, Perdue, Marcinko. Left Guards: Foti, Gregory, Seawell, Neville. Centers: Mullens, Hursh, Bruton, Kirk man. Right Guards: Patterson, Alexander. Right Tackles: Yarborough, McCreedy, F.ure. Right Ends: Adler, Mainer, Frye, Wal ser, Starner,' Quarterbacks: Newman, Bullock, Mot ta. Left Halfbacks: White, Deweese, Grav itte, Keller. Right Halfbacks: Parker, Lackey, Wil liams. Port, Ridenhour. Fullbacks: Wallace, Cooke, Wallin. Scoring summary: Notre Dame 7 7 14 7 Carolina 7 0 0.7 Notre Dame McHugh (2), Heap, Wor den. Carolina Adler, Walser. Badminton Tourney Held Tomorrow The Badminton Club sponsored badminton tournament starts to morrow night in Woollen Gym at 7. Everyone is asked to be prompt as the courts are available from 7-9 only. Those who haven't already entered may do so at the gym office tomorrow night. Courts will be available for people wish ing to play but not interested in entering the tourney. Soccer Team Takes Trip Tomorrow The University of North Caro lina soccer team, fresh from a good 3-2 victory over Virginia last week, take to the highways tomorrow and Tuesday for an invasion of Virginia. The .Tar Heels face Roanoke College in Salem on Monday and travel over to Lexington, Va., on Tuesday to meet Washington and Lee. The Generals have a strong team, while the Tar Heels will be favored over the Salem squad. Coach Alan Moore's tc m open ed the campaign two weeks ago with a 1-0 defeat from N. C. State, but rebounded to take the Cava lier match. Renny Randolph, a local boy with no previous soccer experience, has paced the Tar Heels with superlative play. Rawleigh Tremain, Gerry Rus sell, Dave Cole, Barry Kalb, Tommy Hopkins, Harry Pawlik, Ben Tison, Don Gladstone, Lou Patseavouras, Drew Patterson and Ronnie Younts have been other standouts. The Tar Heels return here for a practice match with the Cherry Point Marines next Monday. Every treaty signed at the UN must be brought before the U. S. Senate for approval. The UN helped Indonesia achieve her independence. to MURALS j Tomorrow's Football 4:00 Field 2, Connor vs Graham-2; Field 3, Alexander-1 vs Everett-2: Field 4, Everett-1 vs Stacy; Field 6, Cobb-1 vs Law School. 4:50 Field 2, AK Psi vs DKE-1: PMeld 3, SAE-1 vs Delt Sig Pi; Field 4. Gra-har-l vs Med. School-3; Field 5, Med School-4 vs Lewis. Tomorrow's Volleyball 4:00 Court 1. Theta Chi vs Beta-I. 5:00 Court 1, Chi Psi-4 vs KA. 7:00 Court 1. Med School-2 vs Stacy- 1: Court 2, Winston vs Med School-5; Court 3, Lamb Cht vs Phi Kap Sig-l: Court 4, Phi Delt-2 vs Phi Kap Sig-3. 8:00 Court 1, Phi Delt-1 vs Zeta Psi-2; Court 2, Phi Gam-3 vs SPE; Court 3, Phi Gam-2 vs Chi Phi; Court 4. Pi Kap Phi vs Chi Psi-1. Individual citizens can be help ful to the UN by writing to their Congresman. Congress must approve all ap propriation and implementing bills passed in the UN. Chess Club Holds Tourney Tomorrow A chess tourney sponsored by the chess club will be held to morrow night immediately after the 7:30 meeting in Woollen Gym. AU chess players are in vited including entries from both A and B flights. Secretary Robert Hubbard will- register entries at the 7:30 meeting. CLASSIFIEDS FOR RENT 3 ROOM APARTMENT with refrigera tor, stove, heat, hot water furnished. Private bath. Available Saturday Oct. 25. 426 Whitehead Circle. (1-C9467-2) Opportunities in Optometry Optometry is a profession offering special advantages to ambitious young men and women. Its scope is constant ly expanding. Eighty per cent of the Nation's millions depend upon the Doctor of Optometry and his profes sional skill in conserving vision. There is a shortage of optometrists in many States. ' The Doct6r of Optometry possesses the dignity of being a professional man. He renders an essential service to the health and well-being of his com munity. Substantial financial rewards are obtainable almost from the begin ning of his practice. U. S. Department of Defense and Se lective Service grant optometry stu dents the same consideration accorded medical students. The Doctor of Optometry degree can be earned in three college years by a student having sixty or more semester hours of Liberal Arts credits. Such stu dents will be admitted at mid-year by Chicago College of Optometry. Chicago College of Optometry is cen trally located in the heart of the world's greatest center for teaching in the healing arts. It is nationally ac credited and is splendidly equipped. Clinical faclities are unsurpassed. For cE'.alog, address Registrar, Chi cago College of. Optometry, 2307 No. Clark St., Chicago 14, 111. Adv. Crest 3 finest Mvo'feo yr matin. ' MEDICO V. F.O. 2 With NEW NYLON BIT. i: Exclusive! Guaranteed Bite-Proof I Odorless! Tasteless! Cushion Bite I HEDIC0 MEDALIST-1.5 1 When filter turns brown in Medico Pipes or Cigarette Holders throw it away, with nico tine, juices, flakes, tars it has trapped. Insert a fresh filter ' for cooler, cleaner and dryer amokinfr ImDorted Briar. lOflttsfs-lM Wid variety of ttylM end iizn. Write Medics Phies, Inc. N.Y. 22. tor tooUet O f We're headquarters for THE EYELET SHIRT Styled for a distinctive ap pearance, fashioned for comfort! This flattering col lar has two perfectly plac ed pin-holes that assure a neat, well-dressed lok ay ways! Shown in white ox ford, including pin $4.50 THE ,;Mglp N. COLUMBIA ST. N. Y. POST EDITORIAL SAYS: "She does a Calypso Dance, wearing only what the Hays Of f ice insists is the min imum necessary to keep celluloid from catchina fire' wait till you see that Trinidad Lady number! RITA niri I B L H IS DACIL. with that man from "GILBA" : - v-,'f Sis 1 I' v;H i " " ' I V h S " , "I f ' s ' ' J I J V O T 1 i n r 3 r f ,t lil't ritil iti I iiiL 1.1(0)1 M.I I t I "ll M t lit) I "S . l) j T-O-D-A-Y MONDAY L , A