tj c tibftfy qaMsIs Bap' II I J. I M - WEATHER Continued Cloudy with cl(er d rin today end tonight. HILLBILLY Everybody is but me and thee, nd thee might be, says editor on page 2. VOL. LVIII, NO. 3 Complete 11 Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1957 Offices in Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES THIS ISSUE UNC Afraid Of Mistakes' Tatum Says After Openet Ht i). v y, winu: Amid the shunt s ol " Poor Caio- fn m the east side of Kenan S adium and (In1 murmurs of. "wait til b.isk ;b.d season," from the tst siik- tlio beaten, exhausted Tar WccIn slowly ambled off the held toward Ilu- locker rot,m. ' Prolit l our mistakes." the asi.s.ant coaciie.s rcpoa.ed over and over a they moved around tlie locker room inu each of the plajci.s a reassuring pat on tlie back. When h II the players were in Hie room the door was closed and Coach Tatum spoke T. .I.in told li.e press later the tx, ol his talk to t.e team. We aic playing seared foot hall-afraid o( making mistakes. The line charg ed with reserve. So many mistakes al.cady made, alraid ot making lucie." Tatum said i: and the pl'jcr-. agreed. Co-captain Ruddy l'a ne put it this way." The team red something to hold on.o. to ;:iC i.s dine aid confidence." Ta.uii docs not feel as it he is iti the same spot as he was tins line la.1 car. It will u.t le as great a problem this vcar since we ii.ive more ouug-tcrs giving us quali ; dc. h." Tiie we.i.lier was an important f;u -.or in the game. Both teams lilt il lul he u.esperieiH cd Carolina .sopnomons tcii n more Tatum pou cd out that a vi.cran football pla.er knows how to rest and regain llieii energy when they are on. ot tlie ;;amc but less experienced ones doll t. Pajne when asked how he felt said. ' Usually when you're down on about the poor Carolina cheering the field you don't hear it, but when you're in a spot a good show o' support by tlie students xives ou a boost to not let them down." , flow ever. I think that the team must iukc tlw flvt fep and uive I he MxuWmUs soinctmnji to chfr for." ! Tatum had no excuse for the loss other than the bad breaks which 5 New Series Slated On TV hue new series of lie nation wide TV programs will appear on INC TV. Channel 1. the I'ni icrsity's educational television sta tion. The series will bruin Octo ber 23 One of the scheduled series will concentrate on the International Geophysical Year. surveying the r.tige of ' activities now t;o'uiu on ,1s a part of the IGY. American resources, current al fair and creative aits will be' among the subjects of the other series. Kadi of the series, including 10 . programs telecast over a 10-week period, w ill be presented Monday j through Friday nights from 6 p.m. j to 6.30 p.m. Cheers, Action And :Jr FRANKIE Vc'C "re j Ih' says he always gets when he ' 1 plays Sta e. "Every time we made a long gain it would be called j back." . f The dressing room gradually em- I plod as the Tar Heels left to join ' i i io mis and well wishers outside, i Handshakes were exchanged and j individual ct iiiplimcnts gien. only' o be answered by slow meaning nodding of heads, had lost again. The Tar Heels In Brief Explosion Wounds Coed i ML . NCI i:. INI) . ,r State and Local Police have joined forces o lind the sender of a booby-trapped package that explcded on the Bail S :!"e Teache:-s College Cam pus and wonded a pregnant coed. Mrs. Mehin Kcynolds. 20 year-old si nior home economics student 1 1 e m Anderson. Ind.. was reported in s; ti.-factiry condition at Ball w noi ial Hospital. The blast frcm a sIk . am shell severed the tips ot wo lingers on her right hand aial riddled her fare, neck and arm w h bucksiK t. .Mrs. Reynolds is cxpeeimu a child in two months. Russia Denies Charge MOSCOW, -.p- The Sovie; C.ov ei nniont has denied that Hussian Police held an Israeli diplomat for 2i. hours and threatened him with death unless he spied for Russia. The foreign office ;ermed Israeli di;.:ges in the incident a provoca te e statement issued to hide the diplomat's anti-Soviet activities. Israel charged last Monday that her Moscow Embassy Secretary, F.Iiyahu liaian. was seized by So- iet agetris while vacationing .. in Odessa. It Raid ho was questioned ' for 2i hours and told he would ' disappear" unless he agreed to spy tor Russia. Haan has since Mown back to Israel. Beck Defies AFL-CIO MIAMI RF.ACH. FLA.. T In ;i new show of defiance. Have Heck, retiring president of the Teamsters Lnion. told the AFL-CK) that it is up to the Teamsters' membership to decide whether top officials have been guilty of w rondoiny. He akn denied charges made by the A I 'CIO Fthical Practices Com mittee and. in effect., rejected an imitation to appear at a hearing on them belore the AFL-CIO Execu tive Council in New York Tuesday. MANAGER WANTED Anyone interested in the position ol advertising manager for the Carolina Quarterly should contact the editor. Christian Lefebure. any day bi t w een 3 and j at the Quar terly office in Graham Memorial. TUis is a paying job based on per centage of sales. fa. -.. y &rftr i.wf : r-l -fAi is -r-f BLACK JIMMY AND JIM www ". , , , x), m We're lere'. . . DeCantis gets a boost . . . Nobody gets cokes . . . Atruvr. He mwed ... po.stx anyone. u 7? fUl mj ... ' , . ' -' . . . I ' ' 1 "" " ' ' ' b- T r ? w --i-.-tlM' "-t, v' -w "v ,J (ft r: v.t4 . :? '- W HtO ' 1 " - i - tM- . -- ,vlsi ' I , - . , " . . ,X v., '1 ' V . - - - : y-' - . Ji - - - -- - " - ,- rr.r-.-;-,, ' ...,n mt,,,.m-,,rt',,mn,,,,Mm,mmiimmt'' t LOOK WHAT I Quarterback Dave Reed pitched out to RH Goff with, four minutes thirty-three seconds gone in the third quarter. Goff went to his left, set and threw this pass tackled by No. 17 Cackovic and No. Adlai Here Next Saturday Former Presidential Candidate i.Adlai Stevenson will deliver a pub lic address here next Saturday during a one-day visit in Chapel liill and Raleigh. 1 He will speak at 10::!D a.m. in, Memorial Hall and later will at- U nd tlie Caiolina-Cleinson football I game with a host of local and state 'officials. j Traveling under auspicies of En cyclopedia Britanniea Films. Inc.. Stevenson will arrive at Raleigh Purham Airport at ." p.m. Friday jind will stay at Carolina Inn that night. His address here was arranged by i the North Carolina Citizens for Letter Schools, an agency appointed by Gov. Hodges and headed by holt McPherson of High Point. Saturdav night. Stevenson will be the house guest of Governor and Mrs. Hodges in Raleigh. His ad- dross here w ill be followed by a press conference in Gerard Hall. Mob Mark Opener - . ' -""I I , ,'t. , , T -, l&iZ...AMit i r .M.'-l'lAfl"MW mai CTiiJIe 5TATE PASS PLAY THE END AH Photos By Bill King n n to LH DeCantis. DeCantis was 22 Christy. In heJbacJc9gurd- Stevenson is chairman of the ad- isory board of the Britanniea firm. a post lie accepted last April upon his return to private life. At that time he said he accepted the position because of the "inl ADLAI STEVENSON I usual opportunities" it offered to j lend his influence to audio-visual , educat ion in the nation's schools. " After years of familiarity with Jv a.i.JM m p..iiuijj wi., mmmwMi: fc , I 3 I i ; id n LLI CAUGHT. . is No. 84 for Carolina Don Kemper, The play carried to the State 30 yard Carolina had an illegal receiver 1.., . ,.:t. w . :. i public questions. 1 have found the deficiencies in education our most I serious and urgent domestic con- j eern. Stevenson said. lie predicted a "major break- ! through into a new era of teach- ! ing" with the application of audio- visual techniques and said class- ! room film can ' improve education i at all ages." j 'I am convinced of the need for i greater public understanding of the role of the motion pictures in teaching." he added. In numerous communities, he continued, techniques of audio visual education have been used "with such stimulating effects that I foresee a major breakthrough into a new era of teaching." Stevenson's visit here will also I include breakfast Saturday morning j with President Friday and lunch at 12:30 p.m. in the Morehead ' building. On Consolidated University Day Of '51 No. 24 for State, Trowbridge, line, but was recalled because iJcvsn field, . - Photo by Bill King Riot Follows Saturday Game Riot broke out after the Carolina State game here yesterday and police hauled at least two men away. Local officers said it would be "at least 7:30 or 8 p.m." before charges, if any. were lodged at the police department here. Two officers escorted one middle-aged fan off the field only mo ments after another unidentified person had been nabbed by police. A full report of the riot could not be obtained from official sources by press time. ! Hundreds of fans thronged the ' south end of Kenan Stadium when ! a mob apparently instigated by State College fans attempted to tear down the goal post there. As officers hauled one man away, another observer mingled among (See RIOT, Page 4) Alien's Carolina Downed 7-0 In 1st Game By BILL KING , N. C. State halfback Dick Hun ter wiggled five yards for a touch- ' down at the close of the first quar ter and the Wolfpack line throttled Carolina's running attack all after noon to give Stae a 7-0 victory over the Tar Heels in Kenan Stadium esterday. The largest Kenan Stadium crowd since the Tennessee game in 1933. 39.000, watched the Wolfpack ad minister a second straight setback to Jim Tatum's Tar Heels in a season opener at Kenan. The Wolf pack romped to a 23-6 win last season. S afe's big line was entirely too much for the Tar Heels. The Chap el Hillians could muster only 73 yards rushing while the Raleigh club chopped out 252 through tlie Carolina front wall. Hun er's five yard touchdown run was the culmination of a 76 yard drive from the Carolina 24 yard line. Second string center Paul Dalonick was the man who sex the stage for the tally when he pounced on a fumble bv Carolina fullback John Hayworth at the 24. nom mere Ht cook me woiipacK just six plays to go over for the score. Halfback Ron Podwika got a l l.fi' - i yN i wo yaras ai ouno ien enu. wuar terback Frank Uckovic then pilch ed out to Wally Prince and Prince went six yards before flipping back to Cackovic w ho carried all tlie way to the Tar Heel 23. Cackovic lost a yard and had a pass intercepted by Emil DeCantis but State kept possession as Carolina was penaliz- cd 15 yards for holding. The penary put the ball on the Carolina 5 and Hunter squirmed over frcm there on the next play. The speedy Wolfpack back then j booted the extra poL'.t to give j State the 7-0 edge. Carolina's two biggest threats ; came in the final quar.er when the Tar Heels twice moved within the 1 State 30. ! Wtih 11:20 remaining, the Caro-' Una moved to the State 23 after ; Dave Reed's 32 vard quick-kick 1 had backed State deep into its own I trritory. Haywood intercepted a Cackovic pass at 'Jie Wolfpack 39 and went to the 23. The Tar Heels could not take advantage of the bieak as they ran four plays and lost a yard. Two Reed passes and one by sophomore Qb Jack Cum- mings were incomplete during the: series. o Biggest cain of the day by C no lina Ci me moaicn s Liter when Hun cr kicked to DeCantis on the Caro lina 30 and he returned il to the 33. Cnr nings then fired, a ." yard pass to Al Goldstein and the Tar Heels had the ball on the S:ate 23. Three plays later at 6:3:; Caro lina had lost back to the -13 and Curt Hathaway punted into the cad zone. Frcm there, the Wolfpack ran ot,: the clock, holding the ball for six minutes and 20 seconds and picking up four first downs in the process: Tatum subs ituted frequently in an at empt to come up with tin bes" combination. The Tar Heel mentcr used three men "jt every position and substituted mostly in units. The quarterback trio of Reed. , Hathaway and Cummings threw a ; teal of 17 passes and completed i four for 75 yards. , The Tar Heel backs simply could ! not penatrate the more experienced State line. Time and again the lii: ! Red stopped the Tar Heels when it seemed that a big surge might be in the making. Co-Captain Buddy Pavne was pcr- haps the outstanding line performer as he grabbed a couple of passes 1 - i for good yardage and returned a - i vieWoff w -vards Halfback Daley kickof f 11 'yards. GofT" was " tl;e only back to gia more tna I2 yards as he went fvr 1 3 pV.r n. ivnifnart it ;.s r.ir k.- vic Hunter, Dick Christy. Don Hafcr aud quarterback Tom Kalirli i vvho djd tho ,most dani;,ClV Christy sc( a school rusIiiir4 n,a:k enly ; the fourth quarter. Physically, the Tar Heels were unhermed except for a slight shoul der injury to DtCan'is. Next S urday Carolina will meet the Clemson ium. Tigers in Kenan Stad- (See STATISTICS, Vwie 1) GM's Slate Activities scheduled for Gra ham Memorial today include: Episcopal Church school, 9:15 11 a.m., Williams-Wolfe Room; Friends Meeting. 11:30 a.m., Grail i Room; Presbyterian Church : school. 9:45 a.m., Roland Parker ! Lounges Nos. 1,2,3; Presbyterian Church choir. 9:15 dezvous Room. a.m., Ren- F'hotos

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