HiMMM M ♦ THt WCATHER TODAY: J P«r thn |t«to. ♦ | Fair. V Volume LVI. No. 08. Leads all North Caroliaa Dailies in News and Circulation BOYS. THE DEVIL SAT CROSS LEGGED He Had It in For the White and Blue Yesterday, as the Story of the Game Will Show. SCORE WAS 11 TO 11 -Virginia Had a Try for Goal. The Ball wss Kicked Straight Enough but too Low to Get Over the Bar. and a Carolina Player Standing Be neath the Posts. Jumped into the Air and Struck the Ball Deflecting it Upward and Over the Bar." (By the Associated Press.) Richmond, Va.. Nov. 24.—The Uni versity of Virginia defeated the Uni versity of North Carolina in their an nual game for the Southern champion ship at Broad Street Park this after noon by a margin of but one point. The score was 12 to 11, the Carolin ians failing of a drawn battle by their inability to land a rather easy goal. It was the irony of fate that the point that won the game for the Or ange and Blue was the result of an accident in which a Carolinian player figured. With the score 11 to 11, Vir ginia had a try for goal. The ball was booted straight enough, but too low to get over the bar. and a Carolina player standing beneath the posts, jumped into the air and struck the ball, deflecting it upward and over the bar. The two teams were as evenly matched as ;* was possible for them to be. and of each v,tt* superior to its ‘fence. . Virginia pit ed Yale footban, straight line plunges and mass plays being used effectively against the Car olina line, until the Blue and White, were hammered hack over their own line. Carolina played Princeton style, depending on end runs chiefly for gains. The Carolinians had a star back field, and one of the heaviest ever seen in this city. Carpenter, an old V. P. I. player, was the star of the game, and Caro lina's main dependence as a ground gainer. It was lie who made all of the Carolinians’ best runs and their second touchdown after a thirty yard dash. The first touchdown of the game, made by Carolina, was due to a Virginia muff of a punt on its own goal line, the ball rolling over and a Carolinian failing on it. For Virginia, right tackle. Council, made the lirst touchdown, after the hall had been rushed almost the length of the field. John son carried the ball over for the sec ond. in a brilliant fifteen yard dash into the line. Both yielded goals. The line-up was as follows: Virginia. Positions. Carolina. Warren 1. e Townsend Cooke 1. t Webber B. Johnson c Stewart (Captain.) Murphy r. g Siegle. Kite 1. gg Maness Council r. t Story (Captain. > (Iraham r. e Barry Ilollard f spectators and students on the field. This practice has obtained for several years. It is the worse thing an Ath letic Association can be guilty of in us .-conduct of a •'’ne. While no harm was done yesterday people crowding on the sidelines is distinctly unfair to a visiting team. Hcme-folk may be thoughtless in this matter but college students know better. Had the crowd gone on the field at Chapel Hill the other day, the A. & w* would have complained bitterly. No policemen were provided and no serious effort made to keep back the crowd. Tne i referee and uiti" 1 **e have the rlght to J penalize the home team in suen in i stances and they should have done so. Encroaching on the -Adelines by tne students of a home team is unsports manlike, to say the least. Students May Merry. The college students marched into town last ni w ht. three hundred strong in jubilation. They cheered and sang and made merry. They had a right to. They -have a fine team that plays great ball. The Game in Detail. A. and M. won the toss and chose tiie south goal, Clemson kicking off ag.Jirivt the wind. The ball was kick ed low and blocked by A. and M.. The ball, however, bounded back towards the charging Clemson men, one of whom f ell on It. On the lipe up Clemscu showed to better advantage than sh» did during the remainder of the game. The first rush into the line netted her eight yards, the men lined up in a hurry and *ha second tush, ten seconds later, tore A. and M.’s line wide open, Holland breaking through for a gain of twenty yards. Clemson gam.! five yards through line, followed and re peated a moment later by another gain for same distance. Clemson goes through right end for two yards, through left tackle for twelve, through right tackle for three. The A. and M. line was being broken at every point. Clemson tried center, however, with out gain. The ball was then on A. and M.’s six yard line, second down, (Continued on Page Five.)