Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 27, 1936, edition 1 / Page 3
Part of Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Wife "Stave 144 Deiit Mural Football Starts Tuesday Plural Football Starts Tuesday car CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1936 mmlv fi) W 01 T7V 0 itptay M T7V 0 .M if rs hi 6 I Wli Dick Buck And Little Score I To Give Tar Heels Victory Here's How Tar Heels Miss Score As Half Ends Continued from first page period, Carolina found itself and started a comeback behind the brilliant running of Bur nette and Art Ditt, who, with the aid of Hutchins, Watson and Little, carired the ball from their own 40 yard marker to the Deacons' 8 before the whistle ended the goal march. The third period saw Carolina continue to carry the game to their opponents, driving deep into enemy territory but each time the Deacon defense tight ened and almost certain touch down threats were stalled. At the start of the final quar- j ter, Dashiell passed to Buck for . a first down on the Baptists' 14 yard stripe but failed to gain the necessary ten yards for an other first down by rushing. The Wake Foresters took pos session of the ball and Daniel finally kicked, the ball going out on the Deacons' 47 yard line. Alternations by Dashiell, Hutch ins and Watson carried the ball back to the Deacons' 26 where Little sent a long pass to the arms of Dick Buck in the end zone. Burnette's placement with Little holding the ball tied up the ball game 7-7. Little Scores Shortly after, Little fumbled Daniel's punt on his own 46 yard mark where it was recovered by Burnette who raced around right end to Wake Forest's 46 yard line. Little and Hutchins added 10 yards and then a reverse from Hutchins to Watson gave Carolina a first down on the Deacons' 11 yard mark. With perfect interference, Little raced around right end, evading two tackier s, sending the Tar Heels to the fore. Burnette's second placement completed the scoring. With only two minutes of play remaining, the Tar Heels threat ened to score again. Following Burnette's punt to Wirtz on his own 25, Kitchins fumbled the ball on the 453 yard stripe .and Andy Bershak promptly fell on it. Hutchins added three yards through the center anq Burnette duplicated as the whistle sound- ea. Statistics of the Carolina-Wake Forest Game CAROLINA POS. WAKE FOREST Peiffer LE Shore Trimpey LT ' , Beaver Webb LG Souther Avery C. Mumford Maronic RG Rogers (C) Bartos RT Swan Bershak . . RE Hoyle Little QB Allen Burnette LH Warren Cernugle RH Morris Hutchins FB . x Daniel Score by periods: , - Carolina ' 0 0 0 14 14 t .A Parker And Hackney Run Amuck In Intersectional Wii Andy Kerr's Tricks Of No Avail Against The Iron Defense And Crushing Offense Of Wade's Blue Devils Blue Devils Have Visions Of Rose Bowl Bid Pictured is the method used by Captain Dick Buck in scoring the first Tar Heel touchdown of the 1936 season. Another touch By R. R. Howe Duke Stadium, Durham, N. C, Sept. 26 In a. tight, heads-up game of football here this, afternoon, 30,000 people saw a classy bunch of Blue Devils outsmart a supposedly tricky crew of Red Raiders to the tune of 6-0 in an effort to start the heart-breaking march to the Rose Bowl. Before an enthusiastic mob of Homecoming alumni, students and visitors, Duke University announced through the medium of their plunging, sharpshooting, accurately kicking backs during the game and gaily colored tableaux between the halves that they were all set to go Pasadena-wards. Hackney Stars With Honey Hackney, Captain Ace Parker, and Fullback Tip ton reeling off yardage, Wallace Wade's silk pant alooned charges smeared Colgate's trick plays and intercepted their long passes to outplay the slow starting, red and white clad Raiders. With Parker and Marshall doing the kicking for the Devils and Raiders respectively, the first quarter resulted in a punting duel at 50 yards with all the smoke of battle hovering over Colgate territory. False Hope On the first play of the second quarter Hackney passed to Parker from Colgate's 26 yard line and Parker dashed over the goal line. However, Duke was ruled offsides and the play was called back with a five yard penalty. A play later, the pass was tried again with Jaeger intercepting- Hackney's toss. On the next play Colgate was penalized 15 yards- f or holding and the ball was escorted to Colgate's six yard line Marshall kicked out to Hackney who received on Colgate's 46,. returning the ball to the 35 before being downed. The Wademen. picked up more yardage on rushes by Parker, Hackney and Smith. iir"- in-- Parker Wake Forest 7 0 0 0 7 DAVIDSON UPSETS N. C. STATE, 6-2; LAFFERTY STARS Other Scores OCOnng: loucnaowns: iviuriie, cutiv, xjiluc. xvmw -oilioW To Tniiivnrl Tn Morris, Burnette (2). All placements. Substitutions: Carolina ISeriinSKl IS mjurea in Palmer, McCarn, Dashiell, Watson, Buck (C), Adams, Ditt, Der- mid. Mclver. Bricklemeyer, Wrenn ; Wake Forest Wirtz, War ren, Shephard, Dooney, Kerley, Bryan, Dale, Evans, Mauney, Kit- chin, McCarthy. STATISTICS North Carolina Wake Forest First downs .. ....... Net yardage gai Passes complete Passes incomplet Passes intercept Yards returned on kicks Kick off s returned According to Harvey Harman, head coach at the University of Pennsylvania, it costs $ 60 to equip a college gridder for a season. When a chess set was found in King Tut's tomb it fractured the contention of historians that Han Sing, a Chinese Mandarin, during the reign of Kao Tsu, originated chess. Kao Tsu was a Chinese emperor in 174 B. C, whereas Tut was a king of Egypt about 1350 B. C, nearly 12 centuries ahead of Han Sing. State's Last Quar ter Drive Fumble Leads To Touchdown By Karlin Kaplan Raleigh, N. C, Sept. 26 A thoroughly outclassed Wolfpack went down to defeat, 6-2, here to night as Teeney Lafferty kicked, passed and ran all over Riddick stadium behind the excellent blocking of Dennis and Corbin. Davidson made their score in the third quarter when McClell recovered Entwistle's fumble of Lafferty's kick on the three yard line. The ball was given to the Wildcat quarterback, Armfield, nnP of the easiest ways to who promptly plunged over for create a campus spirit, lieaa luutuuuwu. nhPPrleader Hotre Vick explain- conversion was unsuccessiui. - I it f i ji 1 j. - ed at the pep meeting Friday State rained in me uu quai- morning, "is to meet every per- ter and, sparkpiuggea-Dy n.aaie Enn with a cheerv "Hello." a nod Berlmski shot a series oi passes f h hpad. or some manner of down the ifield, but the Wildcat ... 15 3 ..272 89 ... 22 10 ... 62 0 ...312 79 .... 3 0 ... 5 3 .... 0 0 ... 37 41 .... 55 . 102 .... 24 92 "Hello, Advises Vick Clemson 20; V. P. I. 0. V. M. L 24; South Carolina 7. Virginia 34; Hampden-Sidney 10. Maryland 14; St. Johns 0. W. and L. 27; Elon 0. Navy 18; W. and M. 6. Alabama 34 ; Howard 0. Georgia 16; Mercer 6. Ga. Tech 55; Presbyterian 0. Auburn 45 ; Southern 0. Kentucky 21; Xavier 0. Cornell 74; Alfred 0. Pitt 53; Ohio Weslyan 0. Purdue 47; Ohio U; 0. Tenn. 13 ; Chattanooga 0. Tulane7;Miss. U. 6. Roanoke 33; Guilford 0. Bucknell 6 ; Ursinus 0. Temple 50; Centre 0. "Dartmouth 58; Norwich .0. ' ' i -inn iiiiiii i rr Smith recognition. "This would tend to give ev eryone a feeling of friendship," he added, "and give our games much more color." Patronize our advertisers. I liiTf lrcf" Ti Toll rxr irtPAmTklafD noca nTotrc? down bv Little in the last quarter gave the Carolina team a 14-7 , , , , . , , . - , , neither team threatened for the rest of the half. Reminiscent Colorful Homecoming ceremonies featuring talks by Governor Ehringhaus and student spon sors, gaudy and numerous floats depicting Duke's Rose Bowl ambitions, and music by six uniformed bands kept the fans in their seats during the intermission. Both teams returned to the field at the begin ning of the third determined to cease all shilly shally and ettle down to a little serious scoring. Duke threatened when the brilliant and stubborn running of Captain Parker and Hackney and the line bucks of Tipton gave Duke a first down on-Colgate's 22 yard line. Touchdown! i5irmmgnam-down on the n yarn line Tinton crashed through tliA mnfpr the line for a first down and then hit the middle again for a touchdown. Hackney's attempted extra point place kick was wild, making the score 6-0 in favor of- the Devils. Duke threatened .again when Marshall's kick was blocked after four downs giving the Blue Devils the ball on Colgate's 30 yard line. Tipton and Hackney carried the ball to the 18 but Parker fumbled on the 15 yard line with Colgate recovering on the 20. The quarter ended soon afterwards. Fourth Quarter Geo. Wash. 27; Emory-Henry heart breaker when Taliaferro had to step out of of bounds on Colgate's 10 yard line to catch Hackney's heave from the 34. The play was called incomplete and Colgate took possession of the ball. The Raiders' scoring threat later in the period Hackney was stopped when the red-headed Duke center, Danny Hill, inter cepted Marshall's pass on his own 35 and carried the ball to the 45. Neither team was in, a position to score during the rest of the quarter. Parker and Marshall competently handled the punting situa tion, averaging about 45 yards, but Duke outrushed the Raiders 180 yards to 63 yards. The Devils ran up nine first downs to Colgate's four and all in all looked far better than they did against 0. forward wall and pass defense tightened and they met the chal lenge successfully. The rally fizzled out when Berlinski was taken from the field badly hurt. State garnered their two Continued on last page) Holy Cross 45; Bates 0. Illinois 9; DePaul 6. Iowa 14; Carleton 0. Minn. 14-, Wash. U. 7. Oregon 14; Portland O. Villanova 32 ; P. M. C. 7. l Hp!' " "--j- Harry Williamson, Carolina's only entrant in the Olympic games, is now working at the Y. M. C. A. in Winston-Salem. He ran sixth in his specialty, the 800 meter, in the. games. Davidson last Saturday.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 27, 1936, edition 1
3
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75