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SUNDAY, OCTOBER 5, 1941
Tigers Take Decisive
Tilt From Wolfpack
Sophomores
Standout
For State
By United Press
Charlotte The Clemson Tigers
moved to defend their Southern con
ference crown by polling over NC state
27-6 before more than 15,000 swelter
ing fans here today.
Halfway in the initial period Bootey
Payne went off tackle for the Tigers'
first score. Early in the second half,
Sid Tinsley swept right end for another.
Sophomore Art Faircloth made
State's lone score by passing his team
down to the 8-yard line late in the
second period allowing another sopho
more, Buck Senter, to sprint off tackle
for the score.
Tar Heels
Wake Up in
Last Half
(Continued from first page)
Hodges in the end zone and a score
had been made. Reliable Harry Dunkle
centered the uprights and the score
read 7-0 Tar Heels.
The Wildcats then launched an at
tack that seemed to be hitting on all
cylinders and they quickly rolled up
three consecutive first downs, but the
drive was halted there and the 'Cats
punted as the quarter ended.
Three minutes crept by in the second
period before Davidson received a
break that looked disastrous. Johnny
Miller booted to the Tar Heels' safety
man, Cox, who signaled for a fair catch
and then proceeded to fumble the ball,
whereupon Buck Archer pounced upon
it on the Carolina 25. .
d Hay passed pn the first down
from that point but Blocking Back
Dave Barksdale intercepted the aerial,
ending the threat.
On the third down from thatpoint,
Dunkle dropped back to kick on the
-third down but Bull Shaw and Archer
broke through the Carolina defense for
what would have been a blocked punt
but Dunkle held the ball. Then on the
fourth down, the same two men rushed
him but he managed to get the kick off
and it sailed out of bounds on the Dav
idson 43.
The Wildcats punted back to Cox on
the Carolina 15 and Shot advanced the
ball only five yards before being down
ed. Cox kicked out of the hole beauti
fully and a 15 yard penalty set the
'Cats back on their 25 yard line.
Davidson punted back and Pecora re
turned it to the 45. A clipping penalty
put the ball on the 30 and Jordan eeled
through for almost a first down but
a backf ield in motion put the ball back
to the 30.
Late in the second quarter, Carolina
lost two scoring chances. Dunkle punt
ed to Roy Hunt on the Davidson 18
and Hunt fumbled as Suntheimer, who
played a whale of a game, recovered.
On the first play Cox passed into the
arms of Johnny Fredrick.
On the Wildcats' first down, Fred
rick fumbled and Serlich and Suntheim
er came up with the ball from a pile of
players.
The Tar Heels came close to a first
down on a couple of passes but then
again Cox passed to the opposition and
See VICTORY, page U
Full Schedule
For Murals
This Week
Intramural activities for the fall
quarter shift into high gear this
week with the first full week's sched
ule of football games and the inaug
uration of play in the handball tour
' nament with five games .slated in
that sport. -Monday
afternoon football games
bring together several outstanding
teams. Sigma Nu, captained by Bill
Loock, will tangle with Phi Delta Theta
No. 2, led by Williford and Beyer, in
the feature frat contest tomorrow. The
dorm loop offers as its chief attraction
the Alexander-Steele match with Mike
Mangum leading tEe Steelers.
Beginning this week an all-campus
team will be selected each week. The
annual all-campus pick at the close of
the season will be made from players
making one of the weekly squads. Both
dorm and frat men are eligible for the
weekly choices.
Herman Schnell, intramural direc
tor, announced that all football games
would start 10 minutes earlier this
week making starting time of 5:00
matches 4:50. This is being done due to
the shorter days.
Handball makes its debut into the
fall sports Monday with Pi Kappa Al
pha meeting Kappa Sigma No. 1 in
the opener. In the handball tournament
teams are made up of six men and each
contest will consist of three doubles
matches. Each match is to be the best
two out of three games. Thirty-two
teams are entered in the fraternity di
vision with 13 dorm teams registered
for play.
Mural Schedule
TAG FOOTBALL
4:50 Field No. 1 ATO vs. Kap
pa Alpha; Field No. 2 Lewis No. 2
vs. Law School; Field No. 3 Phi Al
pha vs. Lambda Chi Alpha; Field No.
4 Alexander vs. Steele; Field No.
5 Sigma Nu vs. Phi Delta Theta
No. 2; Field No. 6 Ay cock No. 1 vs.
"226 Boys."
HANDBALL
Monday 5:00 Pi Kapa Alpha vs.
Kappa Sigma No. 1; Tuesday 5:00
Beta Theta Pi No. 2 vs. Alpha Kap
pa Delta; Wednesday 5 .-00 DKE
No. 2 vs. Zeta Psi No. 2; Thursday
5:00 TEP No. 3 vs. SAE No. 2;
Friday 5 :00 BVP vs. Town.
Sports Staff .
Meets Monday
The following are asked to meet
in the Tar Heel office in Graham
Memorial tomorrow afternoon at
1:30 o'clock for a meeting of the
sports staff: Earle Hellen, Horace
Carter, Mark Garner, Ben Snyder,
Bill Woestendiek, Bob Jones and
Abby Cohen.
' '
Make Appointments
For Y-Y Pictures
Students who have not had their
Yackety Yack pictures taken must
make appointments for them at the
studios of Wooten-Moulton immediately.
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Colorful Display
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But Gamey Contest
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.- 4
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DICK SIECK, Carolina tackle, who played a bang-up ball game in Car
olina's 20-0 defeat of the gritty Davidson Wildcats last night.
Blue Devils Show Power
In Dumping Volunteers
Dukes Use
Breaks to
Advantage
STOP THAT COLD
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SUTTON'S DRUG STORE
Three (3) Registered Druggists
By Ben Snyder
Durham, N. C., October 4 A team
of blue clad opportunists from Duke
university took advantage of every
possible break in the game this after
noon and as a result drubbed a gal
lant but ineffectual Tennessee eleven;
19-0.
To start affairs oft, Duke won the
toss and elected to receive. The ball
was put in play on the 27 yard line
after a snappy 22 yard run back by
Tom Long. From that point, the Dev
ils proceeded to rip, tear, smash and
pass their way down to the Volunteer
12.
Midway in the first quarter Tennes
see got a break when Balissaris broke
through to block Tom Davis' kick on
the Duke 44, but the short lived threat
fizzled out when Johnny Butler's fum
ble on the 41 was. recovered by Mike
Karmazin. From here the Devils were
quick to move into scoring position.
Sophomore Bob Gantt took a pass from
Storer good for 11 yards, Long made
five on an off -tackle smash and Davis
faked a pass and ran clear to the Vol
28. .
The stands had just begun to quiet
down when the Devils struck again.
After an exchange of kicks, Duke on
some pretty end running by Bill Wart
man moved for a time up into Volunteer
territory. Then set back by a pair of
penalties, Moffat Storer dropped back
to kick on his own 38. The boot got
away in good fashion and carried clear
to the Orange 15 yard line where Ci
fers signaled for a fair catch. Rushed
by a tide of Blue the Tennessee quarter
back fumbled the ball whereupon there
was a mad scramble for the oval which
very conveniently for the Dooks rolled
way back into the end zone. Out of
the mass of scrambling players came
See BLUE DEVILS, page 4
By Ernie Frankel
RICHARDSON FIELD, DAVIDSON
Oct. 4 The Tar Heels flew high here
tonight, blasting out a 20-0 tattoo
against a small, but willing . Wildcat
squad, and although Carolina's fans
got a late start, they shattered the
electric-born smoke hanging over Dav
idson's stadium with a stand-to-stand
duel which played a melodious second
fiddle to the mass of red, black, white
and blue that struggled over Richard
son f ieliTs green backdrop.
But it was a ram of a different color
earlier in tonight's struggle. While the
blue and white cracked against sting
ing little Davidson, Carolina's twelfth
man slumbered in the stands, and cheer
man Curry Jones, equipped with a bat
tery of Kyserish yells barely managed
to garner a cEorus of snores from the
30 students and alumni who had slipped
into a -dismal unconcern after the first
three . minutes of dazzling play had
ticked its way into a 7-0 score with the
Tar Heels in the driver's seat. -
The Davidson stands, meanwhile,
rocked out a staccatto of who shot Cox?
Bring on your tough ones, hit'em, hit
'em harder. And as the ball churned
into Carolina territory, and the red and
black seemed bound for the glory road,
loud speaker, band, and conversation
were blacked out by spirit reminiscent
of ivy-cloaked Kenan stadium it was
the Wildcats on hand.
Half time brought a Coney Island-
Worlds Fair fireworks display with the
for victory. Lights out, a hundred
sparklers gleaming on Richardson
field's green turf, three dots, a dash,"
solemn stands hearing America, a
glowing V burning in candles behind
the goal posts, an unfamiliar black and
red sending up "Hark the Sound," UNC
burning in blue and white three-foot
letters and unaccompanied, "For I'm
a Tar Heel Bom" color at the half.
From there on, the seven thousand,
who jammed every seat and then over
flowed into temporary bleachers, saw
the kind of football game youH find
in Frank Merriwell or see in the sum
mer time at the E. Carrington's Caro
lina. And the struggle went on in the
stands as well as on the field. Tar Heel
fans began to open up, and although
they were outnumbered, their "Ummm,
boy" swelled over the stadium while
the Kings Mountain High School band
played a brassy, but brave "Hark the
Sound."
In the press box Ed Koskie, Ford
ham scout, mapping Tar Heel plays on
white cardboard ever so deliberately,
and Hank Bartos, former UNC assist
ant line coach, studying the blue and
white attack for the Demon Deacons.
In the air-victory, twice as sweet as
ever before, and a bunch of touchdown-happy
students who wondered
"when-in-hell will we get home?".
Whirlaway, famous three-year-old,
has a new sister at Warren Wright's
Calumet farm in Kentucky. The sire
is the $250,000 Blenheim 11, and the
Davidson band forming a mammoth V dame is Dustwhirl.
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PRESENTS
NEW FRESH
FRUIT ORANGE
Juice
6 Refreshing Ounces
5 CENTS
VAES I T Y
(Located in the Center of Town)
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THE GREAT NEGRO SINGER
ILf
ROBESON
B. N. DUKE AUDITORIUM
NORTH CAROLINA COLLEGE FOR NEGROES
lk DURHAM, N. C.
Monday Evening - October 6, 194:
At8:W
P.M.
Season Tickets: $6.00 Reserved Seats: $2.50
' ''
For Tickets and Reservations, Address:
North Carolina College for Negroes
orham N. C.