Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 16, 1949, edition 1 / Page 3
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i i SUNDAY. OCTOBER in m. w v, X JIJ :pTHE Sporting Pictuke By BILLY CARMICI1AEL III Chop, Chop, Chop . THE CRY OF -Woodman, Save That Pr.L jn Kenan Stadium yesle afternoon ftv, Unhdi North Carolina chopped their wav thr w lumberingjacks of 14mber of Wake Forest tht iZTJZt supposed to. The cutting amounted to u JT Were by an early Deacon sc2 that lef iE " "! tet quarter tarolina fans among the 44 000 attendfn, T Nrth after Carolina had gone to work h" Vbghtly petrified" Even third periods to T i'Ct. and beacons flitted back into the ball gam for af ? 21 points the JCoup de Crace TlZ FVUt j? -hing less .,d halfback Wh0 played 'X 'So: tr rT T?r ""I Rarely had the . , . "aimceniiy in tipping the scales that . luuunts oi iNortn Carolina. On Charlie Justice THE LITHE LEGGED LAD from the Land of the Sky performed .what hockey fans call the Hat Trick in scoring three whole touch downs in the short course of an afternoon. And when the Comet had come and gone, even the Wake Forest fans joined the assembled mob in returning the honor and doffing their hats to the one and .only Charlie Justice. It would be more correct to say that the Choo Choo tallied four times in the game, for Justice added another touchdown to his .bulging belt in the fourth quarter, that was withheld from the scoreboard because.of a penalty, but went home safely in the minds 'of the spectators no matter what the official ruling may have been You just can't take anything away from Charlie Justice. t Looking and playing as if fully recovered from the distraction of disease, the Choo Choo performed like the legend he is, as he gal loped, danced, pranced, and filtered through the dubious Deacons .who seem to wonder from whence he had come and from whence he would go, and when the offensive doings of the Deacons became too lucrative at times, Justice would return to the scene and press his forceable finger to the dike. The Choo Choo did everything but play "Hearts and Flowers" for the Deacons. On the Other 21 , THERE WERE 21 other men on the field with Justice throughout the afternoon, and 11 of these, who comprised the Deacons of Wake ' Forest started out the day as if they'd never heard of Charlie Justice. After Carolina had continually Stuttsed it offensive toe on some , tremendous quick kicking in the opening period, the Deacons finally came into possession of the ball on the Carolina 38 yeard line. Eight plays later the Deacons came into the possession of the . 1: J i : i .i . i . . . ... wiuima cou iune anu muneuiaieiy aeciarea squauers ngnis, wnicn . the scoreboard immediately recognized to the extent of seven points worth. This whole action the Tar Heels treated as something of pn insult and while the Wake Forest fans were trying to uproot . Kenan to the tune of their touchdown lead, the Tar Heels did a little composing of their own. ' The first of these compositions ended on something of a sour note from the Tar Heel point of view when a pass interception Stopped the Music on the Snavelymen. Better late than never, the Tar Heels wandered back next time they got the ball. The first major movement of this work was a couple of reverses by Fred Sherman followed bv a little flichtv idea which travsed from the arm of Hilly Hayes to the arms of five yard line. Draped in IT DOESN'T TAKE much imagination to realize what followed. Justice suddenly got tired of all the crowd and slipped off on his own with only the football for company to the Deacon end zone. That balanced the books after Egbert Williams had done his clever act and had the Deacons been satisfied with the tie they had on, they might have departed at the half in a 7-7 condition. But such was not the case and. in efforts to better itself, Wake Forest fell back seven points. Seems the visitors made a break for the ceiling from the depths of their goal line, and before they had time to regret such a step, Dick Bunting had pignapped the un ch.ipcroned ball from the air with a. Nijinsky leap and whisked the leather away some 30 yards to the Deacon end zone where he claim ed and was awarded touchdown ransom for his pilgrimmage. After the intermission the Tar Heels, who had most of the breaks in the football game, got another, one that proved to be a compound fracture to the Deacons' chances of winning. Nubb Smith on being hit returning the kick off, disowned the pigs,kin suddenly and our boy Bestwick immediately repossessed it like the man from the finance company. Five plays later that Justice fellow was home steading the Wake Forest end zone again. On More Touchdowns WAKE FOREST, ONLY seven and trying to be 36 about this . time, did reach 14 shortly thereafter thanks to their air mindedness. It being about tea time, the Deacons unleascd theirs and soon had drifted down field to their second touchdown. Thankfully, it proved to he their last From that point on, the ball game moved away from the Deacons. ' Foreseeing that the crowd was growing uneasy, the Tar Heels nad,.. with another touchdown. A pan-flashing punt return by Gantt got Carolina into Wake Forest territory, and after an un necessary unnecessary roughness penalty had hastened the ball to the Deacon 14, Justice completed the rural teedee delivery, sifting through the Deacon outfit to the place where he's no stranger. TV O s All Yours 1 'i dMm Pocket Lighters -$6.00 & up- I 'k?UOfS'l Tabic Lighters 1 v) -$8-00&up- Case Lighters 1 NSOg -$10.00 &up- I i Engraving jree on all Lighters purchased here WENTWORTH and SLOAN , t JEWELERS 1 i V) Engraving jree on WENTWORTH and SLOAN JEWELERS uoo Goo Gantt to the Wake .forest Bunting Justice Great Second Period Rally Gains Lead For Tar Heels Continued from page 1) wiess style, that ultimately land- ed in the hands of Tar Heel Dick Best wick. Nub Smith was sche duled to return the kickoff from his 11, but his signals were mix ed and he handed off to Bestwick on the 24.- From there it was only a mat ter of formality before Carolina was fourteen points ahead. Hayes, Justice, and Sherman, had turns at moving it up to the five. Then Justice did the big trick with a twist toward several would-be tacklers and a short wind sprint toward the East. Williams again put the ball through the uprights. Two minutes and 15 seconds later Wake Forest was back in the ball game, trailing the Tar Heels by seven points. After Billy Carpus intercepted a Billy Hayes pass on the Baptist 25, the Dea cons used up only six plays to cover the 75 yards between them and Tar Heelia. With the fourth quarter only two minutes old, the Tar Heels MONDAY'S MURALS FOOTBALL SCHEDULE 4:00 Field 1 KA 3 vs Delt Sig; 2 Sig Nu 1 vs Zeta 2; 3 DKE 2 vs Sig Chi 1: 4 Chi Phi 2 vs Phi Gam 3; 5 Graham vs Q Hut 2; 6 KA 1 vs SAE 1. 5:00 Field 1 Phi Delt Chi vs Chi Psi; 2 Beta 1 vs TEP; 3 Phi Delt 1 vs Sig Nu 2: 4 Whitehead vs Ay cock 2; 5 Nash vs Wes Rockets; 6 Law School vs Alex 1. VOLLEYBALL SCHEDULE 4:00 Court 1 Chi Psi 2 vs Kap Sig 3; 2 Lewis vs Q Hut; 3 Kap Sig 2 vs Chi Psi 3; 4 Kap Sig 1 vs Phi Delt 3. 5:00 Court 1 Med School 1 vs Steele; 2 Phi Kap 1 vs Pi Lamb; 3 Med School 2 vs A Dorm; 4 Delt Sig 2 vs Pi Kap Phi. TABLE TENNIS SCHEDULE 4:00 Table 1 Manlev vs A Dorm 1; 2 A Dorm 2 vs Nash Hall; 3 Stack 2 vs Aycock 2: Phi Kap Sig 2 vs vs ATO 2; 5 Old West vs B Dorm. 5:00 Table 1 Phi Delt 1 vs Kap Our Special This Weekend. . . FRESH BANANA ICE CREAM Call for our Dairyland Ice Cream "JUST A LITTLE BETTER" IIWrnmBssmfil THE UNIVERSITY FLORIST (Flowers-by-Wire Worldwide) 130 East Franklin Street Phones 6816-9326 THE DAILY Paces' Four Touchdown were knocking on the Baptist door for the fourth time. At 2:25 Justice went over from the 14 and Williams made it 28-14. Wake Forest LE Duncan, McClure. Butler. LT George. Staton. SniscaS.. LG Cicia. Carry. C Dawson. Zrakas. Baublis. RG Auffarth. Dye. . RT Listopad. Palmer, Reinhardt. RE Bradley. O'Quinn, Gibson. QB Davis, Blackerbv. LHB-Jones, Pollaccf. Smith. RHB Gwinn, Gregus. Scarton. Wil helmy. FB Karpus. Stutts. Miller. Price. North Carolina LE Werner. Kelso.Bledsoe. ' LT King, Wiley. Hansen. Williams. LG McDonald. Wardle. Bestwick. C Neikirk. Holdash. Stevens. Miketa. RG Augustine. Dudeck. RT Ruffin. Kuhn. Hendrick. RE Bunting. Bilpuch. BB Knox, Rizzo. WB Sherman. Clements. Gantt. TB Justice, Hesmer. Bunting. Carson. FB Hayes. Verchick, Curtis. Score by quarters: Wake Forest 7 .... 0 ... 7 .... 0 14 North Carolina 0 .... 14 .... 7 .... 7 28 Scoring: Touchdowns: Wake Forest Blacker- oy. Miner. North Carolina Justice 3, Bunting. Points after touchdowns: Wake ; orest George 2 (placements). North Carolina Williams 4 (placements). Psi: 2 Siff Chi 1 v Thi T.lt 1 ATO 1 vs Chi Phi 1; 4 PiKa' 1 vs DKE 1; 5 Sig Chi 2 vs Lamb 1. TENNIS SCHEDULE NOVICE SINGLES 4:00 Court 1 Luxenburg vs Dick; 2 Bates vs Peele; 3 Oberdorfer vs Nicol; 4 Bromberg vs Yancey; 5 Boyce vs Fogle. OPEN DOUBLES 4:00 Court 6 Lowenstein-Litten vs West-Welborn; 7 Turner-Clovd vs Jones-Jones; 8 Dick-Dick vs Duval Haroutunian. HORSESHOE SCHEDULE 7:00 Weisner vs Gerringer; Holmes vs Tyler; 7:30 Winner match 1 vs Winner match 2; Cloyd vs Cooper. . DOUBLES 8:30 Holmes-Picard vs Barton Harris; Byrd-Solaski vs Cowenstein Hamrick. 9:00 SimDSon-Weisner vs Winner match 1; Cloyd-Turner vs Winner rnatch2. also Fudge-Ripple Buttered Pecan Peach Strawberry Vanilla and Chocolate 1 1 TAR HEEL . Snayely Pleased; Peahead Peeved With Final Result "V (Continued jrom page 1) that defensive team is still tops." 60-Minule Man Dickie Bunting, the game's only 60-rninute man, and wingback Bobby Gantt were both too happy over the game's outcome to have much to say. Bunting finally add ed, "I'm happy that we won, that's all. The team won and that's what counts." Gantt echoed his opin ions Coach Carl Snavely arrived about five minutes after the team had finished coming in and his first words were, "Good game! A very good game." When asked if he was pleased over the outcome of the contest the Grey Fox replied, "Of course I'm pleased. Anytime we can beat a team as good as Wake Forest, I'm sure to be pleased." A Different Situation Over in the Wake Forest dress ing room, there was an" entirely different situation. There were no cheers; congratulations and the general gay mood like that which hung over the Tar Heel dressing room. Deacon guard Bill Dye summed up the feelings of his teammates as he, first Wake Forest gridder into the dressing room after the game, threw his helmet in dis gust at the wall. Peahead Walker, immediately upon arrival, ordered the doors closed and would see no one. The rotund Deacon boss, admitedly on the spot so far as his job is concerned, sent a representative to the door to make a statement. "I thought we got a lot of bad breaks, but am not offering an alibi," the Wake coach was quoted as saying. "North Carolina has a mighty fine ball club. They took advantage of every break offered them." As for the relative merits of Charlie Justice and SMU's Doak Walker, Walker had no comment. MEW Give Your Suit All 5 Benefits of Our Better Dry Cleaning Service! v. -V Si 1 1X3 "sssPSSffiBi UNIVERSITY CLEANERS Phones 4921 - 9901 Local Cross Country Team To Face VPI 1- W-m . ... dj t ran Alston. Jr. Still seeking its first win of the still young season, the Caro lina cross country team will go against a strong Virginia Tech team on the local course tomor row afternoon, starting from Fetzer Field at 4 o'clock. The freshmen teams of the two schools will go through their paces and will start out with an abbreviated course five minutes before the respective varsity squads. Carolina coach Dale Ransome knows that his team needs 'ts win tomorrow badly to stari on the road to a successful season The affable little man of Fetzer Field has trained his boys hard during the week past in order to have them in their top physical and mental conditionn for this meet. In an effort to get the maxi mum efficiency out of his squad, Coach Ransome has made two substitutions in his ranks. Billy Burgess and Sophomore Ed Dixon, two boys who showed up well in last week's time trials, will get the nod over Bill Pat terson and Jim Bolch. Rounding out the starting eight for the four-mile grind will be Captain and course record holder Sam Magill, Jerry Lewis, Frank Hooper, Otis Honeycutt and Sophomores Gordon Hamrick and Tommy Williams. This year they all say that VPI is much improved over last year (in cross country, that is). The Gobblers have the nuecleus of that 1948 team returning and a crop of fine sophomore up from last year's outstanding fresh man team. MORE DIRT REMOVED : : i fabric patterns recaptured: SPOTS BANISHED : : : an essential to the best dry cleaning; PERSPIRATION STAINS GONE . ; : giving your suit new life, new vitality; i COLORS RESTORED TO THEIR ORIGINAL BRILLI ANCE. BETTER PRESS : : : suits hold their shape longer ; : : an added plus of our fa mous Sanitone Dry Clean ing Service; Your suits deserve the best! Try our better dry cleaning, service today. There is a dif ferencea difference you can see and feel yourself. Phone us today! Scoring' Show Here Monday Carolina freshman team, how-! ever, is Ranson's pride and the yearlings will get their first op-j portunity of the year to turn in! a cross country win. I There are several outstanding! men on the team and they in- j elude Durham's Bobby hyrdj State mile champ for the lasx :vo j years; Mike Healy, a track and cross country star from Valley! Forge M. A. and Roy Solaski, star 440 man on the frosh track team last spring. The other five men who will Irun the two and a half milt? grind are John Bennett, Clem Johnson, Bob Webb. Weldon Matthews and Tom Sully. FUEL OIL 6161 BENNETT & BLOCKSIDGE, INC. E Franklin St. 24 Hour For Your Convenience at OBIE DAVIS ESSO STATION Washing Greasing Recapping -Batteries Accessories PHONE 3091 TODAY AND MONDAY t i iwJ l-'rj Vi mix ' r mi & Hm M m s x - ;r v ; - ' r , , I UNBELIEVABLE. X THAT THIS QOUID HAPPEN TO UNFORGETTABLE..., s E r? B mam m i im m t Sr m mm ws mm m mrr-m sr&m. psesekied by WARNER BROS. 6S IK PAGE THREE On Wisconsin MADISON. Wis.. Oct. 15 (.T) An alert and capable Wisconsin football learn capitalized on Nayy errors and smashed lo a 43-13 victory today. The Badgers passed and ran for four of their seven touch downs and intercepted Nary passes lo score two and set up a lhird. The opening period indicated a bruising battle wilh lhe Bad gers gelling off lo a 7-6 lead. Three rapid lire touchdowns by Wisconsin in lhe second quar ter changed lhe picture com pelely and there was little doubt from that point on as to the out come. It was lhe largest score run up by a Wisconsin learn since 1S30. A capaciiy crowd of 45. COO turn ed out. Service 4 im .TRAKSATLANTICfma 3
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 16, 1949, edition 1
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