Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Dec. 3, 1950, edition 1 / Page 3
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SUtfEf AY, vDECEMBEBr 3 v 1 950 .THE DAILY TAR HEEL' Carolina ins Second tow. Beats Lion, 57 Am Strictly Aid Lib ..By Zona Robbira Deasy Wallace Leads With 18; Next With 14 Old Times In Charlottesville SCOTT STADIUM, CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va Dec. 2-It looked like old times here this afternoon as a wildly-cheering band of Vir ginians, some 30,000 strong, watched their favorite sons romp to a 44-13 victory over Carolina's hapless Tar Heels. Today's cower show by the Cavaliers was reminiscent of the early days of this 53-year-old rivalry when the Virginia outfit almost invariably came out on top in one of the South's most colorful rivalries. It was power, power, power that snowed under the Carolinians "That together with ragged, uninspired play by the Tar Heels sent the Virginia score soaring to its highest point since 1912 when the boys from the Old Dominion rolled up a 66-0 score against Carolina Jarnn' Johnny Papit,- the- Virginia ground-gaining ace, started things pff with a resounding bang when he ran the first nlay from scrimmage for 68 yards and a touchdown. Papit swept- wide around his own right end, cut to the sidelines and hot-footed it all the way to the goal line. Stop That Fiasco THE FIASCO COULD .JUST as well have been stoppsd at that point because Carolina was never'in the game. Four minutes later,. Cavalier ngniing struck again as Bobby Pate dived through left ouard frdm the one-yard-line to score. . That was only the beginning. At the end of the first quarter, Virginia was way out front, 18-0. It seems impossible, but things fiot worse instead of better. In the second period, Virginia tallied two more six-pointers and added an extra point to run the score to 31-0 at intermission. The half time rest, by the way, was Carolina's only effective weapon against the swift-scoring Cavaliers. The cycle finally reached its low, however, and Carolina managed to play their hustling rivals to a standstill in the final 30 minutes, both teams scoring 13 points. Coach Carl Snavely and Virginia Mentor Art Guepe substituted freely in the last half, and the game was far more interesting than when the first-liners were on the " field. Poorest Play All Year IT WAS A REAL rock 'em, sock 'em battle from start to finish, but the Tar Heels just couldn't find themselves. The Carolina play was, by far, the poorest turned in all year. You would never have recognized the Tar Heels today ha'd it not been for the familiar blue and white uniforms. - The day was black in all respects for the folks from the Old North State. It marked the end of Carolina's most disastrous football year since the return of Carl Snavely. It provided apoor finish for any season .and it gave Carolina a flat .000 record against its two oldest rivals Virginia and Duke. The statistics told the sad story. Virginia outdid the Tar Heels in every department. The Cavaliers picked up 21 first downs to Carolina's seven, completed 12 of 20 forward passes while Carolina completed, 10 of 18, gained 217 yards passing to 93 for Carolina, and kicked for an average of 40.8 yards to Carolina's 39.9 yards. Cavalier Rushing Hurt Most VIRGINIA RECOVERED FIVE TAR HEEL fumbles while Caro lina came up with .one Cavalier bobble. The real damage was done in the rushing department. Virginia netted 195 yards from scrimmag? via the overland route, and the Tar Heels were held to a very poor minus 20 net. There were a few very few bright soots in the afternoon for the Carolina fans that made the trip. Fullback Jule Rousseau, a sophomore, looked very good in backing up the line during the last half, and Ernie Liberati, another soph, turned in a creditable offensive performance, running, kicking, passing, and calling signals. Soph Wingback Jackie Cooke showed well and Bill Hayes' passing was good. Big Huck Holdash, slowed considerably by a knee injury, played .well on defense as did Tackle Bill Kuhn and Guard Joe Dudeck. ; Papit As Good As Wadiak PAPIT, THE VIRGINIANS' BACKFIELD ACE, proved to be one of the toughest runners that the Tar Heels have come un against all ear. South Carolina's Steve Wadiak was great, but Papit seemed just as good if not better. The Philadelphia flash, by the way, added 141 yards to his rushing yardage to bring his three-year mark to 3.237 yards. As a whole, however, the team was without doubt at a nsw low. ""he offensive unit could never get started, and the defense was more lagged than any that has worn the Blue and White in recent years. The failure of the defensive team was a real blow after the bang-up ... . i '-,rc nrDimi5 rnrstpsts. panics it naa turnea m m m.. ah ; n rmmo uras reminis cent of Casev's third strike. 111 dll, uic " it's an even bet that Mudville was a Chanel Hill will be like tonight. ELON COLLEGE, Dee. 2 (UP) Carolina's Tar Heels broke what had been a close contest wide open in the final 10 minutes of play 'to defeat ' Elon's1 Christians 57-48 in a basketball game here tonight which Vmarked the dedication of Elon's new 4,600-seat Alumni Gymnasium. . " ; : Hugo Kappler and Foward Deasy pulled the Tar Heels out of a 39-39 tie at the three-quarter- " " ' mark and on to the win before a crowd of approximately 2,500, which-' watched - impressive half time ceremonies in connection with the dedication. , :. ' Deasy, high scorer of the night with 18 -points, and Kappler, who got nine of his 10 points in the second half, turned back a Christ tian threat which hung on for a 25-24 halftime margin and then which had closed the gap. Hank Hamrick and Don Haith cox led the Christian spurt after Larry Gaither had kept the Chris tians going in the first half. Haith cox ended the night with 16 points for Eton scoring honors. The freshman team won their second game of the year in the preliminary, defeating the Elon But madhouse compared to what This Christmas WE o.THE SOUTH'S LARGEST STOCK PLUS MONEY-STRETCHING BARGAINS ktnrtJin PLUS FREE GIFT-WRAPPING MAILING SERVICfc AND IT'S FUN TO S"OP FOR BOOKS PLUS at IS INTIMATE BOOKSHOP Open Till 9 '.Ji. ?05 E. Franklin 51.. frosh, 65-32 ' The box: CAROLINA Kappler, F Ferraro, F Wallace. F Grimaldi. F Ellington. F Madd'ie, C Sch'warz, C Thorne, G White. G Deasv, G Wells. G Gaines, G Totals ........ ELON Gaither. F Gauldin. F Hamrick, F Hall, F Haithcox, C Mitchell. Mondy, G Usrsery. G Cooper, G Kendall. G Totals 18 FG ' 4 1 6 2 0 2 0 0 0 6 0 - 0 21 FG 5 0 , 2 0 7 0 0 1 1 FT 2 0 2 1 . 0 2 1 1 0 6 0 0 15 FT 2 1 3 0 2 0 0 2 0 2 12 TP 10 2 14 5 0 6 1 1 0 18 0 0 57 TP 12 1 7 0 16 0 4 2 o 4 48 Halftime score: Carolina 25, Elon 24. W&M Wins 40-6 WILLIAMSBURG, Va., Dee. 2 Tailback Dickie Lewis lead Wil liam and Mary to1 a 40-6. victory over Richmond here today. Thomas Wins In NC State Invitational Special to The Dailv Tar Heel RALEIGH, N. C, Dec. 2 Jim my Thomas, All-American middle distance man from Carolina, arid Donald Sonia, State freshrnan, were the only double winners here this afternoon . in' the First Annual Carolinas Invitational Swimming Meet held at State College. : - Thomas, Tar Heel captain from Balltmore, won the 200-yard backstroke in 2:19.3 and 440-yard freestyle in 5:04.6. Soni'a won the freshman 50-yard freestyle in 24.7 and 200-yard open breast stroke with 2:27. The old record was -.2:28.2 set by Bill" Kelly in 1943. Buddy Baarke of Carolina took a second in the backstroke "and a third in the 100-yard freestyle to land well up in the individual scoring. Other seconds taken by Carolina men were Cecil Milton in the 440, and Kent Williamson in the 100. . Other' Tar Heel scoring was as follows: Ray Edmundson fourth in the 440, Barry Wall third in the breaststroke, Kirby Ambler fourth and Buddy Heins fifth in the 100, and Duke Widof f third and Ron Walker fifth in the high school 100. . . x . . Floyd Leads TCUOver SMU27-13 DALLAS, TexM Dec- 2 (UP) Gilt-edged Gil Bartosh and Jump ing Jack Floyd passed and ran Southern Methodist diz?y today as Texas Chritsian overcame a two-touchdown deficit to close out the Southwest Conference season with a 27 to 13 victory. The two offensive flashes had to share headline honors for the day, however, with a pair of de fensive terrors, Guard Herb Zim merman and End Bill Moorman. Moorman scored the tying touchdown as he scooped up a blocked punt and scampered 30 yards. , Slaughtered! NORTH CAROLINA 1 Left Ends Walser, Noriis. Nickerson Left Tackles Ruff in. Hansen Left Guards Venters, Penegar, Kinjel, Bestwick Centers Holdash, Miketa, Stevens Right Guards Higgins, Dudeck, Wiley, Hogan Right Tackles Kuhn, King, McCorm- ick, Grover Rignt Ends Bilpuch, O'Brien Quarterbacks Wallace. Weiss, P. Riz- zo, Carr Left Halfbacks Bunting, Liberati, Car son, Page, Brown Right Halfbacks Gantt. Cooke, Sher man, Port. Young Fullbacks Hayes. Rousseau VIRGINIA Left Ends Bessell, Tom Scott, O'Don- r.ell. Caldwell Left Tackles Johnson, Mott, Dahlgren, Gav Left Guards Nesbit. Turner, Palukbo, Barker- , Centers Myers, Meadows, Harris Right Guards Smith, Hansen, Ford, Clarkson, Showalter Right Tackles Miller. Goldberg, Min- ter, Ritchie Right Ends Schroeder, Weir, Chis- holm, Waidner Quarterbacks Barkley, Harding, Le- sane Left Halfbacks Page, Granger. vN. Scott, Berry, Young Right Halfbacks Furst. Tata. Ashwell, King Fullbacks Papit, Hoak, Sinclair, Kern North Carolina 0 0 0 13 13 Virginia 18 13 13 044 North Carolina scoring Touchdowns: Walser 2; Conversion : Sherman Virginia scoring Touchdowns: Papit 2. Schroeder 2. Bessell. Pate 2: Con- i versions: Scott (pass from Harding), Barker Tar Heels' Rushing Loses 20 Yards Net (Continued jrom page 1) 25 and outran the secondary for the score. , Carolina was still unable to make any appreciable yardage. Virginia drove to the Carolina 13 midway in the second quarter, but again the Tar Heels held. The next time the Cavaliers got their hands on the ball, they drove to the Carolina 22 where Barkley hit Schroeder oh the goal line for the touchdown. Harding's pass to Scott made it 25-0. , With three minutes left in the first half, the Virginians took over again when they recovered a Car olina fumble at the Carolina 36. Papit and Pate paced the drive to the goal and Papit hit over left guard for the score with a little over. a minute left. Carolina Wingback Bob (Goo Goo) Gantt returned the second half kickoff to the Carolina 16 where he fumbled and two plays and 35 seconds later the Cava liers had their sixth touchdown. Pate flipped a 35-yard scoring pass to Bessell on the 10 and he carried over for the touchdown. Barker's kick made it 38-0. There was no more scoring until late in the third period when Barkley passed five yards to Pate in the end zone for the score after an unnecessary roughness penalty against Caro lina had moved the ball to the five-yard line, ' Then as the fourth quarter got j under way, Carolina struck for its first touchdown. Virginia Fullback Harold Hoak fumbled at the Cavalier 32 trying to get off a punt and on the first play from scrimmage, Liberati threw a short pass to Walser at the 25 and he dashed down the side lines behind perfect blocking for the touchdown. Carolina held' the ball during most of the rest of the fourth period and scored after Tommy Stephens had intercepted a Bark ley pass and carried it 33 yards to the Virginia seven. With two minutes left in the game, Bunt ing threw a first down pass to Walser in the left flat at the goal line for the second Tar Heel touchdown. Fred Sherman's per fect conversion ended the scoring for the day. JUST RECEIVED OVER 300 MARINE FOOT LOCKERS ALL SIZES . . . LARGE AND SMALL Inquire for Prices at SURPLUS SALES 425 W. Main Durham. N. C. Lauritz MELCHOIR "ThQ world's greatest heroic tenor" PAGE AUDITORIUM-Duke University Monday. JANUARY- 8. 1951 at 8:15 o'clock Tickets: $2.50, $3.00, $3.50 (incl. tax) On sale: Room 201 Men's Union Duke University For information and reservations, phone Durham 112. etx. 270 Or write J. Foster Barnes, Duke Univres-ty, Durham, N. C. iirS&ASfc Hie iS ' 1 -TS 7.. act aj 3 7 5 It's easy to choosa Electrical Gifts this year, for. we have on hand, the biggest and best selection in our history. J9' . instruction Go. All rjifls purchased from us w.'ll he packed . p.nd mailed free The greatest adventure picture of them all if Romance of Eyes have never before beheld its equal! Actually filmed in Africa amid authentic scenes of unrivaled savagery and splendor! m0 Mi fewrf' SEE! OfM Two seven-foot, lion-maned Wafussi waf riors n death-battle. Treasure hoard of ancient gems whose radiance rivals the sun! err Flame-haired god- "tt dess attacked by a prowling jungle leopard. Crr I THOUSANDS OF WILD ANIMALS IN FRENZIED STAMPEDEJ 0LL ONE OF THE MOST STARRING SCENES EVER FILMED! NOV PLAYING ALSO LATEST NEWS- -CAROLINA 5 Zf - Y , -- 1 Ilt'vlou's Aquamarine Loiiim Complexion Soap IS ox of .7, Itevlon's Aquamarine, Motion Hath Soap n,,x of .7, .6.7 A fragrant, refreshing gift' perfect for your holiday hostess! 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Dec. 3, 1950, edition 1
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