Serials Sept Chaps! HUl N. C. A vie H - V ' . WEATHER Sunny and contin ued mild today with 78 high. Yesterday's high 77; low. 59. CRITIQUE Sports Editor Eiff Roberts replays yes terday's game. See page 3. VOLUME LXI NUMBER 5 CHAPEL HILL. N. C. SUNDAY. SEPTEMBER 28, 1952 " 3 1 II - - : - I i a 4 I I EH Il.tr I J a - f -.- i y i it ii 1 ii li ii r j' I- fin 1 ii JNjlW. "1111X1 U P) J u IN BRIEF SEOUL Russian troops have been seen in North Korea, south of the Yalu River boundary which the UN is forbidden to cross, it was told yesterday by a sur rendered North Korean security officer. Until his desertion this month, the prisoner was security officer for the armistice talks at Panmunjom. The officer said he saw about 20 Russians dressed in Chinese Communist uniforms who were installing an anti-aircraft battery at a Red airfield in June, 1951. He said he did not know whether the Russians fired the battery. Meanwhile, all Korea fell under a UN Naval blockade yes terday. WASHINGTON-Officials here said today that the Kremlin might force the removal of George F, Kenan. U. S. ambassador to Rus sia. It was indicated Moscow's unparalleled propaganda attacks on Kenan might be a prelude to withdrawing his credentials. I, ... I,,,. I., i Mtfim-iiitTmrTr"""'' '"" TIwUM-WWBBwgRi"vjWr'l"!tw,i'1 IJ' "W I !.NRWs;stt- . . x " -, v,ic s-vard runback of ihe TEXAS HAD THE1H 1 down IO a 1 yesiexady cuiwiiw " " T'::v," ,.. nncla ,aht kickoff by Tar Heel Bob While after Texas' first score did little lo offset ihe Lrns 3 The actors, from left io right above; are Ken Yarborough (UNC : 76). .niJCJ Dick Gawlick (UT 74). Ken Anglin (UT 39). Texas tackier Ed Kelly. White, and George Allen (UT 62). Daily Tar Heel photo by Cornell Wnght. Nose In News SAN JOSE. Costa Rica Presi dent Otilio Ulate resigned last night because Congress accused him of trying to block an inves tigation of the army. ROME Spanish philosopher and poet George Santayana, who was educated at Harvard Univer sity and wrote all of his many works in English, died in a con vent here yesterday. He was 89. His best known work is the novel, "The Last Puritan." WASHINGTON Some 60,000, 000 Americans went off day light saving time at 2 o'clock this morning which means turning the clock back for an hour. PARIS Prince Aly Kahn and Rita Hayworth slept late yester day morning after their first night under the same roof in more than a year. The prince arrived at his plush villa in the fashionable Neuilly suburb of Paris late Thursday after racing 575 miles in 12 hours from his home near Cannes. 4 MI AMI The fourth big blow of the hurricane season brewed slowly in the Carribbean Sea yesterday as hurricane "Charlie carried its howling 125 miles per hour winds away from the U.b seaboard. a ttt v T?v fueling in flight, jets based at American fields m ' other countries are 7":: - , : -urn revealed here yesterday by Undersecretary of Air Roswell u. uupau-. Coach Price Has His Say Coach Ed Price of Texas said after the game: , "I thought we played a very good football game. It was above average for us. Our passing was sharper and our defense was better organized. We ran better at L. S. U. last week (Texas won 35-14). Our runs were longer. But the Carolina defense stopped the long runs. Stolhandke, Genthner and Se well were good in our line, I thought. "Carolina has a fine ball club. They are at the pomt right now that we were last year, this time in starting with the Split-T. After our opening game last year I .talked with Don Faurot who started all this Split-T stuff and he told me to hang on. 'It will come in time,' he said. He predicted about the third game for a starting Split T squad and it worked for us. I think and hope it will for Carolina. I was impressed with their hustle and I know that (Charlie) Motta was missed. You can't play without that number one quarterback." Grey Fox Talks, Too Coach Carl Snavely said: We re not quite ready for a team like Texas. They are fast and resourceful. We had a few lap ses but I can understand them with a new system and so many sophs and freshmen." I was disappointed in spots but I think we'll get better. Coach Price has a fine ball club and it's a privelege to play against them. Marines To Start Club A club for Marines on campus will be organized at a meeting at 8 p.m., Thursday, October 9 at the Naval Armory. Mai. Frank C. Caldwell, USMC Marine Officer Instructor in the NROTC, yesterday said that the organization will be named the Sumner Fidelis Club." It will be onen to all Platoon Leaders Class and Officer Candidate Course stu dents, NROTC Marine Candidates and Reserve Marine students. The club's objectives will be to hold seminars concerning Marine Corps doctrines and policies, to stimulate ah Interest in the Mar ine Corps on this campus, to stage club social events, and to receive outstanding guest speakers, par ticularly from the Armed Forces. To 79 International Students W Lt Wr,T)T tip A GG 2nd vw -nt rrhuck) Hauser, um versity of North Carolina alum . :toi Recon- nus, has been appu"-- , naisance and Survey Officer Assistant Intelligence (S-2) of the 758th Field Artillery Ttoto!; w it was announced yesterday. Lt. Hauser has been serving as the assistant executive officer of Battery B of the same unit, a 240 millimeter howitzer outfit. Free Pictures "Frankly" Editor Hugh Gale said yesterdya. "I'm worried. And he had good reason to be there are only three days left for freshmen to have their pictures taken for the Yackety Yack and only 60 of 900 have showed up thus far. Coats and ties for the boys, while blouses for the girls. Gale said. Picture taking resumes tomorrow from 2 p.m. on in the Rendezvous Room, Graham Memorial. There is no charge. The University again this year is host to a large number of inter national students. Eleven such students who at tended in previous years are re maining in residence here, while an additional 68 registered for the first time, making a total of 796. The information was released yesterday by Dr. S. E. Leavitt, adviser to international students, and Col. F. Carlyle Shepard, as sistant adviser. Ham Horton, president of the student body, welcomed the new students, saying: "I appreciate this opportunity to extend to our interntaional fellow students a most cordial welcome on behalt of thP student body. It will be a pleasure for us to work with them in class, to live witn mem in mc dorms, and to teach them how iinr tvpv are to become lar lULAJf v.-rf WppIs and Rebels. Welcome, suh! Students who attended the Uni versity last year and are remain ira are Ram Singh, India; Khos Rassiti. Iran: Purshottam Amprsev. India; Alfred Descloux Switzerland; Enrique Carlos Ez- ,rrfl Argentina; Dang - wen Turrr r.hina: Dina Salvatori Tr.viV Aziz H. Hinein, Egypt Noble Somerville, j Canada X . , . 1 Mr Jean Souweme, Belgium, ana vaheth K. Goldie-Smith, Eng land. New students are Mrs. Aleym- . Tv.,q;a- Chanti Swarup ma ueoigc, -- Gupta, India; B. A Sreemsa Tvengar, India; ia" ravana, India; - - - India; K. V. Ramachan- fnia- Jo e Francisco Molina, El lnlld:,l Mrs. Avizonis Angele, Lithuania; Mev. - land; ITuLoA Tewfik Abd-El- T ' wvpt- Aziz Habashy Hine Aziz, EgyPW - m MansOUT. Freitag, Germany; Antje Luise Dendtler, Germany; Ilse Garbsch, Germany; Edith Ingeborg Gold schagg, Germany; Rudolf Ernest Greb, Germany; Fritz Hartmann, Germany; Martin Hirschf elder, Germany; Maria Margareta Inge nerf. Germany, Eberhard Kindig- er, Germany; Eberhard F. Koeh- ler, Germany; Hans Eckhart Kummer, Germany; Hans Gurgen Lambers, Germany; Erna Klise Martha Liebaug, Germany; Rose Elfriede Luginger, Germany. Elizabeth Poegaeler, Germany; Albert Foellmann, Germany; Sadao Morita, Japan; Hiroshi Takano, Japan; Joyce Marie Dunn, Australia; Angel Ganoza, Peru: Carlos Labarthe Baca, Peru; Eduardo Garcia, Columbia; .Toree Alberto Nantilla, Colum bia- S Zafar Haidri. Pakistan: S Hamid Hasan Naqavi, Pakistan; Frank Richard Harman, Burma; Atifa Jabry, Lebanon; Rolf Reu ben Klasmer, Israel; Enrique Mandiola Chile; Alvaro Mendoza, Venezuela. Mufid Said Nashashibi, Jordan; Chian Beng NG, Singapore; Em manuel Papaermanuel, Greece; Jones Jolts Fagged Fans; Zest Zooms By Lt., Chuck Hauser SDirits were getting low to ward the end of yesterday's foot ball fracas, and the crowd in the student section demand and got the one man they knew could inject a shot of the old-time Tar Heel feeling into things. And when Durwood '-"Nose" Jones ascended the platform and called for "Hark the Sound" to be sung so it could be heard in Texas, his followers answered him in true Carolina fashion. "I don't even want the band to play, Nose shouted. "They make too much racket. Just want to hear you sing." They sang. Nose Jones, who led cheers in the famous Norm Sper cheer ing sauad in the fall of 1948 and took over the squad toward the end of the season last year, was in demand again. To this old Tar Heel, he was right up there where he belonged. For a while I sat on the Texas side of the stadium, and the cheering from the opposite stands sounded slueeish. to be kind about it. In the third quarter things picked up, and toward the end of the fourth quarter a "Blue and White" roared across the field and rocked the pine trees looming up behind me. , My bi nnrulars told me Nose was at work, again. The people sitting to my rear were optimistic at the start of the game. "Old Snavely's got something un his sleeve this year, they chortled to one another. But it was a different story after the half. Like rats desert ing the foundering ship, they sniveled after the half that it was time to start talking about one-way tickets back to Cornell. I left my seat and headed for a more loyal section of the stadium Elizabeth City's champion high school musicians vied for honors during the half with the Carolina card section. It was strictly two-ring circus affair, with both rings getting cheers and appre ciation from the crowd of 40,000 in Kenan Stadium. Long horns Score t In Three Periods T. Jones Has Field Day: Tallies One, Passes For Two More In Opening Tilt By Tom Peacock The University of Texas methodically ground out a 28-7 football win over a game but outplayed North Carolina team here yesterday before a crowd of 40,000 fans in Kenan Stadium. The , Longhorns dominated the play throughout. the game, scorme in three Quarters while. Albert 7 " ' Edison Rivera, Costa Rica; Jean Guenther George Pusch, Ger many; Martha Agnes bcnaeier, Germany; Tuenther Otto Trom- mer, Germany; Otto Heanrich Vehrenkamp, Germany; Dr. John C. Cassel, Union of South Africa; Maria Louisa Fernandez, Brazil; Taeko Fujita, Japan; Sho Maru- yama, Japan var Senstad, .Norway; yuen Chang Tso. Formosa; Heikichi Urasaki, Ryukyus Island, Japan; Jirawoot Viruchagool, Thailand; Miguel Toral Viteri, Ecuador; A E. Sarhan, and Charles Samuel Coval "Jones Pork Sausage" floating around in the air several thou sand feet up was another famil iar sight yesterday. And to in augurate the new season, Mr. Jones painted his airplane a gar ish green. Missing: The gentleman (ap parently from Texas) who en tranced the Y Court crew Friday morning with his git-tar strum ming and singing. Did anyone say anything about having a spot of T? holding the Tar Heels to 85 yards gained both in the air and on the ground. T. Jones made a strong bid for All-America honors with his near-perfect handling of the Texas split-T, and the Tar Heels couldn't stop the other Texas backs. Gib Dawson, Dick Ochoa, and Dan Pace. Jones had a field day, scoring one of the Longhorns touchdowns himself, and passing for two more. He nipped a short pass to Doug Cameron for the second Texas score after running for the initial touchdown, and on a pass play covering 65 yards he hit Tom Stolhandske for the third. Ed Ouinn bucked over for the last Lonehorn touchdown, and the Texans also scored a safety, The only bright spots of the game for Carolina were the put ing of Bud Wallace and the quarterbacking of freshman Mar shall Newman, who passed for the lone Tar Heels touchdown late in the last quarter. With - the Tar Heels behind 28-0 and four minutes left in the game, Doug Cameron of Texas fumbled Dick Lackey's punt on the Texas 30, and George Norris recovered for Carolina. Newman went in to run the team for the first time and promptly hit Jeff Newton with a pass on the 14 yard line. On the following play, Newman ran to his left, side stepped a tackier, and nipped pass to Ken Keller in the end zone to keep the Longhorns from getting a shutout. Tom Adler converted to make the score 28-7, Texas, with 3:25 seconds left in the game. After exchanging punts early in the first . quarter. Texas took the ball on its own 28 and Jones limbered ud his passing arm. The Longhorn quarterback ran one play to the 35, then hit Daw son on the Carolina 45, and Daw- raced down to the 23-yard line before he was stopped. Jones threw again, this time to Tom Stolhandske on the 11 -yard line. Pace cracked to the nine, and then Jones kept the ball on an option play around right end for the score. Ingraham's attempt for the conversion was wide, Texas taking a 6-0 lead with 4:23 left in the first quarter. The Longhonrs struck again (See INEXPERIENCED, page 3) Carolina Has Great Team, Price Asserts By Paul Cheney Coach Ed Price of the victo- -r 1 XI ..Ui nous Texas Longnoms uwuguv his charges were at their best in conquering the Tar Heels yester day by a three touchdown mar gin. At the same time Coach Price opined that Carolina has a very fine football team, one which will improve as the season progresses. Price stated that the Longhorn passing game was much improved over last week's opening game performance against LSU. How ever, the game agamst the Tigers . -1 was played m a steady aown- p o u r at , Baton Rouge, which somewhat accounts for the im proved aerial attack yesterday. On the otherhand the Longhorn mentor thinks the Tar Heels have a sounder ground defense than LSU. Texas was not able to get off as many long distance runs yesterday as they did last week. The Texas players singled out for special recognition by their coach were end Tom Stolhandske, guard Harley Sewell, and tackle Charles Genther. Price thought that Tom Higgins and George Norris were, outstanding defen ers for the Tar Heels. Statistics First Down - Rushing Yardage (net) Passing Yardage (net) Passes Attempted Passes Completed Passes intercepted by Punts Punting Average Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized 19 19 3 19 3 1 5 7 2 3 . 34.8 4 20 6 33 53 13 5 2 1 1 43.8 3 4.5 Linevtps rnahdy Fam Mansour, in, &e,yv . -omeister. Ba- Egypt; Gertruu. van- fiermany; Hel u nirher Germany; Hans Ce" ; Anton fc 'ff iriH p -xA . H i TEXAS Left Ends Massey, Spring; "Left Tackles Lansford. Petrovich, Cawlik; Left Guards Sewell, Reeder, Leath; Cen ters McDonald, Barton; Right Guards Branch, Barney. Flinn, Johnson; Right Tackles Genthner, McGraw, Polk, Finchum; Right Ends Stolhandske, Moon, Kitchens, Georges; Quarter backs Jones, Andrews, Raley, Graham; Left Halfbacks Dawson, Parkinson. Quinn, Anglin, Burket;' Fullbacks nrhnna. Matthews. White, Kelley, In- graham; Right Halfbacks Pace, Miller. Rosner, Price, smnn, xvmier. NORTH CAROLINA Left Ends Kocornik, Norris. Adler; Left Tackles Fredere, Higgins; Left Guards Foti, Hursh; Centers Mullens, faeaweu. Bruton, Kirkman; Right Guards Pat terson. Neville. Gregory; Right Tackles Yarborough, McCreedy, Eure; Eight Ends Starner, Mamer, waiser. r rye. Newton, Quarterbacks Annillo, Wil liams, Newman, Britt;'Left Halfbacks White, Lackey, Bullock, Keller Gra vitte; Fullbacks Wallace. Cooke, David son, DeWeese; Right Halfbacks Parker. Port, Gaylord, Worrell. Scoring Summary TEXAS 6 7 0 1523 N. CAROLINA 0 0 0 77 Texas Scoring: Jones. Cameron, Quinn. Conversion: Dawson 2. Stol handske. Safety. N. Carolina Scoring: Keller Conver sion: Adler. ttey&s&i&XttSte .... J 1" TiTYaj T fft HaLFBACK BOB RILEY (left photo) returns a Carolina punt 20 yards lo me warouna i y " first So5 of y7st2da TgSe. The ?lay Td 20 yards. Tom Higgins. Miles Gregory and a third CmoJbj ln Texa's -T" Jones (center photo) after a short gain in the third quarter. Tom Stolhandske (right photo) begins a 40 yard SX SEd Texai rouchdow.PI? came in the fourth period. Stolhandske grabbed a T. Jones pass near the rmdfaeld stnpe and skirted the sidelines for ihe score. Daily Tar Heel photos by Cornell Wright. Come On Up The Daily Tar Heel will hold an organizational meeting at 3 o'clock this afternoon for those interested in working on the staff. The meeting will be held in the Roland Parker Lounges. Graham Memorial. Positions are open in all phases of journalism.

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