Tut?. C LttjJ-ary ' Ssrills Dsfct. Cliap-l Hill, H. C. .. ! -.. . ' SPORTS Sports Editor Tom Pea cock gives you an insida look at the grid picture. See p.3. WEATHER Fair with little change. High, 72; low, 40. VOLUME LXII NUMBER 19 CHAPEL HILL, N. C. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1953 FOUR PAGES TODAY 11 ET"3 it HI1H wmm m ml (oru Cornerstone To M ark The 160th anniversary of the founding of the University will be celebrated with traditional exercises here tomorrow, beginning at 10:50 a.m. The program will be part of the Orange County Bicentennial cele- hration whicn wm conunuey through Tuesday, when Carrboro Chapel Hill Day will be observed. Tomorrow's program will be Uni versary Day, highlighted by the cornerstone laying of Old East and the fifth performance of "The Road to Orange," on Fetzer Field at 8 p.m. The date of the laying of the cornerstone of Old East Building, oldest state university dormitory in the country, was October 12, 1793. Pageantry, re-enacting in panto mine the cornerstone laying, will feature the program for which classes and administrative offices will be closed from 10:50 to 1 p.m. Formal ceremonies will be cancelled in case of rain. Arrangements for the pageant are under the direction of Julianne Hale, Jefferson City, Tenn., gradu ate student in the Dramatic Art Department. Special music will be furnished by the University Band under the direction of Prof. Earl I Slocum. Preceded by a color guard of cadets in the Navy and Air Force KOTC units, President Gordon Gray, Chancellor R. B. House, stu dent body President Bob Gorham, Rocky Mount, and members of the Carolina Playmakers in Colonial costumes wTill proceed from South Building to temporary platforms in the south court. The services will open with the 'Star Spangled Banner" followed by invocation by Dr. Samuel T. Habel, pastor of the First Bap tist Church. The audience will join in singing the University Hymn. Chancellor House will lead in responsive reading of lines from the Apocrypha, after which there will be one minute of silence in memory of alumni who have died during the past year. The Men's Glee Club, under the direction of Prof. Joel Carter, will sing "Integer Vitae," and the com bined Men's and Women's Glee Clubs will sing "Creation" by Wil liam Billings. Taking the part of General Wil liam R. Davie, often called the "father of the University," Donald Treat, of Chapel Hill, will lead members of the Playmakers in re enacting the Masonic cornerstone 'y yj w " ' '-y ? &v '"J DEACON ED STOWER5 is yard gain. Leading the tacklers is , "'f 'JT ; f- yy. f . . J- f I - yt r i y - v r f y it. n tj-y. 0 sm A;C imf.: q . y:s: News Meet Ends With Banquet Highschoolers here for the North Carolina Scholastic Press Insittute last night wound up a weekend of exchanging newspaper ideas with a banquet at the Carolina Inn. Speakers Chancellor ifobert B. House and Walter Paschall, direc tor of public relations for station WSB in Atlanta gave the young scribes last bits of advice. " Earlier yesterday the prep news papermen attended panels on va rious phases of publications in cluding editorial writing, feature writing and newspaper makeup. They closed the afternoon with election of officers. Elected were President Frances Youngblood, Wilmington; Vice President Vance Neece, Curry High School, Greensboro; Secre tary Frances Haynes, Mt Airy; Treasurer Margaret Helms, Hard ing High, Charlotte. The two day meeting was spon sored by the School of Journal ism, The Daily Tar Heel,- the Ex tension Division, and the State De partment of Public Instruction. Professor Walter Spearman of the Journalism School directed the program. Jenner Lauds NY Educators For Local Red Investigations WASHINGTON, Oct. 8 Senator Jenner, chairman of the Senate Internal Security subcommittee, applauded the New York City Board of Higher Education for inaugurating local investigation of subversive activities within its col lege system. The handling of infiltration into educational systems has previous ly been deemed a local, not a fed eral matter. Until this step was taken by New York authorities, it was difficult for local groups to get the facts without the power to ' . . yy . ,y.- ' Carolina ' eft), Bill Com. Conni Gravitte iiottj. ft JV N f- il f A V?;W I P? Off l'f X N3?V Af $v " Cornell Wright Photo DICK LACKEY, CAROLINA fullback, drives forward for a first down in the first quarter of yester day's game against the Deacons. Pulling him down are Joe White (left) and Mike Soltis. The play carried 20 yards, ending on the Carolina 36-yard line. Will Start Next Year University's 1,000 -Foot Educational TV Tower To Be Highest Man-Made Structure in State The highest man-made structure in North Carolina will be con structed soon in the form of WUNC-TV's 1,000 foot transmit- ter tower to be located in nearby subpoena or take testimony under oath. Jenner indicated that at least things have started in New York and this action might set the pat tern for local handling of a situ ation which has been a headache in Congress. The Board of Higher Educa tion is acting on a decision by the State -Board of Regents to cause the listing of the state and national Communist party as subversive. defenders after running back a kickoff n (55), an unidentified player and Tom Pittsboro. The tower, very close to the geographical center of the state, will send over a maximum 100 Ullnwatt hpnm with a lOO-mile radius covering most of North Carolina. In addition to studios at Wo man's ' College, State and UNC, will be a mobile unit which will produce 'on - the - spot' telecasts from experimental farms, legisla tive halls, sports fields, special events spots and other education al resource areas of the state. Approximately 2,250,000 people will receive effective pictures, ac cording to engineer estimates. Oth er thousands will see many of the programs over local stations by film recording and rebroadcast ing. Commercial stations will be free to retelevise any program rejuvi nated in the.University's kine scope or film recording facilities Cornell Wright Photo to his own 38-yard line for an 18- Adler (right) and complete film-processing lab oratory. A converter will not be neces sary to receive the station's beam since the channel allocated to WUNC-TV in VHF Channel 4. More than $1,000,000 has been donated to the Consolidated Uni versity for construction and main tenance of the station. The station is an outgrowth of a conference of 150 deans and di rectors of the three faculties that recommended the appointment of an All-University Advisory Coun-cU. I . GERALD PARKER (left), Sil verdale, and Wade. Matthews, Winston-Salem, head the debat ing societies on the Carolina campus this year. Parker is speaker of the Dialectic Senate and Matthews heads the Phil anthropic Assembly. College Demos Told To Unite To Save World RALEIGH, Oct. 9 ."Let us unite' the party for our common ideal, that of saving the nation in a world gone bad," Lt. Governor Lu ther Hodges said in his keynote ad dress to the Young Democratic Clubs Convention here. Hodges lauded the spirit, ener gy and courage of the young lead ers of the nation, and urged young Democrats to stay in the party and iron out its. difficulties. "The Republican dilemma is symbolized by Arthur Murray's new dance step, 'the presidential waltz;' one step forward, two steps backward, one to the side and one on hesitation," Hodges said. Carolina delegate Al House is in the race for secretary of the North Carolina YDC. Other delegates Trom UNC are John Sanders, Bob Pace, Gene Cook, Ken Penegar, Al Adams and Lindsay Tate. ravitte arolina By John Hussey Daily Tar Heel Sports Writer GROVES STADIUM, WAKE FOREST, N. C, Oct. 10 Carolina came from behind to score two touchdowns in the fourth quarter and defeat Wake Forest 18-13 for the first time in four years. Halfbacks Ken Kel ler and Connie Gravitte along with fullback Dick Lackey stole the show for the Tar Heels with their broken field running. " Lackey and Gravitte, neither of whom had played first string ball this ' vear. were welcome surprises to Spirit High In UNC's Big Period By Ken Sanford Daily Tar Heel News. Editor WAKE FOREST, Oct. 10 Shades of old Tar Heels For one solid quarter here today, the old Caro lina spirit was revived. It was a solid quarter of noise and waving banners as the Tar Heels caught fire in the final quar ter. The weather was hot and the team was hotter in that last round "Nose" Jones didn't seem too aware of the heat as he showed up wearing a fur coat. The little pig followed the air plane all the way to Groves Sta dium. The pig wasn't the only one who followed the Tar Heels to Baptist Hollow. Was that George or a Dea con first cousin trotting arounu on the field? Perspiration and Deacon tears have furnished enough moisture for an old fashioned baptizing. Reluctant Carolina rooters were seen to buy sun shades with the word "Deacons" on them, turned the word side down and same-fac-1 edly put them on to protect their eyes from the burning sun. Fall colors on the trees furnish-1 ed an appropriate backdrop for the game. During the ride from Chapel Hill a spot check revealed hitch-hikers dotting the road like flies. At 12:- 45 p.m. almost a dozen lined the Pittsboro Road in the 100-yard hospital entrance. It was the first Saturday at The Hill wiuiout the magnetic Influ ence of a home football game. The "exodus" appeared almost as great jas a regular Friday afternoon last year. Game latecomers were held up by long lines of slow moving traf fic. It took as long as 20 minutes to cover the last half mile into overcrowded parking lots. Between - Class Crowd Cheers Tar Heel supporters, a small but vocal band of students and in structors, . assembled between 10 and 11 o'clock classes yesterday at the Y Court for ten minu7es of "Beat the Deacs" yells. Head cheerleader Jim Fountain and his coterie led two hundred Y Court passers-by through Carolina cheers and "Hark, the Sound," from the steps of South Building. Administration officials, Assist ant Dean of Admissions Charles Bernard and Associate General College Dean Cecil Johnson among them, hollered enthusiastically from the windows above. Grid Scores t 20 Duke 27 N. C. State 41 Alabama 27 Georgia Tech 28 Mississippi 21 VMI 21 VPI Purdue 14 Davidson 7 Tulsa 14 Tulane 13 Vanderbilt 26 Citadel 0 . Richmond 7 Georgia 14 Auburn 21 40 Maryland 21 Miss. State 27 South Carolina Furman 14 40 Tenn. Chattanooga 7 40 Virginia Geo. Wash. 20 40 W. Va. W & L 14 27 Army Dartmouth 0 13 Yale 1 Columbia 7 41 Illinois Ohio State 20 , 19 Oklahoma Texas 14. Stars In Conquest the Tar Heel offensive. After the Deacs had taken a seven point lead in the first quarter, coach Barclay WF 7 . 187 . 35 . 5 . 2 . 1 . 39.0 2 . 25 . UNC 12 231 20 3 2 0 . 35.9 . 1 . 15 First Downs Rushing Yardage Passing Yardage Passes Att Passes Com. Passes Int. . Punting Av. Fumbles Lost Yards Penalized sent in his second-stringers. The subs promptly took the Wake For rest kickoff on their own twenty five yard line and, after the whis tle had ended the first period, put on a seventy-five yard rnarch which ended with Larry Parker bucking over whac looked like the whole Deacon line for the score. Keller's conversion attempt failed and the Tar Heels were one big point behind. The first Wake Forest score came with a minute and 44 seconds remaining in the first quarter. Car olina, with its backs to the wall, was forced to punt on second down. Standing in his own end zone, Lackey booted out to the 45 where Deacon workhorse Bruce Hillen brand returned to the Carolina 33. Mixing runs by Hillenbrand and Jim Bland, Wake Forest had a touchdown within five plays. In jured captain Sonny George came into the game to boot the extra point which loomed as a deciding factor, for three quarters. After the Tar Heel score in the second stanza, there were no ITeri ous threats on the part of either team to add to their totals. The Deacons did penetrate into Caro lina territory once, but their drive was smothered when the Tar Heels stopped them short of a first down. Carolina kicked off to begin the second half and Junior Seawell brought Deacon halfoack John Parham down on the 21 yard Tine. After an eight yard run by Hill enbrand and an incomplete pass, the Tar Heels got a big break when Will Frye fell on Joe White's fum oie on the Deacon twenty-five yard stripe. After trying the impenetrable Deacon forward wall to no avail, Carolina took to the air. Ken Kel ler set his sights on Will Frye in the end zone but Bruce Hillen brand came up to break up the pass. Charlie Motta then threw one and, although the pass was low, Gravitte scooped it out of the dirt on the fifteen to give the Taf Heels the necessary yardage for their down. But then the Carolina attack bogged down. Gravitte, Keller and Billy Williams took successive at tempts at the Demon Deacon tackle positions, but according to the measuring sticks they were a few inches short of a first down. Taking over on their own five, Wake Forest elected to try to move the ball. Hillenbrand broke through the Carolina defense for five and seven yards on successive attempts to give the Deacs new life on their seventeen. But there the Tar Heels dug in and held for three downs, forcing the Deacs to kick. Joe Wh'e got his toe into the ball and sent it sixty-two yeards down the field before it went out of bounds on the Carolina 18. Carolina was again deep in their own territory and, finding the going tough, was forced to kick on third down. Bland returned Wil liams' boot to his own forty-five yard line. John Parham picked up a couple of key blocks and speeded to the Carolina 32 yard line, a gain of 25 yards before being stopped by converted halfback Maraiiail Newman. Bland gained four and then Par ham took off a sixteen yard jaunt (See KELLER, page 3)

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