Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 20, 1953, edition 1 / Page 3
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TUESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1953 TMS DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE THREE "V; y Car ?eei Hport By Tom Peacock "TV-Ns----iirv.vr- PEACOCK Coach George Barclay was "disappointed but proud" of the game his Tar Heels played in their 26-0 defeat by Maryland. It could have been a different ball game, said Barclay, "if we had had a little more age and experience. Maryland had a senior team with all the experience that goes with it When they needed something, they got it "If we had had more background and some older boys in the lineup we never, would have fumbled on Maryland's two-yard line. What happened was the boys were excited and got in a hurry in a place where you shouldn't hurry. . Barclay," hoarse and quieted from his shouts and commands from the sidelines, had little to say about the referee Lng. "I dont want to say a thing about it for the press." The Tar Heels were penalized 10 yards in the first half including three straight 15-yard penalties when they were deep in Maryland territory. Pressed about the matter, Barclay admitted, "I was bitter sure. I thought there were a couple questionable calls, but I cant say for sure until I see the movies. ( Before the game Barclay had stated that Carolina teas due to be come a passing team. When asked about the poor shotting of 25 yards gained m, the air, he had no ready answer. "We threw 13 passes, and should have thrown more. But we only completed three, and the protection was bad. All I can say is that we will have to work on them more." - Quarterbacks are still the big problem and question on the Caro lina team. "I won't know anything until I get a full report on Britt " continued Barclay. Quarterback Lou Britt pulled a rib cartlidge Saturday. , , "Leonard. Bullock looked good out there, and maybe he is ready to play. You can't tell much about play in the last part of the fourth quarter, however. I thought Motta was improved. We're got a problem. "If Maryland hadn't scored in the last couple minutes of the half it would have been a much different game. That long pass play was just one of those things in football, but it went a long way towards beating us. "Tfe.?, early in the second half, Maryland held us for four downs on its 12, end that was the turning point as far as us staying in thj$ running. "I was mighty proud of my boys. They never gave up, they played hard, and well, too. They'll be better with some more ex perience." NOTES AND STUFF Head cheerleader Jim Fountain is work ing on a gimmick for Tennessee, the homecoming game, that pro mises to be one of the more startling events of the football season if not the whole year . . . Almost every semester system school in the nation has a caravan weekend with no Saturday classes during the football season, and Carolina should be no exception . . . -Plans for a caravan weekend are in the first but nothing has been said about classes . . . The Virginia game was tentatively picked by the University Club, but it will probably be switched to South Carolina on Fountain's recommendation ... Speculation that University of Virginia will successfully engineer into the ACC another Virginia school is way off base . . . The con ference was anxious to get UVa. both for prestige and to have an eight team conference, but has no intention of expanding any time soon . . . Carolina's 1954 basketball schedule is confined to ACC and Southern Conference schools right now, and will prob ably stay the way it is . . . Next year look for some good Western teems and possibly a New York engagement . . . Kirkman Witt Be Ready for Briff Sustains Minor Injury Yarborough Also Returns To Work By Vardy Buckalew Only quarterback Lou Britt miss ed practice yesterday as a result of Saturday's Maryland game as the Tar Heels began their preparations for this week's encounter with Georgia's Bulldogs. Britt was injured in the third quarter of Saturday's game and suffered a rulled cartilege in his left side. However, Coach George Barclay stated that he would be back in uniform today. Coach Barclay also reported that center Bill Kir km an, who has been out since a week before the season started, will be ready to play this week in Athens. Kirkman broke (two bones in his right hand dur j ing pre-season practice and at the jtime he was playing first string. Also back in uniform yesterday I was captain . Ken Yarborough who has been nursing a knee injury sus tained in the Wake Forest game. Yarborough was expected to be out for several weeks but was working out with the team yesterday. That leaves the Tar Heels with only one man missing from the squad and he is Will Frye, first string end who was also injured in the Wake Forest game. Frye suf fered a knee injury and he has not been in uniform since that con test . The practice yesterday was held without the benefit of heavy padd ing as the team limbered up after pWSSrt .wia vSy , fcf AUBURN'S RIGHT END, Jim Hall (51), leaps high into the air as he pulls down a pass from quarterback Bobby Freeman for a 25-yard gain during the first quarter of the Auburn-Georgia Tech game in Atlanta, Ga. Charlie ' Brannon (30), Tech left halfback, brough Hall to earth. Tech won the Southeastern Conference clash, 36-6. ACC -Big Seven Pact Is Praised By Coaches MIAMI, Fla., Oct 19 (3) The suffering their first defeat of the Orange Bowl's two year pact with season at the hands of Maryland! the Big Seven and Atlantic Coast Saturday. After running through a Conferences was praised by coaches long dummy scrimmage, the squad was split up into four teams for 50 and 100 yard relay games. During the offensive drill Coach Barclay experimented with Len Bullock at quarterback with the first string combination. ana college otiiciais today as a step toward taking some of the taint of commercialism off post season football. Under the agreement, the two Two Football Deaths Occur Last Weekend Carolina is hustling its head off right now to get the Notre Dame game on theatre television, but cable difficulties are so far stopping any progress . . . There is still a chance that something will be worked out thus putting the Tar Heels on the theatre screens of the best theaters in the largest cities in the east . . . The Notre Dame-Oklahoma game was televised in this manner and had un qualified success ... Carolina Cross Country Team Will Invade N. C. State Today Coach Dale Ransom will take both his varsity and his freshman cross country teams to Raleigh to day where they will face N. C. State in their second meet of the season. Both squads took decisive victories over the Richmond Spid ers here Saturday. N. C. State is recognized as one of the top cross country powers in this area. Last year they literal ly ran away with the state title when they topped the second place Tar Heels by sixteen points. Al though State has several veterans on their team, Carolina has a great ly improved squad and after Sat urday's whitewashing of the Spid ers, should be able to recover the laurels which they gave up a few years ago. ' Bob Barden will pace the Tar Heel' attack in the capitol city. Barden toured the 3.7 mile Caro lina course in highly creditable time of 21:31.5 as fomr of his team mates finished less than a minute behind to give the Tar Heels a total of fifteen points and a per fect score. Boyd Newman, Al Mark, Tony Houghton, Don Wright and Lee Bostian will carry the load for the Carolina Harriers. 0 DR. W. T. KOHN EYES EXAMINED - GLASSES FITTED VISUAL TRAINING FLU ID LESS SCHERAL CONTACT LENSES 129 E. Franklin St. Phone 9-3141 NEW YORK, Oct. 19 ) Two high school football players died during the weekend, bringing to eight the list of grid fatalities since the start of the season. Other deaths have included two college players, one college fresh man and three high school players. Earl King, a Clay, W. Va., high school junior, died after being hurt in the last period of a game Friday night Doctors said he died of a combination of shock and weak heart Lewis Robertson, a 17-year-old Alexandria, Va., high school play er, died after he left the field at halftime of a Saturday night g2me. He complained of dizziness at the time. Athletic officials said the boy injured his head a week ago and his death may have stem med from that injury. . The college deaths were John Pappas, Boston University player who was fatally injured in the BU- Syracuse game Oct 3, and Joseph Higgs of Fisk University in Nash ville who died Oct 7. conferences will supply the teams for the next two Orange Bowl games. Oklahoma and Maryland are favored to dominate the two circuits this season and meet here next New Year's Day in the first game under the pact. Missouri's Coach Don Faurot said he had always favored bowl games "where they are under the control of the colleges and the; money is divided among all con ference members, so the rich don't get richer and the poor poorer." Each team will be guaranteed $110,000 for the 1954 game and $112,000 for the 1955 game. The Big Seven team playing in the bowl will turn 80 per cent of its purse over to the conference, to be divided equally among the other members schools. The ACC bowl team will be al lowed to keep 50 per cent of the total bowl take. Of the remaining one half, 25 per cent will go to the conference and 75 per cent will be divided equally among non- participating members. ACC Commissioner Wallace Wade was enthusiastic over the agreement because "it takes out all the worry and some of the com mercialism. The latter feature makes it acceptable to the faculty people." The Big Seven will send its champion to the 1954 game. The ACC will have to vote on its re presentative because the confer ence was just recently organized and will not be able to determine a true champion through round robin schedules for two years. Executive Secretary Reaves E. Peters said the Big Seven will not permit the same team to go to the Orange Bowl two years in a row. At present, Wade said the ACC has no rule which would prevent a team from playing in Miami both years of the agreement I MURALS 5:00 Field 3, Med School-4 vs. Stacy; Field 4, Cobb-3 vs. Old East-1. THE ADORN BEAUTY SHOP LOCATED IN THE LENNOX BUILDING, GLEN LENNOX J ' WILL BE " CLOSED WED. OCTOBER 21 OOMT MiSS HIM I" THfS OtAe-SWEET-HOME Red's half , a Home- I Owner. k)V-CiRVhalf-h- love! 2 JO 1 A I An M-G-M Picture JLVNHAGEN-pollyKen . An M-G-M Picture . COEDS fM kic usf fef ph hy ",at's the easy1 -'iTNv we deliver i:;XJ' if To Your W'F:4 Dorm- Cobb-1 Withdraws From League; Winston Finally Scored Upon Undefea3, league-leading Win-ston-1 wayKCored upon for the first time Us year but hung on and won their fourth game of the season, joining Lewis-1 and Everett in the winner's circle for yester day's intramural tag football games. Skippy Winstead, ace Carolina basketball guard, passed to Ted Richardson for two scores and to Charles Fox for another. Winstead also tallied two extra points. Rich ardson continued hifc incredible scoring streak to six touchdown catches, bringing his total output in four games lo six touchdowns and 36 points. Charles Wartman kicked the final point in the 23-6 victory. Ritchie Smith was the vil lain as far as Winston's unscored upon record went as he crossed the goal early in the first period for Alexander's only score. Lou Rosenstock spoiled BVP's day with a tally for Everett dorm and the only score of the game. The win tied Everett for second place in the No. 1 dormitory di vision. In the only other game of the day Lewis-1 took another for (See MURALS, page 4) DAILY CROSSWORD 17. The ACROSS 1. Heal 5. Terror 9. Incendiar ism 10. Tapestry 12. Of the nature of poetry 14. Sown (Her.) 15. Thus 16. Prepare for publication 18. Resort 19. Type measures 21. Cease 23. Land measure 24. Ahead 26. Come into view 28. Test 31. Raise 32. Rung: of a ladder 34. Music note 35. Part of "to be" 36. Comfort 38. Egg of a parasitic insect 41. Flap 43. A knight's attendant 15. Negative reply 46. Enough (poet.) 48. Bearlike 50. Oriental coin 52. Finished 53. Opera by Verdt 54. Rip DOWN 1. Sing softly 2. Employ 3. Method of learning , 4. Oklahoma city ( poss. ) 5. Music note 6. Bitter vetch 7. God of war 8. Excited behavior 9. Projecting , end of a church 11. Scorched 13. Quote grave 20. Present ly 22. Saucy 25. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 20, 1953, edition 1
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