Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 25, 1953, edition 1 / Page 1
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0 c Lirurir CUPEL KILL, II. C. 2-31-49 SPORTS WEATHER Fair and cooler with lit tle change in temperature. High, 68; low, middle 40's. Sports Editor Tom Pea cock brings you Coach Barclay's comments on the Georgia game. See p. 3. VOLUME LXII NUMBER 31 Complete (JP) Photo and Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, N. C SUNDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1953 Complete (iP) Photo and Wire Service FOUR PAGES TODAY fnfn innn n fprp 1 n ? r Li LlL-3 "11 .71 f r mm TO C3 own Wfh Th By Rolf Neiil Daily Tar Heel Editor ATHENS, Ga., Oct 24 Fraternity house doors swung wide tonight and Georgia's victory party was on. Living rooms were packed so tightly that the only things stirring Trio Of Coeds In Engineering At N. CState RALEIGH, N. C, Oct 24 (.TV Three coeds at North Carolina State College are proving engi neering is no longer strictly a man's world. They are Emily Brown of Wil-i mington, Mary Ellen Short of Bre - vard, and Jane Asbill Land of York, S. C. Miss Brown is following in her fathers footsteps in civil engineering. Miss Short, with two grandfathers who were engineers, is studying aeronautical engineer ing. Miss Land, a sophomore in chemical engineering, is breaking new ground in her family. The girls are three of 52 coeds enrolled at the college this term. The other 4,009 students are men. Student Party Will Nominate Tuesday Night The Student Party will meet Tuesday night at 8 o'clock in the Roland Parker Lounge of Graham Memorial to nominate candidates to fill vacant seats in the student legislature. Two seats are vacant in dorm men's district I (Cobb), three in district H (lower quad), and two in district HI (Alexander), Connor and Winston). Dimes Group Leaders Meet CHARLOTTE, Oct 24 Ap proximately 200 volunteer leaders in the fight against polio will attend the regional March of Dimes planning meeting at the Barringer Hotel here Monday and Tuesday, it was announced yes terday by Secretary of State Thad Eure, North Carolina March of Dimes chairman. Joseph F. Nee, national March of Dimes director, and several assistants from New York nation al headquarters, will lead the dis cussions. Basil O'Connor, Foundation pres ident, will address the delegates by closed circuit-television. 4? ' L , t : ; - p I k I .. i . -f CONFERRING ON THE EXPLOSIVE Arab-Israe'i situation are United Nations Secretary General Dag Hammarskjold (right) and Maj. Gen. Vagn Bennike, U. N. Palestine Truce Supervisor, who flew to New York to deliver his report on the tense squabble. Bennike said that tension in the Middle East critical," but added that he does not believe i; will erupt "into a one, wan, Wind! arere drinks. Corsages were muti lated; best dresses were soiled; button downs were unbuttoned but no one cared, for Georgia had won. Carolina fans who made the trip probably some 200 or 250 mix ed in with friends at the fraternity houses or headed back for the HilL Carolina guard Chris Carpenter showed some acting talent in the lobby of the.Holman Hotel, team headquarters. Carpenter, head top ped with a black homburg and hand holdins a iaunty cane, hustled about e hotel imitating various i uxc coaches. Halfback Ken Keller , a neat mimic, of Coach Steve Belichick. Athens' favorite houses no long er operate. It's widely renown four houses of prostitution, located just outside the town limits, were pad locked this summer by police. Po lice claim it's for good, but old timers smile. They've heard of that before. Handicapped by a sore throat, head cheerleader Jim Fountain re mained in Chapel Hill. Four boys and three coeds from the cheering squad did come, though, and they led the meager Carolina yell sec tion. - ' - One of the things here which impresses Carolina visitors most is the average Georgia sorority house. They are plush layouts. The houses are immense and of old-style architecture where one would expect to find Rhett Butler and Scarlet OUara right at home. The University of Georgia claims it's older than the University of North Carolina at least from a charter point of view. A sign at the entrance to the Georgia cam pus says the University was the first chartered government - con trolled university, this being in 1785. Carolina opened up in 1795. CPU Schedules Semester Debate Tonight At GM The Caroina Political Union will discuss "The Semester System Versus The Carolina Way of Life" at its meeting in Graham Memorial , tonight at 8 o'clock. Chairman Joel Fleishman, in announcing the topic and meeting time, added that all old members absent at tonight's meeting will;Wolf . tQ trate its terrf. have their names stricken the organization's roll. r 4, 59,(Cf)riPUS 5FSFEN Squirrels warily circling stu dents taking afternoon siesta on lawn in front of Bingham Hall. Bulky male perched on kid- die's trike in Y Court. Woodhouse Is 'Satisfactory7 After Accident Professor E. J. Woodhouse of the University Department of Polit ical Science was in an automobile accident yesterday. He is at Me morial Hospital, where his condi tion was described as "satisfactory" last night. The extent of neck injuries suffered in the accident had not yet been determined. Prof. Woodhouse's mother-in-law, Mrs. Hepzibah J. Kinsman, was riding in the car also. Mrs. Kinsman suffered what is thought to be a concussion, but she has regained consciousness. Prof. Woodhouse was cut about the face and received rib injuries. The two had started to Chapel Hill from their home on the Ra leigh Road when the accident occurred. The blowout of a rear tire caused their car to leave the road. No other vehicles, reportedly, were involved Duke's Devils Stomp State, 31-0; Irish Top Tech; Penn Nips Navy Smith Scores Twice In Win, Grad Thrills With 75 Yard Tally DURHAM, N. C Oct 24 OP) Halfback Red Smith scored two touchdowns as once-beaten Duke routed North Carolina State, 31-0, today in a great display of power. Duke, bouncing back from last week's 14-13 loss to Army, scored one touchdown in the first period, Iwo in the second, one in the third, and added a fourth in the last period on an electrifying 73 yard run by third string quarter back Dave Lerps, a graduate student. It was Duke's third straight ! ii i i-i a. st e : Mj 1 gave the Blue Devils a 5-1 season record. State's record now is one ; victory against four losses. A crowd of 15,000 saw State com pletely throttled by a bruising Tlnfrp tpam that npv?r allrvA-pd thp from.tory untii the third period. Not (See DUKE'S 3RD, page 3) V; -ST t '4 maior conflict, NEA Telephoto. Snafu Day, Even For Drill Team ATHENS, Ga., Oct 24 For I all its main tte United btates .Navy jusx couldn't win today. Carolina's crack drill platoon over 40 strong was to put on a fancy half time marching exhibi tion. Here's what happened instead: They arrived at Raleigh-Durham Airport at the appointed hour, 9 a.m., eager for the takeoff in the giant "Flying Boxcar' which would wing them south. However, a de lay put them one hour and ten minutes behind. r When they arrived on Georgia soil it wasn't Athens at alL but Atlanta. Athens' airport was too small to take the big plane and the middies would have to change planes at Atlanta. However, the planes weren't there so the UNC men had to wait. Marine Capt G. F. Good, IH, decided to try out his drill'' team during the layover. The drill team wasn't as snappy as it should be, and Capt Good raised some Ma rine helL Still the change-over aircraft hadn't arrived. Game time was at 2 p.m. The drill squad was getting nervous. Meanwhile, at Athens Airport a I half dozen middies were waiting, They came down Friday night by auto with team commander Don (See SNAFU, page 2) Notre Dame Endures Tough Second Period Without Coach Leahy By Jerry Liska SOUTH BEND, Ind., Oct 24 OP) Notre Dame, the nation's No. 1 team, survived a tooth and - nail second half without stricken coach Frank Leahy today to shatter Georgia Tech's vaunted 31-game unbeaten streak 27-14. It was a dramatic, bitterly fought game that really started after Notre Dame left the field at halftime 'eading 7-0 but came back without Leahy who collapsed wiJi a "muscular spasm" in the lower chest Leahy was taken to a hospital in the third quarter about the time Tech bounced back with a 70-yard scoring drive before Notre Dame with lightning swiftness! scored two touchdowns on a short pass and a bad pass by Tech's third string center into the end zone. Georgia Tech, last beaten by (See TECH'S VICTORY, page 3) Automobile Designer Believes 'Dream Cars7 Not Here To Stay By David J. Wilkie 'monster,' they say American- DETROIT, Oct 24 (JP) The -built cars generally are larger "dream cars" of today undoubted-i than most European cars. They ly develop a lot of engineering pos-! call our cars 'top heavy.' sibilities for the future, but theyl "Well, American-made cars still do not necessarily suggest design ring the bell in Europe as well as or styling features of a decad-: hence. That's the view of George W.ied for the smaller European car." Walker, one of th? nation's best! known industrial designers. Walk- industrial designers, waix- styled some of the better American automobiles dur-; er has known ing the last 20 years. ; we can anticipate the car of the "Past experience migfct suggest I future," h2 said, "the center of there is a definite trend in auto ; gravity will be even lower than styling and design. This is true it is today." only to the extent that we design-1 He explained that paved high ers are now working cn possible ways made possible the lower styling for the automobile five j slung passenger car of today. "Cer year! hence. However, we don't ; tainly with unimproved roads, know what the public will demand rutted by wagon wheels you could five years beyond that time. "Some foreign car designers have said the American car is a 4 -'l- .V' V- ' j .'-"-"Out '" ! I . j- . - - ' T V r fit II -h I I ; s if'" - I VV ' 1 - L C jH - ' i "JMlSreR ROBERTS," season opener for the Carolina Playmakers,. bar. been held over until Tuesday. Here, Playmakers Donald Treat, Old pel Hill, and Suzanne Elliott, Alvah, Oklahoma, are pictured in a scene from the production. UN Week Ends Flag Rites, The flag of the United Nations yesterday. The blue and white emblem Quaker's Field Goal In Closing Seconds Ends 6-6 Deadlock PHILADELPHIA, Oct 24 -(JP)-Pennsylvania booted Navy right out the unbeaten ranks today on 1 a field goal by husky Ed Gamigna from the 25-yard line that gave the j Quakers a 9-6 upset win in the j final 60 seconds before a roaring crowd of 52,210. T'ais was Penn's day as the Red and Blue charged up and down the field, completely dominating the play against favored Navy. Even a gift touchdown which the Quakers handed the Middies in the third period did not stem the Pennsylvania charge. Penn scored first on a 36-yard j march: literally handed Navy a i matching touchdown and then I sursed back in the dying seconds F tuQ , It was Gramigna, the man of the hour on Franklin Field who kicked ,-the bottom out of Navy's chances for a clear record this season. He had missed a chance for an extra point, earlier. j they do here at home. And most , of them have the readability claim- Walker noted there has been a steady irena towara lowerea su-i houettes in American automobiles : since World War EL "Insofar as S steady trend toward lowered sil not have cars with but six or he seven inches road clearance, eaid. Drama Held was raised over the Carolina campus of the world organization was raised to the top of the South campus nargpoie -ma - morning- "ceremony' which featured the wind-up of United Nations week on the cam pus. Two hundred students stood and watched as the flag fluttered to the top of the pole. A Naval ROTC trumpeter played, 'To The Colors." Friday night, Hill Hall was the scene of another UN Week fea ture, the presentation of "The One And the Many," a play by Chapel Hill's John Clayton. Over 30 students from 18 coun tries represented at Carolina par- ticipated in the drama. Five of them. Purobi Bose, Mike Furuha ta, Colin Williams. Abdel Khalil, and Fang-Wen Wang, took part in dramatic tabloids. The drama, described as "A Primer For Uniting Nations," was directed by Mrs. Ephraim Rosen sweig. The Hill Hall play and yester day's flag-raising concluded a week of activities on the camnus related to the United Nations. The YMCA, Dialectic Senate and Phil anthropic Assembly, sorority grouns, and numerous individuals particinated in the Week's pro gram in an effort to brins the UN function to students and towns people on an intimate basis. Maron Downs Will Sing Here Wednesday Marion Jackson Downs, inter nationally known soprano, will present a concert, open free to tin public, Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock in Hill Hall under trie SDonsorship of the Inter-faith Council. Sirs. Downs is the wife of the late Dr. Karl E. Downs, who was president of Samue! Houston Col lege in Austin, Texas. gT,e reC5nn7 returned from TtaTy "whprhe spent the summer studying "seventeenth century" Ital- . I i an music wim uaa franco u chL While: on tour in Mexico in 1952, she was guest artist on the National hour, Mexican ment Radio Network. Govr.-n- She received her masters degree in music at Columbia University, and has also studied at the Julii- j ard School of Music and under j Once more a hard-playing Car Guiseppi Eoghetti, the tutor ofolina team took the kickoff and Marion Anderson. (See BULLDOGS, page 3) Ga. Back Completes 18 Passes By Tom Peacock Daily Tar Heel Sports Editor SANFORD STADIUM, ATHENS, Ga., Oct 24 Havoc rained down from the heavens on Carolina's Tar Heels here today in the form of second quarter passes from Zeke Bratkowski's talented arm, the Georgia quarterback throwing for two touchdowns and setting up two more to give the Bulldogs a 27-14 win. Bratkowski did his wrecking and won thp tramp in the cennr? rrnar- 20-0 halftime lead after a score- GEORGLV UXC 18 Total First Downs 14 142 Net Yds. Rushing 137 29 Pass Attempted 23 13 Passes Completed 13 1 Passes had Inter. 3 219 Yds. Gained Pass. 121 4 No. Punts 2 36.2 Punting Average 44.0 9 No. Penalties 4 95 Yds. Penalized 30 4 Fumbles Lost 4 less first period. Most of his 123 first half passing yards came in this frame, and most of the re ceiving damage was done by left end John Carson who caught eight passes for 87 yards and a touch down. "The Brat's" exhibition stole most of the shine from a brilliant debut at quarterback by Leonard (Teedee) Bullock who played all but five offensive plays of the game while leading the Tar Heels to both their second half scores. The clear blue Georgia sky was filled with 29 of Bratkowski's pas ses, 18 of which found their mark for 219 yards. A 15-mile westerly breeze cooled the 26,000 fans swel tering in an 80-degree late Octo ber heat wave, but did little to af fect the bullet throws of Bratkow ski or his counterpart Bullock. Larry Parker ran for twelve yards to score the Tar Heels' first touchdown in the third quarter, ' d BuUock meaked over one yard out with 20 seconds left in the game for their other. Carolina looked like the team to beat late in the first quarter when right halfback Connie Gravitte took a Bullock handoff, crashed right tackle, saw daylight and cut back to go 69 yards for a touchdown. A repeat of the previous week ap peared in the offing, however, when head linesman Harry Sharp of Alabama called it back on an offsides penalty. Two plays after Gravitte's ill fated run Carson recovered right half Marshall Newman's fumble on the Carolina 25 as the first quarter ended. The Brat whipped a first down pass to right end Gene White on the 17 one play later, then heaved one as he was being tackled to Carson on the two-yard line for the touchdown. Guard Sam Mrvos' conversion gave Georgia a 7-0 lead at 13:50 of the second quarter. From then on to the half, the Bulldogs couldn't be stopped, get ting every break of the game. Bratkowski hardly bothered to call a running play, sticking to a pass up the middle that the Tar Heels obviously hadn't reckoned for. Georgia capitalized on the Tar Heels' next error, a fumble on the Bulldog 43 by Dick Lackey just when Bullock was smoothly operat ing a Carolina drive after the kick off. End Joe CMailey recovered. It was a matter of little conse quence for the Brat to move 50 yards to the Carolina seven-yard line, 46 of them coming on passes to Carson, three of them an identi- cal play. A penalty refused by Carolina and two running plays resulted in a fourth down on the four-yrd line from which right half Charlie Madison scored off tackle. George Foti blocked the conversion at tempt, and Georgia led, 13-0, at 8:50 of the second quarter.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 25, 1953, edition 1
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