Lackey SUNDAY, NOVEMBER t, '1953 THI DAILY TAR HEEL PACE THREE William. And 'Av.irag(8 Finy- On U : Wax Heel By Tom COLUMBIA, S. C.,. Nov. 7 Slow and easy talking Rex Enright of South Carolina leaned back in his swivel chair and waxed enthu siastic. The genial coach has a deputation for filibustering for hours I & fi PEACOCK our best game on the ground this A : "Well," he countered a question, "I don't want to pick any single , player out. You pick someone out yourself. Brazell looked fine, though. He played his best game. ' "Carolina had a fine team that blocked hard and4 played hard. , I won't make a comparison between it and-i)uke, though. It never compare opponents." It was a different story in room 1002 of the Hotel Columbia, coach George Barclay's headquarters. , "Yeah, we stopped them in the air," said Barclay, "We always stop them in one phase. You have to stop them more than one way ' to win the game. ' "Ed Patterson played his usual fine game. t "We were beaten by a better team, that's all. We didn't play our best, but South Carolina could have beaten us at our best. Rex ' has a great ball club with power and speed." Barclay," tired and weary after four straight defeats, wasn't in the best frame of mind to talk about the game. NOTES AND COLOR Columbia saw its first local television pro- ' gram today . . . The new station went on the air with the game . . . A North Carolina fan found the papers and broadcasts confusing . . . ,-They all said, "Carolina plays North Carolina today . . ." The crowning blow was the scoreboard which read. "Carolina" and "Visitors . . ." It would have read better if it had been in Chapel Hill . . . 4. t Tar Heel tackle Thad Eure was injured and couldn't make the trip, but his father tried to make up for his loss . . . Secretary of State Eure carried a huge state flag on a pole, and followed the team ' up and down the sidelines with it . . . The few times Carolina went ' into Gamecock territory, Eure would run to the goal line where he 4 would set up the flag, take off, his cap, and urge the Tar Heels on by waving it in the air . . . The team stayed at the Hotel Columbia, not the newest in the ' city, but the old stalwart frequented by the "old guard ..." A huge t blue and white banner swung in the lobby announcing headquarters , of the North Carolina Alumni Association . . . But in the plush coffee shop close scrutiny of one of the spoons revealed "Wade ' Hampton" embossed on the handle which is the big new rival ho ' tel . . . An addition is being btiilt on the hotel, and balanced on two r steel beams three stories over the sidewalk is a big GMC truck . . . How it got there is a m3stei-y, but one Carolina fan saw it after the ' game and immediately tossed his small paper bag in a sewer . . . Miss Dolly Jean Dennis of Charleston, the homecoming queen, - doesn't confine her beauty to South Carolina, but has dated in Chapel Hill on the weekends ... Grid Results 121 Miss. State Dartmouth 19 1 40 Kentucky East 25 Columbia 6 Princeton 26 Syracuse Harvard Cornell 32 Yale Temple 23 Notre Dame Penn 20 27 Army N. C. State 7 42 Brown Connecticut 7 20 Holy Cross Boston U. 7 19 Colgate Bucknell 12 0 Navy Duke 0 20 Boston College .. Wr. Forest 7 South 12 West Va. Va. Tech 7 32 Tennessee L.S.U. 14 18 South Car. . North Car. 0 26 Pitt - - Virginia 0 27 Maryland - .. Geo. Wash. 6 34 Wash. & Lee Davidson 7 21 Florida - Georgia 7 20 Ga. Tech. Clemson 7 20 Va. Military W&M 19 21 Alabama Chattanooga 14 &iks wti- Camera Hawkeye Camera, Flash Model. Also batteries, eight flash lamps, end two packaged. $13.95. . - - Kodak Duaflex II Camera, Kodef Lens, Flasholder with guard and batter.es, eight flash lamps, and two rolls of Kodak Verichrome Film. In handsom. gift box. $21.95. onyong interested in taking snapshots. Featured .s the KodaK uuar.ex .. Camera with the focusing Kodar f8 Lens. Carrying case, Flasholder with guard and batteries, eight flash lamps, and two rolls of Kodak Ver.chromt Film are also included. Complete, $32.45. Prices include Federal Tax FOISTER'S CAMERA STORE Peacock without ever saying anything, and he and the re porters were playing his favorite game they would try to pin him down, he would try to evade the question. v. - Enright lost a round or two in this interview, not because of lack of evasive skill, but because he had an infected eye that bothered him and took his mind off the game. With a patch over the bum blinker that made him look like Blackbeard, Enright waxed, "North Carolina's pass defense was something to see. It stopped us more effectively than any other team we have played this year. Our ground game was at our best however, so we still moved. It was year. Tulane 0 Vanderbilt 14 . North Texas 7 40 Mississippi Midwest 28 Minnesota Indiana 20 19 Illinois Michigan 3 26 Iowa Purdue 0 28 Mich. State Ohio State 13 7 Kansas State Kansas 0 19 Marquette Detroit 0 34 Wisconsin Northwestern 13 14 Oklahoma Missouri 7 44 Miami (O) Tenn. Tech 6 Southwest 20 Okla. A&M Wyoming 14 23 Sou. Methodist Tex. A&M 0 21 Texas - Baylor 20 Far West 25 Oregon , Idaho 6 21 Colorado , Utah 0 32 Montana Mon. State 13 34 Col. A&M Brig. Young 12 23 Sou. Cal. Stanford 20 53 California Washington 23 Kodak Gift Outfits bete ': .Each one contains everything necessary for outdoor-indoor snapshooting plus a picture taking information booklet. Features the Brownl included: riasnoiaer w.m gua.u .. rolls of Kodak Verichrome Film. Gift . . . -. , ..! I J This gift package includesi A superb gift for .Mm A I Newman Passes Gain 111 Yards Tar Heels Fumble Twice In 1st Period . (Continued from page 1) lost the ball three times on bob bles. The Tar Heel running attack was stopped almost completely this afternoon as Carolina obvious ly missed their first string quar terback, Len Bullock, who is out with an injury. The ""deepest 'penetration into South Carolina territory which the Tar Heels could make was in the fourth quarter when, after recov ering a fumble on their 46, they went to the South Carolina 26 in 2 plays: a long pass from Newman to Gravitte covering 25 of those yards. However, three passes and a running play failed to gain and the ball went over to the Game cocks. South Carolina jumped into the lead in the first quarter when, after recovering the second Tar Heel fumble of the period, they marched from the North Carolina 30 to the touchdown in 11 plays. Gramling made the touchdown on a one-yard buck. The Gamecocks were not able to score again until the third quar ter when, taking over the ball on their own 19 yard line, they went the 81 yards to the goal in four running plays.. On first down, captain Gene Wil son turned the Carolina right end for 17 yards. On the next play Carl Brazell, who was the game's mdivraual leading ground gainer with 92 yards, started out around left end, reversed his field, and ran to the North Carolina 26 after being hit by almost every Tar Heel player on the field. After an . off-tackle play gained nine yards, Wilson took off around right end behind good blocking and ran 17 yards to the end zone. Kincaid's kick was wide. The last Gamecock touchdown came with only a minute and 30 seconds left in the game and fol lowed an interception of a Mar shall Newman pass. The scoring play covered 16 yards and was a flat pass from Gramling to Kin caid on first down. Newman had completed two pas ses in a series which had carried the Tar Heels from their 18 to their 35. At this point, however, center Leon Cunningham inter cepted a pass and ran it back to the North Carolina 16. On the next play Gramling sent Kincaid out wide as a flanker, took the ball from center, stood up, lofted the ball over the heads of the Caro lina defenders, and Kincaid scored without being touched. Again Kin caid's kick was wide. On several occasions, South Car olina runners got away on long runs and appeared to be going all the way, only to be caught from behind by the Tar Heels. In the third quarter, with the ball resting on the South Carolina 36-yard line, Brazell took off around his left end for a gain of 24 yards to the North Carolina 30. ' From there South Carolina drove down to the Tar Heel 15 before they lost the ball on downs when two passes fell incomplete. Carolina won the toss and elect ed to receive, and on the first play from scrimmage, Newman fumbled on a handoff to Gravitte and the Gamecocks recovered on the 39. From there the South Carolinians maneuvered to the Tar Heel 20 before the Carolina line held on first down. Gravitte gained five off tackle and then on a handoff from Newman, Parker went into the line and fumbled, Gramling recovering on the 30. Eleven plays later South Carolina scored. For the second week in a row, Billv Williams' was the Tar Heels' leading ground gainer. Williams ran the ball four times today, gaining 51 yards and an' average age was gained on a draw play which was the most effective one used by the Tar Heels all after noon. Halfback Ken Keller was runner up to Williams with 22 yards in five tries for a 4.4 average. Con nie Gravitte, the Tar Heels' leading ground gainer was held effectively by the Gamecocks as he gained on ly 10 yards in five tries. Again the North Carolina punt ing was outstanding with Lackey and Williams combining for en av erage of 54.4 yards per kick. In the third quarter Williams thrilled the crowd with a perfect coffin corner kick which hit the red mar ker at the goal line on the fly and bounced out of bounds at the one-foot line. iiiilillf ..Thh 4 : MARSHALL . . Back to agonal Terps Take Eighth Consecutive Victory WASHINGTON, Nov. 7 (JP) Maryland's magnificent linemen wore down a stubborn George Washington team today, clearing the way for a second half rush that netted ine Terrapins their eighth straight victory, 27-6. G.W, a 28-point underdog, made a real game of it for the first half, leaving the field trailing only 7-6. But a pair of defensive gems by Maryland produced two quick touchdowns in the third quarter and that was the ball game. End Bill Walker raced inland partially blocked Bill Weaver's punt early in the second half and Maryland took over on the . G.W. 35. Two plays later, speedy Chet Hanulak pulled off one of his copy righted specialties, a long distance touchdown run. This one went for 32 yards. Eagles Score Late To Whip Deacons, 20-7 BOSTON, Mass., Nov. 7 () Boston College's Eagles struck for three fourth period touchdowns including one on a blocked punt to whip Wake Forest 20-7 today in the mud at Fenway Park. Capt. Sonny George gave the Demon Deacons a 7-0 first period lead on a 45-yard touchdown run by intercepting Bill Stuka's' pass and booting the conversion. , Wake Forest . 7 0 0 0 Boston College 0 0 0 20 20 I MURALS Monday's Football field z, Med School vs. Law School; Field 3, Sigma Chi vs. Sigma Nu. Monday's Volleyball 4:00 Court 1,' Wrinston-2 vs Ruffin; Court 2, KA-1 vs. Chi Phi-1. 5:00 Court 1, TMA vs. Connor; Couit 2, Zeta Psi vs. DKE-1. Monday's Wrestling ' 130-lb. 7:30 Cowan (Stacy) vs. Hill (Old East); 7:37 Patseavouras (Chi Phi) vs. Hill (Phi Gam). 137 lb. 7:44 Ayres (Win ston) vs. Van Winkle (Cobb); 7:51 Keyes (Sig Chi) vs. Woods (Phi Delt). 147 lb. 7:58 Farrington (Med Sch) vs. Whiteside (Ruffin); 8:05 Evans (Zetes) vs. Calvert (PiKa); 8:12 Bell (Law Sch) vs. Erwin (Stacy). 157 lb. 8:19 Brumley (Sig Nu) vs. Hanes (SAE); 8:26 Gil leland (Old West) vs. Cornell (Med Sch). . . ; 167 lb. 8:33 Smith (Phi Delt) vs. Winner (Stout vs. Shull); 8:40 Madison (Med Sch) vs. Carshun (Everett). 177 lb. 8:47 McMillan (SAB) vs. Knott (Phi Gam); 8:54 Pepper (Med Sch) vs. Cruver (Cobb). Unlimited 9:01 Wallace (Zetes) vs. Hutchins (SAE). N With S u. y - a if it ? - - , -' NEWMAN quarterback Leaders econd Half ' W. Virginia Almost Loses To Va. Tech BLUEFIELD, W. Va., Nov. 7 (JP) Unbeaten West Virginia, held scoreless for the first two periods, recovered to take a 12-7 Southren Conference football game from Virginia Tech here today. . The seventh ranking Mountain eers came back from a 7-0 half time deficit to score in the third and fourth quarters and boost the nation's longest winning streak to 13 victories. Fullback Tommy Allman, 200 pound senior from Charleston, W. Va., ' scored both Mountaineer touchdowns. He went 40 yards to score on an off-tackle smash early in the fourth period, and bucked over from the one in the third quarter. Tech scored first with just 18 seconds left in the first half on a nine-yard pass from Jack Wil liams to Billy Anderson in the end zone. Five recovered fumbles and two pass interceptions kept the Gob blers in the game, but a strong ground attack netting 311 yards to Tech's 38 crushed the outweigh ed losers. The Gobblers, three touchdown underdogs, fought back with a pas sing attack that netted 127 yards against the Mountaineers' 71. WVU scored first on a 71 -yard drive late in the third period with end Bill Marker going 43 yards to the Tech two on a pass from quarterback Freddy Wyant. Allman got to the one and was halted by Tech center Hunter Swink. He went over right tackle to score on the next play. Jack Stone's conversion try was blocked by Howie Wright. 'The Mountaineers' second score climaxed a drive that ate up 81 yards in 10 plays with Allman go ing the last 40 yards on an off tackle smash. Stone's conversion attempt failed. Tech's only score was set up when end Roger Simmons hit West Virginia's Ted Anderson and knocked the ball from the substi tute quarterback's hands on the Mountaineer 15. Simmons recovered.- West Virginia was penalized to the 10 for delaying the game and a pass interference ruling against Allman on the WVU goal gave Tech the ball at the one. . i 1 M can YOU type INTENSIVE, COLLEGE-LEVEL ' x TYPING COURSE NOV. 16-JAN. 1$ SiSTJl-. , , Hours To Fit Your Schedule Miss Betsy Parker TOWN CLASSES (over Sutton's Drug Store) pobo,615 town classes Chapel Hill f c,,g, ma md warn Chapil Hill, North Carolina Tech Pressed Hard By Tigers; VMI Edges Wm. & Mary, 20-19 Keydets Win With Last Minute Pass ROANOKE, Va., Nov. 7 (P) Quarterback Dave Woolwine flipped a 23-yard touchdown pass to . halfback Johnny Mapp with only 56 seconds to play here today to give Virginia Military Institute's Keydets a come-from-behind 20-19 victory over William and Mary and spoil the Indians' chances for a share in the Southern Conference football title. , Trailing by 19-14 with three min utes left, the Keydets moved 70 yards in that length of time, wholly on Woolwine's passing, to hand William and Mary the surprise de feat its first in conference play and only its second of the season. A crowd of 5,000 in Roanoke's Victory Stadium saw the lead change Hands four times as the two teams, who used only30 play- I ers between them, battled on near even terms weather. VMI W&M in almost freezing 0 14 0 6 0 13 620 019 Uprising Lattner Leads Irish To 28-20 Conquest PHILADELPHIA, . Nov. 7 (JP) All-America Johnny Lattner, re turning one kickoff for 92 yards and setting up two other scores with spectacular runs, saved Notre Dame's unbeaten record to'day as the nation's No. 1 college football team downed the surprisingly rug ged Pennsylvania eleven, 28-20, in a bruising intersectional game at Franklin Field. The Irish halfback from Chica go's Westside also intercepted a pass in his end zone in the last period when the Quakers were threatening for a fourth touch down. It was the toughest battle of the year for the men of South Bend and coach Frank Leahy, returning to his duties after a two-week siege of virus. The partisan, sellout crowd of 74,711 was treated to a stirring per formance as Penn, a 19 point un derdog, fought the vaunted Irish to almost even terms. Ed Gramigna, Penn quarterback, had his greatest day in passing and fullback Joe Varaitis and halfback Bob Felver ran like berserk bulls through the Irish defense that had cowed all other foes. i Lattner's 92-yard touchdown run with a kickoff came in the first period after Penn had stung the top-ranked Irish wath a quick op ening touchdown. His great run set off a touchdown re-action for the South Benders who added two more within the space of 10 min utes. Quarterback Ralph Guglielmi scored from three yards after a 68-yard drive and sub quarterback Don Schaefer added another on a two-yard sneak on the first play of the second period. This score followed a 35-yard punt return, by the elusive Lattner and a 38-yard crunching march by Notre Dame's modern version of the Four Horsemen. Lattner also set up the Irish's final score by twisting 56 yards on a punt return early in the third period. This carried the ball to the Penn 26 and two plays later Guglielmi threw a 23-yard scoring pass to halfback Joe Heap. Two of Penn's touchdowns were quickies opening each of the hal yes. Notre Dam e .14 7 7 028 Penn 7 0 13 020 Win Tilts Tar Heel Billy Teas Rambles For Wrecks ATLANTA, Nov. 7 () Billy Teas, a skinny-legged speedster, and an erratic but touchdown-producing air game boosted Georgia Tech to a 20-7 victory -over a big Clemson team brilliantly quarter backed by sophomore Don King. Teas, a junior from Andrews, N. C., continually collected good gains on his favorite play, a sweep of his left end. He set up Tech's tie-breaking touchdown in the third quarter with a 55-yard punt re turil and gained more than 100 yards from scrimmage. ' After the. tough, 162-pound half back had lugged the punt back to Clemson's 18, quarterback Pepper Rodgers sneaked for a yard, the!i passed to Dave Davis in the end zone. Earlier Tech bad marched 51 yards to tie the game, halfback Leon Hardeman sweeping 22 yards to the one and Rodgers sneaking over. A 22-yard pass from Bill Brig man to Bill Sennett gave Tech an insurance touchdown in the third period. Clemson's big line outplayed the sixth-ranked Yellow Jackets most of the first half and the King-led Tigers matched Tech's offense. King , guided the Atlantic Coast Conference visitors 80 yards fA eight plays after the opening kickoff. King sneaked it over from the two. Clemson 7 0 0 0 7 Georgia Tech. 0 7 13 020 Clemson scoring: Touchdown, King. Conversion, Shown. Georgia Tech scoring: Touch downs, Rodgers, Davis, Sennett. Conversions, Rodgers 2 Save on Gas at HIGHWAY SERVICE STATION ('on the curve'" at Carrboro) -All Credit Cards Honored 29.4c regular 30.4 extra ifSK t riff Tf i- fTJFIB? "irr.i ' EUTtfcS THE UNFAIR SEX: on expose O! the human mole for young ladie of all ages. By Nina Farewell. Get your copy (price $2.95; of INTIMATE BOOKSHOP MOT M1MI EDNA FERBER'S PULITZER PRIZE NOVEL it PRESENTED ar Warner Bros. STARRING Jane Wymam HER FINEST. PORTRAYAL NOW PLAYING Cross Country Team To Meet Blue Devils The Tar Heel cross country team will meet the Duke Blue Devils here tomorrow afternoon at 4:00 p.m. Thus far in the sea son, the Tar Heel harriers have won two and lost two, losing to N. C. State and Maryland an: defeating Tennessee and Rich mond. The Blue Devil freshman team will take on a here tofore undefeated Carolina freshman team which has won four straight meets against the freshman teams of Richmond, Duke, N. C. Slate and Tennessee. The varsity runners will he led by little Bob Barden, along with Al Marx, Tony Houghton, and Captain Bill Higgins. Barden last Saturday against Tennessee camo from behind to turn in a spectac ular finish "and set a new course record in winning first place. This will be the second meeting for the two freshman squads. In their previous encounter the TaV Heel Frosh, led by little Jimmy Beatty, won "handily. Jim Garner, Marion Griffin, Dick McFadden, and Bob Harrington are either freshman performers who have shown up well so far this season. 'jjj ' 'p 1 M l - - I 2 Kiiiii' .MXi.jai&fa)ail&& 100 PURE IMPORTED CasHmere Sweaters 19.95 You Will Find A Variety Of Colors In All Sizes If You Shop Early, So Take Advantage Of This' Exceptional Buy. mmmm M. COLUMBIA ST. v SINCE -JOHNNY BELINDA'! the -Mm EE

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