i SUNDAY; SEPTEMBER 26, 1954 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE THREE Duke 52 S. Car. 34 Navy 27 Penn State 14 Georgia 14 Florida -- 13 27 Notre D. 21 Okla. 21 21 Texas OjTCU 16 Perm 0 Army 20 W&AA 0 Illinois 12 Clemson 7 Ga.Tech 12 DONT BE MIS-LEAD . . . HERE IS TOP SCREEN ENTERTAINMENT . . . 99 minutes of romance . . . comedy . . . adventure . . . action and color . . . it it uanr p 0 0 :By TOM peacock: TEEDEE BULLOCK DESERVES his chance. 5tnrv he miliar with the heretofore third string quarterback's in tL S 1 11 iS filled with tou-h breaks" et Bu"ock has shown in ine -past he may easily be the best signal caller on the team. Yes teruay; a -day when all the quarterbacks were looking good, Bullock stUod out like an inflamed digit the short while he was in the game. Taking nothing away from the the excellent jobs done by both Al Long and Marshall Newman, Bullock satisfied the fans most and seem ed to handle the team best. Circumstances didn't lend themselves to a true appraisal of Bul lock's j6b, however. He went in the game when State was tired and Carolina was deep in its territory. The game was virtually won before TeedeeTed the team to its insurance touchdown. Bullock deserves a start so he can show what he has from the very beginning. Briefly, this is Bullock's story: As a freshman he started out at halfback, switched to quarter, and caught the fancy of the crowd'against Virginia when he ran 69 yards for a score while Carolina sank in ig nomiolfc defeat. His sophomore year he was outstanding in the Mary land game until he hurt his ankle, an injury that never left him. Spring practice last year did without Teedee, who underwent an operation for internal injuries and missed the whole show. v . THE CAROLINA COACHES could only shake their heads and shrug their shoulders when asked about Bullock before practice this fall, pointing out he missed the all-important spring workouts. Then, on the first day of fall practice, Bullock hit a blocking dummy and suffered a concussion, putting him out again. He kept at it though, and was allowed to start practicing last week. It would have been an injustice to Bullock if the coaches had played him too much yesterday, with his lack of preparation, But he has proven he is a bright boy, a good football player, and he will be ready scon. Bullock is an active boy, with extra-curricular activities other than football.' Some people take the attitude that football- and school is enough' for any man to do, and that something must suffer if a player takes ftn more. It has been said Bullock doesn't want to play enough, that when the going gets rough he isn't there with tile goods. Teedee will tell anyone he wants to play 'football, that he loves football. Fnllock deserves a chance, and I'm sure he'll get one. It will be up to 'him after that. The Ayden junior has a large following of people who fi?mly-believe-that he is the best quraterback on the team. It can't be denied that he is a cute ball handler and a good runner, one of theTbest. He calls a wide open game as shown by the plays he called while 'leading Carolina to a score yesterday, and that pleases the crowd. Ooach Barclay simply said that all three of his quarterbacks looked good fend he was pleased. Coach Bill Edwards, who makes backfields his specialty, watched the game from the press box and gave instruc tions on the phone. He couldn't hide his pleasure over Bullock's work, and said, "Yes, he deserves a chance. And I'm sure he'll get one." A hurt doesn't help the team a bit. The question is, can he take it? I think so. But it's up to him. NOTES: CONNIE GRAVITTE seemed to be victimized twice on interference calls . . . Don Klochak has solved the fullback problem, but he needs to run with his head up, not watching his shoes. He can punt, too . . . Larry Parker showed he can get a good ofot into the ball !',(' -Bill Koman did a lot of wrecking from his backer-up spot . . . Will Frye looked like the outstanding lineman, and Dick Starner and Norman Lane made Carolina fans breath easier on the end situation . Why did Frve stand still on a punt return once? ... The team missed halfback Ken Keller, as was expected, especially around the outside . . . In fact, Carolina didn't do much around ends at all . . . There was every indication that spirit was at a new high before the game but from the sound of things yesterday it looks like we'll have to get Nose Jones back . . . Jim Fountain does a goou juu .nm na -, not got -.so engrossed in the game we forget to lead tne cneers . it fashionable to curse again? Is Carolina Smashes N. .C. State For Eighth Successive'Time Aldridge Leads Duke Victory Blue Devils Score 32 Points In Final Period V PHILADELPHIA, Sept. 25 (IP) Long-legged Bryant Aldrich broke down the door and a hard-hitting Duke team poured through to a crushing 52-0 victory over "new look" Pennsylvania today in an in tersectional football opener at Franklin Field. Coach Bill Murray cleaner his bench of 40 men and finished wit,h third and fourth stringers in han ding Penn its first humilating" de feat since Army's Doc Blanchard and Glenn Davis rolled up a Gl-0 score in 1945. It was a sad debut for Penn's new coach, Steve Sebe, who brought in a new regime from Michigan State. " Aldrich a six-foot, 197-pounder from Kinston, N. C, personally marshalled a 76-yard touchdown drive which broke a scoreless dead- lock late in the second period and set Duke's awesome scoring ma chine into motion . Before the day had ended be fore a crowd of 35,000 the Blue Devils had pushed over two more touchdowns in the third period and five in the fourth in a out which saw Sam Eberdt, son of a famous Alabama great, also reach for star dom. Eberdt, a senior fullback from Arlington, Va., scored two touch downs in the last period and set up a third with a pass intercep tion. Aldrich also accounted for two touchdowns, his first coming cn a two-yard plunge after he had pick ed up 65 of the 7 yards in the .sec ond period and his second in the final period on a four-vard plunge. Other Duke scorers were Jeerry Barger, on a one-yard after a 69-yard drive: Sonny Sorrel 1 on a 35-yard pass from Buddy Bass; Bernie Blaney on 20-ya d run and Bill Conner on a ..55-yard man euver after taking a lateral from Eberdt, ' who had intercepted a Penn pass. Aldrich and halfback Bob Pascal of Bloomfield, N. J., carried the Duke attack through the first three periods when Penn effec tively bottled the Devils headline starts, Worth (a million) Lutz and Jerry Barger. But it was Eberdt, a bench sitter for the last two years, who fired the last quarter assault, scoring on a 14-yard play" and an other time from seven yards out. Duke 0 7 13 3252 Pennsylvania 0 0 0 0 0 Duke scoring: Touchdowns, Al dridge 2, Eberdt 2, Barger, Sorrell, Blaney, Conner. Conversions, Al dridge 2, Nelson 2. I ) F : ma CONNsE GRAVITTE, who scored yesterday in the third quarter for UNC. is also co-capra:n. The Tar Heel halfback ii ss hiCh aa-M f fa B f?x 1 A B I uowns wane tages iJ y 32 To 0 Qinson Tigs foot sneak. Wake Forest -Virginia Tech ...0 0 ....0 14 0 0 6 12- -32 RICHMOND, Va., Sept. 25 Virginia Tech's fast-moving backs, operating behind vicious blocking, reduced Wake Forest's usually stout defenses to a shambles here today as the Gobblers routed the Deacons 32-0 in a footba'l game that featured Richmond's sixth an nual Tobacco Festival. Halfback Howie Wright of Do ver, Del., a defensive specialist back in the days of the two-platoon system, was the most offensive of al the Gobblers. Wright brought the crowd of 17, 000 to its feet with two spectacu lar touchdown gestures. He grab bed quarterback Bill Cranwell's second quarter pass on a plp.y cov-; loose, he sent fullback Bob' Clem- J the game even, but , sideline ob i servers rated Clemson a slight fav- Georgia-Clemson ATHENS, Ga., Sept. 25 UP Slim Jimmy Harper, endowed today with a large measure of predecessor Zeke Bratkowski's passing wizar dry, hurled the Georgia Bulldogs to a 14-7 triumph over Clemson. Harper, a 6-ft 1, 171-pound jun ior from Thomasville, Ga., guided Georgia to a tying touchdown in the second quarter a 55-yard drive in eight plays that included six aerials. With the Clemson defense (Continued from Page 1) on a quarterback sneak. Gravitte ronvprted and Carolina took the periQfl -Marshall faded back to his lead 7.0 own .25, but before he could get Less than three minutes after the the b-all away cleanly, Al D'Angelo, tnird period opened Carolina scor State. guard, batted the ball out of od again. Newman intercepted a his arms. Nardone, the other State Billy Franklin pass on the 50 guard, grabbed the pigskin before where he was immediately tackled, it hiiftthe ground and raced awayI arfy MCMullen, operating out of from the milling throng to State's the fullback position, drove only,;,ouchdown. through the line to the State 44. Carolina was bugged from the Newman then hit Gravitte about vert beginning by an old nemesis 2q yards downfield and Connie :. iiie fumble. State kicked off waltzed to tne goal. Newman's and moved to its 30 in three plays. kick was deflected by State's Harry On fourth down, as Newman tried Lodge." for aifirst and 10, he fumbled and Six minutes later Nardone the ball was picked up by State's snatched Newman's lob and tallied Ben Kapp. The Wolfpack then for statc moved- to Carolina's 13 where a Klochak's running was one of field goal attempt by John Bagonis the highlights of the Carolina vic was t4de. Most of the remainder lory The 213-pound fullback car of the first period was played .in rjed eight times for an average of CaroMa territory. five yards per carry. In the last Carolina Scores quarter he bulled and stamped like Tt was. late in the second quarter a maci bull, his head down and legs before Carolina began to move pumping him toward the goal. I with treterminatton. The Tar Heels McMullen also looked good, av drove into State territory and aseraging 4.2 yards per try. thP Afwns ran out. Larry Parker puntetf'to the State 12. State half back Ted Kilyk ran back down the sidelines to the UNC 30 but a clip ping penalty leit State on its own 11. ' An exchange of punts and a States-fumble, recovered by Caro lina guard Roland Perdue, placed the bMl "oh State's nine. Newman moved .the Tar IIels to the two and on the next play took it over GRID SCORES EAST Lafayette 26, Albright 0 Brown 18, Columbia 7 Dartmouth 27, Holy Cross 26 Duke 52, Pennsylvania 0 Colgate 19, Cornell 14 South Carolina 34, Army 20 Navy 27, William & Mary 0 Yale 27, Connecticut 0 Princeton 10, Rutgers 8 SOUTH Tennessee 19, Mississippi State 7 Memphis State 13, Tulane 13 Davidson 19, Stetson 13 Virginia Tech 32, Wake Poorest 0 VMI 16, George Washington 14 Georgia 14, Clemson 7 Florida 13, Georgia Tech 12 Virginia 27, Lehigh 21 MID-WEST Iowa 14, Michigan tate .10 Kansas State 21, Wyoming 13 Northwestern 27, Iowa State 14 Penn State 14, Illinois 12 Purdue 31, Missouri 0 Ohio State 28, Indiana 0 Notre Dame 21, Texas 0 Minnesota 19, Nebraska 7 WW it t'f if f - . . i P af - ? ering 62 yards and ran 25 yards unmolested. Wright struck again in the third quarter, springing off right tackle for 64 yards and six more points. Before Wright's dashes, quarter back Johnny Dean had . put the Techmcn out front on the first play j tern Conference Bulldogs a mild of the second quarter' with a one-1 upset. The betting fraternity called Clemson ens 17 yards up the middle for the score. Then, with the final quarter half , gone, ne loiiea a jz-yara Deauiy deep into the end zone to half back Jimmy Williams for the six pointer that gave the Soufheas- orite. Clemson, a highly regarded team in the powerful Atlantic CoCast Conference, hung up the first six points on the second play of the second quarter when Sophomore halfback Jim Coleman scurried ov er from the three to climax an 83 yard drive consisting entirely of ground plays from a winged-five formation which fooled the sophomore-studded Georgia line. Clemson lost a second touch down when sophomore quarterback Charlie Bussey, subbing for in jured star Don King, passed wide with halfback Joe Pagliei open near the Georgia goal line. 0 .0 7 7 0 0 0 7 714 Clemson scoring: Touchdowns, Coleman; Conversion, Paredes. Georgia scoring: Touchdowns: Clemens, Williams; Conversions, Graff 2. BrazelCaskey Score Twice Wet Ground Fumbles Injure Army Chances WEST POINT, N. Y. Sept. 25 UP South Carolina double-platooned a green and undermanned Army football team with a horde of fleet backs today and handed the Ca dets a crushing 34-20 defeat in their opening game of the season. It was only the third time in Ar my football history that the Ca dets had lost an opener. It happen ed in 1890, when Army lqst the first and only game it played. And again when Villanova won in 1951. Carl Brazell and Mike Caskey, who scored two touchdowns apiece, ; were, the leaders in the poient South Carolina running attack, but it operated just about as well when Bill Tarrer and Tommy W oodlee replaced them at the halfback spots. Four of the five South Carolina touchdowns were scored on the ground and three of them on drives of 96, 97 and 80 yards. Army suffered a crushing blow when Bob Kyasky, heralded soph omore halfback who had done much to keep the Cadets in the game, went out with an injured shoulder just after South Caroli na's Gamecocks had tied the score at 14-14 late in the second period. A series of costly fumbles, due in part to a wet ball after show ers had drenched the field just before the game began, also hurt Army's chances. The first two touchdowns were set up by recov ered fumbles and Army, leaning 14-7, seemed headed for another, when Pat Lebel fumbled on the South Carolina four and tackle Bob Schwartz recovered for the Game cocks. From there South Carolina went all the way, with just one pass, to score and tie it up 14-14. In the third period the Carolin ians opened up again with wide runs and pitchouts from the slid ing T formation that seemed to have the Army defense completely bewildered. They moved 93 yards this time, all on the ground, to send Tommy Woodlee over. v S. C. 7 7 7 1334 Army :. 14 0 0 6 20 South Carolina socring: Touch downs, Brazell 2, Caskey 2, V-7 ood lee. Conversions: Silas 2, Jarrett 2. Army scoring: Touchdown?, Bell, Ziegler 2. Conversions: Chesnauskas 2. mi COtOR BY WW ' V - v- I t& STARRING TONY CURTIS JANET LEIGH DAVID FARRAR BARBARA RUSH HERBERT MARSHALL .t.Torin Thatcher Daniel O'Herlihy Sunday - Monday I .and how it started. TERESA WRIGHT says: "Up to 16," my knowledge of acting had been gleaned from seeing movies. When I saw my first professional pjay, that was it: I only wanted to act. 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