Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 10, 1954, edition 1 / Page 1
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Serials Dapt. r- V WEATHER Some cloudiness and a little warmer today, with expected high of 77; low, 50's. FALL The editor speaks of autumn. See page 2. 1 VOL. LVII No. 22 Complete W Wire Service CHAPEL HILL, N. C, SUNDAY, OCTOBER 10, 1954 Offices In Graham Memorial FOUR PAGES TODAY Gravitte Plows Through iy ifoliz 11 M In " I i , ,,,,;,- ITu Wo 7 L u S I r-yX', ' "" "" lm -&'.!?lamw.a.x TTT'n I I I ll I i n I nTFrn m m ifti l ' m .l ..i i imiu, 1 ! i .. , . . , J , . , . r , - f . r ' ; -r Is I - 1V - ; - czf$ -JS I r,r; vx ; , . vm '--fc-v CTxr"" 'iW " x'-i -i . . ,-. - -v - ' HIGH STEPPING Connie Gravitte cuts through right tackle for Larry Parker and Don Klochak (40). Gravitte carried eight times for Th ree Grants Are Awarded In Pharmacy Three research grants, totaling $16,095, have been awarded the (i. School of Pharmacy at the Univer v sity for the year 1914-55, Dean E. N A. Brecht of the Pharmacy School y announced yesterday. A grant of $6,235 was received for the eighth consecutive year from the North Carolina Pharma , ? ceutical Researh Foundation; Dean Brecht said. This grant includes research fellowships for four grad uate students in the School of Pharmacy and funds for research f supplies and library materials. It V was incorporated in 1946 through ( the North Carolina Pharmaceuti cal Association to foster and pro mote pharmaceutical education and research at the School of Pharmacy and throughout the State. Industrial research fellowships are assigned as follows: William S. Merreli Company Fellowship to Nicholas H. Batuyios, Wilming ton; Vick Chemical Company Fel lowship to Earl T. Brown, Leicest , cr; and the Sharpe and Dohme Fellowship to Robert W. Meschke, j n Darien, Conn. A. W. Jowdy, Jr., .New Bern, received a non-indtis- trial research fellowship from the foundation. Giants totalling $3,360 were re ceived from the American Foun dation for Pharmaceutical Educa- . , tion, anational corporation organ I ized to promote pharmaceutical education and research at both the graduate and undergraduate lev ' ,cls. Two graduate research fellow r ' ships were assigned - to Ben F. I Cooper, Warsaw, and Cleborn E. 1 Kimsey, Chattanooga, Tenn. I A post graduate research grant ! was assigned for a third consecu tive year, to be directed by Dr. W. H. Hartung, Professor of Pharma ' ceutical Chemistry, on the synthe ses of amino acids and peptides. GM's Slate The following organizations have scheduled meetings in Graham Memorial Student Union today through Wednesday. (All meetings are in the afternoon or evening unless otherwise noted.) Today 7 to 9 a.m., Newman Club in Roland Parker 2 and 3. 11 a.m., Quakers in Grail Room. 3:30 to 4:30, Sigma Alpha Iota ' in Roland Parker 1. 8 to 9:30, Carolina Political Union. Monday 4 to 6, University Club in Roland Parker 1 and 2. ,4:30 to 6, Publications Board in APO room. 7 to 11, Bridge in Ren devous Room. 7:30 to 10, Press Club in Roland Parker 3. 7:30 to 9:30, Intervarsity Carolina Fellow ship in APO room. 8 to 10:30, Student Party in Roland Parker 1 and 2. Tuesday 2 to 3, Audit Board in Woodhouse Conference Room. 2 to 6, Bridge in Rendezvous Room. 6:30, Dance Lessons in 'Rendezvous Room (more girls needed). 7 to 9, Alpha Phi Omega .in APO room. 7 to 9, Athletic 'Assn. in Woodhouse Conference Room. 7 to 9, University Party in Roland Parker 3. . 8 to 11, Chess Club in Roland Parker 1 and 2. (cflnpus W SEEN . Miss Ann Carlton wandering around behind Med School late Friday evening with a flashlight, looking for some thing or someone. At the game: Cute quartet, drinking something besides Big Oranges, with Chapel Hill police man sitting 50 feet away. Med School Now Offering Grad Courses Postgraduate courses in medi cine open to all physicians in the State are being offered during the 1954-55 academic year both in Chapel Hill and as extension meet ings in other cities throughout the State. Dr. W. P. Richardson, assistant dean for Continuation Education at the school, released yesterday a preliminary schedule of all courses, which are sponsored by the UNC School of Medicine and Extension Division. "The programs for these courses are carefully planned to give a bal anced presentation of subjects of particular significance to the gen eral practitioner, to aid him in pro fessional growth as well as in meeting his day to day problems," Dr. Richardson said. He added that certificates of at tendance will be given, and all courses provide credit toward ful fillment of the American Academy of General Practice's requirements. : ( V',; I ZCZr-. li ill I'w'AMTr- y Scenes ot the University 1 i nine yards to the Carolina 16 yard better than five yards a try. Frat Rush Starts Today Fraternity row will roll out the welcome mat and extend its glad hands to several hundred rushees this afternoon as formal rushing gets underway. Rushing begins today at 2:30 p.m. and will continue through Thursday night. The following Monday, Oct. 13, will be shakeup night. Strict silence between fra ternity men and rushees will be maintained from Thursday night, until shakeup night. After shakeup on Monday night, strict silence will be observed a gain until pledge day Wednes day, Oct. 20. Silence and rushing will end after Tednesday noon. Inter-Fraternity Council spokes man Ed McCurry reminded fra ternities yesterday that it is a vi olation of IFC rules to inform a ! rushee that he has been accepted Poetry Competition All college students have been invited to submit original verse to be considered for possible publication in the Twelfth An nual Anthology of College Po etry. Rules for submission are as follows: manuscripts must be typed or written in ink on one side of a sheet; student's home addresses, name of college and college address must appear on each manuscript. Students may submit as many manuscripts as desired. Theme and form may be in accordance with the wish of the studelit. Shorter efforts are preferred. The closing date for the sub mission of manuscripts is Nov. 15. They should be sent to the National Poetry Association, 3210 Selby Ave., Los Angeles 34, Calif. line. Leading the interference is Cornell Wright Photo before Wednesday, Oct. 20. It is also a violation for rushees to commit themselves before shake up night. . '- - McCurry said that any violation of strict silence after rushing hours will be punishable both to fraternities and to rushees. Freshman with questions about rushing may refer them to the Dean of Student Affairs Office in 206 South Building, according to McCurry. Rushing schedule is as follow: Today from 2:30 to 5:30; Mon- day night from 7 to JO o'clock, Tuesday from 7 to 9:30, Wednes- day from 7 to 9:30 and Thursday from 7 to 9:30. Shakeup night is Monday, Oct. 18, from 7 to 8:30. Pledging is anytime atfer noon Wednesday. UNC Pianist Carol Sites Will Play Second Petite Musicale Carol Sites, graduate student in the Music Department, will pre sent a piano recital on the Gra ham Memorial petites musicales series next Sunday night, Oct. 17, at 8 o'clock in the GM Main Lounge. Miss Sites is the second artist to appear on the petites musicales series this year. Her program will consist of selections from Mozart, Chanler, Piston, Barber, Debussy and Shumann. Since the fall of 1952, Miss Sites, a native of Martinsbury, Va., has been a graduate assistant and instructor in piano in the music department here. Previously she taught piano and theory at the Adirondack Music Center and pi ano and music appreciation at Av- t t-tt ullcsc ... """""; j' w "I : Last summer she taught piano at i the Uuniversity of Wisconsin mu sic clinic. I 8-' tr Vxr 'tt&L - f Sir4'V Xiffl6j?m A Lime Heat, .1 . A Drill Squad, Little Boy los? '2 Football in Kenan Stadium yes terday was 20,000 spectators, some j cheering and others silent. It was a drink vender in the card section wearing ah orange and black no. 55 football jersey. And it t was the UNC band playing "The Bunny Hop" in the stands when things out on the field weren't hopping in the right direction fcj Carolina. It was a couple hundred Boy Scouts who cheered the Universi ty's Naval ROTC's crack drill squad when they went into the intricate Queen Anne salute. Yesterday's football game was the autumn leaves effect that you saw in the air when the card sec tion tossed away their colored cards. And it was the guy next to you who said of the card stunts, "They're droodles. We're supposed to guess what they are." And it was the cheer that rip pled through the Carolina stands when the loudspeaker boomed out the Duke-Purdue score. Duke was 1 ahead. It was Spero in section 15, who (with the help of his portable) was giving a play-by-play of the Blue Devil game. ; n wag gray sport coatg and coed swfiaters in the almost too warm gun An(J it was the cop who al. feel asleep in the stands during tne third quarter. jgut most of all .it .was football where one team usually loses. And we were the team. ' Before coming to UNC she grad uated from the University of Cin cinnati and the Cincinnati Con servatory of Music. She has also studied privately with Roland Goldsand, pianist, in Cincinnati and New York. The petites musicales are pre sented every other Sunday night by the Graham Memorial Student Union. Following each perform ance a reception is held in the Main Lounge in honor of the guest artist. CAROLINA CHRISTIAN FELLOWSHIP The Carolina Christian Fellow ship will meet Monday at 7:30 p.m. in the Woodshop Room of Gra- ham Memorial. The speaker will be Connie Bouldin, a Greensboro en gineer. Cornerstone Re-Laying Will Be Held Old East's cornerstone will be re-laid Tuesday as part of tradi tional University Day activities, according to Chancellor Robert B. House. The 161st anniversary of the founding of the University of North Carolina, called Univer sity Day, will be observed Tues day morning beginning at 10:50 in the south court of South Building. Classes and labora tor es will oe dismissed at 10:50 o'clock for the remainder of the day. right. Loaned to The Daily j Heel by UAL. Aiunnu Assi tri ot men decidinj? on a si the University. Davie Po Heel by UNC Alumni Assn.. ty. Uavie lar is in the background. On the right, two gentlemen on horseback ride from a meet ing concerning plans for the University. -.v t'"-" nr 0C4' ' - l tef- - .. . . fl..,. ILI .IT- ., ,- ,,, I SWEEPING THROUGH right tackle Larry McMullen picks up 10 yards and a first down on the Georgia nine yard line during the Tar Heels' only scoring drive. The play started on a hand off from Quarterback Leonard Bullock. Cornell Wright Photo Says UNCs Barclay: Same Old Story By LARRY SAUNDERS Coach George Barclay sat in the Kenan Stadium equipment room, his head bent low and his slightly gray hair brushed down over his forehead. Red faced, with his head in his hands, the Carolina coach listened silently to the radio de scription of the Duke-Purdue foot ball game. Suddenly, he pushed his hair back, got up and walked to ward the dressing room. His Tar Heels had just suffered their first defeat of the season, a 21-7 loss to , Georgia. j In Barclay's opinion, it was. the j same old Carolina story. "We made j too many mistakes," he said. "We ' made it -easy for them (Georgia).! We just made too many mistakes. Wht Won The Game? Those Two Drives By BOB DILLARD Coach Wally Butts was all smiles yesterday afternoon as he drifted through tne crowd of well wishers and friends toward the Georgia dressing room. And well he had a right to be, after the showing his Bulldogs made. . The Georgia mentor was modest in his statements about the game, j "We were fortunate enough to sus tain two drives in the second half. That was the two drives." main thing, those 1 The Bulldogs were a happy lot. The laughter and smiles were flow-; s ear- and Tar a te Pop TT f Our fumbles really hurt us." The Tar Heel dressing room was quiet. The players trickled in slow ly and headed for the Coke ma chine. Quarterback Len Bullock talked to friends outside of the locker room. He agreed with Bar clay that the fumbles hurt. "Their line was good and I thought their quarterback (Jimmy Harper) play ed a good game," Bullock said. Guard George Foti agreed that Harper looked good. He said, "They were just better than we were. I didn't believe they had us beat until the game was over." End Dick Starner didn't know what was wrong with the Tar (See BARCLAY, page 4.) ing freely throughout the room; There was no doubt in the mind of someone entering the room that he was seeing the winning team. The managers Vere in with the team, making cracks and in general adding to the happy at mosphere of the room. Out of the shower came loud laughing, and noises were hurled back and forth across the room. When Bill Saye, Georgia center, said, "It was good for us," 'he echoed the sentiments of the rest (See BUTTS, page 4.) Win MS" UNCs First nA n Ira c Trllr By BERNIE WEISS Georgia's "Bulldogs vecoxcr ed two fumbles, torn ci ted both into touchdowns, and drove 54 yards for a third score to defeat Carolina. 21-7. yesterday. afternoon at Kenan Stadium before approximate ly 20,000 fans. It was the Tar Heels' first loss of the season. Again Carolina bested its op ponent in rushing yardage, 183 yards to 163 (net), but the Blue and White just couldn't come through with the offensive power when it was needed most. Georgia racked up 17 first downs to Carolina's 12. "We just made too many mis takes," said Carolina coach George Barclay after the game. Charlie Madison, fleet Bulldog halfback, arid Jimmy Harper, the master - minding quarterback, were the big cogs in the winners' ground - gaining monster. The team showed a tremendous amount of power in the second half, scor ing two touchdowns on long drives which wilted UNCs defense, pre viously rated third in the Atlantic Coast Conference. Harper did most of Georgia's damage in the airlanes, complet ing four passes for 57 yards. Madison Scores Georgia tallied its first touch down on its initial series of downs when Madison - ran -28 yards to paydirt. Carolina, did not get into the" scoring column until halfway through the second period when Bullock dove over on a quarter bak sneak. Georgia's other scores came in the third period, Bob Clemens going over from three yards off-tackle, and in the fourth quarter when Howard Kelly made it on the same play. Madison was Georgia's top ground-gainer, eating up 48 yards in seven carries. For Carolina, Ed Sutton was the top individual runner, carry ing the ball six times for 67 yards. Most of this came on a fourth quarter43 - yard run. Ken Keller, his leg still sore from an injury sustained before the season's op ening, gained 48 yards. Len "Teedee" Bullock, starting his first varsity game and playing without relief for more than three quarters, could gain only 14 yards via aerials. Three of his four com pletions came in the first half. Bullock was replaced in the fourth period by Marshall Newman, who tried two passes and completed both for 30 yards. Carolina's old nemesis, the fum bles, got into the game early. On the second play from scrimmage fullback Larry Parker dropped the pigskin, Georgia's Bill Saye recov ering on the Tar Heel 47. Seven Plays To Score Bulldog mastermind Harper took over from there and engineered the distance to the goal in seven plays. He had moved the pigskin in six downs to the Carolina 27 where he executed a beautiful fake and handed off to Madison, who went around the end all the way. Madison also made good on the point - after - touchodwn and Georgia led, 7-0. Carolina finally got its sputter ing offense burning on high oc tane gas in the second quarter, moving 70 yards behind the run ning of Sutton and Keller td Geor gia's goal. The drive began when a Bulldog punt rolled dead on the UNC 30. With Bullock's arm work ing full-time, either passing, pitch ing out or handing off, the Tar Heels quickly got to the Georgia one. Bullock swan-dived over the center of the Tine for the tally and Keller's placement was perfect to deadlock the sore at 7-7. The Tar Heels almost tallied a gain toward the end of the period when Gravitte attempted a pass to Keller, who was waiting in the end zone. However the aerial was interepted by Bob Garrard to end the threat. The first half came to (See GAME, page 4.)
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 10, 1954, edition 1
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