Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 27, 1954, edition 1 / Page 3
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WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1554 THE DAILY TAR HEEL PACE THREE Sors As M. F In AP Pl h lvt j v' " " iv miV-v 4&e. BOB and MONK Oklahoma Drops To Second; UCLA Third; Arkansas Fourth Powerful Army Rises To Fifth, While Dyke Drops To 16th; Terp-Beaters 10th i - Ohio THE ASSOCIATED PRESS State's ruc:keve.s, a collection n( fruition . -.1 ' ; i ......... iiiiLij .... . in uieii eves and mayiieni m their hearts, -have icpi.ict.a wkianoma as the Ao. 1 college team in th ol tlie nation's sports writers and broadcasters. They earned the honor crushing Wisconsin Satury while Oklahoma was 1 T " t Sliding-- ilSt.lesslv thrnnoh a 91 n lie opinion 31-14 last decision over Kansas State. Okla homa had been on top of the As sociated Press poll for three weeks. Oklahoma collected id more first place ivotes than Ohio State 74 64 but the Bucks edged ahead on the second place ballots, of which 69 went to Ohio State and only 49 to the Sooners. The final count, on the usual 10-9-8, etc., basis, gave Ohio State 1, 808 points and Oklahoma L834. UCLA, with 45 firsts, was right behind with 1,800 points, and the surprising Arkansas team fourth with 1,351. Ohio State was fourth last week while Wisconsin was second to Ok lahoma. UCLA, which walloped Oregon State ,61-0, polled a much higher vote than it did a week ago in re taining third place. : Arkansas, a "team of destiny" which came from nowhere to take the Southwest Conference lead and then .knocked Mississippi from the j i The leading teams: 1. Ohio State 64 1858 2. Oklahoma 74 . 1834 3. UCLA 45 .1800 4. Arkansas 16 1351 5. Army 1 974 6. Notre Dame 1 . 727 7. West' Virginia 6 478 8. Wisconsin . 460 9. Purdue 393 10. Miami, Fla. 369 Second 10: 11. Michigan 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Mississippi ". 318 USC !.. Virginia Tech Navy Duke Texas Christian SMU Rice Cincinnati Chi Phi Shows Power; ZBT Wins Overtime Zeta Beta iTau won a spectacu- ranks of the unbeaten, jumped! " 0 ' u""5 Jri eu Kappa Phi 1-0. The game was an even affair with both teams hav- from seventh to fourth. Army rose from ninth to fifth and West Vir ginia from 10th to seventh. The new order, after the first four, is Army, Notre Dame, West Virginia, Wisconsin, Purdue and Miami, Fla., conquerors of Maryland. OPENS TODAY SHAKESPEARE'S GREATEST MELODRAMA . FLAMING PASSIONS AND VIOLENCE IN LUSTY, LAWLESS ROME! "JULIUS RflFSAR" BEST PICTURE CF THE YEAR! EEST PERFOR MANCE OF THE YEAR! National Board of Review X fv -JTHY tit' v v ing sustained drives, but .neither could get up the necessary scoring punch. After Pi Kap Phi held ZBT on a goal line stand in the closing minutes, the game ended in a scoreless tie. On the last play of the overtime, Irv Gottlib threw to Al Reisnick for the win. ZBT . 0 0 1 Pi Kap Phi 0 0 0 Chi Phi unleashed a powerful running and passing attack, which along with some razzle-dazzle plays, gave them a 33-0 victory over Lambda Chi Alpha. Joe Cru ciani was the big gun for Chi Phi as he scored twice. Roger Her bert, Al Moise, Bill Sanders, were all outstanding. Chi Phi, under the tutelage of Jack Little and Bob Merritt showed a fine piece of coaching work. Chi Phi 13 20 33 Lambda Chi Alpha ..000 Scoring: Chi Phi TD's, Al Moise, Bill Sanders, Joe Cruciani, 2, Roger Herbert. PAT, Dick Arm strong, Charlie Fitzgerald, Al Holt. 1 "' 4 ''( I r, JMADIDM ddx lino JAMES MASON JOHN GiELGUD LOUIS CALKERN EDMOND O'BRIEN GREER GARSON DEBORAH KERR JULIUS CAESAli Oifscled by JOSEPH L. MANKIEWICZ Fiatacrito JOHN HOUSEMAN I'f'li. An M--M ficiure .at is J i j i- - ; f a ' ? h 4 I t 1 i'1 ALFRED Vs ! HITCHCOCK'S Ij fsi" Rinrdler" Halfback Ed Sutton Rates As "Athlete Of The Week" By BERNIE WEISS Sophomore halfback Ed Sutton, who scored two touchdowns Satur day to give Carolina an upset 14-7 victory over Wake Forest, has been selected "Athlete of the Week" by the sports staff of the Daily Tar Heel. . Sutton was given a race for the honor by trackman Jim Beatty, who set a course record of 19:42 Saturday morning in a three-way Frosh Court Schedule Set Carolina's freshman basketball team will play a 22-game schedule which opens on December 2 a gainst the Pineland Edwards M. I., according to a statement released today by Coach Buck Freeman. Freeman also announced that practice will open for the frosh next Monday at 3:30 in Woollen i meet with Wake Forest and Mary land. The fleet scatback was named "Athlete of the Week" once before this year on the basis of his per formance against Georgia. Sutton's performance against the Deacons rivaled that of any other athletic feat put on by a Tar Heel this season. The pre-med student not only accounted for both touchdowns, jjut also scored a third on a 64-yard run which from WARNER BROS. WarnerColor STARRING RAY M ILLAND GRACE KELLY ROBERT CUMMINGS WITH, JOHN WILLIAMS wm7Tf n e who wrote the 'FREDERICK KNOTT International Stage Success eiE:rro by ALFRED HITCHCOCK MljS'C COMPOST; 0 fnNOCrTFD 5Y DtMITPt TlOMf Iff TODAY ONLY! gym. Varsity practice will get under way Monday night. ' The freshman schedule: -Dec. 2 Pineland Edwards M. I., home. Dec. 4 U. S. Atlantic Fleet, home. Dec. 7 High Point Jayvee, a way. Dec. 9 Atlantic Christian Jay vee, home. Dec. 10 Duke frosh. awav. Dec. 13 Wake Forest frosh, home.l was nullified because Carolina was Dec. 16 Campbell Jayvee, away.l detected clipping on t"he play. Dec. 18 Charlotte High School,' Ed played an outstanding de home. ' tensive game. It was also believed ,,rn g vi"'T''"ia frosh, away. I that he had recovered a Wake For- r Jan. 8 Wake Forest frosh, est fumble deep in UNC territory home. ; Jan. 11 Duke frosh, home. Jan. 12 Pineland Edwards M. I., away. Jan. 13 Atlantic Christian Jay vee, away." Jan. 18 3ST. C. State frosh, a way. . . Feb. 2 Parris Island Marines, home. Feb. 4 Duke frosh, home. Feb. 9 Campbell Jayvee, home. Feb. 14 High Point Jayvee, home. Feb. 16 Wake Forest frosh, away. Feb. 21 Wake Forest frosh, away. , Feb. 22 N. C. State frosh, home. Feb. 25 Duke frosh, away. 39c SALE Here's your chance to pick up impressive gifts for those club and fraternity Christmas par ties. Sale Ends Friday The Intimate Bookshop 205 E. Franklin St. Open Evenings . with less than a minute left in the game, but subsequent showings of film revealed that it was Will Frye who pounced on the loose pigskin. A freshman standout last sea son, Sutton has not seen too much action to date. Has 16.25 Average Sutton is Connie Gravitte's un derstudy, being a member of Coach George Barclay's second "first string." He has carried on ly 12 times all year and has a rushing average of 16.25. This mark would top the Atlantic Coast Conference leaders but Sutton does not get official No. 1 spot because he has not carried as often as others. Saturday he ran four times to gain 127 yards, averaging 31.7 yards per carry. He also caught one pass for 11 yards. His touchdowrn runs were jaunts of 21 and 77 yards. Barclay said that he. knew Sut ton "had the stuff'all season, but that he (Barclay) was bringing the Morehead scholar along slowly. Barclay also hinted that Sutton would see much more action from now on. Sutton is 19 years old, weighs 194 pounds and stands six feet, one inch tall. 3. J J 42 W , 111 i . - -r x - i V .J I I . I 1 344 t i" -' 1 I 1 124 1 " - 1 I ; . - 1 ' 39 5 J . I ' . I . : : ' - ' - - - s Tar Heels In Long Workout For Vol Test Offense and defense drew heavy attention today on Navy Field, with the Tar Heel freshmen, com plete with Tennessee orange jer seys, furnishing the competition. End Will Frye, Tackle Jack Maultsby and guard Ed Patterson stood out as the varsity tested its defense against Tennessee single wing plays. . , Coach George Barclay termed the squad's defensive showing as "adequate," but said more work would have to be done in that de partment later this week. Halfbacks Ed Sutton and Ken Keller, got off the longest runs of the day after the varsity turned its attention to offense. Sutton galloped for a touchdown on one play, and Keller followed with a neat 55 yard jaunt. Larry Muschamp, suffering from a boil on his neck, joined end Dick Starner on the sidelines for practice. Starner is still limping from a slight leg injury sustained last Saturday. Quarterback Len Bullock returned to action. Carolina Soccer Squad Is Host To Duke Blue Devils Coach Barclay Remains Reserved In Comments Carolina football coach George Barclay today had viewed films of the Wake Forest-Carolina game last Saturday, but still had little to say concerning the disputed ruck us during and after the Tar Heel's 14-7 victory. Barclay stated there would be no love lost between teams in any case where a two-touchdown fav orite was behind with less than a minute to play. "Will Frye was punished, being suspended from the game, for his illegal block," he said. "The fight j didn't start until two playslater." Barclay also said that any mate rial regarding athletic relations being strained between Wake For est and Carolina would have to come from the higher echelons. By DICK ARMSTRONG Carolina's soccer squad . is host today to Duke's Blue Devils on Fetzer field at 3 o'clock. The Tar Heels will be seeking their first win of the season as they play the second game against Atlantic Coast Conference competition. Both Duke and Carolina have identical season records of no wins and three losses. The Blue Devils will be favored however, due to their recent fine play against Maryland. fThe Terrapins previous ly defeated the Tar Heels by a 4-1 score. UNC coach Marvin Allen hopes for a vast improvement in the Carolina squad as he has switched several men to new positions and has two key performers back in action from the injured list. Allen commented that vthe Tar -Heels haven't played up to par since their second practice tilt against Ft. Bragg. Here is Carolina's probable line up for today's game: Pete Cothran at left wing, Capt. Jerry Russell at right wing, Bill McGinn at in side left, Pat McCormick at in side right, Chip Bryant at center- I forward, Jim Bunting at left half, Harry Brown at right half, and Calvin Lane at center-half. Grover Brown and Joe Mavretic will han dle the fullback posts and Don Gladstone will be the goalie. i Reserves Tommy Kirkland, Jim ,; Skidmore, and Dick Dodson are j expected to see a lot of action. ! "ESCAPE the ORDINARY . . . Eat at DANZIGER'S" STUDENT SPECIAL ITALIAN RISOTTO Parmecin Cheese, Gravy, 1 Veg. Bread, Butter, Coffee 75c Minute Steak T-Bone Steak Junior Steak Al- Sirloin 1.10 1.35 1.45 1.75-2.50 of TOWN & CAMPUS SALUTE ED SUTTON FREE! Prizes to be Given Away At BE-RMANS 51 Gifts $300 worth of prizes No purchase is required to enter. You don't have to be present to win. Drawing will be Monday Sit !P5 for scoring Carolina's two touch downs Saturday in the Tar Heel's 14-7 upset victory over Wake Forest. Sutton's t. d. jaunts came on runs of 77 and 21 yards. He also scored a third time but the touchdown was discounted when Carolina was found to be clipping on that particular play. We want him to drop by TOWN & CAMPUS and pick out a snirt to his liking compli ments of the house We want the old and young alike of Chapel Hill to make TOWN & CAMPUS their head quarters for the finest in men's clothing. Drop in today. TOWN & -CAMPUS What makes a Lucky taste better? n90 m t 4 64 n T r O m m 9 9 l a BUTTERFLY SKIPPING ROPE College smokers from coast to coast prefer Luckies to any other brand. Luckies lead, and by a wide margin, according to the latest, biggest college survey. Once again, the No. 1 reason: Luckies taste better. They taste better because Lucky Strike is the cigarette of fine tobacco . . . and "It's Toasted" to taste better. "It's Toasted" the famous Lucky Strike process tones up Luckies' light, mild, good tasting tobacco to make it taste even belter. This explains, the Droodle below, which is: Eskimo seminar enjoying Luckie3 in badly built classroom. Like all real cool people, Eskimos know Luckios taste better.. So, get the better-tasting cigarette . . . Lucky Strike. LUCKIES TASTE BETTER Cleaner, Fresher, SmQcther! ALPHABET BLOCKS FOR ILLITERATES G ii DEPRESSED FLEA COMMITTING SUICIDE FIFTY-DOLLAR BOY SCOUT KNIFE I poo I ' ' ' ' ' ' T 1 1 1 if C I G A . R r T T E S j GHOST WITH CINDER IN HIS EYE , N "What's this?" asks HOQER PIUCI? ; .vjlulioii : paragmpu aboc. GOT A IUCKY DROODLE? ' IT you've t n I.t" k l)roi;iit- in your noodle, send it in. We pay 1i i.ll t- usi. and also for many w: don't use. He. id as niur.y as you like with your ri.-vrt-itiv.! to: Lucky Droodit, I. O. 1'ox 67, Now York 13. N. Y. '"DZLJJVLilJ, C. .-icH, l:: 5. . t Ho.u- Trice Prices This Attraction Adults, 65c Children, 15c Hours of Shows 1:00 3:02 5:09 7:16 9:25 4
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 27, 1954, edition 1
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