Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 7, 1954, edition 1 / Page 1
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V Serials Dspt. Chap-l Kill. 17. c. WEATH ER Sunny and cool today, with ex pected high of 59; low, near 32. VOLUME LVI1 No. 46 3 ', mmm ii. lijii i i i ii i mmm-mmmmmmmmiwm i it I i .mi f FpnMnimvm i i in n mnaww, jm mi iumi twwh l niil ill inimiiMmipii n wi'WMtiBiiiifji.jiiiuiM!, fiiii. .. wm - ji i .i. ij.: ,ii ji ii i ill f Ftr'"'l"Wi-, , nr mw-s - .... J ii. iij. I.. .i ""J 1 : f -- - , - J ' r""- : . I I . I I .r I ! . -sf . . I . ,v" -inA -V Z 7 1 II-,- ' . ' , - - j . - "'' ""' " "-' '-,fir nmfti i inn "iiilli .....'V-S -i-':'- Oxi.i'ilf' if i i il -1 niiii t- jfclaL. ci&iiiluIjiUt - I1HI mniirwtfTlrt -lllliftilimilnrHHIr'Tlr'f HHIIIIIll I1 rinjlillfiftrrrp!if fli llftr'..-A - ,u- "-'f -:.... - - ...... J..-..:.-..;jaJ'T ' " , .:i.m?ut ' mi .r-.i .J Larry Parker reaches for Len Bullock's touchdown atrial in the quarter for the Tar Heels' second score. Behind Parker are Will Frye the Gamecocks' Carl Brazell. I coir Heels Tyro La si- Victory Over -Gamecocks; UNC, 1 Wake &.ury i A 'Her tisT-hant RALEIGH. S'ov. 7 .-P; The University of North Carolina j and Wake Forest College official!) buried the hatchet late' Friday. J Wake Forest College's President Harold W. Tribble, and j football coach Tom Rogers, apoio-j Major General Visits Major General M. K. Deichel mann, Headquarters Command ant AFROTC in Montgomerv", Ala., arrived here Friday night. He attended the Carolina homecoming game yesterday af ternoon, and with other AFROTC officials he made a "staff visit" of the UNC Air Science unit. Major General Deicheimann is in charge of 183 U. S. college AFROTC detachments. He has 104,000 potential officers under his command, 24,000 of which are advance students. Before coming to Carolina, Major General Deicheimann vis ited A & T College. Artists7 Ideas Display Slated In Person Hall A brief survey of the work and . be determined last night, the- formative ideas of six artist The varsity game Oct. 23 wound teachers in America will be shown i up in a free for all which saw sev at Person Hall Art Gallery Tues-1 erai players banished from the day through Nov. 30. Represented ; game. Wake Forest Quarterback in the exhibition are Mololy Nagy, xick Consoles lost three front Alters, Hoffman, Ozenfant, Hayter and Zerbe, whose work and teach ings have exercised far-reaching influence in present-day American art. The Art Gallery is open to the t,m; fmm P a. m. to 4:iSU p. m. on week days, 9 a. m. to o p. m. on Saturdays, and from 2 to 5 p. m. on Sundays. Characteristic examples have been xhosen from each master s r wotk. ana me udmuiiss, m "'" i i i ii : : drawings r,H nrin included are accompa- nipd- bv Dertinent statements and ccmmentaries provided by the ar t;-st himself or selected from pub lished sources, according to John V Allcott, head of the UNC Art Department. Hailing from different schools, most of these six men have been (See ARTIST, page 4) Complete f m : gized for implying lack of sports- r : manship cn the part of the Uni- j j versity of North Carolina football i team. At the same time officials of the University said they welcomed and i accepted the retraction. The action on both sides was made in a joint statement by Dr. . Tribble and Chancellor Robert B. House. The statement was drawn up Friday night at a meeting at North Carolina State College here and is- sued to the press by William Fri- I day, administrative assistant to Gordon Gray, president of the I Consolidated University. iThe statement added that "both institutions feel that the freshman game should be played in Wilson, N. C, on Nov. 12." This referred to a freshman f oot- ! ball same between the schools which apparently was cancelled following the bad blood which de veloped after the varsity game fra cas at Chapel Hill. But whether the freshman game will be played could not definitely j teeth and had a battered face, all f sustained in the closing minutes of the game. After the game, a fist fight broke out among the players as j they were en route to their dres- sins rooms. Rogers accused the Tar Heels of "playing dirty football." On the following day. Dr. Trib ble issued a statement which said in part "it was a very unfortunate display of bad sportsmanship. Car- olina had won the game . then ; a Carolina player slugged Conso- les after a play had been com pleted ... It looked like a delib erate attempt to knock Consoles ! out Then, of course, the rest of it the fists flying, and so forth i resulted from that "I did not go to the dressini (See SQUABBLE, page 4) UP) Wire Service Three Homecoming Heroes Arid Their Smiling Queen third Ken Kelter takes a pitchou and the end ofthe first quarter rijht is George Foti. ! STATISTICS s. c. ', First downs .11 j Rushing yardage (nrat) 168 i Passing yardage (net) 87 .Passes attempted : 13 I Passes Completed 8 j Pastas intercepted by 0 j Punts 6 I Funting average - 32.3 ; Fumbles lost by 1 Yards penalized 80 Florida Club Meets Monday The Florida-Carolina ' Club will meet Monday night at 7:30 on the second floor of the YMCA. Plans will be discussed at the meeting for a dance to bo held la ter in the year, and the possibili-f ties of other social events will be considered. "I hope that every Floridian on the campus, and there are 115 of them, will be with us at the meet ing Monday night, for there is much work to be done on the com- j ing year's activities, and it is im- jo juapisaad Suuos 'jagraf) uorj pres 'paie;s ;a2 a.w :rein -jUHjod i the club. The Florida-Carolina Club Is a newly organized ct?b which is com posed of students at the Univer sity who are residents of the state of Florida. It has as its goals the promotion of interest in the Uni versity among Florida high school students. Carolina Honor Organizations Have Long, Colorful Histories By BOB EBERLE coed population of the University. Every spring, in the latter part' 'Though these two organizations of April, in the traditional atmos- are considered the highest, there phere of darkness and Wagnerian V " . -l.,e; hHoH .Hants sparrh ered at the toP- These two orders, music. noaea giants seartu through the audience of Memorial p3il for- mal students to be tap ped by the highest honorary or ganization on campus. That organ ization is the Order of the Golden Fleece, and it is said to be the oldest group of its type in th country still to engage in public tapping ceremonies. Ranking side by side with this organization is that of the Valky ries, which taps the outstanding females on campus. In predawn ceremonies during the year those girls chosen as outstanding in lead ership, scholarship and character at Carolina are chosen for this hon or. Since 1940, when it changed from a national organization, Al pha Gamma, to a local one, the Valkyries by custom have chosen the outstanding two percent of the CHAPEL HILL, NORTH CAROLINA, for a thre yard gain from the Carolina 25 yard line at but the play was called back by a clipping penalty. At Mirnylf GAMECOCK MAJORETTES mob The seven lovely twirlers kept CHARLOTTE STUDENTS All Charlotte students have been requested to meet in Room 105, Hanes Hall next Tuesday at 8:30 p. m. The Order of the Old Well and the Order of the Grail, are both honorary and service organizations and stem from essentially the same idea except that the Order of the Grail was founded for a dif ferent reason. In 1S20, the Order of the Grail was founded for sophomores and juniors, and was started for the purpose of eliminating the rivalry' between dormitory and fraternity men. During its first years this or ganization picked seven fraternity and six dormitory men. and the following year it picked seven dor mitory and six fraternity men. Since this time, however, Grail leaders felt the rivalry had sub sided so now the thirteen men are (See HONOR, page 4) cks; Wiri 21-19, Before I & " : "... ' ' ;. "... f . N-C1 L , rI- V'" i r '- ft : -1 A i " " NOVEMBER 7 1954 Tar Heel Cheerleader Miller Carmichael during halftime ceremonies. an attentive audience during their strutting performance. (Cornell Wright Photo) Eruption By FRED POWLEDGE That man that usually flie. around in the Jones Sausage plane sure missed . something yesterday. He missed a funny kind of er uption that occured back of the Bell Tower, in a clearing with pine trees ail around. The eruption occured a little late in the afternoon ... at least, the cheerleaders thought so. But oc cur it did. j It all happened when the people on the south side of Kenan Sta-; short, sweet kiss, along with herierse div'e into the UNC dressing dium (who hadn't been yelling too j flowers and queenship. ' room- Nobody else made any com much until the people from South j There was a little Boy Scout ! ment, and the players resumed Carolina made a touchdown) alljone of 500 attending the" Explorer ! tbeir silent positions before the of a sudden decided they would j Scouts' annual encampment here door. start yelling. And when hey start-j anci he was a really little one, too: j ne Gamecock rtde into the ed yelling, 11 men and a slightly; he stood in front of the University ; dresing room on the hands of four bad-looking scoreboard couldn't keep them down. One fellow got up and led the crowd in a new-type cheer, "Fum ble Play." Since everybody knew the tune (From "Super Suds," and the radio commercial of the same name) the new-type cheer caught on quickly. - Another couple of fellows, who had obviously been smelling the cork a little too much, were sing ing . "We're Gonna Go To The Arnge(for Orange) Bowl." And : they meant it. j From a jealous coed came the i half-time remark about the beau- Offices In Graham Memorial Pretty Nancy Whisnant smiles af ter receiving her Homecoming Queen's bouquet from Tom Creasy. Al of In Kenan ! tiful South Carolina majorette,. pink: "That pink she s wearing doesn't go very well with the rest of them." Twinkling Miss Nancy Whisnant, i who is also chairman of the Wom-j en's Honor Council, a cheerleader! and a very important person out the campus of the first state uni versity, was crowned Homecoming Queen by stucfent government President Tom Creasy. She got (or s rather Creasy was treated to) a Band and in the middle of Kenan Stadium before all those people and saluted while the band played the National Anthem. He looked very- proud. A Tittle la'pr hfn fhp vvintpr sun went down behind Mr. More-:om head's and Mr. Patterson's gift, and when students started getting cold, the little Scout walked up and down behind the Carolina bench, following the game. He wore the biggest, furriest, warmest-looking parka, probably, that has ever been (See ERUPTION, page 4) Long leaps over a fallen taammate for a short gain at the beginning the second period. Coming in for the tackle is Spec Granger of South Carolina. Lasii- Bullocks Aerial To Lane Wins For UNC By BERNIE WEISS Carolina's Tar Heels converted last-quarter disater into ast-minute victory to upset South Carolina's (iamecocks. - - t iii-ig. yesterday afternoon before 22.000 thrill-filled fans at Kenan Stcdium. A Len Bullock to Norman Lane pass was completed in the end zone with only one minute - and 36 seconds remaining in the 'eligible to receive was clear of in game, bringing the Tar Heels from : terference, but he spotted Lane in out of the doldrums after appar- the end zone, threw, the six-foot, ent disaster had struck only a few : two-inch flankman leaped high in minutes earlier. The Birds had tak- to the air, outjumping two defen en a 19-14 lead with less than three ' ders, and hauled in the oas for minutes to go when South Carolina: end Buddy Frick intercepted a: Ken Keller added the extra point pitchout and raced 79 yards foriand Carolina had evened its sea what seemed to be the icer. j son-s record once more at 3-3-1. Lane's catch in the end zon?j All had appeared lost for the was a beauty, and Bullock, too, de- winners just prior to the once-in-serves much credit for his accurate I a-lifetime finish, toss: Briefly, here was the sit- Third-string quarterback Farmer uation. j was running the team in the last Taking the kickoff after the!four minutes and had his crew on South Carolina score, the Tar Heels ! the South Carolina 21-yard line, moved uptown to the Bird 12-yard The S. C. line was holding well, so line largely because of fullback I Don Klochak's 30-yard gallop deep into scoring territory. Klochak tri-j wno was headed in tne general di ed right end on the next play and j rection of the goal, was late. From gained one yard to the 11. out of nowhere Frick appeared on 1 hen Bullock faded DacK tor at pass, drifted far to his right search- ing for an open man. He almost j ran with the ball as no Tar Heel ! Story Book Battle Leaves S.C. Players Tired, Silent Losers By BOB DILLARD "What's the matter with that guy?" The group of players ir front of the door of the Souti Carolina dressing room turned a their teammate's words just ir. time to see Bill Roman's blue teammates. However, most of them seemed in good shape, but tired after the story-book battle. Members of both teams driting slowly into tne field- house, in I I A . . - , 1 maritea contrast to tne dressing episode -of the last Carolina om am: Gro"Ps f t?""C and Carolina players talked con- . ulliCi dI a Blw. hands before departing for their respective showers. Tar Heel half-! , carae lnrruu-u 'e?uui ms ooservauons wi:n, ve crowd tmto Gamecock dressing j made some mistakes, but that hap- ' room to continue a conversation pens. It was a good Homecoming VfAlf . TT'1T 1 1 i L . i i begun on the field. Shouting and yelling came from CHANGES The editor talks cf changes at Carolina over the years. See p. 9 FOUR PAGES TODAY (All photos by Cornell Wright) rail the winning score farmer elected to try the ends. A pitchout to halfback Larry Parker, the scene, gathered in the floating pigskin and outraced Farmer in the opposite direction. (See TAR HEELS, page 4) xtoss the way, but the Gamecocks elt no inclination to take part in he festivities. They continued the juiet conversation begun after the game. Coach Rex Enright. a short, soft--poken man, was bu?!on-holed out- ide the dressing room door by a group of inquiring reporters. "It was a good hard game. They deserved to win," he said. Enright took nothing from the Tar liec in their moment of glory. But he thought his Gamecocks deserved the victory too. Enright commented that he thought injuries received last week by some of his key play ers lessened his team's chances for a victory. When asked which Carolina play er he thought outstanding. Enright commented, "That big fullback, whoever he was." Don Klochak drew praise from the opposing coach as well as from his own team supporters. Enright closed A. 1 . 1 - a ,.-rT win for them." And it was. Mi si) y if J
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 7, 1954, edition 1
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