THE DAILY TAR HEEL PAGE THREI W&M 13 W.. Forest 9 W.Va.v 28 N. C.State 3 Ohio State 21 Wisconsin 27 Minnesota 0 N. Dame 34 Iowa 18 Purdue 13 Indiana 7 Harvard 13 Yale 9 Kentucky 14 Tennessee 13 Duke 5. Car. 26 7 igan 7 SUNDAY,-NOVEMBER 21, 1954 Idi Sfote Will flm In Bowl Tqr Heels 2nd InLAAUMeet ; Carolina's delegation to " the - North: Carolina cross country AAU championships at -Davidson placed second behind a mixture of N. C. State, freshmen and varsity run- ners yesterday morning, despite " the fact that Carolina's number twcrdistance man Bob Barden set "a hew course record for the four mile distance. ' no :' Barden broke the old record of 20:43 set last year, with an effort of 20:25. Other Carolina finishers . wereb"Glen Nanney, 4th Tony Houghton, 5th Boyd Newman, ... . 11th Don Wright; 12th Scot ty Hester, 13th Larry Thames, 17th? and Marion "Griffin. 18th. TKe 'State runners posted a low score of 29, while the Carolina thenx'.with 31. Davidson was third with 70, another mixture of State runn2ars- fourth with 101, .and the Burlington Running Club finished in fifth place with 136 points. . i or osess Squash Va. (Continued from Page 1) of sis passes, good for total gains of 59 yards. It:; was the 30th Carolina victory who prdrnptly marched 99 yards,'' Buckeyes W in In 4th Quarter Hopalong Cassady Stars j In Buckeyes' 9fh Victory j COLUMBUS, Ohio, Nov." 20 (JP) Ohio State's unbeaten Buckeyes made, good on a fourway bid for gridiron glory here today, coming from behind with two long touch down drives in the final period to defeat Michigan '21-7. A crowd of 82,438, and a national televi sion audience saw the game. The conquest gave the brilliant Buckeyes the undisputed Western Conference championship, a berth in the Rose Bowl, a hefty claim to the national title, and their first unbeaten; untied season in fen years. y In beating Michigan for only the third time in 12. seasons, Ohio tie came only the second Western Conference team in history to win seven straight games in' the rug ged league. Only Chicago's 1913 team had done it before. . - The Bucks came from nowhere to climb back on the football throne. Held to only' four first downs in the first, three periods, ' Ohio came to life after holding Michigan on the six-inch line "toi take the ball just as the third j session ended. f With the score deadlocked at 7-7, the Wolverines had a first down on Ohio's four, but four cracks at the line served only to turn the ball over to the Bucks, ' 1 ' -sir: ' - i ' -' , j If.- - l . ' -'"7 W.Virginia D Wolfpack By BO Nov. 20 (P) Quarterback N8ttA Squeezes i - - j ByDeacsJS ! 1 1 WILLIAMSBURG, Va., Nov. 20 1. ff Charlie Sumner returned to 1 fulltime duty at the quarterback post where he gained fame a year ago and passed William and Mary I to a ld-9 tootball victory over. Wake Forest here today in a see saw battle that was in doubt right down to the last play. Sumner, who was shifted to half back with the season only a third j carried in the first period from ; on its own 4t Mountaineer end j Harvard Edges By Yale, 13-9 CAMBRIDGE, Mass., Nov. 20 JP Senior wingback Frank White, playing for Bob Cowles who was injured on the opening kickoff, threw a 40-yard scoring pass to end Bob Cochran with less than five minutes to play today as Har vard staged a magnificent comc- MORGAXTOWX, W. Va Freddy Wyant directed his West Virginia University Moun taineers in four long power marches here today as they trounced North Carolina State 28: before a crowd of 20,000. Only the passing ot "the Wolf packs Eddie W est and the ! back to defeat Yale 13 9. dangerous r unning of halfback j ' j The victory spelled Harvard's George Marinkov kept the visitors: After a 50 yard punt by Chick j first big three championship since in the game. . Donaldson for WVU and two 15 j 1941 and may have cost Yal a West Virginia's initial drive I yard penalties gave State the Ttell ! clear hold on thc Iv' (it,e- old, heaved a long pass to half back Walter Herrman on a dazz ling play covering 66 yards with less than seven, minutes left to pull the Indians from behind. Herrman grabbed Sumner's toss on the midfield ribbon, evaded the Mountaineer 32 to N. C. State 8 from where Wyant sent Bobby Moss over for the touchdown to wipe out a 3-0 lead which tTie Wolfpack gained on tackle John Bagonis' field goal. West took to the air in' the see ond period and comnleteri three Deacon defensemen John Parham j consecutive passes, the last one and EoT-Stowers and sailed down j to Harry Lodge for 49 yards which the sidelines to the goal. Tackle ! put the ball on the 6. WVU "held Jerry Sazio kicked the extra point. 1 and took over omits own 1. Bill Underdonk blocked West's j punt and it went out of the end ' zone for a safety. West - Virginia scored all thrtTe ' times it got possession of the ball i in-the third quarter on drives of: 80, 36 and 83 yards, with Moss, J fullback Danny Williams and sub ! halfback Eddie Dugan sharing the: scoringr . HaVe you seen those out of this world r Christmas Cards at the Intimate Bookshop? Sheering fullbacks... calls for greenbacks! FULLBACK DON KLOCHAK, Carolina's "Wild Bull of the Pampas," who scored two touchdowns and gained 102 yards in the Tar Heels' 26-14 victory over Virginia's Cavaliers. in the: 59th meeting between the two teams. Virginia has won 26, and three were ties; ; Carolina won the toss ''and elect ed to receive. Parker-returned the kickoff 5 to ' the 2 1 y ard line ' f rorri his goal. In four plays "the' fTar Heels moved to heir 35, : but Gra vitteV fumble ' was recovered by Virginia's guard Jay Corson oh the 42. ' ' ! . Three plays netted three yards for Virginia and Henry Strempek punted out of bounds on the Caro lina 13. , -. . . .- , . " i UC managed a first,-down on their next drive, -but, it stalled at their 30, . and. Parker ; punted o the Virginia 38. ' Uya.'j, moved to the Carolina 46, main,! on the strength of Bonney's 16 yard sprint, but Carolina ends Fryenand Lane caught the Vir ginia, .quarterback in the act of passing . twice in a row, throwing the Cavaliers back '20 yards. Strempek punted to the UNC 32. The, Tar Heels rolled across mid field and down to the Virginia 17 qn. some slashing drives by Klo chak.and a 12 yard pass from Bul: locl$ to, Parker, but here the attack fizzled,. UVa taking over on downs. On two plays the Cavs lost four yards, t and on third down Bonney's pass,, intended for Moyer, was in tercepted by Bill Kirkman on the 26 and returned down to the 13. -After hitting the center bar of the . goal post with his first down pass JBulloclc tired a siriKe 10 t-m-ker ,;in the end zone on second down for the game's first sco;. Klochak's placement was . wide. UXC-6; UVa.-O. Ort the ensuing kickoff, Virginia . could not move the ball and was forced to kick, Gravitte taking the punt on his own 16, and immedi ately; swarmed under by a host of tacklers. On-first down Klochak burst up the imiddle for 27 yards to the 43. Parker shot through for nine yards. Bui Irteic added a first down on the UVa. 44. Virginia-was penalized 15 yards back to their 29. On the next;play Klochak tore through; the center of the line and rocketed the -remaining 29 yards to pay-dirt f Klochak converted, and with o:it gone in the second "quarter, the . score was UNC-13; UVa.-O. - J Kirkman's kickoff was returned ( by Dvorak to the UVa. 27. Two, plays 'netted an eight yard deficit . for Virginia. On third down Keller . intercepted Bailey's pass on the 27, . returning it to the five, but a clip- j ping1' penalty against Carolina put , the Dall back on the 23. In two plays the Tar Heels scored, Lear, blasting away for 18 yards to the J five,;and Keller, going over on a. widei;rtght end sweep trom mere. Ken 'Keller added the placement. UNC-20; UVa.-O, with 8:10 gone in the1 second quarter. The. Cavaliers returned the next kickoff to their 35, but a holding penalty set them back on the 16. Gaining seven yards in three plays, Virginia punted to the UNC 31. 2 feet and 6 inches in 12 plays, climaxer by Dave Leggett's 8-yard touchdown toss to end Dick Bru-.' baker. - t : ! ; Late in the session, t Howard (Hopalong) Cassady,; : Ohio's ; out- I standing star of the ;day,. ihter j cepted a pass and ran it back to I his own 38, and 11 plays later he ended the 62-yard drive with a 1 one-yard plunge1 for the final tal ly. Little. Tad: Weed, 145,-pound place-kicking specialist, booted all three placements for Ohio. Duke Rolls Over 26-7, In Rain S. C Mud - DURHAM, X. C. Knore halfback playing Nov. 20. (JP) Buddy Bass, a sopho belore hometown fans, scored two touchdowns and passed for another today as Duke defeated South. Carolina, 26-7, to strengthen its chances for an Orange Bowl bid. -; " y FZalfbrk Bob Pascal and cjtiarterback Jerry Barger teamed with Bass to provide the ' 1 GET 'EM BY TELEGRAM! Having a big time at the bif game costs money. If you need financial reinforcements, flash home your fund appeal by telegram. Instead of a lecture on Economics, you'll get back coin of the realm as requested. It's just Basic Psychology. A tele gram is always something "special" always gets attention gets results. So use 'em for any purpose invitations, greetings, reservations. Just call your Western Union office. WESTERN Michigan marched- 68 yards in ( big' punch as I3uke scored in ev- seven, Bass flipped to Pascal for 12 . plays at the start of the game ery period belore a crowd of 13,-' score. for its only touchdown, -.an; intrfcv.Q00j" , . f j - : cate buck lateral play, senaing left j The second lialf was played mj halfback Dan Cline into the end rain- that turned the field into a( zone for the score. Ron Kramer, sea of mud. ' j Michigan's great sophomore end,j South Carolina's only score who played a fine game on both! came in the causing minutes when offense and defense, booted the, guard Frank Mincevich of Hack- extra point. GRID SCORES EAST -Princeton 49, Dartmouth 7 Syracuse 20, Fordham 7 Rutgers 45, Columbia 12 Penn State 13, Pitt 0 Boston U. 19, Temple 7 Harvard 13, Yale 9 Holy Cross 46, Connecticut 26 Delaware 20, Bucknell 0 SOUTH William & Mary 13, W. Forest 9 W. Va. 28, N. C. State 3 North Carolina 26, Virginia 14 Kentucky 14, Tennessee 13 Maryland 48, Geo. Wash. 6 Duke 26, South Carolina 7 . Elon 14, Davidson 6 MIDWEST Mich. State 40, Marquette 10 Ohio State 21, Michigan 7 Northwestern 20, Illinois 7 Wisconsin 27, Minnesota 0 Notre Dame 34, Iowa 18 Purdue 13, Indiana 7 Dayton 13, Xavier 0 Terps Squash Colonials, 48-6 COLLEGE PARK, Md,, Nov. 20 j (JP) Frank Tamburello, cocky sop-i ettstown. N. J.,v recovered Worth Lutz's fumble in the end zone for a touchdown. t..i, t, v,- .t,it, nirnff ' homore quarterback, opened the a c fnr , floodgates with two long touch rl 1 1 1 I 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 11 UU V Ol V 1 .1 ill 1 . plaj-s. The score came on a 37-yard pass play frm Pascal - to end Tracy Moon. There were five sec onds remaining in the second per iods when Barger flipped a touch down pass to Bass, the play cov ering 39 yards." In the third period, Duke scored on a seven yard pass from Bass to Pascal. The final. Blue Devil tally came early in the fourth per-1 iod when Bass circled left end from the 11. The win was , Duke's third straight in the Atlantic Coast con ference and bolstered its hopes for the conference title. The Blue Devils still must dispose of arch rival. North Carolina. Pascal, who . turned in a great game for Duke, made a' brilliant catch of a 30-yard pass from Bar ger to set up Duke's touchdown in the third quarter on South Car olina's 13. 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