Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Oct. 7, 1962, edition 1 / Page 4
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UNC By Dartan C3 1CK it ir k MID i a. Tar Heels Suffer Third Loss In Row EAST LANSING, Mich. (UPI) Halfback Ron Rubick raced for three touchdowns Saturday and set a new school rushing record to lead Michigan State to a 38-6 vic tory over outweighed North Caro lina. Michigan State, picked as cne of the nation's top teams before the season opened, went ali out trying to atone for its 16-13 upset loss to Stanford last week. For North Carolina, it was the third straight defeat and second rout by a Big Ten team. The Tar Heels fell to Ohio State, 41-7, last week. - . MSU coach Duffy Daugherty benched half of his first string to fire up the Spartans and second string quarterback Charlie Migyan ka ran the ground attack behind a line that outweighed the Tar Heels 22 pounds per man. Speedster Sherman Lewis and Rubick took turns in the first half attack which mashed the left side of the Tar Heel line as 61,029 fans watched Lewis belt from the 29 to the 18, from the 13 to the 6 and from the 6 for the first Spartan score at 3:55 of the first period. All three runs were behind . 247- Where is The assion lower Hotel? jam-. iAHA'U'LLAI (The Glory of God) Founder World pound Ed Budde, and 245-pcund Matt Snorton. The next time State got the ball, Rubick again broke over right tackle on a second-down play and went 67 yards from his own 33 for a score to make it 13-6. As the second period began, Lew is completed another Spartan drive with an 8-yard run over left tackle and Earl Lattimer kicked his sec ond extra point to make it 20-0. North Carolina then used the only offensive weapon it was able to display, the quarterback Junior Edge to end Bob Lacy passing combination, for UNC's lone-scapj-Edge passed 20 yards to Lacey for the touchdown. Michigan State promptly pun ished the left side of the Tar Heel line again and went 58 yards in 10 plays to make it 26-6. Rubick went 10 yards around right end for the score. North Carolina contained the Spartans for most of the third per iod. On a Tar Heel drive, Edge hit Lacey for 30 yards, John Ham mett for 11 yards and ran for sev en himself to carry North Carolina to the Michigan State eight. But Carolina lost the ball on downs on an incomplete pass. Michigan State drove the length of the field in 11 plays with full back Roger Lopes going over from the four and Rubick again ac counting for much of the yardage. Rubik ran for 207 yards in 14) carries, for a 14.8 yard average to break the 12-year-old record of Sonny Grandelius against Oregon State in 1950. Michigan state had 472 yards on the ground. Michigan State 13 13 6 638 North Carolina 0 6 0 06 MSU Lewis 6 run (Lattimer kick). MSU Rubick 67 run (kick failed). MSU Lewis 8 run (Latti mer kick). N.C. Lacev 20 nass from Edge (kick failed). MSU Ruzick 11 run (pass failed). MSU Lopes 4 run (run failed). MSU Rubick 15 run (kick failed). Attendance: 61,029. .... i , HJJJ.U '"' J I.,. J ' HIM li 1 1 1JJL JJLU J II UJU L ' I- " ' I IB tz ' t; -A jcx 'f-ii - j 4--' "5VV , iZ Lr hi -Mx, f.: i-:.A.. : :-::-: :o:-::- -i i i i ' i i i i nf i in i n ' ni"iilMi n Mfm al 1 1 n (MnniTTBT r ff n n"i rintin fl n w wi TilrrriiriiiTT n rn f Blue Devils Spot Gators 21. Bounce Back In Second Half JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (UPI) The Duke Blue Devils, stung into' action by a Florida three-touchdown scoring spree, came from behind in the second half to whip the Gators 28-21 before 30,000 fans at the Gator Bowl Saturday. Duke floundered in the first half as Florida defenders smothered the lonesome end attack. Florida struck suddenly in the second per iod and ran and passed for- 21 points in a record 5 minutes. 41 seconds. . ; But the 21-point lead cost Flor ida three major injuries and Duke swarmed over the weakened Ga tors, using the lonesome end at tack to level the count at 21-all at the end of the third period. In the final quarter Duke march ed across for the winning touch down, then withstood a tremen dous Florida surge. Florida opened the scoring early in the second period, moving from its own 20 yard line in seven plays to the Duke 21. Then southpaw quarterback Tom Shannon hit right end Sam Holland two yards off the end zone and Holland slipped across. line. Leggett ran the two yards for the first Blue Devil score. Minutes later relief quarterback Gil Garner hit end Pete Widener for a 33-yard touchdown pass in the end zone as Florida's defense against the lonsome end play crumbled. The Blue Devils evened the score at the end of the third period, mov .iiig from the Florida 22 on fiv plays, and calling on fullback Mike Curtis for the two-yard touchdown plunge. That tied it up and set the stage for the fourth period and Duke's game-winning drive. The Blue Devils marched from their own 40 on nine plays and Curtis again went over the line frnm two vards out. Florida Duke . 21 0 0 21 721 7 28 MICHIGAN STATE'S Ron Rubick (33) finds game in East Lansing. Trying to get at Rubick a hole in the North Carolina line, and runs for 14 are Carolina's John Hull (72) and Buddy Cozart yards during the second quarter of yesterday's (65). UPI Telephoto. Clemson Throttles Deacons WINSTON-SALEM (UPD Clem- when Matthews, who put on 20 est 10-yard line and made three THE PROMISED WORLD ilEDEEiEf! WORDS OF BAHA'U'LLAH The world's equilibrium hath been upset through the vibrat ing influence of this enost great, new WORLD ORDER, Man kind's ordered life hath been 'revolutionized through the agency of this unique, this won- derous System the like of which mortal eyes have never witnessed. Soon will the present day or der be Tolled up and a new; one spread out in its stead. That which the Lord hath or dained as the Sovereign rem edy and mightiest instrument for the healing of all the world is the union of all its people in one universal cause, one common Faith. This can in no wise be achieved except through the power of a skilled an all- powerful and inspired Physic ian." We nave Used a time tor you, O people! If ye fail, at the appointed hour, to turn to wards God, He, verily, will lay violent hold on you, and will cause grievous afflictions to assail you from every direc tion." "O ye peoples of the world! know verily that an unforeseen calamity is following you and that grievous retributfSn awaiteth you. Think not Sie deeds ye have committed have been blotted from my sight . all your doings hath My fen graven with open enaracters upon tablets of Chrysolite." Terps Defeat Stale, 14-6 RALEIGH (UPI) A 78-vard A t-i . toucnaown punt return by half back Dick Shiner gave Maryland a Ohio, sophomore, and the clutch passing and running of quarter back Dick Siner gave Maryland a 14-6 decision over North Carolina State Saturday. The rifle-like passes of Shiner, plus line smashes by halfback Len Chiaverini. were too much fnr th Wolfpack. Shiner looked like the All-Amer ica candidate he is said to be as ne repeatedly hit halfhar-k- Tnm Brown with passes that clicked in the clutch. The 195-pound quarterback set up Maryland's second TD with a pass to Brown on the State 10. icniaverini carried to the five and irom there bhiner skippered over the double line to climax a 62- yard drive. End John Hannigan's kicks were good after both scores State's big drive started late in the third period and ended earlv in thei fourth with quarterback Bill Kriger slipping over from the two. ihe little quarterback, all 159 pounds of him, carried a half doz en times for short gains before he tell into the end zone. son halfback Mack Matthews, re turning to his 1960 form after a year out of school, returned a punt 88 yards for a fourth-period touch down Saturday to spark the Tigers to a 24-7 victory over Wake Forest. Clemson was leading by a scant 10-7 margin in the final stanza when the 5-10, 195-pound Lincoln- ton, Ga., speedster took Wake For est fullback Steve Bozarth's kick on the 12 and zig-zagged up field for the insurance touchdown. Halfback Rodney Rogers kicked the extra point, putting Clemson out front 17-7. A few minutes later Rogers set up tne I mat Clemson - toucnaown when he intercepted a Deacon pass on the 39. Four plays later full back Pat Crain carried for a first down on the 14, and two plays after inai ne went over tor tne tauy with less than five minutes remain ing in the game, Rogers, who kick ed all points after touchdowns for Clemson, again booted the ball through the uprights. Clemson got its first touchdown pounds during his layoff year, in tercepted a stray Deacon aerial and returned it 15 yards to his own 48. Quarterback Joe Anderson went 23 yards on a run and directed the Tigers to the touchdown. Crain went over from the three for the score and Rogers kicked the extra point. Later in the first period Clem son took off from its own 22 after a 51-yard punt by Wake Forest. The Tigers moved inside the Wake For- Navy Blanks Hooters, 4-0 Runners Beat Ti life rs Easily By LASZLO B lit IN VI Carolina won its opening cross country meet yesterday over Clem son, 15-46. ANNAPOLIS, Md the Daily Tar Heel) Ail-American candidate, Carl Kaeser, booted two goals yesterday to lead Navy's varsity soccer team to a 4-0 tri umph over the Tar Heels. This loss evened Carolina's record at 1-1. Larry Henry, a second-year medi cal student from Horseshoe, N. C, won the race with a 21-minute, 44 second time. Four Tar Heels fol- (Special to Mowed Henry across the finish line at Finley Golf Course. iBob Bennett took second, Char lie Little and Jerry Smith tied for third, and co-captain Jerry Stuver finished fifth. driving attempts before Rogers kicked his 22-yard field goal for Clemson's first score. With the Tigers leading, 10-0, Wake Forest took the next kick- off all the way, scoring in the last minute of the first half. Quarterback John Mackovic passed 17 yards to end Tim Te jeck for the TD and Mickey Walker kicked the extra point. The drive took the Deacons 70 yards. Wake Forest 0 7 0 07 Clemson 0 10 0 1424 Two minutes later Gator quar terback Tom Ratten handed to fulback Larry Lupree on the Flori da 30, and Dupree took off on a 70 yard TD run. The third lightning belt in less than six minutes came when full back Tom Kelley intercepted a pass and started a march from the Duke 48 with fullback Jim O'Donnell scoring. In the second half Duke began the long road back with a 31- yard pass from quarterback Walt Rappold to lonesome end Stan Crissom on the Florida two yard I EVERYBODY IS TALKING ABOUT IT 24-IIOUR THE LORD OF THE NEW AGE will be discussed by Winston G. Evans on Wednesday, Oct. 3 at 8 pj3i. in the music room of East. Duke Build ing on East Campus. Public invited. Free literature. Questions answered. For additional information and free literature, write Rusty Ingersoll, Box 9081, Duke Statics, Durham. 3 o BUFFET CONTINENTAL 12-2:30 P.M $1.25 Navy combined strong defensive play, allowing UNC only three shots in the 88 minutes of play, with excellent ball control to gain their fourth straight win. The Mid dies tallied three times in the op ening period, including their first goal which was registered after on ly 10 seconds of play, and then battled through two scoreless per iods before adding their final score in the fourth quarter. Sophomore goalie Buddy Siege was credited with 15 saves for Coach Allen's booters while back field men. Steve Painter and George Beim, and right wing Pete Blake also turned in fine performances. Henry, who didn't participate in cross country or track during his first year in med school, said after the race, "I felt good all the way, but I feel I can run at least a min- uate faster. I, like the rest of tnc team, am looking forward to Mary land next Saturday." Results: 1. Larry Henry (UNO, 2. Hob Bennett (UNC), 3. Tie Charlie Little (UNC) and Jerry Smith (UNC), 5. Jerry Stuver (UNC), 6. David Moorhead (CD, 7. John Evans (CD, 8. Okie Whichard (UNC), 9. Bill Graham (UNC), 10. Lloyd Hooper (CD, 11. E. J.' Drown (CD, 12. William Evans (CD, 13. Maurice McDonald (UNC), 14. Westley Ackerman (CD, 15. Henry Turner (CD. AT THE Tuesday, Thursday, Friday DINE IN - DINE OUT - CARRY OUT O CTOBERFE NEW CODING SYSTEM CODE B $1.50 CODE C 1.90 CODE D 2.40 CODE E 3.50 CODE F 3.60 CODE G 4.20 2 OOriTIfUES TODAY Open 1 A.M.- 8 P.H. .Hi Hew Shipment Of RCA Records Just Arrived START FRESH With a new STYLI MONO STEREO DIAMONDS DIAMONDS 99 SQ99 0 RECORDING TAPES 15 0! Chez Ltd. t I ' ' .'L' . j I JL e pgr ' " Aisu t " -.- y.'y- x.''? ' V, v" . :2nl t. v ' - . rfyfy' vv" & , xr-h lor you ;. ljjf witli tlie compliments of i r 1 ;i Christian Dior Eiris hi Yd a Lipstick j r - :' 1 I ' J ; , t Rottins Inc., Franklin Street. J j I : ' vi iVlerely present ; tliis invitation before Christian Dicr'on tlie lipi of te'vorld most fas!uonatIewomen. Paris created; Paris made. Ckristian Dior Lipstick is unique lncoloxcitntn&tcxtuxej ojveryczeamy "so very Dior On ristxan lor JT sTixims
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Oct. 7, 1962, edition 1
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