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BIRDS PRIMED FOR CLASH WITH TARHEELS SAT FEATURE EVENT OF HOME COMING North Carolina Brings Down Powerful Eleven For Big Game Having exhibited their best form o the season to hand the Citadel Bull dogs a man sized walloping a Orangeburg last Thursday, Bill] Laval's Carolina Gamecocks will de vote the few remaining days of this week in the highly important task o preparing themselves for the invasioi of the powerful North Carolina Tar heels here Saturday. The game has been scheduled a; the feature attraction of Carolina'! annual homecoming clay and will b< A witnessed by hundreds of old gradi who will return to their old colleg< haunts for a day of handshaking aiu I good cheer. Already, the demand for tickets tc the game has been so heavy, tha I there has been some talk of chang ling the game from Melton field to tin more spacious stands at the state fai grounds. About '.),(><>() fans are ex H Ipcctcd to witness the contest. TARHEELS STRONG The North Staters, who have be m I come famous throughout the Soutl las one of the foremost exponents o I the ballyhoo art, appear to have a I last formed a football eleven that i m I capable of giving the strongest a rut I for their money. Beginning the season with over I whelming victories over Wake Fores fifH I and Maryland, the Tarheels hande< I the old dope bucket a sizeable boo I when she took the vaunted Engineer I of Georgia Tech into camp. The fol I lowing week end, just when she wa I being press agented as the cominj I Southern champions, North Carolin I dropped a close affair to the Univer B I sity of Georgia, at Chapel Hill. Just to show that she wasn't dis couraged, the North Staters cam I back last week and turned back th m V. P. I. Gobblers easily in an impres I sive display of powerful backs. Thi I week she should be at her stronges I and all ready for the clash with th I Birds. ROOSTERS READY BjBp The Roosters too, should be a their very best when they lock horn with the garrulous Tarheels. Cominj along slowly since the opening of th season, Billy Laval has developed hi team into a likely looking team tha is a menace for any football tean anywhere. Their victory over Citadel last weel shows that she is iapidly hitting lie stride and with Boineau, Stoddard and Rhame up to their old tricks should be able to make things quit interesting for the North Carolinans. Carolina's forward wall is still lack ing in a close defensive and coache will work on this phase of the elevei this week in order to strengthen i for the mighty thrusts that th doughty Tarheel backs are certain t< hurl against it. The Birds will enter this game con siderablv outweighed in both back field and line. North Carolina's lin is understood to be about as heavy a Clemson's and she has several set of husky backs, one about as good a the other. All in all, the Gamecock will be outweighed about eigh pounds to the man. U.B.O. HICKS RETURNS N. B. Hicks, plunging Gamecock fullback, returned to practice yesterday after having been out for a month with a broken collar bone. He was injured on the first play of the CarolinaVirginia game and had to be carried from the field. At first his injury was not thought to be serious but upon examination his collar bone was shown to be broken. When he was injured, it was thought that he would be lost for the entire season, but now it appears that he will soon see action. Hicks is not only a great line crusher but also an excellent defensive back. His return will greatly strengthen the Carolina backfield which has been somewhat weakened by the absence of a dependable line plunger. North Caro km&m? ^tL^mmS^ \ C STRUD AfaStf -Mfti- r&tfCK r ROOSTERS WIN I AND STODDAB t ; Sport Chants g BY JULIAN KRAWCHEK a -IT IS NO SMALL source of gratification to Gamecock supporters that - sport writers and a skeptical gridiron e public have at last begun to take some e cognizance of the fact that in Rru - Boineau and Julian Beall, Carolina s has two football players that are forct ing themselves into the front ranks e among the prominent candidates for all Southern berths this year. t MORGAN BLAKE, the vers satile sports scribe who does the 5 Sportanic Eruptions in a masterly e fashion for the Atlanta Journal, s gave prominent mention in his t column the other day to the names ! of Boineau, Rhame and Beall as among the foremost contenders < for places on the mythical all r Southern conference eleven seI lected yearly by an Associated Press poll of Southern sports g scribes. I UK BOASTFUL North Carolina Tarheels, more loquacious than ever, 5 invade Gamecock territory Saturday J for what promises to be the Birds' hardest clash of the season, Clemson e included. Fresh from victories over 3 Ga. Tech and V. P. I., the North Staters are in just the frame of mind - that bodes ill for Billy Laval and his - husky gridders. e s THERE IS A little rumor s going the rounds just now that s North Carolina wants to beat us s decisively this year so they can t have an excuse for dropping us from their schedule. If memory serves correct, they had this little plan in mind on two or three other occasions in tJhe past ten years, but they've always had their pet schemes knocked into a cocked hat. SOl'TH CAROLINA doesn't play North Carolina just because she thinks it is an asset to have her on her schedule. Far be it from that. The Gamecocks play the Tarheels simply because it is an old traditional clash and they want to see it built tip eventually into one of the South'* foremost grid classics. And there is no reason why it can't be so. POOR OLD CLEMSON, may their souls rest in peace. What a pity their funeral couldn't have been right here in South Carolina where it belonged rather than up in the mountains of Kentucky. Anyway, that's the furtherest point west a Clemson leam has reached on its way to California in a decade or so. Maybe if they keep on trying hard enough, they might get there some day. By JULIAN KRAWCHEK liua Threats | >/?/V*7V mot>s? + kolljbacac NASH and SLUSSER, two of the main cogs in the powerful offensive of the Tarheels, will bear watching by the Birds here Saturday. Nash, a Charleston boy, is the star in the North Carolina backfield and is extremely fast and shifty. AS BOINEAU ID MAKE MERRY BACKS RUN WILD TO BEAT CADETS Carolina Eleven Flashes Best Form Of Season To Down Citadel, 27 To 14 With the thudding hoofs of Bru Boineau and Hugh Stoddard leading the procession, South Carolina's larruping Gamecocks gained a thrilling 27 to 14 victory over the Citadel Bulldogs at Orangeburg last Thursday in the 24th renewal of gridiron hostilities between the age old rivals. A colorful gallery, estimated at almost 10,000 spectators, were treated to thrill after thrill as tli e bronzed charges of Billy Laval came from behind to overcome a 7 to 0 lead and give tlu* Cadets from the Ashley a man sized drubbing. _ Boineau, as his share toward winning the game, made two long and sensational runs that resulted in touchdowns for the Rirds and in addition to this circled right end for about (50 yards on another jaunt across the goal line that was called back because of an offside. STODDARD STARS Stoddard, playing one of bis best games of the year, grabbed one pass that netted a touchdown and then shagged another faulty flip to put the pigskin in position for another Carolina score. During the entire game. Stoddard's defensive work and blocking made him one of the most valuable men on the field. Pop Wilson, Citadel's nice running back, was easily the outstanding man in the Cadet backfield, being a menace to Carolina hopes from the very opening of the game when his gallop of some 50 odd yards placed the ball in position for the first Bulldog score. (Continued on Page 7) PICKING THEM OUT Trying to select winners from the outstanding games this week is one head breaking task. If you don't believe it, take a fling at it yourself. Carolina over North Carolina ( Erskine over P. C. i Citadel over Furman Wofford over Wake Forest Clemson over V. M. I. Louisiana over Duke Davidson over N. C. State Virginia over V. P. I. Kentucky over Alabama Tulane over Auburn N. Y. U. over Georgia Ga. Tech over Vanderbilt Yale over Maryland Mich. State over Miss. Aggies Tennessee over Carson-Newman ROUT OF TIGERS E STARTLES STATE Carolina Licks Citadel Easily As Bengals Bow To Thrusts Of Kentucky B The overwhelming and quite unexpected defeat of Clemson's vaunted Tigers by the crippled Wildcats of Kentucky furnished the big surprise in a week of sparkling traditional clashes that rang to a close on the South Carolina football rialto Satur- ti day night. B Doped to lick the Kentuckians by C at least one touchdown, Josh Cody's U] terrible Bengals suffered a severe let a< down from the form tlicy exhibited H; in the South Carolina game, and were vi no match for the Wildcats, losing by the one-sided count of 44 to 6. p The powerful backfickl of Justus, j| McMillan, McCarley, and Padgett st failed to get going for the Aggies while the Kentucky hall toters were tl running wild to pile up seven touch- ti downs and innumerable first downs. t( BOINEAU STRUTS J] I he thudding hoofs of Bru Boincau, South Carolina's super halfback, left p a strong Citadel eleven staggering in b his footsteps at Orangeburg Thurs- F day as lie ran up and down the field a in a brilliant fashion to give the C Gamecocks a L'7 to 14 victory. E In addition to making two touch- tl downs himself and flinging passes y that accounted for two others, Boi- fi (Continued on Page 7) ciJaiemidkA "EXCLUSI W6'-5/ Main St Marshall I Fine worsted che the newest model | Many stores get ^ the same quality. KIDDIES FLASH POWER TO TRIP UP CADET RATS FLEMING TERROR TO PUPS enton, Parrot, Freeman And Musselwhite Big Guns In 39 to 6 VictoryPlaying up to form for the first me this year, Carolina's powerful iiddie eleven ran rampart over a itadel Yearling team Saturday to run p the one-sided score of 38 to 6 and Jd a second canine scalp to Carona's gridiron larder in the abbreiated course of less than a week. Coach Norman's gridders, while dislaying some of the raggedness seen i nearly all first year teams, were rong in their running game and ten more powerful in the air. When icy were held up abruptly in scoring rritory as they often were, they >ok to the air and three long flips ere directly responsible for half of icir touchdowns. The Biddies scored early when a ffi| ass from Fleming to Jones put the all on Carolina's 48 yard line and 'arrott's long 52 yard sprint through broken field sent the ball across the itadel's goal line. Soon after this, enton, Parrott and Fleming drove le ball from midfield to Citadel's 10 ard line from which point, a flip om Fleming to Correl, netted the (Continued on Page 7) I Columbia.. S. (?. -Tatum SUITS $25 MOST UNUSUAL VALUES Blue I Oxford Gray viots tailored in s. !>30 and $35 for