8 MONDAY, MARCH 5, 2007 tuh P , rr* WL' ■ ] DTH/EDYTHE MCNAMME Senior Reyshawn Terry drops in a layup against Duke's David McClure in the first half of Sunday's contest. He had 15 points and eight rebounds. SENIORS FROM PAGE 1 New Hampshire, playing alongside former Tar Heel Rashad McCants at New Hampton Prep, then took a scholarship at James Madison. But after a year on the bench there, Miller got an offer to be a walk-on for the Tar Heels —and he jumped at the chance. Last season after the post championship exodus he was given a scholarship and started for half the year. This season he had to give up the free ride and the start ing spot due to an influx of talented „ c s's> \ * Do you need to pick up an extra class? Don't have time to spend six weeks in Summer School? Earn 3 credit hours in 3 weeks. Registration begins March 23. Interested? Visit http://summer.unc.edu ffl UNC i-Uil SUMMER SCHOOL Jam | If"* 4 "& Mj HhoI^IEI Swimming pool, fitness center, game &■■ f\ .* room, 24-hour study lounge, audiovisual room, wireless zones & on-site dining | s *r all at an... ffiHf ■, |Wjj| The place to be at UNC g> freshmen. Miller said he has no regrets about the reduced role, and has even embraced it. Being a bench contributor for UNC still is more than most 5-foot-ll kids from Charlotte can claim. “I always dreamed about play ing at this level, playing at North Carolina,” Miller said. “But I don’t know if I ever really thought it would happen. But it’s been an amazing road, an amazing journey.” Contact the Sports Editor at sports@unc.edu. From Page One DUKE FROM PAGE 1 ered in blood and his brow creased with rage. The scene vaulted Willianis from the bench over to the developing huddle of emotional players from each side. “First emotions are to run out there and help,” said freshman guard Ty Lawson, who had already fouled out when Hansbrough was bloodied. “I mean you couldn’t do (that) because if you run out on the court it’s a technical f0u1.... I didn’t know what to do. “Him laying on the floor for more than one or two seconds, I knew something was wrong with him because he normally just gets right back up.” That said, Hansbrough didn’t stay down for long. “That shows a lot of toughness by Tyler to get right back up that fast,” Lawson added. “Because if I got hit like that, I don’t know, I’d probably be down there for an hour.” The foul was deemed intention al, and an official statement issued collectively by the game’s referees said that, by rule, the foul was fla grant for combative and confronta tional action and therefore ruled a fight. By rule, that is an automatic ejection and Henderson will be forced to sit out Duke’s first game JARVIES FROM PAGE 1 blocked offby 6:30 p.m. Police reported four fires on the street, fueled by fans that threw their clothes into the fire. One arrest was reported at the post office on charges of drunk and disorderly conduct. But some felt the celebrations were lackluster and short-lived. When firefighters extinguished the first fire, shouts of “party foul” emitted from the crowd. The streets were reopened by 7:lft p.m., Chapel Hill police reported. “I thought it was kind of a let down,” said Sarah Gransee, a graduate student in the School of Information and Library Science. “I’m a first-year grad student, and I thought it’d be fun. I thought peo ple would be more visibly excited.” Gransee blamed the dampened in the ACC Tournament. After the game, Duke coach Mike Krzyzewski was quick to side with his freshman, saying that he knew Henderson well enough to know that he would never do something like that on purpose —and added a little more fuel to the fire by sug gesting that the situation might not have transpired had Hansbrough not still been in the lineup. Williams denounced such sug gestion. “Gerald was in,” Williams frankly replied when asked about Krzyzewski’s remarks. “I don’t under stand that I was sitting in the stands the only game I saw when I was in my first year as a high school coach we beat Duke when we were down eight with 17 seconds to play.... “And, in fact, we had a substi tute up at the free throw line if you want to go back and look at that.... It’s not my fault that Tyler got the offensive rebound.” Though bitter perhaps, Krzyzewski was blatantly honest when asked how he feels about his team heading into the ACCs. “Sometimes you can’t see as much improvement because the team you’re playing against is bet ter,” he said. “We’re playing better.” “Carolina’s better than we are.” Contact the Sports Editor at sports@unc.edu. mood on police shepherding fans off the street. Police said officers running the event decide when to re-open streets based on the crowd size. Jarvies said the post-game festivi ties that stand out most in his mem ory are Final Four victories. During the 1982 championship, Jarvies came home with his uniform speck led with blue paint from the fans that flooded past him while he stood at his Carolina Coffee Shop post Since then, Jarvies hasn’t seen the end of a championship game. “I’ve always taped the games, recorded the games,” he said. “I watch them at three or four in the morning, and I watch it like I didn’t already know who was going to win.” In 1982, Jarvies huddled with fel low officers around a portable televi sion. On the 9-inch black-and-white screen, he saw Michael Jordan hit the winning shot against Georgetown. Jarvies will retire this year during Final Four weekend. He said it will feel strange to watch the game on a big screen and not on portable tele visions or through the storefronts of Franklin Street sports bars. If UNC goes to the Final Four, the event wifi not be managed by Jarvies for the first time in seven years. “I’m not concerned at all that things will not run well,” he said. “It will just be a little strange that I’m not up there in the midst of it. “And I promised my folks I won’t be up there setting bonfires and yelling and hooting and hollering.” Contact the City Editor at citydesk@ unc.edu. “fv* - CrMte and solve your <*k * • Sudoku puzzles for FREE. games lllMp prizesuboKEw Sudoku o Play: Complete I 1 the grid so that j 5 9 2 every 3x3 box, row ——— —and column contains 4 3 O O digits Ito 9. _ just use logic to 4 solve. No number is repeated in any col- _ umn, row or box. Solution to Friday's _ —| j 517 18 3 219 4 6 711362 4 9 7 5 8 1 ' ' | 489615237 9 SQ 7* 1 95748362 __ | 7 2 6 9 5 3 8 14 fi 7 Q ! 843261759 =__£ —f 2.3 1 5.7.4 6.9 8 9 4 O |9581 264 7 3 1 Ii ° K|6 7 41 3 8 911 2 5 THE Daily Crossword Edited by Wayne Robert Williams Year, 1938 54 Narrow opening 55 Preminger and Kruger 56 Leg joint 57 Location 58 Esthetic judgment 59 Render speechless DOWN 1 Adam's third 2 Sunken fence 3 Employs 4 Visor 5 Current government 6 Cowgirl Dale 7 Twinge 8 Byrnes of "77 Sunset Strip" 9 Hilo garland 10 Showy shrub 11 "Apollo 13" co-star 12 Writer Murdoch 13 Silent assents ACROSS 1 Elisabeth of "Leaving Las Vegas" 5 Drive away 10 Related 14 Simple 15 Avoid by deceit 16 Love of tennis 17 Betty MacDonald best seller 19 All fired up 20 Bothering 21 Total delight 22 Bad actors 23 Make oneself sleek 25 Chafe 28 Like rules made to be broken? 31 Semiconductor 32 On the fritz 33 Wiedersehen lead-in 34 At rest 35 Fish cut 36 750 in letters 37 Sniggler's prey 38 Bad smelling 39 Arrowsmith's first wife 40 Involuntary 42 Trumpet's cous in 43 False gods 44 Backside 45 Student, of sorts 47 Liqueurs 51 Turkish VIP 52 Horse of the [eTx E R tBHaTAR ißp E A s p a|r e t h e r o dße r n T A I ■ F E N§££JE££AY Is Itl r |i felhardupll UMn I .NJ__Al_KJ_ B _l_li. Imlrlslc 1 S£££E£|£££ |b lAI T |H eIaDeIhACKS a p eM l onger|be e t ISI T 1 A|B £ £Bu NJ_ r|fl IH IAI I IR* £ £ £BW O nMe M U P un B s ~ p A c E H iLAiiLil p r °le a t ow|r h o n e li|a|nMs|l|e|p|tßs|a|n|d|s 1 UNC 86, Duke 72 Duka 29 43 72 North CmoHm 38 48 M Oak* |72) ft ft lb min im m M i pf tp Medina 16 03 00 2-2 0 0 0 Mcflotem 36 37 34 6-10 2 6 9 Schayai 36 34 2-3 1-4 2 4 to IWson * 6-* 2-2 1-3 2 2 M Partus 31 7-14 44 06 4 5 21 Henderson 30 8-14 0-1 1-6 0 3 16 Thom** 6 1-2 04) 1-1 0 3 1 Podus 3 01. 00 00 0 0 0 Zoubek 6 00 00 0-2 0 2 2 Johnson 1 06 00 00 0 0 0 Dswdson 1 00 00 00 0 0 0 Total 200 2744 11-18 1346 U 24 72 Atrcantaga* TO .422. FT 688 3-point goal* - 7-23 .304 (Partus 34. Sdieyw 24, Nelson 2-7, Henderson 03). Mocked shot* - 2 (Meßoberts, Zoubok) Turnovers - 16 (Lawson 3. ferry 3, Qinyond 2. Ellington 2, Green 2. Wright. Hansbrough. Thomas). Steals - 6 (Scherer 2. McClure. Nelson. Partus, Henderson). . North Carolina (861 t| ft rb ■sin aw res ort a pf Ip Terry 29 44 04 14 1 1 16 Hanabrough 30 W-18 64 9-17 0 2 26 Wright 30 64 00 04 1 3 10 Bwk* 3 01 04 00 0 0 0 Miller 10 Ot 00 00 4 0 0 Lawson 28 44 4-6 01 6 6 12 Thompson 13 1-4 00 02 0 1 2 Green 10 1-2 00 00 1 2 2 Ellington 16 14 1-1 02 2 2 3 Stepheson 1 01 00 00 0 0 0 Ginyard 20 44 44 1-3 2 2 13 Fresor 9 1-2 1-2 00 2 2 3 Copeland 11 00 00 00 0 0 0 Total 200 31-62 22-27 11-30 10 20 9* Percentages -FG .600, FT .815. Opnint goals 2- 9 .222 (Ginyard 1-1, Terry 1-1 Burke 01. Miller 01. Lawson 01, Ellington 02). Masked shots - 6 (Wright 3, ferry. Stepheson). Turnover* ll (feny 4. WrigM 2. Hansbrough. Lawson, Elington. Ginyert. Fresor). Steals 8 (ferry 2, Hansbrough, Miller, Lawson, Thompson. Green. Grtyetd) Technical fade None Attendance 21,750. WHEN I SAY JUMP ... Tip $Jf M vi C* iBS W rJB ■i DTH/EDYTHE MCNAMEE DM uke coach Mike Krzyzewski yells at his bench dur- I ing the first half of Sunday night’s contest against I North Carolina. The Blue Devils fell 86-72, drop ping their ACC record to 8-8. Duke will play N.C. State on Thursday in the first round of the ACC Tournament. 18 Forest clearing 21 Encircling route 23 Like church organs 24 Decisive defeat 25 French farewell 26 Delaware senator 27 Steve Winwood hit of 1988 28 Legally sound 29 Filthy money? 30 Key of "Eroica" 32 Flying toys 35 Tumbled 36 Oil well structures 6 7 8 n 13 _ Hp ■ l|| ~ mm - - ~ J|p3 24 25 26 27 """""29 30 _ iMp? ■■33 33 Ki ~ B|ff —■ 4t pr ~jr ■■■ 46 B^B 48 49 50 S’ i M _ Ld' ~ fjf IP Gltje Saily ®ar Hrcl HOMECOMING FROM PAGE 1 dance to the Homecoming concert is limited to a small percentage of the student body, the burden of the con cert’s costs should be on the students attending the show. “It’s a matter of fairness,” Farley said to Congress. High said when she was at the budget meeting last year, Farley told Congress it was important to fund the concert fully because of its impact on the students and the town. Farley said he supported the proposal last year because he didn’t realize that three different groups match funds for the event. Finance committee members, who originally screened requests, proposed that CAA get its request ed amount. Finance Committee Chairman Val Tenyotkin said that society pays taxes for things that not everyone participates in, citing health care as an example. Almond said after the hearing that ticket prices are determined three weeks before the event, and CAA can’t speculate whether tickets will sell enough to bring in the artist The CAA only will be able to get more funding by putting in subsequent requests to next year’s Congress during the fall semester. Contact the University Editor at udesk@unc.edu. Charged ending? Assault charges against six Guilford College students might be dropped. See pg. 3 for story. Victory lap Senior plans to stay an extra year to lead the student attorney general’s office. See pg. 4 for story. Teaching art The Arts Center in Carrboro mulls opening a magnet arts school: See pg. 5 for story. Energetic debate Play Makers produces Toni Morrison’s “The Bluest Eye.” See pg. 7 for story. Legal expertise UNC School of Law graduates dominate a list of elite business lawyers. Go online for story. (C)2007 Tribune Media Services. Inc. All rights reserved. 38 Small ice field 39 Oodles and gobs 41 Conceive mentally 42 Cherry red 44 Mechanical man 45 Sov. news agcy. 46 Citrus hybrid 47 Long-running Webber play 48 Cousin's mother 49 Stead 50 Anna of "Nana" 52 Drunkard 53 Greek letter