The Tar Hsel 9 Tl Tuesday, July 2, 1974 AM ( The rugged Atlantic Coast Conference wars, intersectional games with national powers and a champions tournament in Spain highlight the University of North Carolina's 1974-75 basketball schedule. Among the intersectional opponents to be met by the Tar Heels are Houston, Kentucky, Utah, Furman and Virginia Tech, all of whom have figured prominently in national tournaments in recent years. Tar Heel coach Dean Smith announced the new schedule last week and called it "the toughest any Carolina team has faced in my 14 seasons at Carolina." A special feature of the new season will be a return trip to Madrid, Spain where the Tar Heels of 1971-72 won the championship of the International Christmas Tournament. Carolina will compete there this season Dec. 24-26 against three other former winners. Real Madrid and two Italian teams. In the 1971-72 tournament in Spain, the Tar Heels edged Real Madrid, the host school, in the championship game. Real Madrid has since then defeated a Russian team for the European championship. Carolina will play in three other tournaments next season, the Big Four Tournament at Greensboro on Jan. 3-4, the North-South Doubleheader at the Charlotte Coliseum on Feb. 7-8, and the annual Atlantic Coast Conference championship tournament in Greensboro on March 6-7-8. In the Big Four Tournament, Carolina meets Wake Forest in the first round this season. Defending National Champion North Carolina State and Duke will be in the other bracket. Defending Southern Conference champion Furman and Georgia Tech will provide the opposition in the North South Doubleheader in Charlotte. mmqi sum! "Ato ualt Ken Huff. Carolina's massive offensive guard has made the pre-season All-America team selected by Playboy Magazine. A senior. Huff has been a two-year starter with the Tar Heels and is rated by the Carolina coaches as one of the best blockers in the school's history. Huff and other All-America picks were guests of Playboy Magazine for a weekend of festivities in June. The All-America team will be featured in a fall issue of Playboy. Ken Mink of the Knoxville News Sentinel, w ho has been compiling basketball recruiting charts for 11 years, not only prov ides a top 100 list but lists them in order. Maryland bound Moses Malone heads the list. In second place is Carolina's Phil Ford. Maryland ranks at the top of the rating service. Next comes Kentucky, Southern California, Georgia, Auburn and UCLA. The SEC landed 15 of the top 100 but the ACC did not do too badly with 12. John Lucas of Maryland and Gus Gerard of Virginia are on the 12-man basketball squad named to represent the United States in the World Championships which begin Wednesday in Puerto Rico. An interesting thing about the Carolina football schedule this fall is that the Tar Heels do not play a team from the Southeastern Conference, the first time that has been the case in a good many years. Carolina plays four independents this season. Teams not connected with any conference on the schedule are Pittsburgh, Army, Georgia Tech and South Carolina. fiOW SHOWING SHOWS at 1:20, 3:15,, 5:10 7:05, 9:00 "IT CAN EI SAID, SIMPLY AKD WITH THANKS, THAT IT IS AN A2SCLUTILY TIS22FIC MOVIE? Jay Cocks "Time Magazine ' J i ' "( Vi" -'" ' '...'"' "I" ; ! ; Y U 1 M tkAA T,rTECHmC0L0R PRINTS BY DE LUXE JL.- " ... ' HOWS 3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00 PG CLINT EASTWOOD HP HAS f EXACTLY LEVEN MINUTES I TO GET f RICH I QUICKI t v,fv f ( i ! f "THUNDERBOLTand LIGHTFOOT" SHOWS 2:00-5:00-7:10-9:20 TODAY! Carolina holds their annual Blue White intrasquad game in Nov. 26 then opens the season with a home game on Nov. 30 against Biscayne College of Miami, Fla., and takes on East Tennessee in Chapel Hill on Dec. 4. Then comes an extremely tough road trip in which the Tar Heels will play at Houston on Dec. 7 and will meet Kentucky at Louisville on Dec. 9. Nov. 6 Blue-White game; Nov. 30 Biscayne at Chapel Hill Dec. A East Tennessee State at Chapel Hill; 7 Houston at Houston; 9 Kentucky at Louisville, Ky.; 21 Yale at New Haven, Conn.; 24-26 Champions International Tournament at Madrid, Spain; 28 Utah at Greensboro Jan. 3-4 Big Four Tournament at Greensboro; 8 Clemson at Chapel Hill; 12 N.C. State at Raleigh; 15 Wake Forest at Winston Salem; 18 Duke at Chapel Hill; 22 Virginia at Chapel Hill; 25 Maryland at College Park, Md.; 29 Wake Forest at Chapel Hill Feb. 1 Clemson at Clemson, S.'C; 3 South Florida at Chapel Hill; 7-8 North-South Doubleheader at Charlotte; 13 Maryland at Chapel Hill; 15 Virginia Tech at Blacksburg, Va.; 22 Virginia at Charlottesville, Va.; 25 N.C. State at Chapel Hill March 1 Duke at Durham; 6-7-8 ACC Tournament at Greensboro. A Nice Shelf of Books on Philosophy A moderately priced treat for the thoughtful Student. The Old Book Corner 137 A East Rosemary Street Opposite Town Parking Lots Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514 - L H i 5 fit V 1' 1 ( Mackeieif 's salutes he U.S. 8. PL aod y .S.A PSens Si Iftfomen's u earns in the upcoming Track & Field Meet at Duke University J"4USSR - USA Jt track ' '. .Iz:::::rr.r::::::::::: TICKETS for this event now on sale at HACKNEY'S. UNIVERSITY MALL ...... J . ty&lS02Q$m .for oeoole who olav .-.rfw- " mm. m Mis University Mall North Hills JJ Am Navy Field and the UNC astro-turf were the sites of two international soccer matches played two weeks ago between Sierre Leone and a group of Chapel Hill all-stars. Chapel Hill managed to tie the visitors from Africa, known for their skillful individual moves, in both games 2-2 in the best performances ever by a local team. "Sierra Leone had beaten all of its other opponents by a margin of at least five goals," said a happy Kip Ward, the Chapel Hill coach. Chapel H ill used the speed of the astro turf to its fullest advantage applying continual pressure on the visitors' goalie. Charlie Dorr and Danny Ariail led the all-stars' attack. Dorr scored both goals in the first game while Ariail was credited with one goal and two assists. Kip Ward scored the other goal. Chapel Hill's effort was aided by the strong goalie play of UNC law student Ron Lindsay, a former All American from N.C. State and Mark Berson of the UNC varsity soccer team. Roy Baroff and Tim Morse also played well defensively. North Carolina miler Tony Waldrop will appear at the USA-USSR track meet July 5-6 but as a spectator not as a participant. Waldrop, who recently joined the Pacific Coast Track Club, will leave for London July 7 to compete in a series of European meets that also includes stops in Italy and Finland. , Waldrop plans to travel around Europe with his older brother. Danny, a Duke medical student, w hen he is not competing and " see all the places I have read about."' Originally Waldrop had planned to run for a year in California before returning to school but he has decided to forgo being a track bum to enroll in graduate school at Carolina in the fall as a graduate assistant. Waldrop skipped the National AAU Championships in Los Angeles for physical reasons thus failing to qualify for the U .S. national team which will compete against the Russians at Duke's Wallace Wade Stadium. The former UNC star ran nine consecutive sub-four minute miles during the past year including a world indoor record of 3:55 and a 3:52.3 at the Penn Relays . but barely made it under the wire in 3:59.8 at the ACC Championships last spring and faltered badly in his last two races. Waldrop, who complained of various illnesses, came in fourth in the California Relays at Modesto and third in the NCAA Championships at Austin, Tex. He lost both races to Paul Cummings of Brigham Young. Waldrop said he would have liked to run in the AAU meet had it not been for his illness and exhaustion. Now he will have to be content to sit in the stands and watch some of the world's best athletes. Contact Lenses Lenses Fitted Duplicated John C. 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