Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Jan. 9, 1971, edition 1 / Page 3
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The Da !y Tar Heel .FirosJhi topple H)mk( A ones JUcDiiiiDiei. Saturday. January 9, 1971 as J o X . v- .? - i I k ' i i J ; t - 1 4 v I V;, V V t 1 r i V - V, - U 'I ' x v - - I - - ' ' ' 1 f ; ! I I - -''r'" " I . ' 1 F .-. , , ,- - , u- --, - ,,..-,.-..,.... , , .,....,..,.., -?g;..,- UNC gymnast Robert Jacobson performs a split in the floor exercises event during the gymnastics meet against Southern Iiiinois Friday afternoon. Despite Jake's side splitting effort, Southern Illinois won the meet 163.4-1 13.25. (Staff photo by John Gellman) Gymeasts beaten Southern Illinois takes 164-113 win by Ben Kushner Sports Writer Southern Illinois, behind potential Olympian. John Linder, crushed Carolina in a gymnastics meet 163.4 to 113.25 Friday afternoon in Carmichael Auditorium. Linder, gliding beautifully across the mat, received a 9.4 rating in floor exercises. The nationally second-ranked Salukis' top all-around man beat teammate Pierre Ropiequet in the still rings with a 9.55 compared to the lattter's 9.45. Ropiequet, called by Tar Heel coach Fred Sanders "the best ring man in the world," missed his dismount slightly. Linder gave a very polished and skillful routine to merit top score on the parallel bars-9.69. - - The Tar feeJs, bothered by !olds and untried routmes, continued a reason-of fine performances in long horse vaulting. David Brantley vaulted to an 8.15 judging, followed by John Hesser's 8.1. Crossword Puzzle Sanders, somewhat disappointed by his team's performance, pledged the Tar Heels would be ready for Virginia Tech, the Tar Heels' next opponent, a week from today in Carmichael. Friday's meet. was hurried because of the inclement weather. Despite the judges needing 1 1 consultations to discuss their decisions, the meet lasted less than two hours. H eel, squads Mi Foad 20 21 22 24 ACROSS 1 Vapor 6 Consequently 11 Carpenter's tool 13 Punctuation mark 14 Part of "to be" 15 Clothesmakers 17 Chinese mile 18 Experimental room (colloq.) Flexible Place Ancient Greek district Make lace 25 Charity 26 Sicilian volcano 28 Degrade 30 Zest 32 Remainder 33 Flight of Mohammed from Mecca 35 Small birds 37 Planet 38 Urge on 40 Musical instrument Abstract being Closes securely Female ruff A state (abhr.) Fall back Parent (colloq.) Negates Glossy paint Strikes Encircles 3 Printer's measure 4 Danish land division 5 Repast 6 At this place 7 Bitter vetch S Symbol for nickel 9 Formation of soldiers 10 Prepares for print 12 Disturbance 13 Billboard 16 Burden 19 Spirituous liquor 21 Serving dish 23 Projecting teeth 25 Norse gods 27 Southern blackbird 29 Encountered 31 Welcomes Forty-five UNC fencers will travel to Durham today for the North Carolina Fencing Association Open slated to begin' at 9:00 a.m. at Duke. , Head Coach Ron Miller is very optimistic about his competitors: "we've dominated this meet in the past and I can see no real reason why this year should be any different." He added that the up-coming exams and a recent two-week lay off may hurt the timing of some of the better fencers. Joining Carolina in competition will be fencers from Duke, State, St. Augustine's, Appalachian, Clemson and several high schools and prep schools. All competition will be on an individual basis. Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle a! Carolina's swimming team also returns to action today when the Tar Heels face Wake Forest in Winston-Salem. The meet will be the first action for Coach Pat Earey's team since the Christmas recess. Carolina ended its pre-holiday schedule with a 4-2 record, dropping matches to ACC Champ Maryland and a strong Navy team. The Tar Heels own wins over South Carolina, Clemson, Duke and Virginia. . - Leading the UNC charge Saturday will be diver Chuck Humphrey, distance-man Gerry Chapman, Dave Bedell in the butterfly and Rich Williams in the breaststroke. PARE E R jN BAT A T RUC AT riPlAlPf S A Mlpl L01t a jp l eTa AjNMSfT E A LS LLRNlADiW ISJA Y JL Z UK 2.N.Z JW E E TLjH E 6 O SiJB E T riA T e sns a te: S E rlT JyiiAL S J E e Ml JS E TTL E LEMTTElLEAN E S 1st IdIE !Wj jEiR 1RS 9 nUtjPfc 3 NOW PLAYING 1: 15 - 3: 10 - 5:00 - 7:00 - 9:00 CP3CC0 33 German-born .41 British 43 composer 44 34 Seaweed 47 substance 48 36 Leaked 51 through 37 Repairs 53 39 Merriment Transactions Observes Warbled Tear Siamese native A continent (abbr.) Title of respect (abbr.) I? 42 43 45 46 47 49 50 52 54 55 DOWN 1 Fissile rock 2 Mexican dish T" 2" 7" 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 n : 12 gi3 ' 18 1 20 ! 21 22 " 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 35 37 38 39 g4Q 41 42 44 46 47 49 50 51 52 53 Distr. by United Feature Syndicate, Inc. Post-holiday, pre-exam Collywobbles? For treatment, both mental and Fiscal, enjoy a browse in the old emporium. Cheer to the great batch of new bargains, the new (low-priced) goodies in the PbG, and the stacks of new posters most at just a buck or two! Come visiting! The Intimate Bookshop Chape! Hill Open evenings 'til 10 i&Laft,T ,i"tu-"-- CHOMP 50URDCXJ6H FEENCM BZEADl I CM0MP ) ' i ( BOV.'I COULCiGO TOCHER!) I I ( HEf-ARB I H . VWER THINK TNEY'REGOlNr NOUTWO fZu Ml V v ' 1 tm p...h s.u V . - iJL JJ, I II CI) .lrs; TMe?? 'JSZZ 1 1 mlstrnm I by Daid Zucchino ; Staff Writer . Forward John O'Donnell and center Bobby Jones turned in clutch second half performances in Friday night's Duke-Carolina showdown in Carmichael Auditorium, propelling the Tar Babies to a .73-64 revenge win over the Blue Imps. Duke nipped Carolina 68-65 in the first meeting between the two rivals. . O'Donneil, after watching the Dukes tie the Tar Babies at 33-ail early in the second half, fired in nine of his game-high 32 points within three minutes and staked Carolina to a 44-37 lead that it never relinquished. O'Donneil fouled out with 4:18 remaining in the contest. ' Jones, a smooth 6-9 center who totalled 23 points and 15 rebounds for the night, took over for O'Donneil at this point and whipped off four quick hyups to keep the Tar Babies out in front the rest of the way. The Tar Babies led for the entire first half and reached their widest first period margin with 13:43 left in the half as Jones dropped in a twisting layup to put Carolina ahead by six at 1 2-6. Zeno Edwards, a 6-0 guard who ended up with 1 2 points, drove the Blue Imps to within two points at 12-10 on a short jumper and a layup, but Duke was never quite able to overtake the Tar Babies, who posted their fifth victory in six outings. Jones and O'Donneil each hit for 20 second half points in sending the Blue Imps to their second consecutive setback, dropping Duke's record to 52. O'Donneil connected on 13 of 22 attempts and Jones put in II of 17 shots to give the Tzx Babies a narrow 50 percent to 48.6 percent edge in shooting. Freshman coach Bill Guthridge praised his Tar Babies for a dc?errr.ined team effort," and expressed pleasure over the manner in which Carolina handled the Blue Imp's full-court man-to-man press. I didn't think Duke's press was effective," he claimed. We got quite a few easy baskets off it. "Fouls didn't hurt us too much," continued Guthridge, "except late in the second half when Jones and O'Donneil had to be cautious on defense." Jones ended the eame with four personals. .-.-rt...,A...sv.t,s'.sv... ....... ..s,'.,'.,.ss' Fights, probations need action J By Lenox Rawlings Secrets, rather unsacred utterances since time immemorial, have a habit of popping up in the most unusual places. Take, for example, reports of probationary notices served on ACC basketball players. The story broke in Spartanburg, S.C., a distinguished Southern landmark most easily "recognized by Carolina students as home of Converse College. No ACC school is located there. To complicate the already complex matter, shreds of knowledge indicate that some players named by early reports are acutally on the list, but other comments acknowledge a probationary list is extant. 'Carolina forward Bill Chamberlain has been giioted as saying, he "didn't know anybody knew about it except for Coach (Dean) Smith and myself. Maryland Coach Lefty Driesell, asked about reports that two Terps are on probation, responded, "Not two, just one!" Fact and rumor t The thin line between fact and rumor compounds the affair. It is reasonably safe to assume Chamberlain, Virginia's Bill Gerry, South Carolina's John Ribock and one Maryland player-either Sparky Still or Jay Flowers are on probation, which means that another violent outburst on court will result in suspension. Driesell's comment hints that only one Terp is on the list. Randy Denton's ; denial: ;xf his -inclusion probably excludes him. The case of the seventh name, John Roche, is intriguing. The reported source of the probation. list, a conference school official, supposedly said "every player who was involved in a fight has been put on probation." Roche drew a technical foul for kicking Duke's Dick DeVenzio in the head. Prior to Monday night's game here, Roche had not displayed any flagrant misconduct, otner tnan the DeVenzjo incident, whicrr Is not a "fight" by this year's ACC standards for such an act. r.v Most disturbing fact about the entire matter of the probation list is that the conference office refuses to comment, although it is obvious that at least part of the report is true. Neve obviously feels public disclosal of the lisi would tntice other players to pick fights with those in danger of losing their playing rights. This was quite logical before the story was uncovered. Now it is ludicrous to assume the same situation exists, and that no motive for starting a fracas persists. This is not the first failure of the acting commissioner. His office promised to reviev game films of the Maryland-South Carolina contest, which ended in a childish brawl, and reach some conclusion. No meaningful public statement has appeared. .Additionally, McGuires verbiage concerning today's Maryland-South Carolina game was met by Neve's ill-tempered reply that "Frank knows what will happen if he doesn't show up." Basketball, even at the high quality level of the ACC, is a game. The fights and crowd hostilities which have marred this year's schedule are reprehensible, but no less so than the commissioner's actions. Neve should act Definite, open ruling should have been made on the South Carolina-Maryland slugfest. McGuire's request for rescheduling or cancellation of today's Terp-Gamecock game should have received a serious, relatively dignified reply. Now, with full public knowledge that some players are on probation, the commissioner should comment. Clarification of the list, and the honest promise that future incidents involving these players will be studied for provocation on the part of other players or fans, should be announced. Acceptance of fights as a way of life in ACC basketball is startling, especially for an activity which considers itself a game. The fights, and the bumbling official response to them, must end. The commissioner has the most power to rectify the situation, or at least that part which he has not already fumbled. CAMPUS U Nil N 300 W. ROSEMARY ST. (Formerly Lums) FEATURING AN! STEAKS SUB ROAST BEEF MEAT-A-BALL BARBECUED PORK HOT DOG t CHICKEN SHRIMP SPAGHETTI CLAMS FISH & CHIPS OYSTERS SPE CIAL EVERY TUESDAY 5-9 Spaghetti with meat bail Roll &Je!lo $1.00 Reorder (spaghetti) $.30 FLICKS EVERY NIGHT Charlie Chaplin VV.C. Fields Laurel & Hardy LARGE PITCHER $.95 EVERY THURSDAY 5-9 Chicken (3 pieces) Coleslaw & French Fries $1.35 Reorder (chicken) $.45 HOURS Mon-Thurs Fri-Sat Sun. 11 a.m.-1 a.m. 11 a.m. -2 a.m. 11 a.m.-12 p.m.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 9, 1971, edition 1
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