Newspapers / The daily Tar Heel. / Feb. 10, 1971, edition 1 / Page 4
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Wednesday, February 10, 1971 lie No solo for Burleson 1m imp o Wolf lei win VII O The Daily Tar Heel by Mark Whicker Staff Writer Four good ballplayers thrive in Tommy Burleson's shadow on the State freshman team. , They outshot, outrebounded and outplayed the Tar Babies Monday night in Raleigh, and gave Carolina an 82-70 defeat, its second of the season. "State controlled the game from the beginning and beat us in every respect," admitted UNC frosh coach Bill Guthridge. Burleson, 7-4, scored 26 points and picked up 17 rebounds to lead the Wolflets, but was hardly a Lew Alcindor. His playmates, intent on drawing some attention of their own, drove and defended well enough t to maintain a 40-30 halftime lead as Burleson sat out ten minutes of the first half. The Tar Babies came back from an 8-2 deficit to tie it up 10-10 with 14 minutes left in the half. In the next four minutes, State scored 14 straight points and was never seriously threatened the rest of the way. Forwards Steve Graham and Steve Nuce got 18 and 17 points, and guard Steve Smoral contributed 11 for the Wolflets. Carolina's best player Monday night was 6-4 Darrell Elston, who got 1 7 points although hampered with early fouls. Coeds win openers at home TJhorsday The coed basketball team opened its season with wins against North Carolina Central University, Meredith College and Campbell College. UNC had an easy opening contest against NCCU. The final score was 71-25. Captain Laura Dupont was the high scorer with 25 points, Sue Bowman next wirn ii points, and Sally Jones led rebounding with 8. in Miss Duporl was again ,.the; leading ' Scofer with 35 points "against Meredith," with Sue Bowmarf gaining 20 points; C.C. v Evans of Meredity had a fine effort with 16 points, but UNC still came out on top in the final score 59-46. As in the first game, Carolina led throughout and everyone had a chance to play. -Carolina came from behind in its closest battle last Thursday in a low scoring win over Campbell College, 40-34. Going into the game, both teams had records of 2-0. After the first 8-minute quarter, Campbell led 1 5-14. Carolina pulled in ARCHITECTS PLANNERS CIVIL ENGINEERS Make your education count. Share it with the other America. V Consider VISTA. Contact: VISTA Recruiters "Y" Court and Carolina Union February 8-10 LAWYERS are needed to help Americans who can't afford legal fees ... or medicine or decent housing or schooling or sdsquata food ... VISTA, America, needs law students ! who care. Contact: VISTA Recruiters "Y" Court and Carolina Union February 8-10 Bobby Jones, staring seven inches upward to find his pivot opponent, scored 1 5 points and snared 1 1 rebounds. John O'Donnell, the Tar Babies' leading scorer, scored 1 6 and twice cut the State lead to eight in the second half. However, a miserable shooting percentage of 39.5 kept the Tar Babies from getting closer. The Wolflets shot 50.7 per cent, hitting 17 of 29 in the second half Burleson and Graham 51-40 rebounding edge. led State to a Despite the initial shock of facing the heralded Burleson, Carolina regrouped and played State almost even , in the second half. "The longer the game went one, the better we looked," said Guthridge. The Tar Babies get another crack at State in Charlotte Saturday afternoon at 12:30. Guthridge will be remembering that Duke gave State its only loss of the year by fouling out Burleson as quickly as possible. And State freshman coach Art Musselman may be wishing that he could bring his partisan crowd down from Reynolds Coliseum; the cheering will be on an equal volume level with both varsity teams in Charlotte North-South doubleheader. for the 9 i-F front by halftime with a scant two point margin, 22-20. Laura Dupont, again the high scorer, had 18 points. Rauna Ruller put in her jj eight points, all in the second half, all of them at crucial times. Leading rebounder for the UNC team was Janet McCall, a p freshman, who also scored 7 points. 1 The team's coach, Gail Steacy, is ;; pleased with its depth and unselfishness. "One of the highlights of our games has been our defensive work," she said. "In Tthe NCUU game, we ,cause4 ,36 turnovers to their 9. We've also Jed in rebounding every time." - r"" In praise of the team captain, she said, "Laura is such a fine team player. Besides being the leading scorer all three times, she has also led in assists and in stealing the ball." The next game will be Thursday, j against uinu-Lt. it win be played in tne Women's Gym at 7 p.m. f ?v Entrance: Back Of The Zoom Mon BAKED CHICKEN WBercy Sauce Tues.-ROAST BEEF Wed. BREADED VEAL CUTLET Thurs. BEEF ON BUN Friday-CHEDDAR CHEESE STEAK Saturday-MEAT LOAF (Only $.85) Served W Two Vegetables & Bread THE SAME WITH TOSSED SALAD & CHOICE OF DRESSING FOR SALE: Norelco 2401 Cassette Player-Recorder, 6 months old. Complete with circulator. Plays both sides, up to 6 tapes. Been completely checked out by serviceman. $170.00. Call Daryl 933-4766. WANTED: Person, male . or female (prefer grad.) to share 2-bedrm. apt. 4 miles out. Carpeted. AC, pool. $70mo. Call 489-7004. Also, 200 cc. 1970 Yamaha street scrambler for ' sale. FEMALE ROOMMATE: Share 2 bedroom furnished apt. in Carrboro. Rent $75 a month (including utilities). I word 2nd shift at Hospital so apt. is vacant evenings and nights. 402-BCarrSL All Return Peace Corps Volunteers in the Triangle Area are requested to contact the Chapel Hill Peace Corps Office. Wesley Foundation, 214 Pittsboro Street. Tel: 967-1421. FRENCH TUTORIALS: Conversation -grammar - translation - intensive lessons for students and professors going to France. Native French instructor, 6 years teaching experience. Call 96 S-S 021 or leave message Oey 319. 1967 Fiat ISO Spider convertible, light blue, new tires and top. Excellent condition. $750. Call 967-5104 after 6 p.m. ' FOR SALE: KLH Model 26 stereo. Like new. 5 mos. old. Retailed for $290 with dust cover. Selling for $225 FIRM. Call 929-5976 after 5 p.m. HELP NEED MONEY. FOR SALE: 2 auto taped ecks. One Craig 8 -track, 24 tapes, case and speakers, $80. One Aiwa Cassette new $ 129.953 mos. old still under warranty $80.00. 967-2194. LEARN TO FLY: Personal, professional ' Instruction. Call 929-4458 or 929-5753 evenings. '1 -t- ... 3-ti . 7". ; ' ' fi , 1 Tar Heel center Lee Dedmon takes aim before putting in the first of his two free 1 throws that beat State 65-63 in Raleigh Monday night. Dedmon scored 14 points j and grabbed eight rebounds in Carolina's h first ACC win away from home. v FSU tlx Student tickets for the UNC-Florida State basketball game will be available for distribution in CarmichaeX Auditorium beginning at 5 p.m.vtoaay? iU. ':! fv "-1 Tickets arer also available for the North-South doubleheader to be played in Charlotte Friday and Saturday nights. No tickets are available in Chapel Hill for the Carolina-N.C. State freshman game slated Saturday at 12:30 p.m in Charlotte. After the Florida State game, the i UNC-State game on March 3 is the last f f home contest of the season. Want a new room1 Retile it yourself. We have 1,417 sq. ft. of usedtoor tile. Call Musslewhite and Woodard Const. Co. 966-3342; LesMcRae 898-9941. :- . Rogers Professional "Double-Bass" drum 'set. Six drums. Six Zildjian cymbals. "Dyna-Sonic" chrome snare drum. Retail value $2200. Best offer. Excellent condition. 9 33-32 36 I , t WANTED TO RENT: New Infirmary Physician and wife : furnished apartment or house on temporary basis. No children or pets. Call 967-5353. GEORGIA BOUND! Two girfsf need ride with someone going to Athens or Atlanta, Georgia on Friday. Will share expenses and driving. Call 933-1908 or933-6001. SKIS FOR SALEV Kneissl " Red Stars with Marker Bindings. 205 cm. $75.00. Call Mark McCall at967-3077. " Schwinn Varsity 10 -speed Men's Bicycle. 1970 model in excellent condition. $50. 967-4977. A SEL YOUR. PROFESSOR on the quality of your term paper before he reads it! Present him! with a professional-looking manuscript typed on Writer's Craft Products. Craft-sets for Dlavwrights. TVScreenplays, Novelists? Complete short manuscript kit $35 0 postpaid. Send check to J. Hail. Box 2042. Chapel HiRi 27514. ? NEEDED: Idiots and drunks to play rugbyr, Meet Tues. Thurs. 4 p.m. Ehringhaus Field. Room for rent with private bath and study. Cair 942-4121 ext. 240. After 5 p.m., call 967173 Volvo 1960 122S 4 -dr. New brakes, clutch front end. AM short-wave radio. Needs air1 cleaner and touch-up. $500 or best offers LEAVE NUMBER. 942-151 9. WW by Mark Whicker ? j Sports Uriter ; The State Legislature is presently pondering where to locate North Carolina's second state zoo. The first one, as anyone who attended : Monday night's Carolina-State game knows, is flourishing at William Neal . Reynolds Coliseum on the N.C. State campus in Raleigh. -t v- Orer 12,000 fans stop by every time fhe basketball-playing branches of the university collide, and try their best to light up the "noise-meter" thoughtfully . placed on the ceiling of the edifice. Along with all the screaming, the State Students brandish their red-and-white "Pack Power" signs to let the world know what part of the pasture they stand in. Lee Dedmon looked out on a forest of those signs while standing on the foul line with two different one-and-one; opportunities in the last 28 seconds Monday night. With the screams of the fans roughly r equalling the sounds of Saturday night at a Chicago abattoir, Dedmon sank the first of both opportunities, then missed the second attempts. .Fencers play at State by Don Albright Sports Writer North Carolina's fencing team travels to Raleigh tonight to face the N.C. State Wolfpack in the Tar Heels' first conference meet of the season. Carolina is fresh from mauling Appalachian and William and Mary in a tri-meet held at Boone this past weekend. Both teams were whipped by 1 9-8 scores. The meeting against State will be the first chance Coach Ron Miller's fencers have had to avenge their only loss of last year, which . came at the hands of the Wolfpack. In looking to the meeting, Miller said, "It's by no means an easy meet, although State is not as strong as they have been. Theyiisryejrhad-g great (feat pf .success, , this rseasohrbut they' still have a" great desire' to win." Physically, the Tar Heels are in their best shape in several weeks. Only Robert Cromartie will miss the meet, as several players have recovered from a virus which had been plaguing the team. The two wins over the weekend boosted the team record for the year to 5-1, the only loss being to Cornell. Miller Luncheon Special 11:30 AJVI.-2:30 P.M. Beef Parmigiana W Spaghetti & Rolls $.97 See Us i ii 4 run (7 . Not perfection, but adequate enough to give UNC a 65-63 victory, its fifth in a row in Reynolds Coliseum. A string that might give the Tar Heels the "I cant hear you" award given annually by the state school of the deaf. "My heart was beating real fast," confessed Dedmon after the game. It took a strong heart indeed to withstand the pressure brought on by State's second-half comeback, which snipped an 1 1 -point Tar Heel lead to nothing in 16 minutes. Ed Leftwich showed how inspired he was by kicking Dedmon after a pile-up early in the first half, then scoring 24 points to lead State on its way back. He hit three straight to pull State into a 63-63 tie, but fouled Dedmon with 28 seconds left to get Carolina off the hook. Statistically, it was far from what rival coaches Norm Sloan and Dean Smith had in mind. State shot 40 per cent to Carolina's 46.8, and the Pack hit only 12 of 32 in the second half. Thanks to Dedmon and Bill Chamberlain, whose leaps left the Wolf pack rebounders empty-handed, Carolina took the backboard sturggle 38-35. was particularly pleased with the performance of his epee team. Ben Brinson, Jon Pavlov and Chad Hilton were all 4-0 for the day, and Dave Lynn added a 3-0 record to the epee totals. The only loss for the epee men was against William and Mary, and their perfect record against ASU left them 17-1 for the day. The foil team had more difficulty as it Girl swimmers win twice The UNC women's swimming team recorded a double victory Saturday morning, garnering 85. -points to 46 for East Carolina' and 34" for Appalachian State, in swimming's distaff debut in hapelHill. "If we can arrange it well definitely have more meets this season," Coach Lari McDonald commented, "and next year we plan to have a full schedule." ; In four events the Tar Heel swimmers rj recorded times good enough to qualify for the women's NCAA championships, Only : $4.00 A Day, $.04 A Mile 'Durham 544-371 1 a Care About The Way Their Clothes Look . . . Do You?!? They Trade At About Our Preferred Customer Discount (Which Mean A Fat 10 Off!) t'J UU Next To Byrd's In Carrboro RENT-A-CAR 6 J r-w . .nn j i n t l fits 1 "All of these conference games are physical," said a weary Chamberlain after the battle. "As far as the crowd goes, I like it because it makes us play that much harder." Some of the crowd may have been watching for another scrap between Chamberlain and State's Dan Wells, but that wasn't about to happen. Both are already on probation and watching their tempers. "We didn't say anything to each other, and why should we?" Chamberlain commented. "It was a senseless thing then and it's senseless now." Sloan called Wells "a clean player and a good player," although Dan failed to illustrate the last point by scoring only two points and picking up four fouls. "Some of the Chapel Hill people originated this talk about Dirty Dan," Sloan charged. "But he's not a dirty player." All the talk was irrelevant in the face of Carolina's first league road win. Three road teams have won in the last four conference games. If the home court advantage continues its backfire, Carolina will have a very satisfying regular season title. But four more ambushers are waiting. tonight managed only 5-4 wins against both opponents. Charlie Poteat led them with a 4-1 mark. Miller stated, however, that the foil team did an excellent job even though the score might not indicate it. The sabre team, lacking some of its usual consistency, beat ASU 5-4 and William and Mary by a 6-3 score. Bo McBee's 4-1 mark was the best for the day in that weapon. although no trip is planned due to a lack of funds. The team of Sherry Black, Margie Barnwell, Susan Murray and Martha Langley got the first NCAA-calibre time as they took the 200-yard medley relay in a time of 2:13.6. Tar Heel Sandy Bradley qualified in both the 200-yard freestyle and the 100-yard backstroke. She was also a member of the winning 200-yard freestyle relay team, along with Betsy Poole, Langley and Betsy McFarlan. RentAT-Bird : $8.00 A Day, $.03 AAfile (BUT You Must Bring This Ad) j CROWELL LITTLE MOTOR CO. j Dir. No. 01 1885 . Chape! Hill 942-3143; Plan ULHJ U
Feb. 10, 1971, edition 1
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