1 VS The Daily Tar Heel t?y n Jkeilly amd by Mark Whicker Asst. Sports Editor Half-inches and split seconds mean a lot in an NCAA indoor track championship. Too much, to Carolina Coach Joe Hilton. While Villanova was winning the collegiate title in Detroit Saturday, two of Hilton's Tar Heels-triple jumper Darryl Kelly and hilf-miler Tony Waldrop missed placing in the nationals by an inch and a misplaced heat. Kelly's jump of 505" was one inch behind sixth place as Mohinder Gill of California Poly won with 52'9". '. Darryl, a sophomore from Newport News, Va., fouled on his first try but his last two jumps were within an inch of each other. Barry McClure of Middle Tennessee State recorded his best jump of 52'4" to clinch second place. Patrick Onyango of Wisconsin, a pre-meet favorite, came in fourth. !' Waldrop Y misfortune was even more "acute. The freshman ran a 1:53, faster than some of the times that made the finals, but his heat also included John 4, Rabb's improved Heels go to State for opener Junior righthander Greg Paviick and freshman lefthander Jim Chamberlain are scheduled to pitch for Carolina Wednesday when the Tar Heels open then baseball season against N.C. State at Raleigh. to The game, which gets under way at 3 p.m., will not count in the Atlantic Coast Conference standings. The Tar Heels and Wolfpack have two more meetings scheduled later in the season, a j Coach Walter Rabb has high hopes for his Tar Heel squad which has been hitting the ball well in recent practice games. This , Carolina team is expected to have good pitching and excellent fielding. Paviick had a 2-6 record last year with an earned run average of 5.50, but Rabb believes he will show much improved form this year. Chamberlain is rated as m V. Fnnkllii . SKI ING VACATION IN SWITZERLAND - EASTER Depart New York April 7th Return April 15th or Return April 17th. Depart New YorK April am 8 Day Only S298.00 Round trip by comfortable Boeing 707 Jet Lodging at either the Posthotel Garni or the Mothotel private oath or shower and W.C. - Ski Lifts. Special Group Rates are being negotiated passes at a 50 discount. Transfers. Kloten Airport (Zurich) Chur Kloten Airport with full services of couriers and all porterage! ,iwm oeaoeo room ai rvu CAiMA cost, piu tun continental Breakfast and Dinner throughout Also mcludrt are all Foreigh and American taxes and service charges. The price also includes membership to the r- tyi i u nwviauuii iwUffB year. Eligibility for this and other trips run by the Anglo Faculty and their immediate Family. MPMRCDC AC TUC ii n xaar-m. . . ZZL Z:: "I t.":,or.",UMJ,A,,UN.are offered various charter flights from most c "'" nrr" , "T " . rT 10 Lnoon our,n9 summer as well as Student flights withint Europe Employment opportunities. Discounts. Car Hire Facilities. Hotel Finders Service. Travel Department For wore information on Ski Ing vacations or membership please wrife.us at Head Office. ANGLO-AMERICA ASSOCIATION 60A,PylaSt.f Nswport, I.W., HampshireEngland ' JOSTTRIVEDf New Shipment Of Imported RUGBY SHIRTS 8 . a ML 1 Tt If 1 II Tuesday, March 16, 1971 M aMirop A place to A Mason of Villanova and another fast 880 man from C.W. Post. Berths in the finals were decided on the first two places, not comparative times, so Waldrop was left in the cold and Wisconsin's Mark Winzinreid won with a time of 1:50.9. Shot putter John Jessup finished eighth with a heave of 57'2". As expected, Kansas' Karl Salb won with 65'9" and Texas-El Paso's Fred DiBernardini finished second. "We're very disappointed hat we didn't score," said Hilton, "but our performances were good. "We're still knocking at the door, and we thought we might be able to crash through this time, but we didn't quite make it. "However, our performances were far and away above what they have been in the past." Maryland, the ACC champion, also failed to score, so it was up to Duke to represent the conference. The track team opens its outdoor season Friday at Clemson and Saturday at the Furman Relays in Greenville, S.C. one of the team s outstanding young prospects. He hails from Greensboro Smith High where he posted a brilliant record. Rabb has listed his probable starting lineup for the State game. It is as follows: First base, Larry Kiser; second base, John Wilson; shortstop, Bobby Elliott; third base, Mickey Hickerson; left field, Jack Gillis; centerfield, Peter Franklin; rightfield, Doug Lanham or Ron Cox; catcher, Mike Roberts. Seven of those players were starters last year. Roberts made the all-Atlantic Coast Conference team at catcher. Following the game at State, Carolina faces Duke at Durham Saturday in another game which will not count in Atlantic Coast Conference standings. 7632T vv GOOdVEAR TIRES michelIn tibes: FRONT-ENP. AV-lf3Nf1EyT OIL CHANGE 1 Sommerau both in Chur. Twin bedded rooms with -' - ' for Ski Lifts and we expect to be able to offer day America Association are limited to Students Staff . . " . ( ! ) (SJb STEtO THE STEVE KILLER BAND SAILOR- - 1 -3-&'rl. r- Reg. 8 Track Tapes x Coach Dean Smith mi tli- is top coach in. district Coach Dean Smith has been selected NCAA District Three Coach of the Year by the National Association of Basketball Coaches. Smith, with a ten-year coaching record of 1 89-77 and a sparkling 22-6 slate this season, will be in competition with winners from other districts competing for the National Coach of the Year award. In addition, junior forward Dennis Wuycik and sophomore George Karl made the ten-man District III-B team, as announced in TV Guide. Other members of the team include Wake Forest's Charlie Davis, Duke's Randy Denton, South Carolina's John Roche and Tom Riker, West Virginia's Wil Robinson, Virginia Tech's Allen Bristow, Virginia's Bill Gerry and Marshall's Russell Lee. The Boston Globe recently nominated Smith for the national coaching honor. He guided the Tar Heels to the regular season ACC title and Carolina went to the finals of the tournament before losing to South Carolina 52-51. The team has been ranked in the top 20 of both wire services most of the season after being picked in the second division of the ACC before the year started. ALEXANDER AYCOCK EVERETT GRAHAM LEWIS STACY VOTE TODAY IN EVERETT randy wolfe for legislature DOES SEEM STRANGE ifnT . . . that my opponents, who have been active in student government for the past 3 years, now see fit to institute change and criticize past student governments with which they have been affiliated. VOTE Jim FLYTJT for Student Body President n FROM t i if if C7 C'irci cf Tha These Two Fantastic Steve Miller LP's Now Both For The Price Of One $4.98" & Cassettes- i . Western by Mark Whicker AssL Sports Editor Not many people woke up Sunday morning with a worse feeling than Ernie Fleming of Jacksonville had but Western Kentucky and Clarence Glover felt good all over. Fleming, with no one near him, double dribbled and then watched helplessly as Glover tapped in the winning shot that gave WK a 74-72 comeback victory over Jacksonville in the first round of the Mideast Regionais in South Bend, Ind. Now Western Kentucky faces Kentucky, an in-state rival that it has never met, in the semi-finals Thursday night in Athens, Ga. Marquette, a 62-47 winner of Miami of Ohio, plays Ohio State in the other Thursday night game. Tournaments and playoff games finalized the NCAA pairings across the country this weekend. South Carolina plays Pennsylvania and Villanova meets Fordham in the Eastern Regionais Thursday night in Raleigh. . In the Midwest playoffs in Wichita, Kan., Notre Dame goes up against Drake and Houston' plays Big Eight champ Kansas, the favorite to escape the regional. UCLA plays Brigham Young in the Western Regionais in Salt Lake City, while Long Beach State plays the University of Pacific. Jacksonville had an 1 8 point lead over Western Kentucky in the first half, but Jim McDaniels and Glover suddenly found their shooting touch while the Dolphins hung themselves with turnovers. Marquette led by only two at halftime, but finally solved Miami's tough defense with outside shots by 6-11 Jim Chones and the direction of Dean (The Dream) Meminger. Forwards Gary Brell and Bob Lackey both have back problems, making the roles of subs Hugh McMahon and George Frazier even more important this weekend. First, the Warriors must hold off the shooting of OSU's Jim Cleamons and Allen Hornyak to reach the finals. And Chones will have the unenviable assignment of either McDaniels, another hot seven-footer from outside, or Kentucky's Tom Payne. Payne has played well lately after a slow start, and Kentucky still hasthe forgotten man, Mike Casey, an All-American his junior year before an 974 TOLW- 4 ROAST BEEF Two Vegetables & Bread 97P Back of Capitol A Capitol Industries Company Future! ST" n ) ft if v 0 a ! t XT' - v f fTiiu f 0 j. CT1 ILlLlXJAk auto accident eliminated him last season. In the East, Fordham overwhelmed Furman 105-74, Perm Duquesne 70-65 for its victory, and Villanova Joseph's 93-75. slipped past 27th straight topped St. Perm has size, good shooting and even better defense, led by forward Corky Calhoun. Fordham has no one over 6-6, but defeated Notre Dame and almost beat pi sir scix win in by Howie Carr Sports Writer Coach Fred Mueller's defending South Atlantic Conference lacrosse champions open their 1971 season at 3 this afternoon on Fetzer Field against Pennsylvania. The Tar Heel stickemn have lost 11 seniors, including All-Americans Harper Peterson and Pete Kramer, off the 1970 team that rolled to a 9-2 record and won the Strohbar trophy as the top team in the South Atlantic Conference. Despite the graduation losses, Mueller has reason to be optimistic about the squad's prospects in the new season. In two pre-season scrimmages, Carolina btteredNlichigan 8-6, and Duke 9-5. "Last year our strength was tEe. CarrjWicks top team Three repeaters and one sophomore were among the 10 players selected on the 1970-71 TV Guide All American team announced Monday. Austin Carr of Notre Dame, John Roche of South Carolina and Sidney Wicks of UCLA were the three repeaters on the team selected by the U.S. Basketball Writers Association. John Neumann, of Mississippi, was the only sophomore on the first team. The six others were Ken Durrett of LaSalle, Artis Gilmore, Jacksonville, Jim McDaniels, Western Kentucky, Cliff Meely, Colorado, Dean Meminger, Marquette and Dennis Layton, Southern California. : 30 -7i 309 7 97 the Zoom Here's your chance to explore the'fuil spectrum of pizza tastes. You'll find the favorite combination that's your taste among the temcting luncheon A compfett selection ol piping hofpizids. plus fresh garden salad without special Pizza Inn dressing. ALL YOU CAM EAT AC? Mon. Thru Fri. 11:30AA1.-1:30PA1. BRING THIS COUPON Buy 1 Get 1 Free 203 W. Franklin 942-5149 Me j.l a l a j liii sy us s i s i - mm. s O n n si r Marquette behind the shoptirg wizardry of 6-2 Charlie Yelverton. VHknova stUi has Howard Porter, humiliated in Raleigh two years ago by Davidson's Mike llhoy but smarter and" stronger now. All will be shooting at South Carolina, ACC champs By virtue of a 52-51 win over Carolina in the tournament Saturday night. men ITS attack, says Mueller, who is assisted in his coaching chores by Capt. VincVnt Anania of NROTC, 4tbut this season our strongest point is rrudfield." The Tar Heels starting niidfield features Bruce Ledwith, a sophomore letterman from Saddle River, NJ.; Bob Lassiter, a junior from Winston-Salem who saw some action last season; and freshman Glenn McKenzie of Fairlawn, NJ. Other middies who figure to get a lot of playing time include juniors John Meiners and Spanky Tiernan, sophomore John Dooley and freshman Robert Malm. The veteran Carolina defense is anchored by All-America Paul Truesdell, a junior from Towson, Md., and senior John Hamachek of Keuwaunee, Wis. They are joined in the starting line-up by Don Wheatley, a junior from Grifton. Taking the place of graduated Ail-American goalie Pete Kramer is sophomore Dave Schreiner. "He's done a tremendous job so far,' says Mueller of the Westfield, NJ. native who was the team's third goalie in 1970. Attackman Ray Seipp, who started most of Harper Peterson's scoring plays last year, is back for bis final season, and this season hell be feeding freshman Bob Cox from Manhasset, N.Y., and junior Phil Sasser of Huntington, W. Va. The Tar Heels' opponent today, Penn, is in the process of rebuilding under Jim "Ace" Adams, who formerly coached at West Point. Carolina defeated the Quakers last year, 8-6. "I'm sure they'll be tough," says Mueller. The Tar Heels' first conference, game of the season is slated for Saturday against Washington College. I SCHIZOPHRENIA! SCHIZOHK -j HOT PANTS. Z UJ X have hit Schizophrenia! rt O N k wUS-dcd Denim whh t?Ji pecktu end cut f-off whits, X rw fend tiu-51S.C0. Vs'our fs corduroy with lej bca .fai C plum-lucky $13Xa Pin! ccriwrcy with tcskLn sx frsnt !n &jsry rccs, rssysl tla f rrisril crtd trewn $12X3. On x D U . esliii-23.C3. ytsnificifit " c& action cf csCTc',nst:rr3 tssa from 10.00. OUR SCHIZOPHRENIA CHC? HAS (T ALL TOGETHER FOB ATI IXCJTING C?RLNS. pern Hfii ...I.. - . i i ..iimm n jr , - , J T ' n 5 "T C V ' ' 1 5-1 . v ' 5 r . . S -: raw 6 fe- V IS f M'-t r-'-l If I W O iff- x i y - r h " ''! v'r-v " ." -i2 x 4 fVi'V u - - ,,: u- X N O "VI z mm SCHIZOPHRENIA Shop ct Miltcn's o X u 10A.M.-10P.M. P1on.-Sat. 1 PJ.1.-10PJ.1. Sunday z cry win

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