Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 13, 1971, edition 1 / Page 4
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The Dailv Tar Heel Monday. September 13. 1971 .Duke riiamBiri saves a sad atmrday by A I Thomas Sports Writer Ihmg- are going badly for the Atlar.!:: ( 'oast Conference Saturday afternoon. Disheateni.ng news was flowing in --Ck-mvn 10, Kentucky 13 . . . Virginia 6. Navy 10 . . . Maryland 13, Villanova 2'.. ACC teams were being beaten. Aii three conference teams playing during the afternoon were given at least even odds of talking away with victories, but none did. 'I he ACC's prestige m football, already :-iir:iv:uk appeared headed even lower. 'I he first news of the night didn't help. The Wolfpack. spirited and enthusiastic during pre-season practice, suffered an embarrassing 23-21 defeat at the hands of little-regarded Kent State. State fumbled away the game, as happened regularly last year. TTie Wolfpack lost tb-e ball five times on fumbles, with 17 of Kent State's 23 Dav:don was very much a.:ve. The first time the Wildcats touched points coming on drives set up by the the football, they marched 5 1 yards -. 1 i bobbles. bob James, commissioner of the ACC. must have been close to giving up hope. Then came news that Carolina easily toppled Richmond 2 to 0 and Wake Forest, behind four Larry Russell' touchdowns in the last quarter, whipped Davidson 2k to 7. The Tar Heels steadily overpowered the Spiders, scoring seven points each quarter. Even though head coach Bill Dooley began clearing his bench during plavs for a surprising lead. While th 19.500 fans eagerly awaited a Deacon onslaught, the Wildcats a: firs: refused :d bend. After three br.g quarters, the Davidson defense shewed signs A weakening, and finally wilted. Explosive quarterback Larry Russell . ,; -, h:ch came that last Quarter Of course, the Demon Deacons as as the Tar Heels were supposed to those games, and there's l.ttle prestige ;- beating a Southern Conference scho-1 in football. The conference's remaining pretige was still in trouble. News from Tampa Fla.. however. suddenly gave Commissioner James reason to hold his head high. Duke, a solid 1-i-pomt underdog, upset took the matter into his own hands. highly regarded Florida of the ab. scoring four touchdowns Ln the fourth quarter. The All-Conference quarterba; tou.h Southeastern Cor.f erer.es d v n a m i The the second half, Richmond could neither netted 1 14 yards rushing and 0 passing. contain the Carolina methodical offensive drives nor mount a serious, sustained drive of its own. The Deacons were supposed to have an easier Saturday night than Carolina, but until the last few minutes of the battle A 1 1 - A m e r i c a n passing combination of quarterback John Reaves and flanker Carlos Alvarez simply wain: enough agiinst the toe of Duke ;ur.:or Dav- vr;h:. Duke had taken a similar ;oume south last ear. and w or. the statistical battle-but not the came, This campaign. Duke, under re head coach M.ke McGee. failed to cam as much vardace as Flor.da-but won the came The big news, as far as rival conference teams were concerned, was the kickir.g of Wnght. and the running of ;un;or fullback Steve Jones. Wnght. standing at or.lv 5-11. !c0 pounds, scored all the Duke points on f eld coals of 22. 54. JJ a-d ird; ruth: holds the ACC field coal distance record on a 51 -yard coal ap:-.t State !.; The socc?r-:vle kicker no h i; another ACC record-the nx f eld c--. in one came. Jones is the mam reason D-V. penetrated far enough into Florida territory for Wr.zh: to kick the wmr.mc field coals. The 212-pound ;un..--fu'dback Masted his wa throuch the Florida line for 2CU vards :n -i cames-and that was bound to have made Commissioner Jame. as wc',; as i o: ..... , . v t , ..If f . ) Wjl 5 - ri t . - its (CD y I -?.. j - ' b - . n line injiLiFeo. rerariii Paul Miller, Rusty Culbreth no longer feel the pain KichmtK'd quartcrDack Ken iNicnois was nit by Carolina's Big D more than he cured for. Kobbi VandeiiBroek (63) brought him down late in the second quarter for a 1(ks. (Staff photo by Cliff Kolovson) by Mark Whicker Sports Editor When a player is injured, medical care is just half the solution. Luck has helped to insure a return to action. Intramurals scheduled Intramural tag football begins Monday, September 13 at 4:00 with a full slate of games scheduled. Approximately 160 teams have been entered in what looks to be a very interesting and highly competitive season. Law Blue, the Lab Retrievers, MBA, and Med School are always tough in the Graduate Division and Phi Delt Blue and Aycock are rated as favorites in the Fraternity and Residence Division, respectively. In other forthcoming Intramural action, Horseshoe entries are due no later than Wednesday, Seotember 15, as is the case with All-Campus Paddleball Entries. Track entries and All-Campus Squash entries are due in the Intramural Office no later than 5:00 PM, Tuesday, September 21. The Intramural Department urges all interested Faculty, Staff, and Students to enter any or all of the events and activities sponsored by the Department. Other schedule activities for the fall semester include Volleyball, Wrestling, Basketball, Handball, and Swimming. Any questions concerning the aforementioned Intramural Activities may be addressed to the Intramural Staff in 215 Woollen Gymnasium or by calling same at 933-1 153. - 7 uiHl Straight talk about college and you Here is a sane and sensitive ana'ysis of college life which treats you as an adult. It throws out the college stereotypes and gets down to the subject at hand without bias. It speaks as freely and factually cf marijuana and sex as it does the blunders cf the Berkeley administration during the Free Speech confron tations. it objectively prctes the factors behind such top'cs as Who Controls a University, racism, study pressures, loneliness and depression, sex. how to study and why the grading system may be stacked against you. Finaliy. it points out that if you want to stay in ccPege. this is the chance in a iifet.me to d s ccver yourself. You are removed from the 9 to 5 gnnd and the biased, if well-inter! cned. family and friends who want you to f.t the:r pre conceived imace. In your college bookstore in paperback. HOW TO DO A UNIVERSITY was written by four Michigan State University professors in re sponse to questions raised by thousands of incoming students. One student. Barbara Hodgson of f.'ankato State CcMece said about the section on rental health that she "...had felt every emcticn cov ered in the section ... not to any extreme de gree, but enough to warrant concern and. ..to appreciate the knowledge that enough students nad c:ne through the same thing to justify in clusion in :e book." Cf course, one student reviewer doesn't make a good book. So why not leaf through it ycu-se'f at the bookstore and see what you think"' HOW TO DO A UNIVERSITY By Andrew M. Barclay. William D. Crano. Chafes Thornton, ail cf K'ich.gan Sf3fe (,',?-vers-ty. and Arnold Werner. Drec:or. Psyci a.".c Se'v'ce. ft ch,gan State University. JOHN WILEY & SONS. Inc.. 6C5 Thrd Avenue. New York. N Y. 10016 Jim Webster has had the des::e to get back on the field twice-atter a broken leg. in "69. and an ankle injury m "0. Luck was not with him. however. In Carolina's win at Richmond Saturday night, many of last year's casualties m3de it all the way back. Quarterback Paul Miller says his back is not bothering him at long last. He ran tor 15 yards, passed for 18 and led the Tar Heels to three touchdowns. Cornerback Rusty Culbreth intercepted a pass and immediately gained 1 1 yards. It was hard to believe that a wrecked knee kept him out of nine games in '70. Defensive tackle trie Hyman was impressive after missing all of last year, and sub QB Charlie Turco got in for two series after seeing no action since the sixth game of '69. Neither Miller nor Culbreth played in the spring. Miller's back problems have been legendary, but when healthy he is as effective as any quarterback in the ACC. He was famous last year for faking out Duke in the 59-34 victory, and getting Carolina ahead of Arizona State in the Peach Bowl before Junior Ah You knocked him out of the game. It was an uneasy summer for the Ayden senior. At no time could he count on playing normally. "I worked around Ayden for a while." Miller said in the locker room, "and then I went up to Pennsylvania for some rest and recuperation. "That means that I spent 30 days flat on my back, getting up maybe one hour each day. "And then my back still hurt. I really didn't know what to think." Miller credits Coach B;ll Doey for the successful recovery. Coach cou'.d have started m on me from the beginning of practice." he noted. "He could have said. "OK. Miller get in there on every play.' "But instead he brought me alone slowly. He'd use me for one play, then hold me back on the next play. I rea'.'y have to give him the credit for the fact I'm out here tonight." Dressing near Miller. Culbreth allowed that it was all "fantastic." "I didn't feel any different than I did last year," he said. "Actua'i. our defense did such a good job up front that I oniy ; uniform d.rtv intercept better w ork-out Saturdav night. "Richmond didn't do a much as we thought they would." Rutv vr.d "very body did a fine job for u- 1 thought Mike Mansfield played real for the amount of time he had pent linebacker m practice. "It'sjusi great to be back." Rusty said that the team prayed :.t Bill Arnold before and after team meetings. "We hear he's getting better and better, little bv l.ttle. but they're not sure what the outcome w be vet Football club beaten by State defense 8-6 An inconsistent offense cost Carolina's football club in its opener against State Friday night at Ehringhaus Field, losing to the Wolfpack 8-6. Poor ball handling and an aggressive State defense managed to stop the Tar Heel club in its tracks. Carolina linemen Dennis Ericksen and Howard Smith joined defensive backs Harry Dorden and Tom Kiehl in preventing a score until the final play in the first half, when a touchdown and a two-point conversion gave State an 8-0 edge. The Pack had shown a surprisingly potent passing attack. txtV I 1 -OLOK BY DE LUXE -2S--R) llc"'1' "f NOW 1-3-5-7-9 J Joseph E lev'v pfscnt a M e Nir.o's s'3"'ng jac Ncyvn Cr-3-ce Bfy u "I was sorry to see Xariial KllOVlC(lgC'end." Vincent Canby New York Times Mike NkholJack.VKholwaCaiKlkc Reren. Arthur Carfunkel..nn Margrei and Jules FeiHer. Carnal knowledge. R An Avco Embassy Pctur NOW PLAYING NORTHGATE SHOPPING CENTER DURHAM. N.C. I 1 Mon. COUNTRY STYLE STEAK w2 vegs. & rolls Tues. 14 BBQ CHICKEN w2 vegs & rolls Wed. VEAL PARMAGIANA w spagetti ' Tburs. PEPPER STEAK w 2 veg. & rolls - f'LET OF FLOUNDER QQOD 11:30-2:30 Fri. w2 veqs & rolls HOT PASTRAMI ON RYE SOUP AND SALAD WILL BE SERVED WITH ANY OF THE S.97 LUNCHEONS FOR . . . $1.30 Quarterback Mark (", .!.-:': . j. . flanker Doug Reynold with a t ul,.t ..:. pass in the third quarter. l;;t conversion attempt failed. The Carolina drive was g..J ' i the blocking of (k-orge DannU. C,-;-:z-Brown and Mike Windsor. The rest of the game was a mudd1. defensive battle until late m the came, when UNC finally drove deep into State territory ag3in. Another pass to Reyrn-lds l-rvug!;t Carolina inside the 10-yard line, hut time ran out. Carolina plays at home again I r;da night, Sept. 17 at Lhrmghau Field when the club meets Evans College, better conditions and a more consistent o!"lene could make that game a more p'eavmt one for the football clubbers. The passing attack of Coodnlie t Reynolds should be Carolina's let attacking weapon again. 77 .v Week's l:cuturc Yale Chronicles of America This collection includes over !O0 geitt volumes from this truly preat sri-s '. classics in American History. All are in good condition, som- ar almost pristine. S2.50 Each The Old Book Corner 137 A East Franklin Street Opposite Town Parking Area Chapel Hill abc IThettrt 1:50-3:30-5: 18-7:03-9:00 MOTORCYCLE SPORT AND THE MEN WHO RIDE by BRUCE BROWN WHO MADE "ENDLESS SUMMER" I .Hii..,
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 13, 1971, edition 1
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