The Dairy Tar Heel A 71 O 6 o T, j& weei&eiKui :ioeni r eel exceiJieince Monday, February 14, 1972 by ED. i n 11 by Mark Whicker Sports Editor Saturday afternoon in Charlotte. Gas station attendants that take you eight miles out of the way to a place you could have made in ten minutes. The rain shows every promise of turning into what the weathermen call "frozen precipitation." The day before, Jim McDaniels decided to leave the Cougars, asking for i50,000 for the "aggravation" of living in North Carolina. You are figuring out how much you deserve. The night before, Richie O'Connor dropped by Bucky First Tiger loss -Freshmen toro by AI Thomas Sports Writer Lightning struck twice last week, although not at the same place. State's freshman team, playing its second road game of the year, came to Carmichael Auditorium Monday with 10 straight victories and a voluminous array of acclaim. The Wolfiets left with a 95-83 defeat at the hands of Carolina. Saturday afternoon in the Charlotte Coliseum, the undefeated Clemson freshman team played its second road game of the year after winning 10 straight games. There had been a lot of talk about the Cubs going undefeated this year, proof of Tates Locke's rebuilding efforts. A Clemson player was even quoted as boasting no one would defeat them. i Again, Carolina's freshmen were the culprits in ending a winning streak. I With Don Washington and Brad i Hoffman leading the way, the Tar Babies 8 sailed past Clemson late in the first half and rolled to an impressive 8874 win. The battle was close during most of H the first half though with the Cubs fj threatening to make Carolina victim number 1 1 . ! The Tar Babies were being limited to Virginia beats Deacons In ACC games Saturday, Virginia beat U'.a-c Poroct 71A7 in rhorlnttwviMa IjDuke stopped William & Mary 87-69, and Maryland defeated Long Island 7860 in Madison Square Garden. fsc-vrginia s win - kept them tied witn 'Carolina for the ACC lead with a 71 league record. The Cavs had trouble with resurgent Wake, however, and Barry i Parkhill, had to score 34 points to keep I Virginia's chances alive. Eddie Payne scored 22 to lead Wake Forest, which is now 1-6 in the ACC and 6 -1 4 overall. At Duke, the Blue Devils survived the loss of junior forward Richie O'Connor to L coast past William & Mary. Chris Redding scored 18 points and Alan Shaw pulled down 19 rebounds to ' lead Bucky Waters' club, now 34 in the """""""""""" c-: : The Daily Tar Heel is published by the University of North Carolina Student Publications Board, daily except Siinday, examination periods, vacations and summer periods. Offices are at the Student Union building, Univ. of North Carolina, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27514. Telephone numbers: News, Sports 933-1011; 933-1012; Business, Circulation, Advertising 933-1163. Subscription rates: $5.00 per semester. $10.00 per year; Second class postage paid at U.S. Post Office in Chapel Hill, N.C. The Student Legislature shall have powers to determine the Student Activities fee and to appropriate all revenue derived from the Student Activities Fee (1.1.1.4 of the Student Constitution). The budgetary appropriation for the 1970-71 academic year is $28,292.50 for undergraduates and $4,647.50 for graduates as the subscription rate for the student body ($1.84 per student based on fall semester enrollment figures). The Daily Tar Heel reserves the right to regulate the typographical tone of all advertisements and to revise or turn away copy it considers objectionable. The Daily Tar Heel will not consider adjus.ments or payments for any advertisement involving major typographical errors or erroneous insertion unless notice is given to the Business Manager within (1) one day after the advertisement appears, or within one day of the receiving of tear sheets, of subscription of the paper. The Daily Tar Heel will not be responsible for more than one incorrect insertion of an advertisement scheduled to run several times. Notices for such correction must be given before the next insertion. LW "MtiLMfel you'Rg 6Q1N6 A i'M 6OIH0 ToYwti DON'T EVEN ' M 5l'E HE UVE5 IN A WHITE f 'lL KNOU IT Utf EN ) J TO VilT MISS INTERVIEW HER. KNOid U)HE VlNlE-COVEREO C0TTA6E IdiTH 1 I SEE IT J I SldEETSTORf? ANP URlTE HER J SHE LIVES.1 ROSE RUSHES, A PICKET FENCE cW y' -j- anp a ujillou) tree... 5y m I sue..- ftX&THE "' e Waters" house to become the sixth helpful Duke player to leave the program. The nausea hasn't fully abated yet from the State-Georgia Tech game. What is anybody doing here? Only the Carolina basketball team is sure. It has convinced itself that it must play its best to beat Clemson and Georgia Tech in the North-South Doubleheader, and as a result 11,666 fans and scores of autograph hunters Find something they value. The other participants have different experiences one shot a possession during the first 10 minutes, and even then was having trouble getting the ball underneath. The very confident Cubs were blocking out to perfection Sharpshooting Van Gregg and tall Wayne Croft were moving with ease around Carolina's defense, powering ..ie Cubs into a 27-17 lead with 9:25 left in the first half. Clemson was showing why it whipped South Carolina's freshmen by 24 points the last time out. Once the Cubs forged that 10-point lead, though, the Tar Babies seemed to be riled into action. Fast-breaking and exhibiting form similar to the second half of the State battle, Carolina outscored Clemson 25-8 during the last nine minutes of the first half. The Tar Babies did not waste time building on to their 42-35 halftime lead, outperforming the suddenly cold-shooting Cubs 14-6 during the first four minutes of the final half. Clemson did manage to move within eight points with 10 minutes remaining, but another Carolina spurt led by Hoffman and Ray Harrison finally put an end to the Cubs' hopes. Extremely close calling by the referees hurt both teams, with Gregg picking up league and 108 overall. O'Connor's replacement, Ron Righter, scored 15 with six rebounds. Maryland, which hosts Carolina Wednesday night, improved its overall record to 16--S. in ...its,,, win ,ovef. the Blackbirds. Tom McMillen scored 27 points and got 16 rebounds in the win, while Howard White contributed 1 1 points for Lefty Driesell's team. Maryland hit 20 of 32 field goal attempts in the first half for a 62.5 percentage. Crossword Puzzle ACROSS 1 Deposited 5 Sweet potatoes 9 Mournful 12 Assistant 13 Leave out 14 Cravat 15 Inclined 17 Note of scale 18 Mountain in Crete 19 Artificial alloy of gold 21 Pertaining to punishment 23 Frightens 27 Football position (abbr.) 28 Talk Idly 29 Spider's trap 31 Resort 34 Faroe Islands whirlwind 35 Place 37 High mountain 39 Symbol for silver 40 Number 42 Insane 44 Got up 46 Teutonic deity 43 Heavy rainfalls 50 Beg 53 Christmas carol 54 Communist 55 Note of scale 57 Makes suitable 61 Number 62 Word of sorrow 64 Gull-like bird 65 Total ' 66 Spar 67 Silkworm 3 Artificial language 4 Leaves 5 Warble 6 Part of "to be" 7 Prefix: center 8 Cease 9 Sharp pains 10 Opera by Verdi 11 Transaction 16 Hold in high regard 20 Cry like cat 22 Spanish article 23 Blemish 24 Woody plant 25 Cooled lava 26 Ocean 30 Trumpeted loudly 32 Time gone by 33 Matures DOWN Spanish plural article Be ill Clemson Coach Tales Locke seerns to have built his basketball program to a place somewhere around the rating of "respectability" alter two years. His team has lost by only four points to nationally-ranked Virginia and South Carolina. But here, on Friday night, he is simply trying to endure. Referees Steve Honzo and Jim Hernjak, who are presiding over an unusually rough game between Carolina and Locke's Tigers, are having to endure Locke. The coach is berating, screaming, wincing, pacing and finally Clemson his fourth foul just before the half and Carolina's Ed Stahl and Craig Swanson committing their four one minute into the second half. Each team was guilty of 22 fouls, with Stahl and three Clemson players, Russ Hunt, Doug Lowe and John Westerman all eventually fouling out. ; Washington led the Tar Babies with 27 points followed by Hoffman with 23 and Harrison with 19. Hoffman also added five assists. Croft topped Clemson's scoring with 23 points followed by Gregg with 18. The Tar Babies hit 71 percent of their shots from the floor during the second half, 59 percent for the game, while Clemson managed a respectable 47 percent. Carolina's freshman team is now 92 for the season with Clemson 101. Tar by David Zucchino Sports Writer Carolina track coach Joe Hilton said before Saturday's dual meet with Clemson that his Tar Heels and Clemson were "pretty evenly matched." He couldn't have made a more accurate prediction. The Tar Heels built up an early point lead yesterday afternoon in the Tin Can and then withstood Clemson wins in the meet's last three events to squeak out a narrow 53 51 decision. Carolina swept the first five events and seemingly had the meet wrapped up until the Tigers finished first in the 1 ,000-yd run, the two-mile and the mile relay to close to within two team points. Hilton's squad captured seven of the meet's twelve events, however, and added Answer to Saturday's Puzzle 36 Make lace 38 Bishop 41 Wanted 43 Man's nickname 45 Preposition 47 Sun god 49 Cook in oven 50 Malay canoe 51 Grant use of 52 Apothecary's weight 56 Guido's high note 58 Through 59 Prefix: three 60 Nahoor sheep 63 Conjunction Meet wjHl Psr:":iFALL S fLXEOl k L!!L!T Duo R E Ft JC A I R SLj OPE E L L STlL ELlA PE S ""IS O LA NJ S P EDJ1 Z3W N SOS A A fipl ' JjLD SjS. I RALL S E RELJLE I !IA T E S H A VDSO A R ST EH.E I VQH A R Rl E S S E R C J X Eft? E. E T E R e ras f Jijp Ne Is Is '4 12 3 4 ;5 6 7 8 J 9 10 1 2 Sws XX 'w lp u v i i 1 1 1 23 24 25 26 ?Tv 27 28 Eg 29 30 y W 32 33 34 31 36 37 3839 40 4142 43 44 45 46-f4t 48 49" 50 51 52 353 ;'& 54 gj5T"56 38 60 51 62 63 64 1H I I irl I I Distr. by United Feature Syndicate. Inc. 14 chair with helpless iriCignanor.. As Tar Heel coach Dean Smith runs players in and out of the fray with subway rush-hour regularity, Locke has inadequate players on his bench. The ranks 2re thinned before his very' 25 guard Bob Havkirs gets in the way of a Bobby Jones drive and catches a foot in the adarn's apple. Another guard. Bud Martin, breaks his sternum in a floor fight for the ball. The Tigers stand resolutely in front of the onrushing Tar Heels, drawing charging fouls. They grimace with the fall, rise to rub the lacerations subconsciously, and go on with the game. One flinch, and Locke will react. "We have the same drill," says UNC's Bill Chamberlain later. "We don't have a name for it, because we don't like to bring up the subject. You just stand there and let the man charge into you. We don't run either, because if we did we'd be running a lot on the sidelines." After staying even for a while, Gemson falls behind Carolina, and gets pushed around as well. Locke sits rigidly. furiously. He will tell the press, through sports information director Bob Bradley, that he has no statement. He is angry with the officials, but the prevailing impression is that he is tired with try ing to cope with losing. Georgia Tech's temporary basketball resurgence is taking a year off. The Engineers are 5 15, with an upset of Georgia remaining the season's high point. Coach Whack Hyder, in his 21st season, is not one of the country's winningest coaches, and has accepted his place. He carries a perpetual expression of resignation on the bench. He knows this doubleheader will not hold any falling into his track team heats four more second place finishes. Long jumper Hubert West paced the Tar Heels with wins in two events. West, taking over from teammates Darryl Kelly in the triple jump, went 47-4 to win the event after earlier capturing first place in the long jump with a 23-316 leap. Kelly and distance men Reggie McAfee and Larry Widgeon were in Louisville, Kentucky over the weekend to participate in the Mason-Dixon Games and did not take part in the win over Clemson. The Tar Heels thus suffered in the distance events, losing out to Clemson in the mile, 2-mile and 1,000-yd run. Weekly Schedule MONDAY 7:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 8:00 p.m. Quiz Bowl Duplicate Bridge Sara Elder. Twin Oalcs: Commune with a Future TUESDAY 4:00 & 8:00 p.m. 6:30 p.m. "Woodstock" APB-TV, Julian Bond: North Lounge 7:00 p.m. Quiz Bowl 7:00 p.m. Chess. Club & Class 8:00 p.m. PRESERVATION HALL JAZZ BAND. Memorial Hall 8:00 p.m. Readers Theatre: Through the Looking Glass, Coffeehouse WEDNESDAY 4:00 & 8:00 p.m. "Woodstock" 7:00 p.m. Quiz Bowl 8:00 p.m. Readers Theatre: Through the Looking Glass, Coffeehouse THURSDAY 7:00 p.m. Quiz Bowl 8:00 p.m. The Philanderers Committee Chairmen Interviews FRIDAY 4, 6:30 & 9:00 p.m. "Hkjh Sierra" Committee Chairmen Interviews 9:00 p.m. Coffeehouse. Howard Sacs. Charles Martin, and a Game of Charades SATURDAY 10.00 a.m. Dance Workshop 4. 6:30. & 9:00 p.m. "West Side Story" 8:00 p.m. SUNDAY 6:30 & 9:00 p.m. MARY TRAVERS. Carmichael "Mondaki COMMITTEE INTERVIEWS Interviews for Carolina Union Activities Group Chairmen will be held on February 17, 18, 21, and 22. Applications and interview sign-up sheets are available today at the Union Information Desk. The application should be completed and returned lo the Information Desk 24 hours before the scheduled interview. I pirs itp n ttrb-55f ft PRESERVATION HALL JAZZ BAND appearing in Memorial Hall, February 15lh at 8:00 p.m. aces Mite i. 2. new r.ot to play ba.ketb S7-T0. Hyder tells the press ho giad he is to be here. Tech is on the third ear of a- five-year North-South contract. He remlr.ces. Tvo years ago. a. o 1 1 center named Rich Yur.kus personally derailed both State and Carolina, and left the capacity crowd a link stunned. Last year. Yur.kus beat Slate bur was throttled by Lee Dedrron and Carolina. Tech makes no special plans to s!e UNC don Saturday night. The Tar Heels accept i: gratefully and speed off to a 45-point victory. "About the only thing e could give Carolina is our fight song," Hyder summarizes. it would be our only significant contribution." He is seen later at a press reception in Ovens Auditorium. receiving friends in a courtly manner. Ever since early December, when he was on Sports Illustrated's cover. State's Tommy Burleson has been a sympathetic figure. It would be tragic if he was not leading the ACC in rebounding and ahead of every one in scoring but Barry Parkhill. Still, he is try ing. He stalks around after every foul with a hand on one hip and a frustrated frown. He has concentrated himself into a pretty good foul shooter. His gaffes are highly visible, and State Coach Norm Sloan, feeling the same disappointment, is yelling instructions at him angrily. "Tommy's such a good kid." Sloan says. "He rooms with our 5-6 freshman. Monte Towe. One day after practice, Monte is pretty disgusted with himself and Tommy wants to encourage him. So he puts an arm way down on Monte's shoulder and says. 'Monte, you're doing good for your size.' Monte gets real mad Clemson's Larry Rush won both the mile and the 2-mile in the relatively slow times of 4:20.5 and 9:27.0. The Tigers' Frank Romero finished second in both events, well ahead of Carolina's Bill Harward and Bruce Hafemiester. Wayne Jenkins of Clemson took the 1,000-yd run at 2:16.4, while Tar Heels Craig Steward (2:20.3) and Roy Helm (2:25.0) placed second and third. Lennox Stewart's first place finish in the 600-yd run clinched the victory for Carolina, for it proved to be the last Tar Heel win of the afternoon. Stewart, recovering from a sinus infection, streaked to a 1:12.5 clocking PLAYWRITING COMPETITION Original plays be students or faculty which have not been produced may be submitted to the Playwriting Competition sponsored by the Union Drama Committee. The play can be a one-act play, happening, or full-length play with approximate running time of T2 hours, excluding intermission. Musicals are not admissible. The script should be typewritten. Because of technical restrictions the play must have simple sets and lighting requirements. The final decision in selection of the script will be made by the Union Drama Committee in late April. For further information contact Kitty Conway, Suite A, 933-1 157. THE PHILANDERERS will appear in concert in the Great Hall Thursday, February 17 at 8:00 p.m. The concert is free and open to the public. They will do an informal performance at noon in the pit or in the snack bar in case of inclement weather. TICKET SALES Preservation Hall Ja Band $2.001.50 Harkness Ballet $2.502.00 Mary Travers $ 1 .50 After his team uernor.srut";c-r. c! CI Q T i- and says that does 1. that he's going to make the team no matter hat." Burleson is also too nice on the basketball court. But on Saturday, he asserts himself. The Wolf pack is using t-o guards and handling the ball better against Clerr.sc n. and T:ger center Dave Angel goes out with four fouls. Burleson rips replacement John Williams apart, scores 25 points, and State wms by 15 Outside the locker room, the kids have their pencils. "Way to co. Tommy." thev yell, and Burleson looks down, rakish in a gray cap. with a bemused sm:le. On the statistics sheet it says. "Bill Chamberlain: eight points and four rebounds." Dean Smith says. "It's ore of his best games in a Carolina uniform." That takes in a lot of ground Chamberlain against Maryland this year. Creighton last year, and in the NIT was a super player. But for two nights m Charlotte, he approaches earlier levels. What is intimidation? Steve Post of Tech is not allowed to move the ball anywhere by a straining, grunting Chamberlain, and the subsequent jump ball is taken by UNC. What is an assist? Chamberlain answers by whirling, shoving the ball past two Yellow Jackets from 10 feet to Robert M c Ad 00. Chamberlain is taken out. with the other starters, well after the game is decided but well before its end. A L'NC substitute charges but the layup goes in. Chamberlain stares at referee Jimmy Smith, making the downward motion that the basket is good. Questioning, he makes it again, and again before Smith turns away. Chamberlain sits down: one Tar Heel basket will not be recorded, and something is amiss. But his brilliant effort on the court almost made the North-South Doubleheader a triumph b itself. emson to finish more than two full seconds ahead of Clemson's. Ralph Zungoli. Carolina's Don Wheless placed third at 1 : 1 5.5. UNC's early wins came in the pole vault, high jump, high hurdles and the 60-yd dash. Steady Danny Deacon took the pole vault, clearing the bar at 14-6. Teammate Cliff Edwards went 13-0 and finished third. The Tar Heels placed 1 2 in the high jumps, where Dave Hilliard and Charles Ball jumped 6-6 and 6-4, respectively. Craig Loudy ; and David Hawkins gave Carolina another two-man finish in the high hurdles, as Loudy won in 8.0 and Hawkins placed second with 8.1. Jril J y L HARKNESS BALLET will perform in Memorial Hall, February 22 at 8:00 p.m. TWIN OAKS: A COMMUNE WITH A FUTURE Sara Elder will lecture on the concept of communal living and discuss the community of Twin Oaks, Va. in the Great Hdll February 14th at 8:00 p.m. MARY TRAVERS will appear in Carmichael Auditorium February 19th at 8:00 p.m. QUIZ BOWL begins tonight at 7:00 p.m. in room 202-204 in the Union. Spectators welcome. First and second round schedules available at Information Desk. This week Quiz Bowl will run Monday through Thursday nights. WOODSTOCK The famed film, "Woodstock" will be shown in the Great Hall February 15th and 16th at 4 and 8p.m. Tickets are $1.00 per person with I.D. The tickets will be at the Information Desk on the day of the performance. i 1 . T

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