Carolina 6-3 in A CC Heels. teirp ?s J Sports photo by Oary Lobraioo Phil Ford puts up two against the Terps by Suun Shackelford ; Sports Editor "l finally got 'em: I finally got 'em. It was worth the wait, wasn't it?" Maryland coach Lefty Dricscll That remark made to personal friends after the game, means a multitude of things to the Maryland Terrapins, who Saturday looked like Red and White raiders when they picked up a "96-74 win over the home team blue of Carolina. In general, the victory was the first Maryland sweep of the' Tobacco Road members N.C. State. Wake ForesU Duke and Carolina on their home courts during one season. The feat, itself, has been accomplished only one other time during the 22-year Atlantic Coast Conference history, in 1970 by South Carolina, which today no tongers belongs to the conference. But specifically, the victory represented two other landmarks: It was the first time a Maryland-Driesell team has beaten Carolina at home. And it was the first time Carolina has lost to Maryland in Carmichael Wo men cagers crush State 85-81, now 13-0 with 2 games remaining by Jane E. Albright Sports Writer Approximately a thousand State-hating fans saw the UNC women's basketball team annihilate the Wolfpack of N.C. State 85-51 in Carmichael Auditorium last Thursday. Saturday's 80-31 massacre of the Davidson College women by the Tar Heels in Charlotte Coliseum seemed anti-climatic. With' the Wolfpack and the Wildcats' casually cast aside by the Tar Heels, the Carolina women now own a perfect 13-0 season record going into the final and roughest week of the season. Tuesday at 7 p.m. UNC will meet East Carolina in Greenville. The Tar Heels didn't have much trouble beating the Pirates 69-50 in the final game of an earlier round-robin tournament this season, but ECU has had several weeks of competition for improvement. The last scheduled game of the season includes a short trip to Elon College to take on the defending state champions. The Fighting Christians will be out for revenge, for its 70-68 opening season loss to the Tar Heels was in the round-robin tournament. Against Davidson, Carolina Coach Angela Lumpkin said she was not trying to run up the score but that she couldn't have her starters "getting splinters on the bench" in anticipation of this week's schedule. These past two games probably mark the end of the lopsided victories Carolina has enjoyed this season. Against State, many Tar Heels can gloat over the fact that the Wolfpack, a name that has come to mean the best, was merely, cheesecake for the invincible Carolina IFlAFi AT 5 piece country folk Show Time 9p.m. -1 a.m. ' Monday Night Special cover 00 -Coming ttrctions-- t -5. Edwards, Glarlce Flyrin the I VlfM 834-0524 I mm' . j fj Feb. 19-22 Restaurant & Entertainment Forum Cameron Village Subway Raleigh Use DTH. Cllssifieds J: ' LUE JiEA G REBATE Do you have old jeans that are top short, too long, too small, or jeans that you just don't wear anymore?? They're still valuable. Bring them to the Shrunken Head Trade in your old jeans and we will allow $1-$5 on your next purchase of jeans at the Shrunken C-jea Ope Downtown Franklin Street DTH Classifieds FOR SALE For Sale: 1964 Jaguar E-typa convattaWa. Naada dutch. $600.00. CaU Jatf 833-6253. - - STEREOS: - AS ALWAYS GET GREAT SOUND AT THE RIGHT PRICE FROM ANN SHACHTMAN. VISIT STEREO SOUND, 175 E. FRANKLIN ST. (UPSTAIRS ABOVE P-J-'S) 942-6546. Component y.t.m: MortHt 737 AmptHUr, -3044 TumtaWa, two larga Advnl apaakara wllh walnut cabineta. $950.00 valua. Will to bast ottac. Call altar 5 pm., 96- 9066. Aak for Tray. ' - " FOR RENT For Rant trail or with thraa-room addition. Flva acraa with pond, atraam. Ilald. wooda. Fumlahad. Call OT7-5M0. Laavt name and number. $95 par month. 2.2 MILLION PEOPLE CANT BE WRONG! the AM Voluntaer Force worka and aophomore men and women can now be part of the AVF by joining the 2-yr. NROTC program. Check tie out The Tarheel Navy. 933-1196. MISCELLANEOUS HELP WANTED OVERSEAS JOBS - Auatralia, EV Amf Student all profea.lon and occupation $700 to $3000 rnnth w Exoenaea paid, overltma, alghtaaalnfl. Free Z"J w0lh RE8EARCH CO. Dept. C3, P.O. Box 603, Corte Madera, CA 94925 Lott: Red Doberman 'Chutka' flea and choke collar, rabies No. 796. Reward. 942-4324. Ballroom dance classes beginning March 4. Small classes. Individual attention. Teacher with ten years, dancing and teaching experience. CaU 929-2513, evenmga. Typing: fast, dependable service on IBM set ec trie Rush jobs usually possible. Call 929-7058. VW GOT THE BLAHS? Have an expert tune tt for $10 plus parte. Mulders Installed. Performance modifications. SATISFACTION GUARANTEED AT REASONABLE PRICES. CaU 967-7414. LOST: 18 pound tan tabby cat, vicinity of Smith Level RL, wearing gold tag with name "Franklin", lost since Feb. 3. Contact Wayne Brothwefk NCMH, 968-4131. women baskethallers. Every Tar Heel made the scoring column, with the unstoppable Marsha Mann pumping in 27 points and pulling down 1 5 rebounds. At the 12-minute mark, Mann left the game with a standing ovation. Like most State-Carolina contests, the crowd gave the officials a hard time with each unfavorable call. The pep band played "Old MacDonald" and several guys sitting on the front rows did their own "pom-pom" routine. Meanwhile, State had trouble penetrating UNCs zone defense, with seven mintues of the second half going by before State scored. By that time, the scoreboard was 30 points in favor of Carolina. Auditorium, which .-in I965. replaced Woollen Gymnasium, now used for physical education-intramural activities, as the varsity playing site. For the Terps. who lost to UNC 69-66 at home, this domino effect was definitely on the agenda. In their last game, a week ago, they trounced Bill Foster's Duke Blue Devils 104-84 in Durham, becoming the first team to score over a 100 points against Duke at home. " ACC Race Putting aside the record books is necessary, however. This contest must be assessed in terms of the strenuous ACC regular season race, whose importance is accented by the National Collegiate Athletic Association's (NCAA) decision to select at large teams for playoff sports. Maryland, third-ranked nationally, appears headed for the regular season championship by virtue of its current 8-2 record and only two ACC opponents. Clemson and Virginia remaining. s N.C. State, meanwhile, owns a 7-2 conference mark and moves into sole possession of second place after its weekend victory over Wake Forest, 89-87. State must still battle three ACC adversaries, Duke Clemson and Carolina before the tournament. Carolina drops to fourth with a 6-3 record and 1 5-6 overall. Clemson is in third with a 7 3 mark after thumping Duke 100-66 Saturday. Now Virginia Tech . The Tar Heels play non-conference Virginia Tech tonight in Blacksburg. Va. The 8 p.m. game is regionally-televised over stations in this area. Against Maryland, UNC head coach Dean Smith said, "they beat us in about every way you can. I didn't think anybody could beat us easily. We were really beaten by an excellent basketball team today. 1 was proud of our effort, but I know we can play, better." That assessment was made in a post-game interview following the nationally-televised contest, when viewers saw Maryland take command by as big a margin as -27 points with 6:33 showing on the clock. . At half-time the Terps led by 1 2 points (43- The World's Greatest Electric Bluearass Band. 1 1 I ( 8 ffi i ? The Mission Mountain Wood Band Wednesday, Feb. 26 o 8 p.m. & a part of dtaSLi A Carolina Union Presentation S lliliiii t HJflUB M mo 8soa 'Ilouthwaterinff Freshly Ground Steakburger $1.95' 3Temptjng 'Temptmgc:!5 Tenderloin Brocnette Served On A Bed Of Rice Pilaf Both lunches include: c All The Crisp Green Salad You Can Make And All The Hot Soup You Can Ladle Aad EJ&ny Other Items ims LIMITED z 1010 Hamilton Rd. At intersection of 54 and 1S-501 g Opsn for Lunch. Mon. thru Fri. 1 1 :33 tm to 2:sa pm 31). their largest spread during the first 20 minute period. Smith said a crucial setback for the Heels after the half was their inability to get a couple of quick buckets" when play resumed. Loc&l boy Luce Maryland's John Lucas was most responsible offensively for stifling any comeback bv the Heels, who trailed the entire first half except at 2-0 and 8-6 in the opening two minutes. The small forward from Durham hit a fastbreak lay-up and a pair of 15-foot jumpers to open the second half and sustain the Maryland dominance. Lucas equaled his career-high 31 points, which he scored last year against Duke, before the final buzzer. ! The all-around mainstay for U NC was 6-9 junior Mitch Kupchak. who. working inside against the leech-like defense of Tom Roy. put in 27 points on 13 of 28 field goals and topped the team rebounding with six grabs. Kupchak's low rebounding total was indicative of Maryland's board control. The visitors gleaned 40 to Carolina's 28. Roy hauled in II. Steve Sheppard. who did an outstanding job coming off the bench mid way the first half, got nine, while Owen Brown had eight. . Poor rebounding also contributed to the Tar Heels week shooting from the floor, a 47.3 percentage, compared to 59.1 for Maryland. "They just limit you to one shot. lamented Smith. UNC scoring For the Heels. Walter Davis, who was averaging 16.9 points going into the game, managed only 1 1 points with a 25 per cent s field goal mark (4-16). Freshman Phil Ford had 1 6 points, while senior backcourter Brad Hoffman notched 12. Kupchak needed more help on the inside, which was effectively bottled up by a hustling man-to-man Tcrp defense, as Tall Tommy (LaGarde) and Big Ed (Stahl) added only two and six points and two and four rebounds, respectively. Concerning the inside inefficiency. Smith also noted. "When we moved Walter Davis closer in. Maryland put Sheppard in the game. I don't know what the score was. but 1 think I made a mistake putting him inside (when Lucas had picked up his second foul). I thought we executed very well. concluded Dricscll: "Like I told the team in there (lockcrroom). 1 don't know how many years I've been coaching, but this has to be one of the best wins. said the former Davidson coach, who came to the College Park school in 1969. "It's great to beat a nationally ranked team on their home court by 20 points." More Kupec Following the Thursday decision by the Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) officials that a one-game hardship case rule would be retained, which denied UNCs Chris Kupec another year of collegiate eligibility, speculation arose concerning his play in non conference games next fall. But. the issue was resolved Friday as ACC Commissioner Bob James stated such participation was illegal under NCAA rules. Terming the case a "grave injustice." UNC Coach Bill Dooley said that any further action would be up to Kupec. A law suit against the ACC is a major possibility. Part-Time and Summer Opportunities in Sales. College Students: No traveling, no door-to-door soliciting. Thorough Training Program. Income commensurate with performance. Career possibilities. Apply between 9:00 and 2:00 601 NML Bldg., 1 43 W. Franklin St., Chapel Hill, N.C. COUNSELORS NEEDED At CAMP MON DAM IN for boys in Western North Carolina. May 28th through June 21st, and June 22nd through August 21 st, , , Actasabiri sailing, swimming, tennis, crafts, horseback riding, hiking, and rock climbing. INTERVIEWS TUESDAY. FEBRUARY 18th at Duke Placement Office. Call 684-8111 for appointment. Our Entire Winter Stock SUITS o SLACKS SPORTSCOATS , LONG SLEEVE DRESS & SPORT SHIRTS TIES o SWEATERS OUTERWEAR m m w . Nva yz .r r a 'Mo m 1 V MOW ThM 1 wwawaaawBB aaaa mmHamm&mmKm&mimm&mz---. 103 E. Frcnklen St. Chspsl Hill OPEN MONDAY THRU SATURDAY 9 TIL 6

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