Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Feb. 19, 1975, edition 1 / Page 5
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Wednesday. Feb. 19, 1875 The Dslly Tar Heel Lucky lottery of ACC fix selections Stephen Nygard, 006, Mary Baggett,0i6 Fletcher Gregory, 042, Floyd Davis, 070 Walter R. Lasley, 075, James Cox, 082, Tommy Flemming, 099, Amy Stephenson, 102, James Akers, 107, Bob Schweitzer, 109; Joe Graves, 121, William Fleming, !3I,: Dennis Ryan, 139, Gaines Hunter, 14 1, Tom Dimmock, A169, Michael Caine, 177, Melainie Adams, 179, Oliver Rogers, 185, Billy .Borwn, 195, Louis Allen, 197; Duane S, Fagg, 216, Michael Hiteshaw, 22, Kalman Stein, 236, Barnett Gunter, 238, John Lowe, 253, Garry Dark, 254, Thomas Zuber, 262, Roger Miller, 265, John Chase, 269, Nancy Lee, 290; Robert Brown, 291, Lawrence Sigmon, 293, Michael Holoman, 301, Grant Vosburgh, 302, Alice Garland, 311, Sid Aldridge, 312, Miles Philbeck, 332, Harold Fried, 333, Keaton Fonvielle, 342, William Plyer, 363; Jeffrey Taylor, 364, James McKinnon, 380, Danny Goolsby, 397, Howard Widis, 400, Anna Bell Jones, 414, Brenda Armstrong, 438, Fred DeVore, 457, Byron Genner, 465, Michael Abernathy, 477, Harriet Overton, 480; William Saunders, 491, Chris Spivey, 495, Joe Deese, 503, Douglas Bald, 509", Gary Woodard, 510, Allan Nanney, 537, David Savage, 550, Bryan Ives, 566, Debbie Rains, 581, Deborah Cline, 601, Ballard Kenneth, 606; Debbie Morrow, 608, J. Micahel Burchette, 61 1, Tommy Holmes, 614, Buddy Davenport, 624, Kendall Troutman. 626, Charles Smith, 628, William Wease, 629, Lonnie Grant, 632, John Boone, 633; Earl Tynstall, 636, Wayne Ross, 642, Jim Wynn, 643, C. William Crone, 653, Joseph Dormagen, 657, James Connelly, 658, James Kirkpatrick, 691, Sally Darnell, 700, Lars Johanson, 710, Michael Sewell, 719; Ken Kennedy, 740, Mike Waltemer, 741, Lloyd Scher, 747, R.W. Fonville, 759, Thomas Eller, 773, William Daughtridge, 820, John Herbert, 827, Michael Buday, 828,. Terry Cox, 83 1 ; Diane Willis, 832, Patsy Peebles, 845, John Gale, 850, Leonard Woodrall, 861, Nancy Kingdon, 873, Kenneth Howard, 882, Don Davenport, 885, J. Gregory Fagan, 037, Christine Boyer, 153, Michael Duffy, 158, Richard Pope, 863. V WORLD'S CHAMPION BAND TONIGHT: ft WEDNESDAY, FEB. 19 The Bacchae Crossword Puzzler ACROSS 2 Confederate general 3 Provide crew 4 Insects 5 Kind of fabric 6 Printer's measure 7 Perform 8 Presentation 9 Expert 10 Ceremony 11 Heavenly body 16 Welcomes 20 Damp 22 Indefinite arti cle 23 Portico 24 Masticate 25 Note of scale 26 Physician (colloq.) 30 Puzzles 32 Monster 33 Act 36 Affirmative 38 Law 1 Charity 5 9 Meadows Title of respect abbr.) 12 Jump 13 Distance measure 14 River island 15 Kindly 17 Preposition 18 Music: as written 19 Traced 21 Liquid 23 Filtered 27 Compass point 28 At that place 29 Cover 31 Land measure 34 Faroe Is lands whirl wind 35 Pigpen 37 Race of let tuce 39 Earth god dess 40 Shoemaker's tool 42 Ocean 44 Retail es tablishment 46 Near 48 Marked by lines 50 Locations 53 Civil injury 54 Emmet 55 Note of scale 57 Arrogates 61 Observe 62 Burden 64 Ripped 65 Pronoun 66 Sagacious 67 Pitcher DOWN 1 Priest's vestment - . : ' John Down in Florida right now, a group of men are cleaning lockerrooms and mowing dew-covered grass. They are working in places like Winter Haven, Bradenton, West Palm Beach, and St. Petersburg. The grass areas are diamond-shaped and are fringed by hard-packed clay. What they are doing in the relative warmth of February is preparing for the major league baseball season. That's right, major league baseball already. By March baseball games will be going on in the Grapefruit League of Florida. . By April the teams will be narrowed down to the starting players. Opening day of the season will be played in the cold, damp weather of late winter in cities like Boston, New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, and Minneapolis-St. Paul. .' And then it is upon us. Six full months of day-in and day-out baseball. Spring training Spring training means a good many things. It means baseball cards strong with the scent of sharp-cracking bubble gum. This year it means Hank Aaron in a Milwaukee Brewer uniform. It is questions unanswered, and a certain joy in the fact that questions can be asked at all. Joy that the Atlanta Braves are still in the pennant race, simply because the pennant race hasn't begun. Still, spring training, with all its hope and rebirth, is a reminder that major league baseball is too long. Six months of baseball is just too much for anyone to take but the most avid fan. ' Shorter season ; A solution rests in shortening the season. A feasible beginning "time for the regular baseball season is early in May. Spring training could begin in Florida around mid to late March. The finish of the baseball season, could be mid -September instead of early October. UNION GROVE. N.C. 1972 912:30 $1 cover charge at door Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle 41 Second of two 43 Unit of Siamese cur rency 45 Stamp of ap proval 47 Symbol for tellurium 49 Incite to ac tion 50 Band worn around waist 51 Arrow poison , 52 Sluggish 56 Southern blackbird 58 Quarrel 59 Prefix: before 60 Weight of In dia 63 Pronoun Baseball already? I 9 4'' Rr y 1 f? It ' 1. - . , . I L"i Ji M M ilium i in I tl ' 'lAlftlElAl IfTaTLTli I Ail IE r IlTe ANf IA l e g iSlTlR! fPlE ST I Tell Dg lom JP Sf tO GIRIe pft1p3lE e r 2ffiM3E IE 3 s l7 attOM aEOIE - lElAlRlNficillpMl IS IN 9gallbf lAIRfels! fTlAIS h 3 U r:i5 I6 I7 I8 y-'i9 10 n r- -rr. Tt 75 2 23 24 25 26 27 V 28" - "29 30"IT 32 3X ""I13"-36 MZ-EZZ 50 Jl 53 53 P&M " 38 60 61 362 63 Ditr. by United Feature Syndicate. Inc. Z"I9 Dunlap The results of this shortening would provide the following beneficial aspects: with a shorter season the races for the pennants would be more exciting, more pressure-filled, and hopefully closer. Fan interest would be greater, average attendance higher, and finally the shorter season would keep baseball from conflicting too much with football. At this point in time the length of baseball combined with how poorly the sport comes across on television, is causing an incredible amount of apathy from the average sports fan. The sad part of all this is that baseball deserves better. The game can be exciting as well as complex. The sport is one to be watched in person, not on television. But until the major league season is shortened, many are going to continue to feel apathy for a sport that is still alive and enjoyable. If baseball is shortened, like all pro sports should be, 4hen maybe it will regain the popularity it deserves. JOB-GETTING RESUME SETS ' One Page - Your Typing 100 printed copies 6 100 printed envelopes... 55. 75 2-dav service Retyped on IBM Composer... $6.9 5 INST ACOPY (over the Zoomfl C9m?r PrsnHlin ft Cgjymfra wts 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. Maynard Ferguson & his Orchestra! Thursday, February 27, 8p-m.MemoriaI Hall $2 A. ,VX A Carolina Union presentation Wednesdays And Thursdays Only! All the prime ribs TOP CM MTi PLUS ALL THE SALAD YOU CAN T.IAKE PLUS A PITCHER OF BEER urrn your heal A i LIMITED ,1010 Hamilton Road. At the Intersection of Hwy. 54 and Hwy. 1 5-501 . Open For Lunch Mon. thru Fri. . ' 11:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m." ' T7 lar Why UNC head basketball coach Dean Smith called his team's 87-75 victory over Virginia Tech, (VPI) "one of the best games we've played all season." may not be clearly evident. Afterall, the. Gobblers are unranked nationally and often overshadowed by their fellow Virginians at Charlottesville, who UNC meets this Saturday in the first of three remaining conference games. But the fact is: winning in Blacksburg, Va. is difficult amid the cup-throwing, loud VPI following that has seen its Gobblers, now 15 8, lose only twice at home this season, to South Carolina and Alabama, each by four points. For Carolina to get the win, which gives it UNC .; fences Duke by Grant Vosburgh Sports Writer The UNC-Duke rivalry extends, into fencing tonight as the Blue Devils visit Carmichael Auditorium. Although the women's match has been canceled, an exciting men's confrontation is in store. Carolina is tuning up for the Atlantic Coast Conference tournament, but has been a bit flat in its last two conference outings. As for Duke, well, as in basketball and football, you always discount records and reputations when they face the Tar Heels. Duke always fences better against us," graduate assistant Bill Shipman explained. "They fence so hard and so aggressive that they fence better than they are. The year before last, they gave us the only close home meet in the last two years by an ACC & a part of 'cEa Ff wwm vvr top Gobb renewed confidence after last Saturday's 22 point thrashing by nationally third-ranked Maryland, it took a masterful direction of the four-corners by freshman Phil Ford, with 10.45 left in the game. After leading 53-47 at half, the Tar Heels see-sawed to a 65-57 score before going into the spread offense, which allowed them to outscore the aggressive VPI hosts 15-9 during the next eight minutes. Junior Mitch Kupchak led the Heels, who outrebounded VPI 40-32, with 24 points and 15 rebounds. Walter Davis shut off the potent scoring of another Davis, Russell Davis, who got only four points, while Walter had 14. Ford added 14 points and seven assists. opponent." Shipman cited Duke's strength in foilsman Carl Meyer and epeeist Charlie King. "They have no one real outstanding," he said, "but they don't have any patsies, either." Concerning Carolina's recent performances, which Coach Ron Miller called the worst of the season, Shipman said, "I think that if we fence as well as we can, we'll win 20-7." The first bout gets underway at 7 p.m. A big crowd is expected. This weekend, a North Carolina amateur fencing tournament will begin at Woollen Gym Friday as the state's best epeeists meet. r anus EXTRA LARGE PITCHER mrah Mori, Tues. Wed. 4-4 5-6:30 TA K E A" BRIE A EC. Dance Music Southern Swamp TOWN HALL O ONLY 500 before 9 p.m. CAROLINA STUDENTS PREFER 'CAROLINA COPY CENTER COPIES PQBOTQ OT8.G VP 17AB Wo Guarcmtoo Quality, Spood and Low Prico EASTGATE SHOPRNO CCNTd CHAFfl "The World's Greatest Electric Bluegrass Band." : 'tr? flM ! L The Mission Mountain Wood Band Wednesday, Feb. 26 0 8 p.m. luiemoriai riaii rrr A Carolina if 1 fr3 If. "TPfesentation I i 1 u For the Gobblers, who fell behind early by 13 points and got its closest at 27-28. guard Larry Cooke tallied 26 points, including the Gobblers' first 12. Coach Smith praised Ford's four-comer execution, the defensive games of Kupchak on the boards and Davis on Davis and the team's offensive first-half movement, which battled head coach Don DeVoe's sticky Gobbler defense. The 12-point UNC victory was aljo the biggest home loss margin for the Virginia Tech team since N.C. State beat them 78-63 during the 1969-70 season. This Week's Special: Back-Number Literary Magazines and Learned Journals All sorts of little gems are hidden here in scholarly wrappers. Better stop in and see if there is one in your field. ho Old Dca!i Corner 137 A EAST ROSEMARY STREET OPPOSITE NCNB PLAZA CHAPEL HILL. N.C27SI4 SPECIAL PIZZA OF BEER H ..WE Dv &TH URS. All Kinds: Country Boogie One stop for all your printing and office supply needs. CAROLINA COPY CENTER AND OFFICE SUPPLY INC. H1L HJ-2ZZ5 . Morv-frL 8S0 & if - lit A ' I A PA fk a part
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Feb. 19, 1975, edition 1
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