1 ) i.'U THE DAILY TAR HEEL Saturday, October 31, 1970 Paqe Two t t ; 1 After Judge's. Decision vctioaealysi J By Mark Khicker Sports Writer Now ihjt Judge Mattocks is no longer on the lootbali team, the great psychoanalysis is in full swing. Students in Political Science 95-A are thinking. "Did Dootey kick him off for what he siid in here last week?." Fans in Kencn Stadium today will he thinking, "What ever made him give up such an opportunity like this?" And there are surely many well-heeled alumni that arc wondenng. "What i it about Chapel Hill nowadays that would take a respectful boy like that and turn him into a black militant?" Yet the only thing that counts is what Judge Mattocks himself is thinking. And a lot of people don't care anymore, because they only looked -A him as a football player. Mattocks was an all-conference defensive end last year, one of the most spectacular sophomores in ACC history. The Judge rose to the occasion at Virginia to throw Cavalier backs for 46 yards in losses. lie received mention in All-America balloting, and stud-.nl and alumni looked to him and Don NkCauley to lead the Heels out of the wilderness this fall. Judge also gained renown this winter as a fearsome intramural basketball pki'r- ,. , In this season's first game. Kentucky put two men on Mattocks to limit his effectiveness. Yet he continued to dens opposing runners an easy route to the sidelines, which is the main function of a defensive end anyway. The first public indication that Mattocks was placing more impoitance on other things than football came last week in Political Science 5-A, when he urged blacks to "get themselves together" in a sepratist movement. Split end Ricky Lanier said that the coaches had not reprimanded Mattocks for his statements. Coach Bill Dooley denied even knowing about the impromptu speech. Mattocks knew he wasn't in the starting lineup today, because of two curfew violations. But any theory concerning why Judge left the team is rather absurd at this noint. p DTH Classified LOST: One pet rogue crocodile in University Lake vicinity. Answers to "Spot." Scared s less cf orangatangs. Call Rock in Durham 286-1 180 if found (not collect). Would like to get rid of 4 Chicago concert. 942-4840. tickets to first FOR RENT Efficiency apartments 3 minutes from campus single male only furnished and utilities except gas. Telephone 942-4075. Sheffield Farms Riding School. Hunt seat equitation and jumping. Special group rates for adult beginners. Located outside Chapel Hill. Call Durham 489-4977. COMPUTER DATING Meet your ideal date. Special introductory price for this area: Sophisticated matching techniques. Write: National Cybernetics, Box 221, Durham, N. C. 27702. FIAT 124 SPYDER 1 9 6 8 5 Speed, new tires, brakes, too. Excellent condition throughout and very reasonably priced. Purchased Sept. 1968. Call 968-8842 mornings and nights. WANTED: Male .to take up lease in Granville Towers West. Please call 929-6228 after 8. STUDENTS Europe for Christmas, Easter or Summer" Employment opportunities, charter flights, discounts. Write for information ( air mail). Anglo America Association, 60 A Pyle Street, Newport, I. W., England. Waitresses, dishwashers, and cook ( particularly lunch) needed. Full or part time. Start immediately. Apply Golden West Steaks 104 S. Estes Drive. POETRY WANTED for cooperative poetry anthology. Please include stamped, self-addressed envelope. Sent to: Idlewild Press, 18 07 East Olympic Blvd., Los Angeles, Calif. 90021. Did you get your free UNC desk blotter1 Pick up at Student Stores, Daniels Bldg. SINGLE STUDENTS! Meet more members of the opposite sex through NDS. Why date one when you can date ten' All dates in Chapel Hill. Most dates with UNC students. Details will be sent in plain unmarked envelope. For free information write: Nationwide Dating Service, P. O. Box 77346, Atlanta, Ga. 30309. Tired of Walking? FOR LOW COST WHEELS . . . 0. f ' i ' "" ' "3 " s - i HONDA - BMW - BULTACO - KAWASAKI 90 CC MODELS from $345 LARGEST SELECTION IN TRIANGLE AREA 505 N. Mangum St. DURHAM - 688-7525 Open Mon.-Fri., 9-9 Sat., 9-6 PROFESSIONAL SERVICE - OUR SPECIALTY .Begins It's Now Or Never For UNC By AI Thomas Lanier, one of Mattocks closest associates, really doesn't know either. -Til never sjy that Judge quit the team-you'll never hear me say that." said Lanier Thursday night in his room m fchnnghaus. "But I know that there was nothing outside of football involved. When you get tired of the game and lose your desire for , it. the right thing to do is stop playing. I mean, that's his preogative. isn't it?" . Lanier went on to say that Mattocks had always been very quiet. "He has never whooped it up much." he said. It is not the easiest thing in the world to be a black college athlete, especially in the South. When he makes a mistake, he draws the boos like a magnet; to gain the cheers he must be consistently sensational, which Mattocks was last year. Although Lanier led the Heels to three victories while filling in at quarterback last season, his 678-yard total offense total was forgotten by many of the fans who vilified his hell-for-leather style of running. Maybe Mattocks could see the same thing happening to him some day. Maybe, in the quest to get his people together, he had to get himself together first. It now or never tor the lr HeeK An addition to their three-came losing skid today would crush even the vacki ;tout-hearted Carolina loyalist. With thousands of homecoming fans expected to flood the already rain-drenched Kenan Stadium, a performance by the Tar Heels similar to their last three would end any hope they may have of picking themselves up and salvaging the season. UNCs loss to South Carolina was unfortunate but understandable. CNC"s loss to Tulane was more bitter, especially since the Tar Heels actually outplayed the Green Waves. Last week's loss to Wake Forest raised serious doubts about the Tar Heel team. A loss to Virginia would confirm those doubts. Today's game is just that important. The Tar Heels have the talent and ability to blast the Cavaliers back to Virginia, but whether the Tar Heels can regroup and make use of that talent is questionable. Carolina, on paper, has too much talent for Virginia to even come close, but events of the last several weeks-UNC losing three in a row and Virginia winning three in a row have brought the two teams statistically close together. UNC is scoring at an average of 21.9 points a game; Virginia is scoring 20.1 points a game. UNC is allowing the opposition 15.7 points a game; Virginia is Booters Drop 2-1 Contest In Rain al!vu m? the opposition 15.3 points a came. I'M in racking t:p Jrv6 yards j came offensively: Virginia is averaging 310.1 yards a came. The Cavaliers" ruin drjwbjck fodjv may be the running same, eecuny it -he I'lupel 1UU monsoon continue. The Tar Hee's hold an jverage of 100 vards rushing a game more than the Cavaliers, with Virginia's main offensive strength coming from Bill Troup's passing. No football player has been able to stop Carolina's Don McCauley. and it's doubtful even a pouring rain can do it. The Tar Heels need a win today more than they have needed any other one this year, and even with defensive end Judge Mattocks having quit the team, the Tar Heels should be happy with the outcome. Other Games A battle being waged approximately 10 miles from here will be attracting the most attention in this area today, with a strong-running Georgia Tech team trying to end Duke's three-game win skein. A win foi the Blue Devils over independent Tech. besides enhancing their chances for a bowl bid, would probably propel the Blue Devils into a position among the nation's top 20 teams. Duke will, however, have a tough time coming out on top. In other games involving ACC teams today, Wake Forest will travel to meet Tennessee while State tangles with Kentucky. The IVeaeons. holding a tour game win streak and second place in the conference, have confidence enough for thetr game today but whether they have enouch ability is doubtful. Tennessee ss strong, has a spot among the nation's top 10. and should be able to easily J;Jd another notch in the Southeastern Conference's win ledger over ACC teams. State, while having more of a chance to walk away victorious trun Wake Forest, may also be facing a bruising experience. Kentucky is having a sporadic war. sporting a win over powerful Kansas State but failing to whip anyone else. The Wildcats lost to Carolina in the rirst game of the year, beat Kansas State in the second, and then proceeded to lose five in a row. State began the year miserably with losses to Richmond and Carolina, but has shown enough power recently to beat Kentucky-if Kentucky is having one of its off-days. Lvidently. the Wildcats are having enough off-slays for tarl L'dwards to be seriously thinking about winning. No matter what the outcome of today's games, however, me ACC standings will change little. At this time next week. Duke will still be the No. I team invthe conference. Wake Forest will still be in second, and all the rest w ill be fighting for "respectable" records, with slight and quickly fading hopes for tht ACC championship. by David Zucchino Sports Writer East Stroudsberg struck for two lightning second quarter scores yesterday to escape with a narrow 2-1 decision over a soggy Tar Heel soccer squad in a game which saw a steady downpour turn Fetzer Field into a slippery, miserable quagmire and transform soccer players into sliding acrobats. The Warriors took advantage of two crucial Tar Heel slip-ups to deal Carolina its second loss of the season. The first occured with 6:50 gone in the second period. Two Tar Heel fullbacks and UNC goalie Tim Haigh lost their footing in the treacherous mud and Warrior forward Dale Marsh quickly slapped the ball into the unattended goal. East Stroudsberg scored-what proved to be the decisive goal just two minutes later as forward George Kazakos caught the far Heel defenders again floundering in the slime and rolled in a second uncontested score. The Tar Heels nearly ran the Warriors off the field in the game's opening minutes, as they drove through the Stroudsberg defense almost at will. Center forward Louis Bush put Carolina on the scoreboard with only 7:50 elapsed in the contest as he slipped expertly through a crowd of uniforms and smacked a Dan Arial assist past the surprised Warrior goalie. The Tar Heels were unable to catch the Stroudsberg defenders out of position again, however, and as a result were shutout for the remainder of the first half. Both the rain and the Tar Heels returned with renewed vigor in the second half, as Carolina's defense stiffened noticeably. The Tar Heel attack also showed new life, maintaining consistent pressure on the Warrior . defense with 15 second half shots, but Stroudsberg goalie Bob Rigby responded with a magnificent performance and Carolina was kept at bay. The Tar Heels .seemed to have tied the match with less -than one minute remaining in the game as Bush scored what everyone but. the referee thought, was Lou's second goal of the contest. The official, however, had spotted Tar Heel forward Dave Feffer offside, and the score was nullified. - Coach Marvin Allen was visibly upset by the call, but he refused to blame the officials for his team's loss. "Those kind of things just happen," he stated, referring to the call. "It was a tough game to lose, but East Stroudsberg simply beat us. I thought we played extremely well during the second half, but the ball just couldn't find its way to the net." ZlL YORKTOWNE 5Lfe PRESENTS EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT 11:45 P.M. THE FALL FILM FESTIVALS OF SCREEN CLASSICS October 31 THE MARX BROTHERS with Lucille Ball - A 1938 Release Room Service if Advance Tickets Now on Sale! ONLY SHOWING! 1 iwikWiuiiv -r MBMI W IIIIMmUHHIHIIini ! m mm I r All Seats $1.50 Phone 89-2327 Ti rom long to longest i ?$v-. MA deeply moving memoir of self-discovery" Sluds Terkel "This I:ook in the collective biography o( the generation that was horn on the New Frontier, baptized on the Mississippi Delta, and educated by Vietnam. This overpowering book explains why so many of the best-educated young Americans choose to think of themselves as un Americans. Jack Newfield "His honesty, like his uncommonly grace ful prose, disarms us." The New York Times "The most disturbing book for the estab lishment to contemplate.' St. Louis Post-Dispatch "Here -is a book with a soul." Philadelphia Bulletin "Ought to be read by everyone under 10." Book Wetk "The rjiiitG man'! SOUL ON ICE" The Washington Monthly The people 1 trust are those who view life as a constant dialogue with experience, not an attempt to shape ideas so that they fit intellectual abstractions, or to manipulate events so that they suit professional ambi tions." So writes Paul Cowan in this brutally honest and deeply personal political auto biography. In it, he tells about his experi ences at Harvard, in Israel, in Mississippi during the summer of 1964, with the Peace Corps, and how these experiences caused him, as he says, "to persist in redefining my loyalties through actions: to call myself an un-American (citizen of the world), to be willing to fight against my own government whenever that is necessary." A respt.iMhle radical statement that tells it like it was and is. THE MAKING 0FAI1 Un-AMEniOAII by Paul Cowan A DELTA BOOK $2.65 at your bookstore ttntt ' ""I,""""r 11111 ' ri n J ' No matter how long or how short your eyelashes are, they can only improve with Maybelline Ultra Lash Mascara. Because Ultra Lash lengthens and thickens each lash with every stroke. It works with a special formula hidden deep inside the brush that comes out only when it strokes your lash. Ultra Lash darkens and curls lashes. Separates them, too. No matting. No messy fibers. So why settle for long when you can have long, longer . . . longest lashes with Ultra Lash Mascara from Mayb!une. The finest in eye make-up, yet sensibly priced. 1 h V J - - r-t S t w