THE DAILY TAR HEEL November 12, 1970 As Heels Shock Maryland Cf screen for the ftrsi t"re A musical journey into the soul of a nation 6 rm McKfieeoe Says ero Page Four Blase,' by Lfcnid Zucchino Sports Writer ACC soccer h:itory repeated itself Monday afternoon in College- Park when Carolina upset perennial league kingpin Maryland, 3-2, thereby handing the Terps only their second conference defeat since the ACC was formed in 1952. It was the Tar Heels who tagged Maryland with its first ACC loss, as they burned the Terps, 2-1, last year, depriving Maryland of the league crown for the first time in history. Senior inside forward McKay McKinnon was by far the Terp's biggest pain Monday, as he scored all three Tar Heel goals, two of which came on assists from fullback' Tim Morse and forward Dave Feffer. McKinnon, a zoology major from Wadesboro, was elated over the Carolina win. "It would be superflous to say that I'm extremely excited he said, 'it was a great thrill for all of us and a big part of our season in that it made up for a lot of our previous disappointments." McKinnon was referring to Carolina's disappointing I -12 conference record, which includes crucial ties with N'.C. State and Clemson. Only against Maryland, he believes, did the Tar Heels finally put everything together. "Our team has the potential to be truly great, and against Maryland we reached that potential," he explained. "We had mediocre efforts against State and Clemson, so it was really satisfying to accomplish all this with a concentrated effort by everyone." The question that immediately comes to most people's minds is how the Tar Heels, who have had only so so conference records the past two seasons, have been able to knock off the Terps, while other teams with better ACC slates have not. McKinnon, who was a two-year soccer Ietterman at New Hampshire's Phillips txeter Academy, offered his explanation of this phenomenon. "Since we know Maryland is such a fine team, we realize that a great effort is necessary to beat them. As a result, we respond with our best efforts when playing them." McKinnon, who has started at forward for the Tar Heels since his sophomore year, was somewhat perplexed by the fact that Maryland was not quite as revenge-minded as Carolina had anticipated. "They were pretty blase against us last year, so this year we naturally expected them to really come out after us. For some reason they didn't, and an inspired team effort on our part was what beat them." Since he had scored only once prior to Monday's game, McKinnon was understandably a bit surprised and pleased with his three goals against Maryland. "Some days are just made to be like I a. fwi rr) I VARSITY I I L cm i tun I Starts Thursday jjztvnnE Bazas nm be SGDCHCsEJCIDuTD V. . . and he could care less who he hurts along the QlfFFElOIIAnD way! A DECIDEDLY DIFFERENT EXPERIENCE IN LOVE c.DGRA BRYAN-MIL ANGERS i ANN HOIlGNwY auy graham (G) to work 10 hours per week at home, creative letters for a company. WANTED Housewife 5 to anytime during the week; to write Please call 942-5128. that." he conceded. "I hadn't lurl n eood day before that, so I was due. A lot of it can be attributed to good luck and simply being in the right place at the right time." Looking back over the nearly completed 1970 schedule. McKinnon views the season as a success for both himself in particular and the Tar Heels in general. "Although 1 came out late for the team, I feel that this has been a good year for me. The team has been successful and although there have been many sacrifices, they've been worth making. I've enjoyed it tremendously." The Tar Heels will close out their season Friday in Durham against Duke and McKinnon believes that the Maryland win greatly enhances Carolina's chances of stopping the Blue Devils, who have whipped UNC the past two years. "Last year they caught us still thinking about our win over Maryland, and the year before we were concerned with a possible NCAA bid and were caught looking ahead," McKinnon revealed. "They won't catch us doing that this year. We'll be ready." You can bet your Duke football ticket on that. pi : 1 l V v ,-f C -P ft i - Y i " A --l! In color - -v 1 s Cliff Richard pcputar star Sirgs s t Raph Carrrtcrae! songs World Wde P'Ct jres Presents n tla nlnl OS Cliff Barrows FREE! ' a sight and sound experience 7:30 Great Hall Mon. Nov. 16 -TP ...... . ...... ..f.Nv.:.:.s:'a.M'x:': n:t. 5? HgWHAT EVER IT TAKES COGGIN GIVES I COGGIN PONTIAC I IM mm irs tin fTT niujy (ao mm m A FUNNY MOVIE 1 WE ARE. OPEN THURSDAY& FRIDAY EVENINGS TILL 9P.M. 4018 Durham-Chapel Hill Blvd. Chapel Hill-929-4900 Durham-489-6531 CROSSWORD PUZZLE Answer to Yesterday's Puzzle ACROSS 8-Nerve network 1-High 9-Waivingthe mountain privilege 4-Liquid measure of rank 9-Man's nickname 10-Girl's name 12- Armed conflict 11-Permit 13- 0ld-womanish 19-Faroe Islands 14- Poem whirlwind 15- TheseIf 21-Gaseous 16 Recess in a shore element 17- Mans nickname 22-Pronoun 18- Food fish 23-Pope's , 24-Number Additional 2S-Hold on 24- Prefix: three property 25- Sl.ppery (p.) I"cer0fti2a 27-Syrr.bol 29- Footlike part for 30- Place in position yttrium 31- Ash-colored 29-Through liPnse?uent,yL. 30-Fondle 34 Place for worship 32-Rabbit ni gnpHt al r i th ie A P AtJ l a d l e , R o. e. BlA R C E A5jE R HDL EAsn R A P S M E Wp 5APDORA P.O.R PC T O P IP A M JLX L A PT P A rTfj V ROTlJAP5EVEN ERRSDW A N j W E N T Z A I P JC AMEL lZ" SPITE 5UM ARVEL J- "t O T Pj" R wasljs1lm p1eLjta1p NOW SHQVVING! SHOWS: 1:10-3:10-5:10 GROSS iPANTYMAI Carolina Biki J 144 for $288 or M 1 cneap and get (still only $2) a T OUT THE one Jcall 967-5161 for delivery or write the Pa 35-Tiny amount 35-Abstract being 38- lnheritor 39- Witty remark 40- Handle 41- Atnotime , 43- Wooden pin 44- Mouotain in Crete 46-Dropsy 48-Possessive pronoun 51 Outfit 52- Ventilated 53- Negative 54- Dutch town 55 Endures 56-Tibetan gazelle DOWN 1-Reverence 2 Fall behind 3- Delay 4- Placed 5- Hostelry 6- Masonic doorkeepers 7'Fra grant oleoresln 33-Strike 34- Exclamation 35- Shipworms 37-A continent (abbr.) 39- Means 40- Three-toed sloth 42-Meat of calf 43- Novelties 44- Man's nickname 45- Performed 47-Encountered 49- Also 50- Music: as written 1 2 "4 5 6 7 8 p$9 0 " 15 Xl7 22 2 23 29 30 1 IiLi!ll 54 1 1 Wk5 1 1 j 1 mF Back to school news for all Students. Coggin Pontlac would like to welcome you to this area and invite you to visit out large up-to-date Service Department where we offer the finest and most complete Automotive Service on any make of automobile with Factory Trained Technicians. We also offer a large fenced area ,for automobile storage. Hours of operation are from 7:30 to 5:3d 8k Monday through Friday. MS Tops Bottoms Other Gems i c Good Sounds 14954 E. Franklin St. Basement Town & Campus . i i KOI D EXPERT CLEANING MINOR-MAJOR REPAIR FACTORY TRAINED REPAIRMEN REASONABLE PRICES FREE ESTIMATES 250 S-R GIVE YOUR MACHINE A CHECK-UP STUDENT STORES "ON CAMPUS" TODAY -8:30-11:00 P.M. Fish & Chips THIS with Mug of Beer or Cider qq 1 11 wir. oy cinuea t eature Syndicate, Inc. IZ V V w I I H -iVI ' 1 AmwYI I I AH.' A LOCAL RE51PEMT... WX7 't i " ! ' " I 2 z fi tl "3 i-T I f TO THINE OWM WIFE BE 1 I ' I is... 291 (07 ANEW ONE BY CLAPTON, DUANE AND CO. ' ERIC ALLMAN, LIST PRICE $10.00 OUR PRICE $6.80 who's CO? 456 W. Franklin Chapel Hill (Under Big Yellow) SD2-704 2LPSel: LAYLA OEREK AAJDTHE. D0MIAJ0S Eric Clapton Jim Gordon Bobby MiiHdch Carl RgcJIs Duo'ns Allmon I

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view