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Monday, November 8, 1971
Vol. 80, No. 59
Gridders take
ead.
in
r wim
e
by Mark Whicker
Carolma-C'lemvon wa-. v i a-, the v :r
ACC '.howdown of 19"! . 'y A si! the
'f ig'ers did Saturday afterr.-.-' r. wa. d.'.w
up.
By hull time the 7a: M-.-.-i . hid rolled
up soms fanciful '.tutr-.'i.s 20-2 .r. 'hr-.t
downs, 1 HO V, in rush:-.;' a.-dairc.
141 29 m passing va:J-: a: i v the
end of the veeo.nd quarter 'he Heel, ha J
13 points on their w ay to a -.:.tory whuh
pave them the Atlantic Coa-.t Cor.tererue
lead.
In fad, the final '-'re a, the nv.:
unimpressive Carolina statisti.. the
2o 13 tally did not begin " re fie. t ? he
difference between th- two teams.
Aided by the surprise mo-, e '1 Lewis
J .iley to tailback (Ike Oglesby gamed
B
lies
despite
by A I Thomas
Spirts Writer
The scene was strangely familiar in
Ca r in l c h a e 1 Auditorium Saturday
at ternoon.
All-American Hill ChamberLun was
coolly manipulating the basketball and
following the act by connecting on
smooth, artful jump shots.
All-American Dennis Wuycik was busy
working under the basket for Larry
Miller-type lay-ups and deftly swishing
outside jumpers.
deorge Karl was literally all over the
court despite a bothersome back injury,
leading the attack and diving for the ball.
Steve Pre vis was beaming with
confidence, directing the offense and
B
j '
i IMw-7
r -4e t f
f
Robert McAdoo scores iw'0 his ,s points in the Blue-White game, held Saturday
in Carmichael Auditorium. yAoo led Blue scoring. See related stories and photos,
page 3. (Staff photo by ciiff?,mson
HilklDOFoiigli may lose knit mill.
Whittaker Knittin-,M:1!s s
.......i.iiti-i.. -iit.irr. : sites for
now
the
i..-.ti.sn nf :i ;i (,- jiLion dyeing and
finishing plant wh:cas to Kvated
near Hillsborough. .;0rJ? to company
president Richard J11-
The apparent dIS1on not to lo.atc in
Oranec ("ountv w 5naJt JtKr t!K' Board
of County ( "loners- Thursday
voted against f-'J,,ne 5(7.000 for
sewer lines to t!"int-
Opposition l,u" p!j!lt "ncerned the
volume of ld hc Proposed plant
would discllai
Countv oarJ Chairman H.irvev
Bennet a;J; eposes t!ie location of
- , ,--!s o" o'" nlav m the to-rth
q 'he Metis ?a:r.ed 29 " yaris .r.
iVj, o U ' -J
pjj Miller. h:s rr.md and arm both as
harp as ever, h.t 12 of 19 pas,es for I "5
-'d'-
Mv.-.e-.er. fAo se.or.d-half pa, : .
( -.v-,rs Johr. M.Makm mat.hed the
Tar Heel tou.hds.wn output. Ki.ker Ken
f ry.;r.. h:s hand bandaged heavily after
r reakir.g a hone while playing defensive
tj.kle in pra.tLe. broke a Carolina record
Aith lour field goals to make the
difference.
7 he Heel defense was so persistent
that riot one did golden toe FdJ.e
Seieler. who has kicked 62-yard field
goals under pressure in practi.e before,
get within sight of the posts in the first
h !
The 7 :gers did end up with 14 :ir--.t
defeat
Whites
Cham
I
ball-hawking to the obvious discomfort of
'he opposition.
The Blues beat the Whites Hi -73, but
the real interest was in the individual and
team performances, not the final score.
With the Tar Heels ranked as high as
second in the nation in several pre-season
polls, the interest was more intense than
ever.
Besides the "regulars" whom Carolina
fans have come to know during recent
successful years, there were others on the
hardwood court demonstrating unusual
basketball prowess and pleasing not only
the fans but head coach Dean Smith as
well.
Junior transfer Robert McAdoo,
standing 6-10 barefooted, was a
towering and reassuring figure around the
the Whittaker mill or any other "wet
industry" in the Hillsborough area.
At the special meeting of the board
Thursday night, he cited a report from
Arthur Cooper, assistant secretary for
resource management in the State
Department of Natural and I conomic
Resources.
Cooper's report said. "Our assessment
ot available water resources strongly
suggests that Hillsborough industrial
development m the future not include the
turther addition ot wet industry alter the
arrival of Whittaker."
Th.
report also reco: mend
uCu i
hat
a ( ar
w rat
The Ta: 1H
j . . e .
' M.
T w
- - ' -; ? . i ( ' j. , - " ' - : r.v.d
goa.. tro.T; ar-
Ir. the se. r.d p- .r hit b.'.'.
S.gler with a 25-ard pas, ar.d Car.h-.a
c ,t a f:rt do a.-; .n the f;-.e t.
later. Miller ther. :-::.uled t . Jete-..-.e
end Bruce Dec U;.
A pa- to bar! Bethea c : ('-r,l;r.- t
ti,'. . - w - . . I . . - . s- : -
moved the HeeS lo:... C.h I V: D "".'! e"
decided to g, for mv. and Jet! Siepe
i t
C!enw,n
r.ted and Ro-t ( ulbreth
de a hrhhunt 5-.urd ichd wn
0
enain
basket. He netted IS points to lea d the
Blues in scorim:.
Sophomore Bobby J,
powering his wa f'r
es Ma
ebciunds
and
blocking shots, issuing a warning to
varsity regulars that he did not intend to
p e r f o r m like an i n e x p e r i e n c e d
sophomore.
Freshman Ld Stalil displayed his
potential, collecting 10 points and leading
all rebounders with 10.
In the game itself, the Blues, including
Karl, Wuycik. McAdoo, Jones and Stahl,
jumped to a quick lead over the Whites,
including Chamberlain, Previs, Billy
Chambers, Don Washington and Don
Johnston.
By the time the first half was
approaching a close the Blues darted to a
commanding 46-25 advantage on a basket
by Stahl.
The margin at half time was trimmed
to 49-33, but assistant coach John
Lotz's Blues seemed well on their way to
running Freshman coach Bill Gutliridge
and his White team out of Carmichael.
After a short intermission - five
minutes - the momentum suddenly
changed. Now the Whites were the ones
getting all the breaks.
Chamberlain led the charge, garnering
numerous assists and consistently riddling
the basket with his patented turn-around
jump shots.
The Blues began to wilt under the
pressure, and with 11 minutes remaining
the Whites had moved to within seven
points at 59- 52.
The margin staved from nine to twelve
points for almost three minutes, with the
two squads exchanging baskets and foul
shots.
Slowly, methodically, the Blues began
rebuilding their lead. The Whites had
been just too far behind to catch up.
With a little over three and one-half
minutes remaining. Chambers cut the
Blues' lead from 16 to 14 points. When
Chambers went up for the shot, however,
Karl suddenly crashed to the floor.
Obviously in pain. Karl was helped off
the court and into the dressing room.
The coaches later calmed fears of a
re-injury to his back, an ankle injury,
saying Karl had suffered a charlie horse.
The final three minutes of the battle
were little different than the preceeding
three, with the Blues holding on to the
remnants of their first half lead.
Chamberlain, voted "most valuable
player" in the National Invitational
Tournament last year, was high scorer
w ith 32 points.
TODAY: clear, windy and cold:
highs in the law to mid 40"s: lows
in the mid 20: probability of
precipitation near zero.
Whittaker be limited to 250.000
of discharge per d.
HilNborouc:
enlarged -ewer treatment riant
is
approved by the State Department of
Natural and L: conomic Resources.
The state agency would also "carefully
monitor" the volume and quality ot
discharge from the Hillsborough
treatment plant. the report sJK.
The report also said "there must be an
understanding between the county and
the town and Whittaker that curtailment
or interruption could be necessary in
order to avoid a municipal treatment
plant discharge that would violate the
r..k. and Sigler
Kre.es.
T. m:r. Ktr.d::k then hit McMk.r.
w ith a ;0-ider ar.d the Tigers sa
( r"- ''- f"st time. Wh.it
the sua. the didn t like. Terry Tal;r
rr.-mr'!;. intercepted a Kendrick pass
Miller t t- the air again, hitting
Bethea ,n.e and Jrhr.r.y Cowel! twice.
On- the cisl'.t. Miller relied cut. waved
Bethea -d Siglcr deeper into the end
i ne .rn.d ran tor the overdue touchdown,
with 45 seconds left.
Ker.dn.k plived right into Carolina
hands then, firing another interception,
this time to Culrreth. And who said
C arolina can't score quickly? Sigler ran
tor 15. Geof Hamlin broke loose tor 14.
Miller hit Sigler on the sideline for 1".
and Craven booted a 37-yard field goal
- ilk L '
. -o. .' iT,rs
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SI
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P ... .': . i o. :.,ov,;o' rllflltVS' ;'o
Van Cri-n L tL-c rn o rf hie ronrr? -CAf
IXVll VldlVII ll V l J VM1V Vl tU IWWIW I 1 c, -' " - . c . c-
Saturday's game with Clemson. UNC won, 26-13, in a game
At 8 p.m. Thursday
.Bella Afosii
Representative Bella S. Abzug, a leader
in the women's rights movement and in
the el to-1 to end the Vietnam war, will
speak at S p.m. Thursday in Memorial
Hall.
Free tickets for her speech will be
distributed beginning today at the
Student Union Information Desk.
Rep. Abzug's speech is sponsored by
the Carolina Forum and the Association
of Women Students.
The Democratic representative to
Congress from the 19th District in New
York City. Mrs. Abzug has been
outspoken in her advocacy of various
causes during this term, her first in the
U.S. House. "
A graduate of the Columbia School of
Law where she was editor of the Law
Review. Rep. Abzug has practiced law in
New York City since 1947, specializing in
labor and civil rights cases.
She has been active in organizing
numerous community campaigns for
peace, banning nuclear weapons testing,
open housing and other urban problems.
Her involvement in the peace
movement began in 1962 with the
resumption of nuclear testing by both the
U.S. and the U.S.S.R. She helped
organize support for the nuclear test ban
treaty on both state and national levels.
From this beginning, she became a
principal figure in the union of the peace
movement and the politicians in the
"Dump Johnson" movement in 1968.
While in Congress, she has been a leader
for the Eno River
dow nstrcarn."
Hillsborough Mayor Fred Cates said
the Whittaker plant met town standards
for a desirable industry and maintained
the area had to provide employment for
its citizens.
The plant 'would have employed up to
100 workers in the initial phase of its
operations.
Cates said Juiiccs ot the company
locating their plant in Orange County
appear exceedingly dim because other
communities m the region are making "u'l
sorts ot concessions" to attract new
industrv .
C-o:: . H v.- l-m.
rla.ed Kerdr.cv -.th J :.- S--g:t .r.
H.-w he ......J--': r.- u-v :r. o.
Car.-hn.i TD "The- d.dn": he:p."
., . , - . - . . ! , -Clemen
t. u r-urd ID dr.-,-.-
trom the three I'M" helped the T:
civmc tnem - tirt
As Nick 'idvn;c kept w i-s. p..:
uwa and over the dangerous lie :
.tO..AO. Ic..c..c. -I-- t
position.
i v 1 ' i
-rr. cAtpv-l 1V
i
f in(I fniir field POals
which pave the
and photos, page
in the moves to end U.S. involvement m
the Vietnam war and in Congressional
efforts to end the draft.
When the Pentagon Papers controversy
arose, she introduced a rare "resolution
of inquiry" calling for the release of the
papers and other important d uu-nents
pertaining to U.S. involvement in
Southeast Asia.
Rep. Abzug played a leading role in
the election of John Lindsay to the
mayor's chair in New York. She
organized and still heads the Taxpayer's
Campaign for Urban Priorities in New
York, wnich received a major share of the
Jethrc Tail's Ian Anderson gyrates
Auditorium nderson wild antics kept
eeniiii (Staff photo by Cliff KoIovsrn
c
11 i
V.
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4
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Heels first nlacc in I fit ACC. See related li
3. (Staff photo by Cliff KJos.n I
to
pealc
i.
credit tor Lmdsav vivt :.. .. 1
In add:ton ! t!;e-.e ,ot:
began a movement m 1 '".' ',-
York City a separate t ate Sr.
the dissolution the - ti
rural-dom.nated -tai-Albany.
New Y-,rk
ReP V :- :0 h:
significant rde s.n th.- ;-i
nat! T.a! w -n.en 's . . : '
She has appeared . n :.. , ;
numerous areas ' ' the c o.'r.
the mjb;!;.at!' in ( -t w one
effective political a.ti'-r, e;.
equal fights for women.
th.
4
-4
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madly before a full house in Carmichael
an electric spark in the crowd thrnuuhuui the
: A ft
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