The DarfyTar Hid All within 24 hours r fencers victorious in three tries Moody. February 19. 1973 " m f i n f i W io) f) "r by Elliott Warnock Sports Writer In a span of less than 24 hours, the North Carolina fencing team added three victories to their record to up it to ten wins and two losses. The Tar Heels only defeats came at the hands of national powers Illinois and the Naval Academy. Friday, night, the Heels hosted tough ACC foe Maryland, then Saturday morning traveled to Boone to fence the Catamounts of Appalachian State and the Tennessee Volunteers. The Terrapins of Maryland proved to be more tenacious than expected as Carolina edged past, 15-12. In the first round, the Tar Heels appeared to be pulling far away as they took a 7-2 lead, then head coach Ron Miller began to substitute freely into the lineup allowing the Terps to pull as close as 13-10 by the third period. Carolina won only three of the nine individual bouts in the last round but it proved to be enough as the Heels clinched the meet in the 24th bout. Seven of the duels went to 5-4 decision, the Heels winning only two. In total team scoring for sabre, foils and epee, Carolina won all three, 5-4. . Maryland head coach John Cox spent much of the evening walking up and down the floor disputing various rules and calls by the officials. After the meet, when asked what his views of the match were he said they were "nothing printable." He continued, "I honestly think we should have won two or three more bouts in the first round. Ill just have to say there was some bad directing. Miller noted that the Carolina substitutions were the primary reasons for the closeness of the match. "I think that our fencing in the first round was up to our best potential of the year," commented Miller. "But I was disappointed with the overall meet. We were overconfident and then let down." The Tar Heels proved to be in total control of their confidence Saturday morning as they trounced Appalachian 20-7, then went on to beat the Volunteers 19-8. To prove it. Miller used two starting Terps squeese by Tigers CO LLEGE PARK, Md (UPI) Maryland let an II -point lead slip away to Clemson Saturday but Terp forward Tom McMillen made a clutch defensive play and scored an easy basket in the final moments to preserve a 69-66 victory for the seventh-ranked Terrapins. McMillen, who led all scorers with 24 points, blocked a shot by Clemson's Terrell Suit after the Tigers came to within three Sports notes points with less than a minute remaining. McMillen took the ball away from Suit and seconds later took a pass alone under the basket and made it 69-64 with six seconds left. Clemson steadily chipped away at Maryland's lead in the final 10 minutes as coach Tates Locke rotated four players at a time after running out of timeouts. Maryland's Len Elmore and Clemson's Rick Hunt were ejected for fighting at the opening of . the second half. Neither had scored a point. Clemson coach Tates Locke denied after the game that the fight had been started deliberately. Hunt had been in the game only 23 seconds when the swinging started. Gregg was Clemson's high scorer with 21 points. Maryland is now 17-4 while Clemson is 10-12. THE UNBEATEN N.C. STATE Wolfpack, 21-0 on the season, has clinched a tie for the ACC regular-season championship. The Wolfpack beat Wake Forest Saturday night to run its ACC mark to 9-0. Carolina is in second place, with Maryland's Terps one game back. Carolina defeated the seventh-ranked Terrapins, 95-85, last week, to hand Maryland its fourth consecutive setback. Duke is in fourth place. Team ACC Overall W-L W-L N.C. State 9-0 21-0 North Carolina 6-3 20-4 Maryland 5-4 17-4 Duke 4-4 12-9 Virginia 4-5 11-7 Clemson 2-7 10-12 Wake Forest 1-8 9-13 THE NORTH CAROLINA GYMNASTICS team has cancelled its The final organizational meeting of the test anxiety project being run by Dr. Mark Appelbaum and David MacNeill will be held tonight, Feb. 19 at 7:30 p.m. in 110 Davie Hall. Any test anxious students who were unable to attend the Wednesday and Thursday meetings are asked to come to the meeting tonight. THE SCANDAL OF SECRECY John W. Gardner, Chairman Common Cause Former Secretary of Health. Education and Welfare One of the weird and nonsensical facts about our government at all levels is that much of the pub lic's business is done in the deepest, darkest secrecy. Citizens assume that only questions of national se curity and some aspects of criminal justice are dealt with in secret. Little do they know! Most of the time our public officials act as though the way they con duct our business is none of our business. In 1972 roughly one-third of the Senate Public Works Committee meetings were held in secret. The figure for the Senate Agriculture Committee was 59 percent, f6r the House Appropriations Committee over 90 percent. The House Ways and Means Com mittee, which drafts the laws governing every federal tax dollar you and I pay, is notoriously secretive. Se curity is so tight that even the staff assistant of a Con gressman who is on the Committee can't attend the closed meetings. What are they hiding? All sessions of congressional committees and records of all votes taken at such sessions should normally be open to the public. Committees should be allowed to close a meeting only for considerations of national security or invasion of personal privacy, and the procedure for closing it should be carefully pro tected against abuse. In the Executive Branch, virtually everyone asso ciated with national security acknowledges that the system of classifying documents to preserve secrecy has been badly abused all too often for the pur pose of concealing bureaucratic error. And the zeal for secrecy extends to every government agency un der the control of the Executive Branch. Regulatory agencies often meet behind closed doors, omit public hearings, and suppress reports the public should see. Of course, the secrecy involved is only secret-from-the-public. The special interest lobbyists know very well what goes on in those hush-hush meetings. Quite often they're right in there with the decision makers. The only one who has splinters in his nose from bump ing against closed doors is John Q. Public. Now there is a resolution before the Senate sponsored by Senators Humphrey (D., Minn.) and Roth (R., Del.) (plus 11 other sponsors) which would open all Senate committee meetings. A bill (S 260) re cently introduced in the Senate by Lawton Chiles of Florida and in the House (HR 4) by Dante Fascell, also of Florida, would open all Legislative and Executive Branch meetings except those dealing with national security or involving personal privacy. Information is power, and secrecy is the most con venient means of keeping that power out of the hands of the people. What the people don't know, they can't, object to. It's time to change all that And you can help. Write your two Senators and your Congressman. Tell them you want them to open up the system. Or join Com mon Cause (2100 M Street NW, Washington, D.C. 20037) and ally yourself with 200,000 other members in getting these changes made. We're going to give this nation back to its citizens. The student member ship rate is $7.00. Don't just stand there! . This space is contributed as a People Service by The Van Heusen Company scheduled trip to the Southern states. The gymnasts were scheduled to face the Citadel, Georgia Southern and Georgia Southern again on a three-day. southern swing. Old Dominion visits UNC on Friday. ALL-CAMPUS SOCCER, after a week's delay due to snow and mud, will begin today, according to a release from the intramural office. Forty-six teams are entered. Play will start with round robin activity in leagues of three and four, followed by a single elimination playoff of the twelve league winners. Bowling, handball and basketball tournaments continue this week in all divisions. Next Monday, Feb. 26, is the deadline for entries in softball, badminton and co-rec badminton. epeemen Bob Peterson and Bill Shipman in foil while switching foilsmen Walter Futch and Jim Scott to epee. He also used epeeman Dave Lynn in sabre. "Jim Krause and Lynn had really good weekends overall," said Miller, "both were undefeated. It was also nice to see Bill Shipman back in good form with his three wins over Maryland. I was especially pleased with Rob Rivers and his two victories over Carter, Maryland's number one fencer." The Tar Heels will have to fence as well if not better to beat the ever-improving Blue Devils of Duke when the two teams face off Tuesday in Carmichael Auditorium. Duke defeated both Appalachian and Tennessee on last Friday and Saturday. The 22-5 win over AS U and the 23-4 victory against the Volunteers upped the Dukes' record to 12 wins and only one loss. The match is the season Finale for both the Tar Heels and the Blue Devils whose 7-4 overall and 3-2 conference record were good enough to earn them a third place finish in the ACC. "Duke is really going to be tough," stated Miller. "This is the only match with which I will say I am conservatively optimistic. They have better depth than us in two weapons but I think the experience of our fencers will begin to show and take its toll." Miller made note of the importance of the crowd size and reaction during fencing meets. "The crowd at the Maryland meet was great; they really helped a lot. It was five times as big as the crowd in College Park last year. That really surprised the Maryland fencers." Led by all-ACC fencer Ed Pettis the Blue Devils should prove to be a formidable opponent, one for which Miller says he "should have no trouble getting the fencers up because there is so much pride at stake." Michael Davis TV awie stink Nothing could be finer than basketball at Carolina . . . except when you have to watch the Heels on the tube. Actually, at first it all sounded so good. Carolina meets Florida State in a rematch of last year's NCAA semifinal. This time the scene of battle was to be big, bad Madison Square Garden, high enough above Penn Station not to hear the trains, and low enough to escape the grey, polluted clouds that could gag a maggot. The disappointments, however, came early and fast. The First was when the game announcers disclosed their identity as being Ray Scott and Bill OTJonnell. This awesome duo treated the television audience to such enlightened tidbits as "If patience is personified, Carolina is patience." Also, Ray Scott promised us (Boy Scouts honor) that he would make sure that he'd "tell you about hometowns as the game progresses." Great, RRay thanks! The second disappointment of the afternoon occurred simultaneously with the rolling of the first commercial. Yes, folks, remember that when you feel like your life is sinking and a tidal wave approaches, there your insurance man will be behind the helm of the great ship of life, piloting a course especially for you. I can just see my little bespeckled insurance man over the port rail feeding the fish. Perhaps the most disappointing aspect of the game over television was the rediscovery of Madison Square Garden college basketball fans. I had hoped that they had changed since my last visit to that imposing edifice, but unfortunately they have not. Upon the introduction of players and coaches, the New York throngs emitted the most intelligent vocalizations that they are capable of bringing forth. This verbal cornucopia included a various assortment of "boos," "youbumyas," and of course, the classic "go back to Flooruhduh, you stink." Bright and perceptive are those who dwell in America's "mecca of basketball." The fourth and final frustrating aspect of watching the Heels Saturday was that the refs can't hear you. What fun is a basketball game if you can't tell the referee that if he had one more eye, he'd be a cyclops? In retrospect, I have decided to drastically change my viewing habits. Firstly, I will turn down the audio on the set and turn on the radio broadcast. Secondly, during all commercial breaks I will bop on over to the fridg and pull out a beer (and you can bet your zumbazumba that the beer I will drink has not won any ribbons, blue or otherwise). Finally, when I have reached the desperation point in terms of incompetent referees, I'll quietly direct a short recitation of the Lord's Prayer to Oral Roberts and hope for spiritual intervention. James Taylor The Rolling Stones Joe Cocker George Harrison Jimi Kendrix Elton John JethroTuIl Cat Stevens Chicago Santana The Moody Blues The Beatles If somebody gave a free live rock concert, you probably couldn't get in. But WQDR - FM brings your favorite artists to you. We play more of their songs than you'd ever hear at a concert. Original album cuts, too. We don't take many breaks. (There are fewer commercials on WQDR than on other stations around.) After every break, we come back. We're on 24 hours a day. Every day. And we broadcast in Quad whenever material is available. Quad recreates alt the echoes, reverberations and "ambient" atmosphere of the concert hall when played on a four channel system. If you have a two channel system, we're great in stereo, too. Stay home at our rock concert. No traffic jams. No lines. No pushing. No shoving. And no charge. 94. 100.000 Wafts. 94.7 Stereo FM. Raleigh. Durham Life Broadcasting Service. Inc.