t s Th Dz'.'y Ter Heel Monday, February 11, 1974 T viku; Fionas m liii(U)iiMii Tony Waldrop ran his fourth consecutive sub four minute indoor mile (3:58.3) in the Los Angeles Times Indoor Games last Friday night. No one else has ever run more than three sub-four minute miles in one indoor season. Waldrop took the lead on the final lap en route to his fastest time ever indoors. The UNC star won despite bumping ( with runner-up Steve Prefontaine of Oregon (3:59:5Xsnd stumbling. John Walker of New Zealand came in third. Marty Liquori was scheduled to run but scratched from the race to compete in New York. At Chapel Hill Carolina's depleted indoor track team finished third in a quadrangular meet in the Tin Can Saturday afternoon. Virginia Tech won the meet with 45 12 points. N. C. State had 38 12. The Tar Heels, missing several key performers due to participation in other meets and injuries, had 38 and Duke trailed the field with 30. Ward were the two-mile Sam Beasley and Tommy Carolina's top individuals while relay team also performed well. Beasley won both the long jump (23-7) and the triple jump (46-1), Ward won the mile in 4:17. Kevin McLee, Steve Bullock, Mike Stratford and William Southerland combined for a'7:56:8 in the two-mile relay. Southerland also finished third in the 880 with a time of 1:58:8. Other individual efforts were Dave Robinson's 14-6 in the pole vault; Hank Snowden finished third in the long jump (22-1); Mark Gaines put the shot 50-9; Fred Woltz was third in the triple jump (45-2 12); and Winfred Falls ran a 1:14 in the 600. Carolina's next home meet is a triangular meet with Clemson and South Carolina this Saturday. p. . .. , ...I,,., .,, ,. . u n . .i w mm ....... .. -i- ' ' ...,,...i..u i w, -y ' " . ,-( x I ?: ' W o) ' j'i 1 o J L I nj i I. J ) In I p) j i (I -Jj I I J S ni ..... - I. ..., . . , I M r ,,.,.. : .,- -J 1 wimmers arown visiting Gamecocks by Anna Heynow Sports Writer Carolina swimmers closed out their major dual meet season Saturday with an emotional 59-54 win over the Gamecocks of South Carolina. Avenging last year's defeat and gaining momentum for the up-coming ACC championships, the Tar Heels looked sharp as they gave one of their best over-all team efforts of the year. "If there is one meet all year that we have been aiming for," said UNC coach Pat Earey before the contest, "this is it." Supported by the UNC pep band and a crowd of alumni back for the meet, the Carolina swimmers won the opening medley relay and led almost the whole way, finally clinching the win with one event left. Dave Marlin was the individual leader for Carolina, winning both the 200 yard backstroke and the 200 yard individual medley, as well as swimming one leg of the winning 400 yard medley relay. JOB paperback i inn rAUia TO GET A JOB in Govt. ConiiJiiinications Ecfusztlcn Retailing Urban Plsnninj Fir.sr.cs Ensir.ssring Industry etc. dressss of over 503 ccm p:r,:c3 End school systems c!us descriptions of above by leaders in ths fields Also info on resumes end intcrviovjs. At your ccllce bookstore cr writs: N.E.A.S., Inc. 300 Lexington Ave., NYC. N.Y. 10017 Enclcss $1.50 plus 25 for 1 ! 4 LUNCHEON SPECIALS! 11:30-2:30 EACH ONLY $1.17 Without Soup & Salad or $1.50 with. Mon: Roast Beef Platter w2 vegs, soup, salad, fresh rolls Tues: Veal Parmesan wspaghetti soup, tossed salad, C rolls VVsd: BBQ Chicken, 2 vegs. salad, soup, rolls Thurs: BBQ Pork Ribs 2 vegs, soup, salad, rolls Fri: Corned beef Ct Cabbage or Shrimp S&lad wsoup Salad, rolls or Fish Ft"st, 2 vegs, soup salad, rolls Shrimp Salad available EVERY DAY The Tar Heels jumped to a 7-0 lead with their first in the medley relay, in a time of 3:36.9, their best of the year. Gamecock Tom Schmidt came back to win both of the next two races, the 1000 yard free and the 200 yard free, in an amazing display of endurance, but Tar Heels Jike Southard and Mitch Kolesaire captured second and third in the 1000 while Pete Butler and Steve McDonald finished second and third in the 200. Carolina swimmers swept both first and . second places in three different events. Marlin and Jim Osborn took the top places in the 200 yard individual medley, and then when the Tar Heels were trailing 45-43 with just three events left, breaststrokers Karl Thiele and Mike Eddy swept the 200 breaststroke. Divers Larry May and Ben Aycock took one-two in the three meter diving to insure the victory. Saturday's win was the Tar Heel's sixth win against four losses, swimming one of the toughest schedules in the southeast. Carolina faces Clemson in two weeks, but the Tigers are perennial door-mats of the ACC and should be no contest for the UNC squad. The ACC Championships are scheduled for Duke University, Feb. 28 and Mar. 1,2. The Eastern Championships will be the following week in Princeton, N.J. if l 1 I " A'i v lV . : A- 2 - M ' 1 u omMMf . . r n i X 21 sun photo fcy QM1 LeteMcv Freshman Tommy LaGarde in action against Furman during North-South Doubleheadcr. Susan Shackelford Peaceful conditions not necessarily so Unfortunately, intercollegiate basketball, although relatively new, isn't immune from the disease of unsportsmanlike conduct. As women's programs grow, the developers have constantly expressed hope that the mistakes which have plagued the men's activities can be avoided. Carolina women have encountered rude spectators and players. No cups have been thrown on the playing floor, as seems to be a prevailing rage, but jeering and heckling abound. "I've been in athletics a long time," assistant coach Raye Holt said after a recent game with Peace College, "but I've never witnessed anything quite like tonight. Some of our players were even cursed and kicked." Coach Holt said the rules state that a coach is responsible for all such activity. All of Carolina's players and coaches were shocked at the hostile reception they received in their last road game. "I've never seen grown women in college behaving like immature children," said co-captain Mann, a veteran of world competition this past summer in Moscow. "It reminded me of some low-class high school basketball games; I was astounded." For the most part the season is not getting older, it's getting better for UNCs women eager s. The Heels boast an 8-1 record, including five straight victories since their early season defeat to Winthrop College on Jan. 24. A "dynamic duo" of 5-4 guard Dawn Allred and 6-0 forward Marsha Mann has piloted the offense attack. While Mann lurks underneath the basket, Allred irritates foes with top-of-the-key swishes. Allred, holding a 16-point average, provided UNC with a consistent outside scoring threat to balance the inside strength of Mann, which has dominated the Heels for the past two seasons. Perhaps, though, one of Allred's greatest assets is a somewhat assuming demeanor. Opponents see her ambling around the foul line area, as if intent on running a play, but as they relax into a zone, despair envelops them. With a simple-looking overhead flick, Allred pops in a 20-footer. Against Peace College, after Mann fouled out of the game with five minutes left, the high school all-stater asserted poised leadership which helped preserve a 61-50 win over previously undefeated Peace. "I was scared to death when Marsha fouled out," Allred said after the game. "But when we got a four-point lead with about two minutes to go, I felt it was ours." 1 p '. 1 cr-- - 4 b2 S . C5 i fa: . ! n U LJ ) by a mountain of information you ought to know to get ahead? ivelyira 'Wdl ISeodHii y Li v, j invites you to a free demonstration of this internationally famous method. You will see an amazing, documented film about Reading Dynamics and team how it can help you to faster reading and understanding. OVER 500,000 GRADUATES READ AN AVERAGE OF 4.7 TIMES FASTER with equal or better comprehension! In the 22 year since Mrs. Wood mode the startling discovery that led to the development of her unique method, over 500,000 people have taken this course. These are people with different educations, different IQ's . . . students, business men, house wives. All of them even the slowestnow read an average novel in less than 2 hours. You can, too. We guarantee it. Acclaimed by public figures In 1962, the late President Kennedy invited Mrs. Wood to the White House where she taught the course, at his request, to members of The Cabinet and the White House Staff. Senator William Proxmire, Wisconsin! "I must soy that this is one of the most useful educational ex periehces I have ever had. It certainly compares favorably with the experiences I've had at Ycle and Harvard." So revolutionary It made news! Results have been reported in newspapers. Time, Newsweek, Business Week and Esquire. Demon strators have appeared on television with Jack Poor, Garry Moore and Art Unkletter. How Is this different from other courses? Conventional rapid reading courses try for 450 600 words per minute. Most Reading Dynamics graduates can read 1,000-3,000 words per minute. Yet our students don't skip or skim. You read every single word. No machines are used. You use your hand as a pacer. And you will actually understand more, remember more and enjoy more of what you read. you Must improve or your mokzy back We guarantee to increase the reading efficiency of each student AT LEAST 3 times with good compre hension. We will refund the entire tuition to any sfcj dent who, after completing minimum class and study requirements, does not at least triple his reading efficiency as measured by standardized testing. COMZ AN3 ZX A FRI2 CLVOK3T3ATIO?I Of THIS AMAZIMO f.'ZYY f.'.miCD THAT IS CUA3ANTXXD TO TRIPLE YOUR R2ACK3 ctzzd vmi COCO CO izt:zic::i 3Cul5gs DoDsijOUdJiG'e Fnn2 CZTJOIISTRATIOriS MONDAY Fob. 1 1 12 Noon, 3 pm and 0 pm TUESDAY Feb. 12 12 Noon. 3 pm end 8 pm Carolina Sno r ALSO TRY ZOOM ZOOM SPECIALS FROM 7:30

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