Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 22, 1975, edition 1 / Page 5
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Monday, September 22, 1975 The Daily Tar Heel 5 ' 4 ' '- 'ili 1 " . if i s I J I i I V 4c-.-: -:-.-.-:;:... : it I 4?" r i SUfl photo by Chart Hardy CAROLINA CRUNCH Jams Dettcrson (above) gained only 317 yards... by Susan Shackelford Sports Editor Maryland made the trip Manges-less and mangled but still took home first prize. The defending Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) football champions maneuvered for a 34-7 mashing of North Carolina Saturday in Kenan Stadium, where the weather conditions already had provided a hot and sticky atmosphere for hometown rooters. Led by Larry Dick, who replaced injured Mark Manges at quarterback, Maryland capitalized on Carolina's inability to move the ball in the second half. The Tar Heels, now l-l, didn't penetrate deeper than the Maryland 45 in the last half, but the pivotal point occurred immediately following halftime. Aftr j M-vard drive to the Maryland 4- i. oiiii .mate s V . v:.:i;:-:i-:i:-::- ' ' hi'mmi lit! Mt "' iriaomawifc i N xI..i.iiwM,M..Mjou;1: ifl tHwwwwiwn ' tk suk S,.n m i f ' -iii-tt-'- T n X 0) ... nd L"!ke Volght picked up 63 yards to lead th Carolina Oetterson, a senior from High Point, has only 73 yards and n : hlng game against a stingy Maryland defesne. Last season Volght, a junior from Chesapeake, Va., has picked up 131. In '; h tailbacks gained over. 1,000 yards each, but so far this kick-off returns, however, Betterson has gained 200 yards, c son are far below that standard. After two games,- f I J L &. i u r n II )) I till flirts ij) m 1 ' k it 4 H I J i I . VV -U wuvjucLA fl SDDBadl DoDsraADo You can do it too. So far over 550.000 other people have done it. People who have different' jobs, different 10s. different interests. completed the course. Our graduates are people from all walks of l.fe. These people have .all taken a course developed by Evelyn Wood a prominent educator Practically all of them at least tripled their reading speed with equl or better comprehension. Most have increased it even more. Think for a moment what that means. All of them-even the slowest-new read an averaga novel in less than two hours. They read an entire issue of Time or Newlweek 25 minutes. They don't skip or skim. They read every word. They use no machines. Instead, they let the material they're read.ng determine how fast thev read And mark this well: they actually understand more remember moreha Tnjoy more than when they read slowly. That s . rg They understand more. They remember more. They enjoy more. You can do the same BUT EVELYN WOOD GRADUATES CAN READ THE EXORCIST IN 58 MINUTES At That Speed, The 403 Pages Come Across With More Impact Than The Movie. thing-the place to learn more about it is at a free speed reading lesson. This is the same course President Kennedy had his Joint Chiefs of Staff take. The staff of President Nixon completed this course in June 1970. The same one Senators and Congressmen have taken. Come to a Mini-Lesson and find out. It is free to you and you will leave with a better understanding of why it works. One thing that might bother you about your reading speed is that someone might find out how slow it is. The instructors at the Evelyn Wood Reading Dynamics Free Speed Reading lesson will let you keep your secret. It's true we practice the first step to improved reading at a Mini-Lesson and we will increase your reading speed on the spot, but the results will remain your secret. Plan to attend a free Mini-Lesson and learn that it is possible to read 3-4-5 times faster, with comparable comprehension. SCHEDULE OF FREE MINI-LESSONS You'll increase your reading speed 59 to 109 on the spot! Today 4 p.m. or at the Carolina Inn Cameron Avenue by the UNC campus LAST DAY EVELYN WOOD READING DYNAMICS yard line, UNC quarterback Bill Paschall threw a pass that was picked off in the end zone by a ready and waiting Kenny Roy. Maryland. Head Coach Jerry Claiborne admitted his team had studied the bootleg left play in films of the UNC-William and Mary game, and the pass, which was intended for UNCs Mike Corbin, was like acing an already-announced quiz. If the Tar Heels had scored, they would have gone ahead 14-13, grabbing the momentum trom the not-too-spectacular Terps, who only moved the ball reasonably well against a good Carolina defense, led by middle guard Roger Shonosky and tackle Rod Broadway. But instead, Dick and his offensive forces, who have been weakened by recent injuries, cashed in on a 49-yard pass to fullback Kim Hoover 6V4 minutes after the homework detected interception. That scoring series, 6 1 yards in only three plays, gave Maryland a two-touchdown lead, 21-7. Early in the last period, Carolina still couldn't muster a sustained drive, as UNC tailback Mike Voight was stopped by Leroy Hughes on a fourth-and-one play at the Carolina 43. A later fourth down attempt for three yards also failed with 6:59 remaining. Maryland, meanwhile, put up two scores and one extra point, and the second half of Tar Heel setbacks suggested that the visiting Terps had mopped up all afternoon as opposed to only the last two periods. A jolting Carolina touchdown inaugurated this steamy ACC opener for the two schools. Maryland's Jamie Franklin fumbled on the opening play from scrimmage and 1:18 later blue and white jersies of UNC teammates were embracing Charlie Williams, who scored on a 20-yard pass from Paschall. On the ensuing kickoff, Maryland responded with a 92-yard midfield return by John Shultz to set up a tying touchdown three plays later, 7-7. Carolina, aggravated by a Voight fumble, the onset of a game-long plague of illegal procedure penalties, and another interception thrown by Paschall, had to punt four times in the first half, while Maryland got 38- and 49-yard field goals from Mike Sochko for a 13-7 halftime lead. Carolina finished the game with 95 yards in penalties, most of which were for illegal procedure called on UNC center Deke Andrews for slightly picking up the ball before snapping it to punter Johnny Elam. UNC Head Coach Bill Dooley said the calls were extremely technical- cou p'o ffXXXXTy co u po cQgCQ, f BUY 1 - 1 RIBEYE 4J )) PIZZAS Lj Ctob uiith Pat qH Potato alaH H W H S S r - li I 0I& Texas Toast for the reg. price'. $2.6sl fe TOT III Q fj IK im t, mi - r i i GET 1 for Vz PRICE UJ price OT U Cl Qk R-J fl lint Ptra fnr taWout nrdersl with . 1 I J with innnnn la LW1 1--" ' m mill wwwswii n g n,y T, Good thru Oct. 3 CO UPON 12 6 oz. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 22, 1975, edition 1
5
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