Ulir Daily (Tar Hrrl
Bames returns to rivalry with 2 TDs
~ , -u©:d
m -
ri ** ■ m ,s
£- m I
V. © 3
~ t
L .*
DTH/BRAD SMITH
Tar Heel junior Octavus Barnes (4) celebrates with offensive lineman
Byron Thomas (75) after Barnes' second touchdown catch Saturday.
{ygfgjSgQAr
Hie word is getting out-we’re a great place to work.
What other employer provides you the opportunity to pretty much set your own
schedule ! You can even select the weekend rotation (weekends only, every other
weekend-shr shifts or every' third weekend 8 hr shifts) that best meets your
needs. We have immediate need for seasonal
Customer Service Representatives
After completing a training class which will be held 1 2:oopm - 4:oopm with
another class at 6:oopm- I 0:00pm Monday (lira Thursday and on Friday at a time
most convenient for you during the weeks of 11/11, and 11/18. Selected
candidates will have a choice of attending either the afternoon class or evening
class.. Whichever class is selected, it will be essential to attend that class the
whole week. We need friendly customer service oriented people with a clear
speaking voice and some experience using a typewriter or keyboard. Bilingual
skills (English/Spanish) would be a plus!
Besides the FLEXIBLE SCHEDULING . we offer:
• employee supportive environment
• casual dress - there is no dress code
• generous product discount
• large screen TV and football table for employees to enjoy during break(s)
Come by and experience our environment, we’re easy to get to:
From Durha- take 85 South and get off on exit 165. Make a right onto HWY 86 North.
At stop sign make a left onto HWY 70-A East. We’re the second building on the left 431
HWY 70-A East (tan/yellow warehouse). Take gravel driveway all the way around the
building and come in Visitors entrance.
From Chapel HiJI- take Airport Rd. (HWY 86 North). Cross over I-85 and at stop sign
make a left onto HWY 70-A East. We’re the second building on the left 431 HWY 70-A East
(tan/yellow warehouse).
Applications are accepted Monday-Friday from 9am-4pm.
If you are unable to come visit us, you can mail your resume to Eurosport, 431 US HWY
70-A EAST, Hillsborough, N.C. 27278 or fax it at 644-6808 or call 644-6800 to have an
application mailed to you. Applicants are Encouraged to Apply ASAP as Positions
Typically are Filled Very Quickly! Fnl
[lsatJEmat]
Mlqqdo@®o®bd®
§©oooooo SO IT
Tuesday, Nov. 5
Law School...6pm
Business School...7pm
For More Information Call
Call 493-5000 or 1-800-KAP-TEST
KAPLAN
BYROBBIPICKERAL
SPORTS EDITOR
Ten months ago, Octavus Bames never
thought he’d experience the N.C. State-
North Carolina football rivalry again.
As the UNC flanker was slowly, pains
takingly carted off the grass at Joe Robbie
Stadium in the midst of the Tar Heels’ 20-
10 win in the Carquest Bowl last Janu
ary, he felt little but the numbness in his
knee and the mental anguish of wonder
ing if he’d ever be the same speedy
9
UNC flanker
OCTAVUS BARNES
caught three passes
for 109 yards vs.
N.C. State.
playmaker.
“I never thought
I’d see this rivalry
again, ’’Bames said
Saturday, minutes
after UNC’s 52-20
blasting of the rival
Wolfpack.
The junior from
Wilson did more
than ‘see it’ Satur
day, he epitomized
it. After an
offseason of rehab
and an inseason of
questions regard
inghis mental healing and physical tough
ness, Bames came off the bench in the
second quarter for injured wideout Na
Brown to catch three balls, two for TDs.
“It was a long road coming,” Bames
said. "... I really wanted to get back out
there.”
He got back with a bang in the second
half. On the 12th play of UNC’s opening
series in the third quarter, Tar Heel quar
terback Chris Keldorf looped out of the
pocket on State’s 26-yard line, scanned
his receivers, then darted a pass low into
the end zone, where Bames slid on his
knees to bring it in.
“It was a great play by Octavus,”
Help Save UNC!
VOTE for ELLIE KINNAIRD for State Senate
Legislators in Raleigh determine UNC’s funding. Too
many of them are budget cutters hostile to UNC. You
can help change all of this by sending a staunch Tar
Heel to the State Senate.
ELLIE KINNAIRD IS PART OF THE UNC COMMUNITY:
• Masters degree from UNC
• UNC library employee for 11 years
ELLIE KINNAIRD’S GOALS FOR OUR UNIVERSITY:
• sufficient funding for instruction so that undergraduates can
take the courses they need
• higher salaries for professors, lecturers and teaching assistants
• funds to restore our research libraries to excellence
• permanent health insurance for graduate students
• restore funds for disabled students
ELLIE KINNAIRD DEMOCRAT FOR STATE SENATE
Paid for by Ellie Kinnaird for State Senate PO Box 1143 Carrboro NC 27510
Pulitzer Prize-Winning
Political Cartoonist
Doug Marlette
creator of Kudzu
and author of the new book
“I Feel Your Pain”
will talk about his work on
Election Day
November 5 from 12:30-1:30
THE FINAL FOUR
Bull’s Head Bookshop
UNC Student Stores • 962-5060
SPORTS
Keldorf said. “I just kind of threw it up,
trying to make a play, and he just made a
great play.”
Bames said: “It was a scramble. And
what I’m supposed to do is follow Chris
until he gets sacked, throws it away or
finds somebody. And it just so happened
that there was nobody there in that spot,
and I was just able to come back under it
and grab it.”
Almost 15 game-minutes later, Bames
sprinted past State defender Jason Perry,
caught an on-the-button Keldorf throw
on the right sideline and sprinted home
for his fourth TD reception of 60 yards or
more in his career.
“Yeah, it felt good,” Bames said.
“Chris put the ball right there, and I just
had to reach out and get it. He gave me
enough room where when I caught the
ball, I could jet it up and ran with it.
That’s what I had, and from then on, I
just saw blue.”
Fans —and coaches saw the pre
injury Bames, an in-your-face, do-it-all
playmaker who did it all with pizazz and
finesse.
“That looked like last year,” UNC
coach Mack Brown said. “That’s the first
time I’ve seen it where I thought he took
off and out-ran a guy who had him man
to-man.
“And I thought, ‘lt looks like he’s
back.’”
Bames said he never really left. His
bum knee stopped him for a while, then
learning UNC’s new offensive system
slowed him.
But for the first time since January, it
all seemed to come together for Bames
... during perhaps the biggest rivalry of
the year, in a matchup of schools in
which Bames has never lost.
“And hopefully,” he said, “we never
will.”
Freshmen provide spark
in Rolex tennis tourney
BY AARON BEARD
ASSISTANT SPORTSATURDAY EDITOR
With three freshmen slated to com
pete in this weekend’s Rolex Southeast
Region Indoor Championships, North
Carolina women’s tennis coach Kitty
Harrison could’ve easily been worried.
After all, 22 teams from four states
were pouring into Chapel Hill boasting
UNC senior
ALISON LEVY
learned with J.C. Biber
to reach the second
round of doubles play.
the region’s best
players.
It spelled poten
tial disaster. Crush
ing losses in tough
early-season com
petition could kill
the confidence of
the rookies.
But freshmen
Jessica Zaganczyk,
Cena Hackler and
Jeni Burnette
spread their wings
on Friday’s open
ing day of competi
tion at Cone-
Kenfield Tennis Center. Each won her
opening day-match in the singles compe
tition, with Zaganczyk advancing to the
third round of play.
Meanwhile, the Burnette/Hackler
doubles tandem joined the team of J.C.
Biber and Alison Levy to reach the sec
ond round of the doubles competition.
“This is the best Rolex Regional we’ve
ever had in my coaching experience,”
Harrison said. “The tournament has no
weak players. They’re the top players
M. Tree MOAT
Diagnostic Test 1
When we say an MCAT diagnostic test, we don’t
mean a half-length test. Our MCAT diagnostic
runs from 9:OOam to 4:3opm with an hour off for
lunch, Saturday, November 9, at our office,
1525 E. Franklin Street, Chapel Hill -a full
length practice test, all six intensive hours of it.
Among other things, the MCAT is a marathon.
We wouldn’t think of offering you a halfway
measure. If you want to know how you would do
on the real test, you need a close simulation of--
the real test! Space is limited, so please call to
reserve a place.
Free MCAT * 967-7209
We Score More
The Princeton Review is not affiliated with the Educational Testing Service or Princeton University.
nO V/-THAT
YOU'RE
SETTLED IN
WHETHER VOURt
-Jfc. IEAVIH6 SCHOOL
fORfALL BREAK
OIUUS* FOR
I 1 THE WEEKEND
JlfflSßJag get away on
ggj gtHgJ M THE TRAIN
Aintrafe^S^®
local Amtrak station or call 1-800-
Monday, November 4,1996
from four states, so we were delighted.”
The tourney served as a qualifier for
theßolexNationallntercollegiate Cham
pionships in Dallas. The two finalists of
the singles competition and the champi
ons of the doubles competition move on
to the nationals.
And though UNC advanced no one to
Dallas, there were bright spots.
The play of Zaganczyk was the high
light of the weekend for UNC. The fresh
man won her first two matches of the
competition but lost in the third round to
Louisville’s Nadia Karpol, 6-3, 6-3.
“They’re all heavy hitters,” Harrison
said. “(Zaganczyk) never got into the
match. (Karpol) just outhit her. She
pounded the ball. Although Jessica’s a
heavy hitter, she wasn’t quite ready for it.
“Actually, there were only a handful
of players here who could have handled
(Karpol).”
Zaganczyk also tallied a victory against
Kelly Brown of Kentucky, 6-1,1 -6,7-5 in
the second round and rallied from losing
her first set of play to win 4-6, 6-2, 6-3
over Tennessee’s Kristin Bachochin.
“I wasn’t nervous, just excited,”
Zaganczyk said. “I had a huge home
crowd that helped me. It gave me some
confidence because I’m only a freshman.
“It was a great experience to play on
our home court. It was such a big tourna
ment, but since it was on our home court,
I wasn't as nervous.”
Hackler reached the second round but
fell to Massoumeh Emami of Kentucky,
6-4, 6-0, while Burnette fell to Elenora
Vegliante of Campbell, 6-2,6-1.
JM THE
PRINCETON
▼ REVIEW
11