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1 r.!ond3y, November 17, 190Tha Dz,-y Tcr Hc:!7 WW fY 4 2i CJ W mm 1 Most invitations already have RSVPi - o r" pi r; For UNC, the bowl picture was clear before the Virginia win on Saturday a trip to the LV.uebonnet Eowi to play Texas on New Year's Eve. Fcr a number of other teams, however, the picture was and remains unclear. Miehhan defeated Purdue 25-0 Saturday to set up a showdown with dcfer.inj Dig Ten champion Ohio State next week for a Rose Bowl bid. The loser will take on Penn State in the Fiesta Bowl in Tempe, Ariz., Dec. 25. Purdue (7-3) has accepted a Liberty Bowl invitation to face Missouri (7-3) in Memphis, Tenn. Dec. 27. Washington, (8-2) upset Southern Cal 20-10 to get the Rose Bowl berth for the Pacific 10 Conference. Florida State did not play Saturday, but they accepted an Orange Bowl bid to play the Big Eight champion, either Nebraska or Oklahoma. The Cornhuskcrs and the Sooners do battle in Lincoln, Neb. Saturday to determine the Big Eight crown. The loser plays Mississippi State (8-2) in the Sun Bowl in El Paso, Texas Dec. 27. The major bowl positions were shuffled up a bit because of a couple of upsets but they were nevertheless quickly Filled. No. 1 Georgia (10-0) clinched a Sugar Bowl spot with a 31-21 win oyer Auburn. The Bulldogs will meet Notre Dame (8-0-1) in New Orleans on New Year's Day. The Fighting Irish blanked Alabama in Birmingham 7-0 to get the berth. The Crimson Tide (8-2) got a Cotton Bowl berth to play Southwest Conference champ Baylor in Dallas Jan. 1. . The Maryland Terrapins (7-3) won a position in the Tangerine Bowl at Orlando, Fla., Dec 20, after defeating Ckrnson 34-7. The other spot went to Florida (7-2) which got the bid following its 17-15 victory over Kentucky. No. 14 South Carolina (8-2) edged Wake Forest 39-38 on a two-point conversion with time running out and minutes later accepted a bid to the Gator Bowl to play No. 8 Pittsburgh, a 45-7 winner over Army, in Jacksonville, Fla., Dec. 29. The Peach Bowl, which wanted North Carolina, has settled on one team for the Jan. 2 game in Atlanta. Bill Dooley's Virginia Tech Gobblers (8-3) accepted that bid after his team beat VMI, 21-6. woinffleini -BOOteFO' in aim l n 71 L iiiH HJUL Mm From staff end wire reports Four "own" goals spelled defeat for the North Carolina women's soccer team as it took fourth place Sunday in the AIAW national championships in Colorado Springs, Colo. The Tar Heels lost to Harvard 5-3 in a consolation game on Sunday. Only two of the Harvard goals came of f legitimate scores, with Carolina putting in three shots for Harvard. Sarah Marr opened the scoring against Harvard, assisted by Chrissie Billings, but an own goal tied it up for Harvard. Carolina then took its last lead at 2-1 with Ann Klas scoring off an Janet Rayfield assist. Harvard tied it up before halftime and took a two-goal lead with a couple more own goals. Billings then brought UNC back within one t with t a . goal, assisted by Rayfield, : but "Harvard put , the game., away with a final score to make it 5-3. The game was hampered by the weather conditions; two inches of snow had fallen during the night and melted on the field. After edging Texas A&M 1-0 in the opening round, the Tar Heels lost in the semifinals to UCLA 3-2 Saturday. Ann Klas and Janet Rayfield scored for Carolina, but an own goal by UNC gave UCLA the margin of victory. In Pinehurst Sunday, the Wake Forest women's gclf team withstood a last minute challenge by North Carolina to capture the sixth North Carolina women's intercollegiate golf title. The 12-stroke lead the Lady Deacons built Saturday dwindled to a single stroke edge as the defending champion Tar Heels shot the day's low round on Pinehurst Country Club's No. 1 course. Patty Jordan, a Wake Forest junior, took individual honors with a 10-over-par 150. She defeated Duke freshman Mary Ann Widmait' with a 'par oh the. first hole of a playoff. IWIM)IIIMIII1MIMI1MIMMWWI 'lMI"MMMllMilMWWMIMMilllll - j t k J U zy u l " U Lt w J i j v-o- I t I Il .' I . .. . j .j m. . x. ' -.1 i : t 4 A -tr-r; LESSEE'S WALTZ A cabaret based on poetry by Tennessee Williams November 19-22 8:00 p.m. Great Hall, Carolina Union Students $3 Others $5 At Union Box Office Brown banging of hecr and vine it permitted. A rmcnmiHMi M eh Carolina Unwm s .i 1 o no r I;. ; )l!H! C 25 uords or less Ncn-Students '2.75 AM it fur h dd.!UmJ wof4 l t 3 ww fir boned cd ur biAlfac typ iO nt C-Mwnt tut da run concuOv day I lm0 r fry Cttmrtf 4.. . .. - ... . CO.NCr.r.NLD ACOUT DISHLGAHD lor human -? tpyipJ to fl.C gpenJj ft m:::;on r in. ,"y I r aWih.n? Ils-er ISrv. IXsnn Crr, f '..MiJjy. 431 Cfrei!4w. 7.23 p.m. cr:t"'Xii::;ouaiTi!j: iv us on v-our ou-nc-Artv. r 4':':o.: Vhi c?s t f&k torn : ''-J trt.Al .'I t; s ' psrt Sian, n-s-t's nj f.i..;t ' t;vt,i ' J M wndef Ijr 3. tce C:i f.,rt!r d-u;U. cf .:tmri!y MafrirJ. f!?!i at V'r!ey I t,'.,t: !a;:a ti f,Mi, rvn.iri-; ft J. 13. rJkitii- 3 in :;:it: '! c f. r .;!.' . t ' c i - : t v. i . s :v, : . " . t, c , , . c i : I - : c : v $1 si.. . t r l i" i ; . J I r, , t ty DAVID POOLE Assistant Sports Ldltor At times, Saturday's Blue-White Carolina basketball scrimmage looked more like a glorified game of shirts-and-skins in a schoolyard than a dress rehearsal fcr a major college team. Sloppy ballhandling, poor shot selection, unnecessary fouls, bad rebound positioning and a near lack of defense all played a part in the 81-72 win by the Blues. But there were also flashes of brilliance. AI Wood's textbook jumper was working early in ths game as he sparked the Blue team to an early lead.' James Worthy then got tough underneath and rallied his White team to a six-point halftime lead. Jimmy Black, Matt Dbherty, Sam Perkins, Mike Pepper and Jimmy Braddock all showed they were capable of making some big plays. s In short, it was a typical preseason scrimmage. The Tar Heels, regardless of the colors they wore, were taking another step toward getting' ready for the 1980-1931 season. "I am more pleased, with our performance today than I was with the first Blue-White game last week," coach Dean Smith said afterward. "We have made some progress in practice this week." Smith said he looked at the game as a way 'to check his team's concentration and execution in a game situation. "We try to check for game slippage," he said. "You'd like to play like you practice and we did that much better today. "Our offense, I thought, looked good. But a lot of that might have been because our defense didn't do anything. I was disappointed with our defense. I expected our man-to-man to be a little better. The offense is ahead of the defense at this point." "We're progressing slowly, but surely," Worthy said. "We still need to work on execution, defense and concentration." Smith said the team was running behind where it should be at this point, less than two weeks before the regular season opens Nov. 28 in the Alaskan Shootout. "We're behind where we'd like to, be," Smith said. "The reason is that we've had injuries to our people in the same position all our big men have been hurt and that's hampered us in practice." Pete Budko, who only began practice last Monday after missing several weeks with a stress fracture in his right leg, played 16 minutes and scored only two points for the White team. Worthy, on the other hand, played 33 minutes nearly twice .as much as he did in the first scrimmage a week ago Friday and said that the tendonitis in his Achilles tendon was improving. "I moved a lot better this week than I did in the first Blue-White game," the Gastonia sophomore , i V f f t - i DTK Scon Sharp Jsmss Worthy goes for a sccro ...sophomore had 27 points in scrimmage said. "There's not much pain; I feel good out there." "Things are picking up for us," said Wood, who missed practice last week because of his grandmother's death. "We had more concentration than we had in the first game. It's beginning to fall into form." Wood scored 22 points to lead the Blue team in Saturday's game, with freshman Perkins adding 21. Black had 14 points and 11 assists, but committed 13 turnovers for the Blues. Pepper had 10 points. Worthy was the game's leading scorer with 27 and also led in rebounds with 12. Braddock helped out with 14 points for the White team and Doherty, another freshman, had 11, but committed nine turnovers. "Matt and Sam are both quick learners," Smith said. "Doherty's a great passer, but I don't think he played quite as well today as he did in the last game. We were happy with Perkins, but he didn't dominate the boards. He's going to get stronger inside.' "I'm looking forward to seeing somebody other than ourselves," he said. "The difference is that they won't know anything that we're doing like we do when we play against ourselves." For insightful analyses of what's going on around the University and around the world, read "Locally," "The State," and "At Large" every Friday on the 77ie Daily Tar Heel editorial page. Ey DAVID TOOLE Assistant ports L'.'.or GREENSBORO The annual meeting among Atlantic coast Conference basketball coaches and players and reiend sportswriters and sports broadcasters is officially called "Operation Easkeiball." But the 19C0 version held here Sunday could just as well have been dubbed The Atlantic Coast Conference Comedy Show. Coaches Charles "Lefry" Driescll of Maryland, Dwar.e Morrison of Georgia Tech and Jim Valvano of N.C. State had 'em in stitches at the Greensboro Coliseum where the media had gathered to delve into the prospects for the 1930-1931 ACC season. Driesell got the show rolling. He was asked if it had become more difficult to coach his players after the success the Terrapins had last season. "Definitely," he replied, "success is hard to handle. "If you have a good year and get picked sport swriter cf the year," Driesell said to the reporter who asked the question, "your boss is going to have a lot more trouble with you." Morrison was next. He was asked about how difficult he liked to make practice. "We never run a drill over five minutes," he said. "Then, we stop and drink fruit juice and talk about running the next drill. ' "I don't know what else to say," Morrison added when he ran out of comments about his Yellow Jackrts. "We could talk about my wife. She's mad at me." When it came time for the new N.C. State coach, Valvano was quick to answer the question burning in the minds of everyon in the room. "Let me answer the question on everyone's lips," he said. "My wife does not sing the national anthem (as did former state coach Norm Sloaa's)." Then the former Army coach summed up his team's prospects. "Other then the fact that we lost our leading scorer, our leading rebounder, our leader in field goal percentage, our leader in free throw percentage, our leading assist man and that two equipment managers transferred, we're all right." But the afternoon wasn't all fun and games. Media representatives talked with players and coaches from each of the eight ACC teams and then selected the preseason All-ACC teams, player and rookie cf the year and the order the reporters feel the teams will finish. The 113 voters chose Maryland as the likely winner, with ZS choosing the Terps first. Virginia got 21 first-place votes and was second in total points with 763 to Maryland's 872. Carolina got five first-place votes and was third in the poU with 684 points. Clemson, the voters predicted, would finish fourth in the ACC, one notch ahead of Wake Forest, the only other team to get a first-place vote.. Duke was picked sixth and N.C. State seventh. All 113 voters predicted Georgia Tech would finish last in the league in 19S0-1981. The preseason All-Conference team and the winners of the poll for individual honors will be released later in the week. fm fm fas f-mm f.m f-m I m f:m m fm m fast f m fm Im )m ).' -s at .11 fa fm J ml f-mm f.m fm ) m fmjmj'mjmjmfm fm jmjmjmj HALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH . ; ORGANIZATION ABORTIONS UP TO 12 WEEKS S176.C0 FROM 13-14 WEEKS S3CD.C0 15-16 WEEKS S350.C0 (All Inclusive) Pregnancy Tests Birth Control Problem Pregnancy Counseling For Further Information Call 832-0535 or I 800-221-2568 917 West Morgan St. Raleigh, N.C. 27605 0"? 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 17, 1980, edition 1
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