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010p0000000jl0000lp0p00l0y0p0 ... 4 J Tuesday, November 10, 1981The Daily Tar Heel5 Qemsoii same attracts eight bowl coiit t ft L By NORMAN CANNADA DTH Staff Writer Saturday's North Carolina-Clemson game had all the outside ingredients needed for a game between two such highly ranked teams fans, media and bowl scouts. Fans came in a Kenan Stadium record crowd of 53,611. UNC officials said that the number of standing room only tickets alone exceeded any other game in the stadium's history. The press also came in record numbers. So many members of the media wanted to see Saturday's game, eventually won by the second-rated Tigers 10-8, that many had to sit in the stands. But the easiest way to tell how important this game was across the country was the number of bowl scouts in attendance. Representatives from eight bowls Sugar, Cotton, Orange, Gator, Liberty, Hall of Fame, Fiesta and Tan gerine saw Saturday's game. Each scout was watching both teams,, looking at various aspects of the teams to fit into their respective bowl game. "We're looking for good football teams with great traditions," Orange Bowl scout Steve Hudson said before Saturday's game. "It also is important for a team to be able to bring a lot of people down to Miami and these two teams (Clemson and UNC) can certainly do that." Hudson said the Orange Bowl was looking at five teams Alabama, Georgia, Pittsburgh, Penn State, and Florida State as possibilities for the game in ad dition to Clemson and Carolina. The Tar Heels appear, to be out of the Orange Bowl picture after losing to the Tigers, though. The same appears to be true for the two other maior bowls that are not locked up already, the Sugar and Cotton. Both bowls were looking at the nation's top eight teams Saturday, but will probably be narrowing down their, list soon since bowl invitations will be ex tended Saturday. Clemson seems to still have a shot at each of the three bowls. With most hope for a major bowl bid gone after Saturday's loss, bowl scouts from other bowls will pro bably be looking more at the Tar Heels. "We're looking for teams that will finish in the 8-3 or 9-2 category," Hall of Fame Bowl scout Robert Fennell said before the game. "North Carolina is certainly one of the teams that may finish in that area. They are very high on our list." Another bowl that said Saturday that UNC was among the higher teams on its list was the Liberty Bowl in Memphis. A scout for that bowl who watched Satur day's game said that the Tar Heels were among his bowl's "top three teams." The Liberty Bowl is looking for a host team from either the Southwest, Southeast or Atlantic Coast Conferences with" the other team coming from the Big Eight or Big Ten conferences. Gator Bowl and Fiesta Bowl representatives were also in attendance Saturday. A Gator Bowl official said his bowl set for Jackson ville, Fla. in late December, is looking at the Tar Heels as well as nine other teams. The Gator Bowl is also looking into the possibility of a national championship showdown between No. 1 Pittsburgh and No. 2 Clemson should those teams remain undefeated. The Fiesta Bowl is looking into the same possibility. North Carolina is among 15 teams being considered for the Tangerine Bowl in Orlando, Fla. A representative from that bowl at Kenan Stadium Saturday said the bowl is looking for a host team from either the Southeast Conference, the ACC or the state of Florida. He said he would like to see an opponent from either the Big Eight or Big Ten conferences. i 7 $ M 1 4 . v . 4r. w v r. ai .t, A v. . SSS I . if I . r v. ft i i 0 7$V I'll. 7 ' - t. W,.! , i vV-v v DTHScott Sharpe Kansas b-ball tickets go out today Basketball tickets for home games in Greensboro and Charlotte go on sale to day at 8:30 a.m. Students get a half price discount on game tickets for $4.50 and may buy a guest ticket for the full $9 price. The first game is Nov. 28 against Kan sas at 1 p.m. in the Charlotte Coliseum. On Dec. 17 the Tar Heels move to Greens boro to take on Southern California at 7:30 p.m. UNC does not have another home-away game until Feb. 14 at 1 p.m. when it takes on Georgia and Dominique Wilkins on national television. Tickets for the North-South Double header in Charlotte will not be distributed today. THE Daily Crossword By Charlene Utley ACROSS 1 Bender 6 Dry, as wine 9 Like frills 13 Winds around 14 Soft drink 15 Wings 16 "...and well" 17 General Bradley 18 Bird-girl in "Green Mansions" 19 Medit. island 20 Scruff 21 Jujube 22 Nestling hawk 24 Meeting 27 Train stop: abbr. 30 Word-for-word 32 English composer 34 Pretty picture 35 Famous code 39 Civil War epic 43 Cubic meter ' 44 Toward: Scot. 45 Ornamental button 46 Hoosier State 49 Conceit Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: 50 Showered f rozenly 53 Secret society 56 Source of energy 57 Bean 59 Rude shelter 63 Put on freight 65 de force 66 Zodiac sign 67 Over again 68 In between 69 Come to maturity 70 Unique 71 Russian letters 72 Billiard stroke pi i b is rToip a ih r is imu rr I RA il L E N I NL TAfjO V A LI DRAMATtURGY aTo U A T 0 T 'zmV N C E S :'is k eTIg1m- s a mu s e dTTmiTeInTt AliH T IS II 3" 0G.iI p r a mTTr a i s eVTb" one AlIi-IN.0A:it0.N N EliPLiN.GE.G.R.LS S "eos Ja m a h " Z aTvToTc e t r t e "ta t f fs ElVT A HO N if fl 0.1 A NET f IS HALT ElfLL Is 1 1 In Ie t je il 1l Is Lis Ic lo Iw DOWN 1 Crooked operation 2 Negri of the silents 3 Brook 4 Choice part 5 Composition , 6 Body of an organism 7 Pass by 8 Vocation 9 Roman household god 1110Bi io Excuse 11 Anaglyph 12 Long (for) ' 14 Be made up (of) 23 Jal 25 Alike 26 Retards 27 Slouches 28 Easy pace 29 of Cleves 31 City on the Nile 33 Uncanny 36 Formal procedure 37 Cozy 33 Taro root , 40 Left 41 Mug with ; a lid 42 Mend ; - ; 47 Greek letters 48 Expressions 50 Type of .' energy 51 Vine 52 Presbyter 54 Siren : 55 Water wheel 58 Scottish naturalist 60 Dunks 61 Commands to ahorse 62 Slave of old 64 Farm animal 1 12 5 p 5 I 6 17 18 '9 ho in TF" T3 ' " " 17 " Tb w Ti Ti 20 21 " 22 " laT" "" """ 24 252T'' "" 27 f 28 29 "37 j. "32 ir 34 IT" iOiIf" 39 " - " "ia" " 41" jiT" " " "" " " 56 ' 57 58"' T" ' ' 59" "" 606T62 63 " 64 1 65 T" pT" """"" " "" 67 '. 68 ' I ; t m io 71 nr p 11 1981 by Chicago Tribuhe-N.Y. News Synd. Inc. All Rights Reserved 111061 Quarterback Scott Stankavage had a tough time Saturday, first ' starting and then coming in for injured Rod Elkins. Stankavage went 8-f or-21 and tossed a lateral pass late in the game to fullback Alan Burrus which did not con nect. Clemson recovered to end all hopes in the 10-8 loss. Ekins is listed today as a probable starter for the Virginia game this Saturday. All other injured players, including tailback Kelvin Bryant, are expected to be back except safety Bill Jackson and center Steve McGrew. j ( BARGAIN MATINEES $2.09 TILL t PM MON.-FRI. ALL SCREENS 2:45 5:00 7:15 9:30 'Body Heat" (R) 3:00 5:05 7:10 9:15 Malcolm McDowell Peter OToole "Caligula" (R) 3:00 5:15 7:30 9:45 Dolby Stereo "TIME $1.00 ADMISSION ALL SEATS ALL TIMES 2:30 4:50 7:10 9:35 FOR YOUR ROGER TirvTSG nxrT.v MOORE UNITPD ARTISTS iPf PILOT TRAINING OPPORTUNITIES FLY NAVY The Navy presently has several openings for the most exciting and challenging job in the world - NAVY PILOT. If you quali fy, we will guarantee you a seat in the most prestigious flight school anywhere. At the completion of training you will fly the Navy's high performance aircraft. Qualifications Are Bachelors degree Less than 28Va years eld 2029 uncorrected vision Excellent health U.S. Citizen ' If you think you can qualify, and would like to earn a starting salary cf $18,000 with $28,000 in four years, send a letter of qualifications tp NAVY PILOT PROGRAMS 1C31 Navaho Dr. Raleigh, H.C. 27E03 or call 1-SC3-6S2-7231 Campus Visit Scheduled For 17-19 November Swim team gets a measure of progress By R.L. BYNUM DTH Staff Writer In anticipation of their season opener later this month, Carolina's swimmers and divers got a measure of their progress this weekend with a couple of tests last weekend. In Friday night's Tar Heel 1650-50 meet, Carolina displayed its new-found clout on the women's team at the distances. Freshman Cay Andres cap tured the 1650 freestyle with a time of 17:04, an event that was one of the Tar Heels' weak areas last year. Andres and Jeanette Nabell, another freshman, have bolstered UNC's strength at the distances. "Last year we were weak in that area," said sophomore breast stroker and sprint free-styler Jenny Strickland. "But they seem to have filled that void that we had." - Sophomore Sue Walsh demonstrated that the sprints and the backstroke would again be the long-suit for the women as she won the 50-freestyle in a time of 24.16, just a second shy of the. Atlantic Coast Conference record she set last fei Sports ''&$pL?;:ZkT: Z?'f- Volleyball vs. William and Mary in Carmichael &2& f : V' Auditorium at 8 p.m. .-. .. 'vV-,nV: I: . . . 1 season. N.C. State swimmers took both the men's events, Carolina's Craig Bartlett taking second in the 1650 and UNC's Terry Jones second in the 50-freestyle. "We've been training real hard," Strickland said of both teams' progress. "After these meets (Tar Heel Meet and Blue-White), it seems like we have a lot of potential. The times are going to drop even more. "The Tar Heel meet was just a chance for the swimmers to get in some distance races. It gave them a chance to see where they were in training," Strickland said. Saturday, the men and women divers traveled to the Penn State Invitational Diving Meet. Pacing UNC's perform-, ances was Janice Dalrymple who was sixth, in the low board and 12th in the high board. Diving coach Ben Aycock said that he was happy with his teams' diving. "Being that it's November, I'm very pleased with the way things are going. Our biggest pro blem is going to be our consistency. "We had some really good dives and some really bad ones in the meet. We got what we wanted, though, which was a pro gress check," Aycock said. Others placing were Sue Perfater (11th on the high board) John Domeron (11th, low board) and Barry Thomas (12th, low board). Pre-Medical Students . Current undergraduate pre-medical students may now compete for several hundred Air Force scholarships. These scholarships are to be awarded to students accepted into medical schools as fresh men or at the beginning of their sopho more year. The scholarship provides for tuition, books, lab fees and equipment, plus a $530 montly allowance. Investigate this financial alternative to the high cost of medical education. Contact: USAF Health Professions Recruiting Suite GL-1, 1100 Navaho Dr. Raleigh, N.C. 27609 Phone collect (919) 755-41 34 luu- four ' BUCK BEVERAGE NIGHTS LOCKOUT KNOCKOUT 8-10 pm Tuesdays LADIES NIGHT 8-10 pm Wednesdays - Your favorites for 25$, 50 $ and a buck corners Student Dinner Specials Best Burqers, Sandwiches, & Fries in.Town! BLACK STALLION Wed at 11 am, all seats $1.00 7:30 9:40 I ALBERT FINNEY JAMES COBURN SUSAN DEV IF LOOKS COULD KILL... rr- (PG OupeirUI t42S1 J 2:30 4:45 It's the land of hospitality 7;- 5 9:30 unless you don't belong there. M.xixH! Keith Carradinc Powers Boot he SOUTHERM COMFORT (R) CAROLINA CLASSIC SERIES Ronald Reagan as THE GIPPER Pat O'Brien as the Famed Notre Dame Coach in KNUTE ROCKNE, ALL AMERICAN , Matinees Through Thursday at 3:00 5:10 T CAROLINA VOLLEYBALL run iti Tonite 8 pm vs. Wm & Mary Carmichael Aud. FriSat NC AIAW State Tourney Carmichael Aud. "See UNC's ACC Champs In Action" 213 West Franklin St. & '1800 ChaDel Hill-Durham Rlvd . ALL IIJ CfiM 1BA SJEAEF served Sunday Thursday; nights. Alaskan Snow Crab Legs $10.99 Fried Shrimp $5.99 Fried Oysters $9.99 Fried Fillet of Flounder $5.99 Fried Clam Strips $5.99 You may reorder any other "ALL YOU CAN EAT" item of equal or less cost than your original order Dinners served with hush puppies, french fries and slaw l,A,TnLriHii:ifs Chapel Hill 967-8227 HOURS: Lunch: Mon.-Fri. 11:30-2:00 . Dinner: 7 Days A Week 5 til 9 I -00RHAM A 1 o y I c . RtSlARCM ' DOONESBURY by Garry Trudcau rri5ASPCIALH0tXXFXM10PF!- esmp.amonm. memta- J SPECT, HE ISA MOST WORTHY I " PPTlOfFUT this i am HEAR! M fl AW THIS PRESIPENT HAVE OFIBi TURNED fOR COUNSO, INSPIRATION, t FflncrOCUlD ..ANPANEW FIEWHOUSB! SERIOUSIX GEORGE HAS SOME THING EVERY UNIVERSITY 111! rW LOOKS FDR IN A LOYAL iiftl i ALUMNUS EIGHT MILLION BUCK5ANPA BAD HEART! HA! 6Eaxe.i3?e HMS HAi GET THROUGH THIS HA! fCjj Ei G GUY. CARRY ON .iiij I
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 10, 1981, edition 1
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