Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 16, 1981, edition 1 / Page 5
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i c c er t e am 1 e t o IBlne Devils Volleyball takes 2nd iii tonirney o 9 The Duke men's soccer team, depending on a solid defense and heavy fan support, overcame a furious UNC rally to take a 3-2 win over the Tar Heels and second place in the Atlantic Coast Conference yesterday. "The margin of our close conference losses often seems to be penalty kicks and they always seem to be dubious," UNC coach Anson Dorrance said. - Duke controlled the tempo of the game from the beginning, keeping the ball in Carolina territory most of the first half. The Blue Devils had 14 shots on goal to UNC's two at halftime. Down 3-0 midway through the second half, the Tar Heels found the intensity they had been lacking earlier. With 24:49 to go in the game, freshman Ken West broke free, dribbled the ball all the way from midfield and scored UNC's first goal. Junior Tim Ensley narrowed the gap to 3-2 with another goal with 19:40 to go. From then on, though, the contest became a defensive battle with neither team clearly dominating the other. Weekend Roundup "Once we got the first goal, it really sparked us," senior Rick Marvin said. , "Considering what we were expected to do, we had a great season. The high point was beating Clemson," added Marvin. Clemson, ranked third in the nation, is the conference cham pion. Duke is now second, N.C. State third and UNC and Wake Forest are tied for fourth. The match was more than a battle for second place in the ACC. It was also to determine the recipients of the bid for the nationals. The loss puts UNC out of the running for a bid. "Clemson and Duke are shoe-ins for bids," Dorrance said. "State should get the third bid." Dorrance gave credit to seniors Rick Marvin, Adam Abronski and Geoff Drayton. "Our three seniors have nothing to be ashamed of. They have a .500 record against Clemson. Not many graduating classes can brag that." This past weekend's NCAIAW State Tournament was a tense one as the number-one seeded UNC Volleyball team finished se cond to second-seeded North Carolina State in Chapel Hill. UNC head coach Beth Miller said that the Tar Heels second place finish and good performance during the regular season would give Carolina a good chance at getting an at-large bid to the regional tournament. " "If we played better, we could have won the tournament," Miller said. "It was a toss-up between us and State. They played better at that particular time." The Heels beat ECU Friday night in the first round of the tournament and met State for the first time Saturday afternoon. A tough match from the start, Carolina fell to the Wolfpack in the first game 13-15. While neither team was ever ahead by more than a few points in the. first game, the Tar Heels captured the second game 15-4 in less than half the time it took for the first to be played. The final game of the match was by far the most tense. Caro lina's Donna Meier suffered an ankle injury at 8-6, and there was a State injury with the score 8-7. A questionable call at 9-7 caused further frustration for the Heels who were ahead 13-9 before State prevailed 15-13. Miller said it was hard to lose Meier in the State match. She added that they are still not sure of the extent of the injury. Appalachian surprised Carolina in their match by providing some stiff competition. The first game was a close one, and Ap palachian won 15-10. Regrouping themselves, the Heels rallied to capture the next two games and the match 15-5, 15-10, but not without a good fight from Appalachian. "1 think we had a letdown," Miller said. "We were not play ing our best volleyball, and Appalachian was playing very well. 1 give the girls credit for hanging in there. They were playing as much for pride as for anything else." ' In the finals of the tournament, Carolina and State were once again on opposite sides of the net. The match was the best three of five games, and it was another close one. State was the even tual winner 15-8, 14-16, 12-15, 15-9, 15-9. The UNC Wrestling team won five individual titles on its way to a team victory in the Monarch Tournament in Norfolk, Va this weekend. The Tar Heels led the team scoring with 1202 points. Clem son finished second with 93 Vi points and host Old Dominion was third with 82. Individual winners for UNC included Bob Monaghan (121), Dave Cooke (129), CD. Mock (137), Bill Gaffney (161) and Jan Michaels (170). In a disappointing conclusion to its season, the Men's Cross Country team finished tenth in the District III regional meet Sat urday at Greenville, S.C., failing to qualify for the national championships. Only four of 37 teams made the field for the nationals; East Tennessee State, Tennessee, Clemson and Florida State. Tar Heel finishers included John Clark 28th; Mark Whitney 35th; followed by Glenn Sparrow, Bret Ayers and Steve Dorsey. Todd McCallister was forced to drop out of the race after.4'2 miles because of stomach cramps. Look for the IM's and Clubs column every Wednesday. SQUARE DANCE Sandy Bradley and trie SMALLWONDER STRING BAND Thurs., Nov. 19 8:00 pm Great Hall m Union Social Committee BLUE-WHITE j Student tickets are still available for the second and final Blue- White basketball game set for this Saturday at 7:30 pm in Car michael Auditorium. Present your student ID and athletic pass at Carmichael Ticket office between 8:30 am and 4:30 pm. Students may also purchase one ticket at $6 in addition to the compliment ary student ticket. WOMEN'S NATIONAL SOCCER TOURNAMENT THIS WEEKEND w Come Watch Semifinals & Finals of ILLS OS The Varsity Spcrt c? the Mind Wednesday, Nov. 18 7:30 fcP7r209:JUHioh Carolina Union Recreation ComMtee Presentation 213 West Franklin St. & 1&nn Phanol MilCHnrham RlxH TH E Daily Crossword By Ran RaguS (""bargain matinees $j!co"" i till pm mon.-fri. all screens 2:45 5:00 7:15 9:30 "Body Heat" (R) 3:00 5:50 7:10 9:15 V A IIIH IL1MJII II ACROSS 1 Window hanging 6 Califor nia , 10 British stool pigeon 14 Kind of race 15 Friends, in France 16 Chills and fever 17 Arrogant 20 Vatican man 21 Succor 22 Menotti character 23 Refrain syllables 25 Dugout 27 Entertainer MacRae 30 Map 31 Distress signal 34 Guffaws 38 Chance 37 Leave out 38 Before 23A 39 Toodle-oo 40 room 41 Shrewd bargainer 45 Baseball stat. 46 .'Singer Adams 47 Garden workers 46 Applause 49 Incisive quality Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: "JG 0 ID PIS L 0 10 IP fTA C 1 1 ID I MIAT E TAMPA F 0 VE I L I E JQ N S E TtiO M E Nj G 0 0 0 LUC KlC HTaTR" M j h r s ; ; o t e ::; ' stptr e dTy TEE Nljfl jjTf riFtr H I E a rIIn lOZoc ON FPU TIT E A FC L 6Tv E.jS R U !TTr R I '2 A L A L. " " AS PEN! IE TCP E L TTfTE SjJ AllD . "1 A N 1 1 I J L E N " ZCHARmTbRA CJE LET iAK..L TEA JL P.S. MUli A X E i 11L.E.IL I S er B IE I DlSlAjjlAlN p 1 Y UlJEijyl 50 Downs 53 Bering or Black 54 Fly high 58 Engages in profitless debate 62 Lessen 63 Great many 64 Up to 65 Holy women: abbr. 66 Deed 67 Untidy DOWN 1 Let fall 2 Gambling mecca 3 Cockeyed 4 Discussion' group member 5 Covet 6 State in Brazil 7 Included with 8 Fast dance 9 Tree 10 Bible name 11 City in India 12 Frantic haste 13 Boat part 18 Pacific coast shrub 19 Forest i 1 1116si aenizens 39 41 24 Beverage 25 Seaweed 26 Disgusted expression 27 Singer Dinah 28 Four-bagger 29 Ms Jong 30 Handbag 31 Protect from sun 32 Western movie 33 Masts 35 Nautical term "I In 1 iw know one" Positions of control 42 Harem room 43 Group of . three 44 Deserter 48 Pigeon sheds 49 Animal 50 Recedes ' 51 Fuel 52 Satisfy 53 Bristle 55 Table . scraps 56 Sale . condition phrase 57, Depend 59 Landon 60 Deer 61 Drone 3:00 5:15 7:30 9:45 TIME BANDITS oniiisYSTEnnr $1.00 ADMISSION ALL SEATS ALL TIMES 3T 1 Sports Monday, November 16, 1981The Daily Tar Heel5 Duke whips State 17-7, Clemson takes ACC title Injuries hit two UNC players Senior fullback Alan Burrus is doing well after ' surgery Sunday to repair damaged ligaments in his left knee, but will not play again for the Tar Heels this season. Burus was hurt Saturday against Vir ginia, after gaining 93 yards on 1 1 carries. Another UNC player hurt Saturday is also considered to be out of action for the ' rest of the year, even if the Tar Heels re ceive a bowl bid. Senior linebacker Lee Shaffer suffered a broken leg and is ex pected to be recuperating for the next 24-30 weeks. "There's no chance that either -of them will play in a bowl game," Dr. Tim Taft said. "Alan will be in a cast for 10 weeks and Lee will be in a cast of some sort for three to four months." Taft said Shaffer, who has now finished his college career, should be able to play pro football, if he gets drafted. The Associated Press DURHAM Sophomore quarterback Ron Sally, a replacernent for starter Ben Bennett, engineered three scoring drives, and Mike Grayson rushed for 102 yards to lead Duke to a 17-7 Atlantic Coast Conference football victory over North Carolina State Saturday. Sally replaced Bennett late in the second quarter and promptly took the Blue Devils 55 yards in nine plays. His 18-yard touchdown pass to Ron Frederick with 48 seconds remaining broke a scoreless tie. . Sally led the Blue Devils on an 88-yard drive late in the third quarter which ended when fullback Greg Boone circled left end for a 14-yard touchdown run with 1:12 remaining. . That put the score at 14-7 and Duke added a 33-yard insurance field goal by Scott McKinney with 9:09 left. Duke raised its record to 6-4 and as sured itself of its first winning season since 1976. The Wolfpack has dropped five in a row. N.C. State's ACC record fell to 2-4. Clemson 21 Maryland 7 CLEMSON, S.C. Quarterback Homer Jordan threw three touchdown passes to lead undefeated, second-ranked ' Clemson to a 21-7 victory over Maryland for the Atlantic Coast Conference cham pionship Saturday. Jordan completed 20 of 29 passes for 278 yards and was the Tigers' leading rusher with 58 yards. Meanwhile, wide re ceiver Perry Tuttle continued his assault on Clemson's record books by catching 10 passes for 151 yards and two touch downs. The Winston-Salem senior, who keeps adding to his school record for career re ception yardage, now 2,432 yards, eclipsed another Jerry Butler standard for number of career receptions with 142. Butler's record was 139 catches. All of Clemson's scoring came in the first half, but it took Jordan nearly all of the first quarter to get the Tigers on the scoreboard. He lofted the ball 14 yards over the head of the nearest defender into.Tuttle's hands for the initial score. Then in the second quarter, Jordan threw a 5-yard scoring pass to Tuttle and followed that with a 12-yarder to Jerry, Gaillard for Clemson's final tally. Wake Forest 34 Richmond 22 RICHMOND,- Va. Wake Forest quarterback Gary Schofield kept the Deacon's aerial game alive with three touchdown passes and Wayne McMillan added a running twist in their 34-22 college football victory over Richmond's Spiders Saturday. Richmond, 3-6, kept the lead into the third quarter with a 4-yard run by star running back Barry Redden and a 2-yard run by quarterback Steve Krainock. ' . But Wake Forest, 4-7, caught up with a 1-yard pass from Schofield to Michael Mullen, another toss from Schofield to Dan Dougherty and then the pass that put the Deacons ahead for good from Schofield to Tim Ryan for 11 yards. r sr m Jo. .4Me:. f - . I I ALL RIGHT, THEN ..A DOONESBURY by Garry Trudsau gSSESiSL r MMUPDO- CHAUN6e,RlCK. S S UJ1TH..&APY k-1 fUr xzL fLs -ii mi t in v it i in i -t r HOmiE? FORK IN W TMN AR&yOU CHAF6E OF SCRAPPING SemiS, H1SOLP IPENTlFfCAim PU4N5? 1 WflH UBEKAUSM ANP JMMYOUV&i, ANDGMNG i hima ems i mrrSf' i torn. SS1 i may me SOVVCH. W CHANGS i itf kin tic i ,1 I 1 2 3 4 5 "l 7 8 9 jlO- TT TF" 13 T4 j "15 j16 17"" : if" mmm 20 1 22 W "" 25"l2f " "" 34 3r""" p"" 37 M i3"-""" 40 j4"ri42" " iTIiT" "T" " 45" hi """ 1 ir nzni z 1 "ST" 59160" " "" if" """" 62 63 ' j f ' ' 65 " j67 . . . -r- i . . Kl V fcl y.... o C.nH Inr 2:45 4:55 7:05 9:15 Candice Bergen RICH and FAMOUS UNITED AHTI5I " ' . . '? l-vSELZ "-" ' - '""m".'. PILOT TRAIUiriG OPPORTUNITIES FLY WAVY 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. 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Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 16, 1981, edition 1
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