iuary 18, 1982A"he Daily Tar Heel5 is TUNC wiinm T1 ' Sports I 'tsoPZ ci;:AW- v. By TRACY YOUNG DTII Staff Writer Sijc UNC swimmers, including five women, qualified for the national tournament and one, Sue Walsh, broke a collegiate record here Friday against South Carolina. The Tar Heels won both ends of the meet, the women 80-33, and the men 658. f J "What was so impressive about the women's win is that we could use each woman for time," coach Frank Comfort said. "No woman swam more than three times. It could have been a different meet.," Walsh's 2:01.64 in the 200 yd. backstroke broke Arizona State swimmer Cheryl Gibson's record by near ly three seconds. Gibson had a 2:04.36 in the event. Comfort called Walsh's swim "one of the finest dual meet swims I've seen in my life." "I guess I was really surprised," Walsh said. "The training trip (over Christmas to North Palm Beach, Fla.) was a lot harder in comparison to the work we had been doing. When we got back, I was really tired and not ex pecting to swim that fast." Carolina's Cami Berizzi also qualified for the na tionals in the 200 yd. backstroke with her second place time of 2:05.26, fourth fastest in the country. Berizzi qualified for the nanonal tournament a second time when she finished the firstjegof a 3:56.54 medley relay in 58.04. Other" swimmers in the event were Jenny Strickland, Barb Harris and Amy Pless. "Cami Berizzi is one of the best swimmers in the country and is the backbone of the team," Comfort said. Harris' 52.01 clocking in the 100 yd. freestyle added another national qualifier for the Heels, and the final woman qualifier for the naitonal tournament was Gayle Hegel, who finished first in the 400 yd. individual medley with a time of 4:28.04. The Tar Heel women won five other events. Walsh and Hegel captured the 200 yd. freestyle and 200 yd. breaststroke, respectively, while Amy Pless won the 50 yd. freestyle. Berizzi was a triple winner for the meet when she, ' Harris, Kathy Smith, and Julie Bassichis took the 400 yd. free relay. Carolina's Janice Dalrymple won in one meter diving. ".".".-X IV - ; Wrestlers stomp ASU b-ball fans cheer on 7 3s 'X-. i UNC swimmer Gayle Hegel comes up for air in the Tar Heels win .. men and women beat South Carolina as six qualify for nationals QTHScott Stiarpe While the Carolina men won seven of their events compared to the women's nine, only Eric Ericson qualified for the national tournament. Ericson's 51.32 first leg of the 400 yd. medley relay led his team to a 3:30.50 first place finish. Also swimming in the realy were Tim Sutton, Dirk Marshall and Mark Welker. "In a men's meet, 57 points is all you go for," Com fort said. "If I get 57 points before you do, then the meet is mine. I thought it would go to the last relay for us to get it. "The two divers who finished second and third, John Dameron and Barry Thomas, and Tom Mecklenburg, ' who placed second in the 200 yd. breastroke, clinched the meet for us. They got us tQ 58 points." Ericson also placed first in the 200 yd. backstroke, while Dave Hansen was a triple winner for the meet with victories in the 200 yd. freestyle, the 100 yd. freestyle, and the 400 yd. free relay. Other swimmers in the relay were Sutton, Geoff Castle and Ken Warren. . Craig Bartlett's wins in the 200 yd. freestyle and the 500 yd. freestyle rounded out the Carolina victories. Comfort called Bartlett "one of the best swimmers we've recruited for Carolina. His wins were absolutely crucial for us." Both sets of swimmers meet East Carolina Thursday in Greenville. Tar Heel women pound Georgia State from staff reports The North Carolina women's basket ball team heads into conference action this week with Saturday's 91-63 pounding of Georgia State fresh on their rninds. "I thought we had the best all around team effort of any game we've played all year," coach Jennifer Alley said. "I was very pleased with the starters and the substitutes." The Tar Heel win was part of the Wolfpack Doubleheader in Raleigh but the North Carolina sqaud only got to play once as Pittsburgh was late coming down because of bad weather. Kathy Crawford led the tar Heels with 17 points off the bench, while Henrietta Walls had 14 and Meredith White netted . 12. Pam Hammond and Tresa Brown ad ded 10 for the Heels. "I don't know if we could have played that well if the (Pittsburgh) game had been played," Alley said. "But we felt good about ourselves at practice and I think it carried over into the game." UNC fell behind 13-8 early in the game but scored six unanswered points to take the lead. The lead went back and forth until a steal and layup by Brown but the Heels ahead for good at 22-20. Walls scored 12 first-half points to help the Tar Heels open up a 51-34 lead at the half. The lead never got less than 12 points the rest of the way and got as large as 31 at 90-59. Dawn Castlin led the Panthers with 15 points and outside shooter Sheryl Martin scored 10. The Tar Heels moved to 8-6 while the Panthers dropped to 7-9. The North Carolina women don't have long to savour their victory. Duke travels to Carmichael Tuesday at 7:30 p.m. to face the Heels in the conference opener. Three weeks of heavy conference battles follow although not all count on the con ference schedule. The No. 8 N.C. State Wolfpack upped its record to 14-2 with a hard fought 72-63 win over Pittsburgh. Cavs beat Tigers CHARLOTTESVILLE, Va. (AP) Virginia's Ralph Sampson scored 22 points and pulled down 14 rebounds as the third-ranked Cavaliers waltzed past Clemson's Tigers 89-68 Sunday in an Atlantic Coast Conference basketball game. - as By S.L. PRICE DTH Staff Writer Students poured in and out of Car michael every hour on the hour for basketball ticket checks, but by the time UNC heavyweight Tommy Gorry scored a superior decision to seal the Tar Heel win over Appalachian State, the majority stayed to cheer; And they had plenty to cheer about. Led by pins by 134 lb. Harry Barnabae and 167 lb. All-America Jan Michaels, the seventh-ranked Carolina matmen easily defeated the Mountaineers 40-6,. for their third dual-meet victory in a row to raise their record to 3-2 on the year. "The crowd got real excited and it looks like we're starting to catch on a bit," Coach Bill Lam said. "What's im portant is that they cheered at the right time, and that just helps the kids." The Tar Heels didn't seem to need any help Saturday, as they jumped to an early lead on 118 lb. Wes Hallman's 8-5 deci-v sion over ASU's Tom Moore. After 126 lb. Bill Christie was out pointed by Appalachian's Thomas Hut chinson, Barnabae came back from a 3-2 deficit to pin Keith Moorehead 2:52 into the match. "A lot people don't understand a lot about wrestling except the pin," Bar- nabae said7 "They get excited and it's a" read good pick-you-up to get the guy on his back and stick him to the mat." Freshman Pete Mankowich, in his se cond dual-meet win at Carmichael, grab bed a major decision over 142 lb. Mark Tuccillo, and immediately after 150 lb. Tar Heel Tim Plott had to be satisfied -with an 8-8 draw with-ASU's George Both 158 lb. senior Mike Elinsky and 177 lb, Danny Fisher took superior deci sions, Elinsky over Rick Campo -15-3, and Fisher over Les Holbert 14-1. Michaels, after a tough 6-0 loss to Peter Capone of Hofstra- last week, roared back to: completely dominate ASU's John Hampton 14-0 in the third period, before pinning him 6;32 into the match. . --. North Carolina's Robert Shriner won at 190 lbs. by forfeit, when he found himself alone at center-mat. Coach Lam was cited one point on a technical foul . after arguing with the referee about the switching of some wrestlers in that match. "You just don't argue with the official," Lam said. Gorry then scored the superior decision 5-3 over Mountaineer Mark Browder to end the meet. . ; "They all did a good job," Lam said. "We left CD. (Mock) and some of our . starters out to give the younger guys ex perience, and it came out all right." The grapplers' next home meet is at 7 p.m. Friday, Jan. 22 against Virginia Tech at Carmichael. The next ticket distribution match will be at 12 p.m., Jan. 23 against Old Dominion. With 62 points, N.C. State outdistanc ed South Carolina (51)' and North Carolina (34) to win their first men's track meet of the season and snap the Tar Heels win streak at 12. Duke rounded out the four-way meet with 16 points. The women's team extended their streak, however, by easing past State 43-34. C&QdD- a ABSENCE OFl C 2:15 4:40 7:05 9:35 2:15 4:45 7:15 9:45 1 T A if ")ff" Dolby Stereo I i Mi BURT. SHARKYS O rvJL 1 iREYNOLDS MACHINE Eli 1 I Vfhrr i - 3:15 5:10 7:05 9:00 g I ViD0QX$ ! Adults Only I original study materials ' small croup tce cntr summer & compact courses EDUCATIONAL CENTER 919-483-8720 YOU LOOK VTIRMARCIE I AM, SIR ..I G0TVF AT SIX O'CLOCK 50 I C0ULP BE AT MY PATROL POST ON TIME I M 50 SLEEPY... I PON'T THINK I CAN STAY AWAKE MUCH... DOONESBURY by Garry Trudoau Adults $3.00 Mon -Fri. 'till 6 pm S2.00 THE Daily Crossword By Stanley B. 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WffH MY NEWUASH DEAR? DOES IH51DN COMEOW?. Ail IN FACT, THZBOWMBrt&SWRB S0OAPTDHWMEBfiCKtI'MKIN& FWHWlDUmorTTDPAVTOaiAR A BGMBHINS FOP. OCR CLEMS'. penmr, ., SHOuwmmouz. Wf CUSTOMERS IN DETROIT PeTROfT? JU5T BECAUSE fT$ A UT- neouTOFwm. THAT HAD espemuy, mavis 7 tUEZmJP. BESIDES, fT MS MY TURN! THIS WEEK AT CAROLINA Tuesday -7:30 Women's Basketball vs Duke Thursday 5:45 JV Basketball vs FK Union 8:00 Men's Basketball vs Wake (Need men's ticket for JV game) - Friday 7100 Wrestling vs VPI Saturday Mm Wrestling vs ODU ' 12:45 COCA-COLA Joe Hilton Indoor Track Invitational 9 mm 213 West Franklin St. & 1800 Chapel Hill-Durham Blvd. 3 1 tTHimmniiinniT ATTENTION UNC STUDENTS University Dining Services has Positions Available Earn $3 40 an hour and get free meals Now accepting appli cations for Spring Semester Limited Positions available. ' Tipply University Dining Services Lenoir Hall 133-A Monday-Friday, 10 am-4 pm ASPEN SOLOISTS Wednesday, Jan. 20 Memorial Hall Tickets $2.50 A New Musical Fri., Sat., Sun., Jan 22, 23, 24 evening & matinee performances ticket info, at the box office GUS GIORDANO JAZZ DANCE CHICAGO Thurs,, Jan. 28 8:00 Memorial Hall tickets $5.50, $7.50 In TIAf KTo Ty .. I A , -'-- - I t: Friday, Jan. 29 8:00 pm Memorial Hall Tickets $8.50 & $9.50 All tickets on sale at the Union Box office ' on campus . . J J, after 5 p.m. daily We use only the finest imported ham, beef, and cheeses, succulent tuna and freshly-made desserts, and all-white turkey. rL BLJMPIE SANDWICHES - on a sub roll or pita bread - regular giant 1. Bologna and cheese 1.40 lljSO 2. Cheese 1.65 3.30 (Swiss, American provolone) 3. Ham and Swiss 1.80 3.60 4. Prosciuttini 3.50 (salami, provolone 5. Tuna 1.95 3.90 6. Turkey-all white 1.75 3.50 7..Blimpie Club 1.95 3.90 8. :Blimpie Super 1.95 3.90 9. Rare Roast Beef 2.05 4.10 10. Blimpie Best 2.05 4.10 11. Pastrami and Swiss 2.05 4.10 12. Bomber " . 2.20 4.40 13. Tuna Melt 2.05 4.10 14. Hot Roast Beef 2.15 4.30 American 15., Hot Corned Beef 2.10 . , ON THE SIDE Potato chips V " Potato salad'-" -Coleslaw Peppers Meat Cheese - EXTR AS .30 .40 .40 .15 .40 .25 - DESSERTS1 N.Y. Cheese cake -world's best Brownie Eclairs Pecan Pie - BEVERAGES -Canned drinks Coke, Tab, Sprite .95 .45 .55 .75 .55 r Drivers Wanted Apply in rierson or call after 2 pm