Virginia beats UNC, 6-3 Wednesday, April 7, 1982The Daily Tar Heel5 By EDDIE WOOTEN Staff Writer Playing in 40-degree weather with winds gusting as high as 40 mph, the North Carolina men's tennis team was beaten by Virginia 6-3 Tuesday in an Atlantic Coast Conference match in Charlottesville, Va. Carolina's Josh Sarrier, at the No. 5 seed, defeated John Murray in three sets, 6-1, 4-6, 6-1. No. 6 John Grigg beat Steve Wilson 6-3, 6-2 in the other Tar Heel singles win. The lone doubles team to win was the No. 3 pair of Robbie Bach and Ken Whitaker, who beat Steve Wilson and Tom Kimball 6-3, 6-4. The Tar Heels were beaten in each of the first four singles matches. Mike Ein sidler defeated Ray Disco 6-2, 6-1 at No. 1. Second-seeded John Dokken beat Ron Erskine 6-4, 6-3. No. 3 Jay Horine top ped Ken Ludwig in three sets, 7-6, 4-6, 6-2, and No.. 4 Darrell Wilburn beat Whitaker 6-2, 7-6. Virginia also took wins in two of three doubles matches. At the No. 1 position, Einsidler and Dokken disposed of Disco and Ludwig 6-2, 7-6. In a three-set match, Horine and Wilburn beat Erskine and Grigg 6-2, 2-6, 7-5. On Monday, the Tar Heels recorded their fourth shufoiif -f V censon h- blanking William and Mary 9-0 in Wil liamsburg, Va. Eight of the nine matches were won in straight sets. The exception was in the No. 2 singles match. Erskine beat Paul Meehan 6-2, 4-6, 6-4. In other singles matches, Disco beat Greg Miller 6-3, 6-1 at No. 1; Ludwig topped Gordon Dia mond 6-1, 6-4 at No. 3; Sarner routed Rod Macklin 6-2, 6-1 at No. 4; Grigg beat Don Robbins 6-1, 6-3 at No. 5; and No. 6 Robbie Bach beat Bruce Phillips 6-4, 6-4. The Tar Heels had an easy time in the doubles matches. The top-seeded team of Disco and Ludwig defeated Miller and Diamond 6-3, 6-4. Erskine and Grigg, playing at No. 2, beat Robbins and Phillips 6-4, 6-2, and the No. 3 team of Sarner and Bach whipped Macklin and Meehan 6-2, 6-1. UNC, 2-2 in the ACC and 11-10 overall, plays non-conference foe West Virginia today at 2 p.m. on the Hinton James courts. The Tar Heels will meet Wake Forest Thursday in an ACC encounter. This will be a crucial match, according to Coach Allen Morris. "Wake Forest is a big one we'd like to have," he said. "If we could go into the ACC Tournament losing only to Gem son, that would be super." UNC to host Carolina Relays By TOM BERRY Staff Writer Perennial track power Fairleigh Dickinson heads a field of 38 teams scheduled to compete Saturday after noon at Fetzer Track in the 20th annual Carolina Relays. Because the meet is Carolina's only home outdoor track classic this season, some of the region's and nation's top stars will be present. Competition starts at noon with the women's field events. The first running event, the 110-meter high hurdle semifinals, will begin at 12:30. "Quality-wise, this should turn out to be one of the best meets we've ever had," track coach Hubert West said. "Fairleigh-Dickinson has some of the top collegiate athletes in the country." The Fairleigh-Dickinson men finished ninth in the recent NCAA indoor track championships. They are led by nationally-ranked steeplechase runner Solomon Chebar of Kenya; Richard Ouma, fourth in the 1982 NCAA in door half mile; and sprinter Ephraim Serrette, who has a personal best of 10.2 in the 100-meter dash. Included among the 21 men's teams are Maryland, Delaware, William and Mary, Norfolk State, Old Dominion, Pembroke State, East Carolina, Winston-Salem State, Liberty Baptist, Campbell, St. Augustine's and North Carolina A&T. Triple jumper David McFadden of Virginia State will be one of the top par ticipants in the field . events. He has jumped 54-5 and finished in the top six in the NCAA indoor championships. Eighteen women's teams will be rep resented, including Fairleigh-Dickinson, Old Dominion, Villanova, Richmond, James Madison, William and Mary, St. Augustine's, Virginia State and Hamp ton Institute. Candy Young heads a strong Fairleigh-Dickinson women's team. Perhaps the top hurdler in the country, Young will run only in the 400 on Satur day. Other top individuals are sprinter and longjumper Robin Taylor of Old Dominion, Richmond's Jo White, the 1981 AIAW 1000-meter champion, and half-miler Dana Wright of Old Domi nion. UNC will count on solid perfor mances from Chris Mand in the pole vault, Steve Flynn in the shot put, James Harris in the long jump, Bobby Wilson in the high jump, Marquita Brown, Yvette Morehead, Kelly Houk and Lauren Lewis in the hurdles and Lisa Staton in the 100- and 200-meter dashes. Assistant track coach Don Lockerbie said the Carolina distance runners would compete in races different from their specialties in order to better pre pare for the ACC Championship the following weekend at Charlottesville, Va. "We are using them to tune up for the ACC meet," Lockerbie said. "Most of the distance runners will be in events shorter than normal to get some speed work in." Jimmy Cooper, normally a steeple chase runner, will run in the ,1500 and Todd McCallister will move down to the, 800. McCallister, one of the nation's top 1500-meter runners, welcomes the change of events. "I've always wanted to do the half mile (800 meters) but I don't do it enough," he said. "I think I could' ve qualified (for the NCAA nationals) in the half last year if I had run it some more," THE Daily Crossword By Fran Ragus ACROSS 1 Army meal 5 Judicial garments 10 Zoo com partment 14 Pain 15 Wear away 16 Stone 17 Pulled the trigger Painter Edouard Disabled 20 All out 23 Cafeau 24 Seines 27 Behind a ship 30 School exams 18 19 34 Care for 35 Support a person 36 Gershwin 37 "Tempest" spirit 38 Lemon or orange 39 Help 42 Shim 44 Wild spree 45 Analyzed a sentence 46 Trueheart 47 Italian money 48 Fervently 55 Kind of skirt 58 Undergo change 59 Piscivorous bird 60 Related 61 Carved gem 62 Pro 63 Secretary of State 64 Pungs 65 Spill over 1 3 4 5 Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: ATSAPrlElMllRr' 1PIAIL1 P UMA S. 0. NLL CJ OMNI 0 MA Bl-TOSCATAUS MP H I L A N TTh R 0 P I S T i rTp EAT S rj THIN 171 II A lit E H s l TMT f" J t L L A TJF L U EPF L U PUB IJT C iiB R A RJLJE.S. s TTaXz A j 0 E ULL n II : C AR TjTG HON K E 0 . i S A U N A Ll BANE riTH A N.JD 1 E WIAIH E G I E tJ IAlAnA 111 N." AIM. I A JF E R rYAIXA 0 OiN R j U 1 S j E j , 71 M Y IT H j j eJn J T I E I 4782 DOWN Rigging support She loved Narcissus Scat! Colonizes Stay 6 Praying figure, in art 7 Fleming's James 8 Idyllic place 9 Bristle 10 Irish lass 11 Literary collection 12 Exercise place 13 River in England Loser to a tortoise the valley of.-" 25 Walks 26 Dirt smear 21 22 27 Old-womanish 28 Most certain 29 Stupor 30 Bangor's state 31 Frosted a cake 32 Metric measure: abbr. 33 Haste 35 Small nail 37 Satisfied expression 40 Stylish 41 Church section 42 Division of a prison 43 Blackboard items 45 Horses" 47 Added alcohol 49 Curved lUl segments , 50 Actual . 51 Docile 52 Nuncupative 53 Biblical preposition 54 Vault 55 Jongg 56 Alias letters 57 Midnight, in Roma 1 2 1 p 15 16 p p p f 110 111 112 113 Ti 75 ' 76 77 75 75 ' IT ; - "2T" 27T 28T"29 " 3fnjppr" 33""" . 35" T "36 If " Is mammm mm ma mhmi 'mg -litimmm nwmmmm mb nmrnmrnwrnm ummmmm mhmm "" "Tirtj -""Mn hnhmmi im bh 39 40 41 42 43 47"- --- 48 """" Ig bcTjsT"" " """" 5253-t5T"' 15T S6lsT" """"" 15 59 60 """" Ti . "el "63 Ti "65 2 v " X y.-Z . w.i 5;y:-:-'.'.v . . Men's gold stays home while women go north 1 ' it i 1 tZJZZ . mm.r .'.' t..-v2?j ''-4' -: xxwv; x' v'jvy. XvX-XvX "XvX-xx- X'i '.-'y.-ii -r:K-:vX -x x S-x-x-x?:? x x-x vx :-ffl-:v;-:-:v:-:: : 7- , DTHSuaime C nver sano UNC catcher Ginny Schreiner slugs a single ... in Carolina's 7-6 win over Lenoir Rhyne Speer keys win in softball split By MIKE DESISTI Staff Writer It was the afternoon of the sacrifice, not only for the players but for the few spectators who braved the cold to watch the UNC softball team come from behind to take a 7-6 decision from visiting Lenoir-Rhync. Pitcher Sharon Speer's ninth-inning sacrifice fly ended four hours of bone chilling ball for the Tar Heels, who had dropped an earlier 6-5 decision to UNC Wilmington. Freshman Dori Kovanen led off the final inning with a single to left, and scored after successive sacrifice flies by second baseman Kay Holt and Speer and a timely error by the Bears. Speer's looper to left center gave her the win and upped Carolina's record to 26-10-1 for the year. UNC saw extra-inning action in their first game as well, taking UNC-Wilmington the distance before bowing out in the ninth. The Seahawk's Sharon Castleberry knocked in teammate Robin Campbell with a single to left center for the winning run. , , UNC-W scored early and often, open ing up a five-run lead before the Tar Heels got on the board with two runs in the fourth. Kathy MacFarlane and Kovanen led off that inning with consecutive singles. MacFarlane scored when first baseman Marsha Brown hit into a fielder's choice. Kovanen advanced to second on the play and came across with run number two when Holt lined a single. 1982 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc. All Rights Reserved 4782 April 21 -April 25 8:00.pm Great Hall $2.00 StudentSr. Citizens $3.50 General Public Tickets Available at Union Box Office & at Door Carolina TAR HEELS FANS Show your1 support for the champion Tarheels by wearing this handsome Gold-tone wrist watch. Makes a great gift for alumni, students, fans and sup porters. I i MOirrMk (r r COLLECTORS ITEMS ONLY 1000 MADE 1 Year 0Q Q Includes Warranty - Shipping Send Check or Money Order to: Championship Watches P.O. Box 2291 Clarksburg, W.V. 26301 Please ship watch(es) $29.95 to: Name Address City State Zip Allow 3-4 weeks delivery UNC tied it up in the seventh on three runs. Brown, Holt and Ginny Schreiner all singled to load the bases. Susie Wilson reached first on a fielder's choice, forcing out Brown at home. Suzie Everette flew out to left center before outfielder Rose Borkowski's line drive to second was dropped, allowing two teammates to score. Outfielder Janet Braxton then singled to left, bringing in Wilson. The Seahawks ended the game with a ninth-inning run off UNC pitcher Wilson, who took the loss. The Tar Heels have a tough weekend ahead of them, but assistant coach Judy Martino is optimistic. "We made some changes last week, but we're starting to come around. We've been playing some solid defense and mov ing the ball around," Martino said. UNC will travel to Raleigh this after noon to face rival N.C. State, a team they haven't beaten this year. The Heels will travel back to Raleigh Friday for the N.C.S.U. Invitational, which traditional ly features some excellent area competition. By STEPHANIE GRAHAM Staff Writer The UNC men's and women's golf teams will both be competing again this weekend, but the women travel to Columbus, Ohio. The men stay at home to host the second annual Tar Heel Invi tational at Finley Golf Course. Men's coach Devon Brouse said that he . was happy to bring his team back to Chapel Hill after successful appearances in tournaments in Florida, Mexico, Ala bama and South Carolina. "We're excited about the second Tar Heel Invitational," Brouse said. "We will be playing two five-man squads and I'm glad that the people in Chapel Hill can watch the entire team play." Last year the Tar Heels scored their first tournament victory of the season at Finley, and the team used that momen tum to propel them to an ACC champion .ship in the conference tournament the following week. This year the ACC championship also falls one week after the Tar Heel Invita-' tional. "It's really a nice thing to have this tourney a week before the ACC's," Brouse said. Though the Tar Heels have failed to capture a title this spring, the team has played well while finishing in the top 10 in each of its four tournament appearances. These finishes included two second-place showings. "There have been some bright spots this year," Brouse said. "We've been very consistent, but we haven't played as well as we can. Our consistency has come from a lot of experience and some good senior leadership. - "We've been close several times; we just have not put it all together yet." UNC will have to play well to defend its title this weekend in a field that is sub stantially improved over last year's field, Brouse said. The district's top-ranked team, Tennes see, as well as the second-ranked team, N.C. State, will be in Chapel Hill as will other strong squads like Louisiana State and Clemson. Brouse hopes that the state's cold and blustery weather will clear up before tee time Friday morning for the three-day, 54-hole tourney. "I'm afraid the weather isn't supposed to be as good as it was last year," he said. "But the course is in good shape, so that won't be a factor. Weather might be more of a factor when women's coach Dot Gunnells' team journeys to frosty Columbus Friday for the 54-hole Lady Buckeye Invitational. "We're really looking forward to going up to Ohio State" Gunnells said. "The tournament is played on the Scarlet Golf Course, which is one of the best courses we'll play all season." . The Tar Heels could be seeing the Scarlet Course again this year. The AIAW national tournament will be played in Columbus in June. The field of 21 teams in this weekend's tournament will be another tough test for a UNC team which has already faced rigorous competition while finishing in ,the top 10 twice in three tournaments. Highly-regarded teams traveling to Ohio include Georgia, Kentucky and all of the Big Ten schools. "It's a really good field," Gunnells said. , Though Gunnells is not completely - satisfied with the team's performance thus far UNC is ranked in the nation's Top 10 she thinks things may be gell ing. "I've been a little bit disappointed," she said, "but we're about to get it together." If hard work on the practice tee means anything, she could be right. "We had an intra-squad tournament last week at Finley," Gunnells said. "The girls are all hitting the ball stiff to the pin. I just hope we can keep it up." Freshman Page Marsh, who carded the team's lowest score two weeks ago in the Lady Paladin Invitational, shot a 69 in that practice session. Joining Marsh and Mescan in Colum bus will be Jill Nesbitt, Cathy Reynolds and Kathy Ayers. ACTORS OF THf ' GOLD Or ST. OREOORV THE GREAT RICHARD ROOGERS MARTIN CHARMN PETER STONE Chapel of the Cross April 15,16,17 8 TICKETS miUBlE AT BNION t CHAPEL OF THE CIOSS For Information call 929-2193 Tickets: $2.50 & J3.00 1 OiJ U Ull I Current Opportunities Nuclear Engineering Business Management Aviation Law Nursing Personnel Administration intelligence Civil Engineering Shipboard Operations we Offer Starting salary from $18,000 $22,500 with increases to. $28,000-$40,000 in four years. 30 days paid vacation annually. Fully financed graduate pro grams. Superior family health plan. More responsibility and leader ship opportunities. world wide travel and adven- ture. - ' - Prestige and personal growth . " ' . potential . , COLLEGE GRADUATES U.S. Citizens less than 35 years of age interested in holding challenging managerial, positions. Contact by resume or phone: V lIAVY OFFICER PROGRAMS 101 Navaho Dr. Raleigh, NC 27609 or call 1-800-662-7231 H MERE, PARTNER, LETS SEE YOU HIT A v feu; serves... N YOUR HANPS LOOK KINP OF SMALL, AMP VDU PONT HAVE ANY POCKETS... HOUJ'RE YOU 60NNA HOLP TWO BALLS WHEN YOU SERVE ? Q ia UrtWd rmmn nn me -V DOONESBURY by Garry Trudssu PLSPTPJJDFJPI mm t m m tnoif ; 600P7JM5! SIR Jjf I Youswrr.Kip- POITHZTSMB! ALMS FIRST N YOU, SIR.. I WORK HARP, AtiPIPWM! 600P FOR I t HEY! this you tSNTSCOTCH! PIP? I0PV5F5P SCOTCH! oRtim T6tHf icaiptfT RSM5M3ER emm,sor PUT IN BOTH. CHAPEL THRILL '82 starring HALL end OATES with special guest JOAN JETT end tho Blackhearts and added attraction ' DONNIEIRIS and the Cruisers SAT., APRIL 24 1 pm KENAN STADIUM TICKETS AT UNION ANNEX Box Office Limited Student $3.50 Tickets Go Off Sate April 9 O (with student ID and Athletic Pass) Cash Only No Checks T-Shirts Now on Sale in the Pit. f ! rff putt Reduced Admission Tickets at the Student Union ':ijh i , . jr 7 S rtAnm mi a ft aocipc ccnicc Matinees VMnuiiiuM uunogivo otniuo t 30 ,rving Ber,in's EASTER PARADE ff 5:15 . Starring Fred Astaire, Judy Garland - 1 f" Nfahtiv You'll ba nlad at rn ramot O 7:45 9:45 r 20th CENTURY-FOX FILMS s Second " I lO-Hi'tuIJA l" Shows at Week! 42-3oei 7:15 9:30 i iii,pii.jii u mi n ui i.jii.miiwn J li Mum li. il I I u III I J l.i nuvmuilll miij. i" m '

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view