TTTfTT?
I AY
! If -TTIm
Main Number 962-0245
News 962-0246
Advertising 962-0252
ii a jj
Thursday, June 3, 1932 Chape! Hill, North Carolina ,
Stickmen
eize sec
ono
e
,3
' X
f'f
" -''J '--
0 f
4
. c
- 4
.:-X!5!-:c..-l
v :-,w-
:?".V.x,;y..
' 7
' ...
' V
? I
-wc w
1
The offensive punch of Mike Burnett (left) and Dave Wingate (right) was in
strumental in the Tar Heels' 7-5 NCAA lacrosse championship victory over
Johns Hopkins Saturday .Photos by Frank Clarkson.
ong, dry summer' for job seekers
Student summer job prospects dim
By JENNIFER CARGAL
and MICKEY WEAVER
Staff Writers
An advertisement for the Record Bar in a
local paper last week said the Franklin Street
store would begin taking job applications at 2
p.m. on a particular day. By the 2 p.m. dead
line between 100 and 200 students were wait
ing outside the store, Record Bar employee
John Rasols said this week. Inquiries about
the position have kept coming in.
For students who are looking for jobs in
Chapel Hill it could be a long, dry summer.
Local businesses have received an unusu
ally large number of job applications so far
this summer, a spot check showed this week.
Some businesses, such as the Porthole Res
taurant on Franklin Street and the Record
Bar, have stopped taking applications for
summer employment altogether, spokesper
sons said.
Other businesses including Ives at
University Mall and Four Corners restaurant
'mimjy ''''f-'-
4
mm.
est '4
4 '
V
V.:- .,
, .fi if: J
1 Mi
!
on Franklin Street also reported heavy stu
dent interest-
On campus the outlook has been similarly
bleak for students who need University
related jobs for the summer.
Students eligible for financial aid had little
trouble getting on-campus jobs, said Mary
Garren, assistant director for employment at
the Student Aid Off ice.
But the Student Stores, Carolina Union
and Undergraduate Library reported no new
hiring for other students.
About 100 students are employed in on
campus jobs through the work-study pro
gram, but they make up a very small part of
the summer student work force, Garren said.
No figures are available yet oh exactly
See EMPLOYMENT on page 2
Vi&.'. -V... j&V4S6fa4M
.,rs-- Tf fee.Matt Cooper
'Old law office' up for sale
- " " 4 , - - - 4
The Chapel Hill Preservation Society recently bought this stucco house
vwhich is across Franklin Street from the President's house. It is thought to
have been built around 1843 and students have lived in it since the 1950s. The
society bought it for $66,000 and hopes to sell it to someone who will reno
vate it.
!?3 crcim at your deer p.: 3: 5
, : 0 a sc be' i 1-oosc 3:' fcri n g l,' -
By CHARLES UPCHURCH
Staff Writer
North Carolina finished another perfect
lacrosse season Saturday in Charlottesville,
Va., with a 7-5 win over Johns Hopkins and a
second straight NCAA Division I title.
Hopkins, playing in its sixth consecutive
championshp game, had played the unde
feated Tar Heels closer than any other team
in the past year. -
Carolina edged the Blue Jays 14-13 in last
year's title game at Princeton, N.J., and took
a 13-12 regular season decision this year in
Baltimore.
But this year the fast-break Tar Heels beat
Hopkins at its own game a slow tempo, set
up game. The Blue Jays could only get as
close as one goal, 6-5, in the fourth quarter
before UNC shut the door.
Dave Wingate had the hothand for UNC
this time, scoring five goals on the sun-baked
astroturf of Scott Stadium before a crowd of
more than 10,000.
Wingate netted all three of Carolina's first
quarter goals, while the Tar Heels defense
held the Blue Jays scoreless.
"He, (Wingate) made some amazing plays;
he's got confidence," UNC head coach Wil
lie Scroggs, formerly of John's Hopkins, said.
"We want to shoot the ball as much as we
can and I'm surprised we didn't shoot more."
Hopkins' All-American attackman Jeff
Cook, who scored six goals in last year's
championship game, was held scoreless by
UNC junior defenseman John Haus.
"Cook's a great attackman," said Haus.
"The game slowed down and we didn't have
to doubleteam Cook as much' Cook, a
senior from Pikesville, Md.; had not been
shut out in two seasons.
"Their defense has come a long way,"
said Cook. "It seemed like most of our shots
were from 15 yards."
North Carolina's guardians of the goal,
Haus, Jamie Allen and Gary Burns, played
punishing defense around the crease. All
American goalie Tom Sears abandoned his
position several times to make far-ranging
checks on the ball.
Hopkins was patient on offense through
out the game. The Blue Jays out-shot Caro
lina 50-39, with most of those shots coming
from at least 10 yards out.
The lays hurt themselves with careless
stickwork in the first quarter, constantly
throwing the ball away.
With a 3-0 lead going into the second
quarter, Scroggs ordered the Heels into a
tight zone defense, hoping to control the
game's tempo.
"When we got the lead, we felt the zone
could dictate," Scroggs said. "That (the zone)
slows the tempo of the game too. We made
them shoot from the outside."
Top ' defensive reserves Roy ' Messinger
and Randy Cox kept things physical inside
the zone. -
Johns Hopkins got its first score with 5:35
left in the first half when Mike Donnelly
knocked a grounder that UNC goalie Tom
Sears had stopped initially at the crease.
With 4:21 left, Wingate scored his fourth
See LACROSSE on page 4