Wednesday, April 6, 1983The Daily Tar Heel5 champions From page 1 Campbell stomps UNC 7-2 in Buies Creek From Staff Reports The North Carolina baseball team dropped a 7-2 decision to Campbell Tues day in Buies Creek, leaving the Tar Heels at 29-5 on the season, 5-1 in the ACC. The Camels struck early in the third on Rodney Stovall's two-run homer, then put the game away with four eighth inning runs, three of them unearned. Campbell's Darin Cloninger picked up the win to raise his record to 5-3 on the year, while Greg Karpuk went the first four innings for the Tar Heels and was charged with the loss, his first of the season against four wins. Johns Hopkins, which has been in the NCAA Division I lacrosse championship game the last five years in a row, winning from 1978 through 1980 and finishing se cond to North Carolina the last two years, tops the Baltimore Sun's lacrosse poll for the third straight week. Hopkins defeated Virginia last Satur day, 12-6, and plays the Tar Heels in Chapel Hill next Saturday. UNC lost to Maryland (4-1) by a score of 11-9 last Saturday and fell into a tie for fifth with Virginia. Second this week is Syracuse (5-0), which ripped Rutgers, 21-13. Maryland is third. Army (4-0), which last Saturday defeated Hofstra, 9-3, is fourth. Ticket distribution for Saturday's home lacrosse match against Johns Hopkins will begin at 8:30 a.m. today at the UNC ticket office in Carmichael Auditorium. Students may pick up two tickets by presenting their, own student identifica tion card and spring athletic pass, as well as the ID and athletic pass of another stu dent. Tickets will also be available on the day of the game at Fetzer Field, but at that point the 4,500 seats at the field may be taken and standing-room-only tickets will be distributed. Tickets for the general public may be obtained at the UNC ticket office starting Wednesday. Prices are $2 for adults and $1 for youths. Ralph Sampson, the 7-foot-4 center from Virginia, was a unanimous choice for the third year in a row Monday on the All-America team selected by the 23 coaches of the National Basketball Association. The NBA coaches' selection came after the announcement Friday that Sampson was chosen as the Associated Press Player of the Year, also for the third consecutive time. Sampson, the lone repeater from last year's squad, was joined on the team by Michael Jordan, senior forward Dale Ellis of Tennessee, sophomore forward Keith Lee of Memphis State and sophomore center Pat Ewing of George town. Among others receiving votes were Sam Perkins and N.C. State's Thurl Bailey. Atlanta manager Joe Torre is less in terested in duplicating the Braves' record setting start of the 1982 season than he is in repeating as National League West champions. Atlanta, which won its first 13 games to set a major league record last year, a Support the Cm March of Dimes IW1M OiffCIS KXJNOAIIONi FREE Public Meeting f Introduction to self study Gurdjieff Method Sunday, April 10, 3:00 pm 107 North Roberson Street Chapel Hill, N.C r SPRING CLEANING SPECIAL $2.00 discount on any drycleaning order of $8.00 or more through April 30th. 7 DAYS A WEEK Franklin Street across from Fowler's OPEN 9 A.M. to MIDNIGHT MIDNIGHT Fri. & Sat Andy Warhol's "BAD" No one under 18 ENDS THURSDAY 5TH DELICIOUS WEEK! 11 U r i "A SMORGASBORD OF COMIC SURPRISES ... Paul Barter spicy stew of tax end murder is a taste beet aeoond to none ... tunny enough to become the sleeper comedy of the year." Godfrey 'Cheshire, THE SPECTATOR 1 C Tt- CNACL Milt f a. If Mttiflte it ill the director of ev.. . HI "Return of the " II Secaucus7" v .. - v II . "YEsTyesj" x- wi 11 " 'UANNA' LOOKS AND SOUNDS AUTHENTIC. It's II 1 Q neither slick, like 'Making Love' nor does it pretend to II "ONE OF THE FUNNIEST OFF-BEAT f be about something else, like 'Personal Best.' Unda 1 1 COMEDIES IN MANY A SEASON!" U Griffiths Is splendid. Her Uanna is... heroic." 11 -Judith Crist I Vincent Cerby, New York Times I 1 Next: String! Pfj H m L'nrtjd&tJStaCsssci M G "Brimstone &Treac,e' m Pay 30 S3S 7:10 9:15 JrVs. Dally 330 5:30 7:30 fr.30 JJ TH E Daily Crossword by Samuel K. Fliegner I r LSJJ KCAT GRE GEE PSYCH GRE BIO CCaT-PCAT-W SSJIT PSJSI ACKEYEKEKTS SAT ACT TCEFL KSXP KTL KED ESS ECFK3 REX V KC3 RM EDS CPA SPEED REACIXG EDUCATIONAL CENTER Test Preparation Specialists Since 1938 For information. Pleas Call: 919-489-8720 489-2348 2634 Chapel Hill Blvd. Suite 112 Durham, N.C. 27707 L n 1 ACROSS 1 Cougar 5 Cubicles 10 Continental prefix 14 Summit 15 Sayonara 16 In a Jiffy 17 Ore deposit 18 Onerous 20 Objective 21 Gait 22 Persian Gulf vessel 23 France's longest river 25 Traffic Jam sight 27 Guarantee 29 Jawbone 33 Passable 34 Taiwan capital 36 Umpire's . call 37 Marketplace of Greece 39 Japanese apricot 40 Concealed difficulty 42 Take it on the 43 Salad vegetable 46 East of Indiana 47 Relating to memory 49 Defender of Troy 51 dafe 52 Laundry appliance 53 Partner of stripes 56 Sharpen 57 Mayday 60 Unwieldy , 63 Cupola 64 Biblical victim 65 " mol le deluge" 66 Mideast potentate 67 Hawaii's state bird 68 Foundation 69 noire Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: HTOlsTSTfA I h I a I b noTFffiiATNl A M O R Li'S 0 L 0 ARETE C A ulc A S I AN ,,JFJI RMS l , TT a m !Tr jaTr c h oTnTtTTm e 4RT0 mTTo a np I R j U 1 H j R I j S W E DlEjN !IN aTr" PRE A 6T IF S E rTDjl T T Y lllai.iln TOT O.A.I reenTTi STHRUFFIY sTe p t bTeIa R I H TrieTa 0.L.1ANJ Till t s do Kw n A JS.N Ej T 0 Y S 'TP E E 1piaItItIy1Jap1s1eLw1e1sIt1 1 2 3 4 4683 DOWN Haggard Atop Officious Logger's tool 5 Nightclub 6 Extract 7 Milan money 8 Ushered 9 Litigate 10 St. Francis of 11 Deceive 12 European capital 13 Unique individual 19 Scandina vian 21 Glutton 24 Skunk trait 25 May and Cod 26 French donkey 27 Hymn 28 Josh or Ella 29 Copycat 30 Annoying 31 Santa 32 Group char acteristic 35 Sound system 38 Excite 41 Top-notch 44 Pismire 45 Hitch up 48 Agate 50 Evil 52 Japanese news agency 53 Peruse 54 Vacuum or inner 55 Assent word 56 d'oeuvres 58 Disregard 59 Parched 61 Mortar mixer 62 Resort 63 Ingenue 1 2 3 Tl I Is 6 17 la 19 10 111 I12 113 J L . L 14 115 16 17 j TT TsT" 20 " " "j zT" """" """ 22 """" """"" "" ' " " ' 23" IT" " " "252'r "" 27-l28 29 30""j3Tl3r" 33 34 3 j ,8 TT" " W " 40 T ' 42 "" 43" 44 " " " if-'t,mmm" -J 77 " " 48" " " " " 49 50" " " " " ' ' 51 " ' 82 53 1 54 55 " " SlT" " " " 57 Salsi"" 60 "" " "" 61' 62" "" "" " """63" " mmm" 64 ,65 I 66 j 1 ; 1 1 I 11 i I I 1 I 1 i II 1S83 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc. All Rights Reserved 4683 Carolina Classic Some Like It Hot : r, H 2:45 5:05 SPRING BREAK 7:15 9:15 (R) .iihrnlui (PG) EMI NUMIW STRICT Mtl The Outsiders 2:45 4:45 7:00 9:00 ELLIOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 $2.00 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! 3:15 5:15 7:15 9:20 Written by Neil Simon (PG) Max Dugan Returns 3:15 5:10 7:05 9:00 Triumphs of a (g Man Called Horse 3:00 :05 7:10 DOLBY STEREO The Black Stallion Returns (PG) 9:15 Dennis Quaid Tough Enough JPG) bowed 5-4 Monday in the National League opener to the Reds at Cincinaiti. "This wasn't one of those games I'm going to lose any sleep over,'' Torre said. "We usually win with the long ball, but they just turned the tables a little on us." The Braves blew a 4-2 lead as the Reds scored two runs in the sixth inning and won when Dave Concepcion singled in Eddie Milner from second base with two outs in the eighth off loser Steve Bedro sian. Mario Soto, who struck out five and walked four in going eight innings, got the win: Tom Hume pitched the ninth and earned the save. Chris Chambliss' two-run homer in the second had given Atlanta a 3-0 lead. So the Wolfpack fouled Drexler, who hit both shots to extend the lead to six, then Michael Young, who missed both of his. Then Whittenburg and Lowe caught fire and State tied it at 52-52 with 1:59 to go. Whittenburg grabbed Franklin, the fresh man. He missed the front end of the one-and-one and there's no need to tell what happened after that. . The Lewis slowdown wasn't the only move by the Houston coach that can be called into question. With 12:21 to go in the first half, Clyde Drexler, an indispensable element in the Cougars' attack, picked up his third foul. Lewis left him in the game. Why? "Clyde is our best defensive player and we needed him on Thurl Bailey," Lewis said. Makes sense. Until you think about it for a minute. With Drexler in serious foul trouble, it should have been obvious that he'd have to be careful against Bailey, that he wouldn't be able to play his best defense. Lewis may not have realized it, but Bailey did. He scored all 15 of his points in the first half. Meanwhile, Drexler was assessed his And what, pray tell, was Larry Micheaux doing on the bench for 22 minutes of the game? Lewis: "Larry wasn't playing very good." Granted, but to keep your dominating power forward the same player who scored 30 points against Villanova out of more than half the game when he's not in foul trou ble seems a little ridiculous. Micheaux agreed. . "I felt I should have been playing," he said. "You need a while to get into the flow of the game." Surprisingly, Valvano never really got into the flow of the post-game mayhem. In Raleigh, he found himself in bed with the flu. But it didn't take away from the satisfaction that came with outcoaching his counterpart who had what everyone considered the most talented and powerful team in college basket ball. And he even had the strength for another one-liner. "I love Albuquerque," he said. "In fact, my wife is pregnant. She doesn't know it yet, and we're going to name our kid Al B. Quer que Valvano." NORTH CAROLINA SYMPHONY'S All-TCIiAIKOVSKY CONCERT Thursday, April 14th 8 pm Memorial Hall Student Tickets 82.50 at Union Box Office PUTTING A STOP TO PUTTING IT OFF: x ?v a procrastination workshop . Tuesday, April 19th, 4:00 pm .1. U;r.;- tt Sign up and further information ". ' ' at The Union desk April 5-14. . ' ': yf) ... Carolina union human relations committee and "'-a-' -qrSg;' ' , - 1 student development counseling center presentation '4 5 stS- ; r-s-i-iv'' WOMEN'S STUDIES COURSEFALL 1983 Cross Listed Courses WMST46 Philosophical Issues in Feminism 3-5:30 W J.Thomas WMST 66 Women in Europe I 9:30 TTh J. Bennett WMST 103 Reproductive Physiology 1-3:00 M J. Hulka WMST 150 (Eng. 50) Topics in Gender & Literature 11-11:50 MWF B.Taylor (British Women Writers of the 19th and 20th centuries) WMST 150 (Eng. 50) Topics in Gender & Literature (Southern Women Writers) 11-12:15 TTh 'T.Davis WMST 190 Supervised Internship TBA Staff WMST 199 Independent Study TBA J.Mathews Departmental Listings Health Education 160 Issues in Women's Health and Health Education 2-3:15 TTh Earp Allied Courses Sociology 30 Family and Society 9:30 TTh j Rindfuss Sociology 30 Family and Society 12:30 TTh Uhlenberg History 90 Evangelicalism & U.S. 1636-1983 11:00 TTh D.Mathews (Women & Religion is one section BY PERMISSION ONLY) Religion 84 Psychology of Religion 2:00 TTh W. Peck (Course discussions include issues such as role, identity, growth, personal pilgrimmage; readings include feminist authors such as Friedan and Dinnerstein) If you're a musician who's serious about performing, you should take a serious look at the Army. Army bands offer you an average of 40 performances a month. In every thing from concerts to parades. Army bands also offer you a chance to travel. The Army has bands performing in Japan, Hawaii, Europe and all across America. And Army bands offer you the It's a genuine, right-now, imme diate opportunity. Compare it to your civilian offers. Then write: Army Opportunities, P.O. chance to play with good musicians. Just Box 300, North Hollywood, CA 91603. to qualify, you have to be able to sight- Af"f nA"TI readmusicyou'veneverseenbeforeand . , Fint t demonstrate several other musical skills. UJiyi ukJ LL4 U, II: . n J! n 7 1 1 f t. .- i tn : p -v - 1 L It I! 6 f OJ r- r if y J I

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