Friday, April 15, 1983H"he Daily Tar Heel5 UNC women's tennis team hosts ACC Tournament Basketball recruits ACC schools sign two The Associated Press While newly-crowned collegiate bas ketball champion North Carolina State sought to lure two more high school pros pects, two other Atlantic Coast Con ference schools announced major sign ings Wednesday. Sports Briefs The Wolf pack is said to be in the run ning for 6-4 guard Kenny Hutchinson of New . York and 6-6 swingman Benny Bolton for Hyattsville, Md. Bolton at tended DeMatha High, the same school that produced Sidney Lowe and Dereck Whittenburg. Coach Jim Valvano was reportedly in New York Wednesday on a recruiting trip, although it was also rumored that he might be talking to officials of the NBA's New Jersey Nets. Recent reports have put Valvano in line to replace Larry Brown as head coach of the Nets. North Carolina, from whom the Wolf pack claimed the NCAA title, announced that it had signed 64 guard Kenny Smith from New York's Archbishop Malloy High School. Georgia Tech enjoyed a big day by announcing it had signed Henry "Bruce" Dalrymple, a consensus high school All-American from St. Johnsbury Academy in St. Johnsbury, Vt. "This is one of the happiest days of my coaching career1 Georgia Tech coach Bobby Cremins said after the signing. "He's one of the finest young men I've ever recruited." ' Dalrymple, a 6-4 small forward, averaged just over 28 points and 19 re bounds per game in leading his team to two state championships and the No. 2 spot this year. : The University of South Carolina is just one step away from joining the Metro Conference and getting the chance to compete for league crowns in basket ball and other sports for the first time in 12 years. In a unanimous voe Tuesday, the In tercollegiate Activities Committee of the university board of trustees recommend ed to the full board that the school accept an invitation to join the Metro Con ference. If . the board does as expected, the Gamecocks would be eligible to play for conference championships beginning with the 1983-84 season. While joining the league will end 12 years of independent status for the Game cocks in basketball, baseball and several other spring sports, the football team will continue to operate as an independent. The Metro offers championships for women in basketball, volleyball and track. The Gamecocks, who dropped out of the Atlantic Coast Conference in 1971 ; will become the eighth member of the Metro Conference. Other members are Louisville, Memphis State, Florida State, Virginia Tech, Southern Mississippi, Cin cinnati and Tulane. UNC club soccer team faces State The UNC men's soccer club will put its first-place league standing on the pitch Saturday at 4 p.m. when it meets up with the second-place N.C. State club at Culbreth Jr. High School. The two teams played to a tie earlier in the season, and with just one week of league play left before the playoffs State will be in a must-win situation. "IMMENSELY SATISFYING!" laiMlati tort liM "BEST PICTURE OF THE YEA! -I A . A MASTERPIECE! "COUP DC TORCHON IS CLEARLY THE YEAR'S FINEST FOREIGN MOVIET I F l I I llll B Mill TOUGH. SMART AND MARg&QLl Y UNPREDICTABLE 4. At : nZLDOVEH! LINDA GRIFFITHS In a provocative new film by John Sayles, director of "Return Of The Secaucus 7". N5 9tnU9T MBWrf 1 Yr-'i . El CCUPBjTCrXEON film &m mm I &Z SiCJ 719 ttlf Extra Late Show Frl. & Sat. 11:30 Starts Friday: CTCIO! to i mi. & CAT. tiafv ACROSS 1 Knift wound 5 Fare computer 10 Kitchen need 14 Yearn 15 Japanast port 13 Govt agent 17 Completely uncurbed 29 Nourished 21 Soothsayer 22 Mame" 23 Santa'a wares 24 Rookie 25 Cornerstone installers 23 Don't fitve up 32 Coeurti" 33 Fish grouping 34 Govt ejancy 35 Fatigue 33 Mirthful 37 Bearing 33 Heart test letters 33 "As You Like It" character 43 Boxer Roberto 41 Repeats a ' performance 43 Frilly appearance 44 War god 45 Slender 43 Speaks pompously Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: SPAlNr?Djr VJT TRAM II N" Mil) 'iiHe.il iiiii TTr Tril tl iiisUlii v a i S Olfl It ;8 A Nil S T 6lft Tip JQ. WF v8i.llS KtL III ii5.il E. S if.I All ii LLKTs i.i A.CJ? TioTs A fl TPf s m w !C A TlSt ,S I M T Elft AfRie a l isJl Amt tgoi JCitAlTIlis L! ' A Tl G A Mill! iJLAili 5.1. A. JL ElAlSlEi iBlOINiEIS LifcT A R Y 41983 43 Etta S3 Creek 53 Omens 53 Imprimatur 57 Drlsd figs 53 Covetous 53 African fox GO Seamstress 61 M horse!" DOWN 1 Fish spear 2 Farm measure 3 Lean-to 4 Haw" 5 Dawdles 6 Small , suffixes 7 Himalayan goat 8 Hitherto, In poetry 0 Khayyam's The" 10 Office figure, for short 11 a man with.-" 12 Notorious German 13 Before high ordssp 18 United 19 Mail route 23 Actor Franchot 24 Gray-white mineral 25 Alma 23 Similar 27 Suiting 23 Massenet opera 29 Ardent 30 M America singing" 31 Baby-sitter in Cornwall 33 Flits in with mud - 33 Between class moments 37 Gooey stuff 39Rodof baseball 40 "Inferno" author 42 Christmas in Pisa 43 Suds 45 "-Entertain You" 43 Thsssalian mountain 47 US land 5 43 Brazilian birds 43 Understood 50 Spiit 51 Monogram part abbr. 52 Egyptian lizard 54 AltrFr. 55 Fldo'a greeting 1 1 3 1 1 1 1 T9 jio 7T TF IT" """" IT "" t IT " " TT" ! iT " " " 2l - 22 """" ' 2j" - 24- - , 251 zsT if " """"" u ; """" zflu 31" . - - iJ-- "W "" j u mm " """" " j" " " " - - 42 - . 4a - '4i 4"" 4d' . 4a - a2 15 - -jp . mmm. - " 1 I I i rj 1 1 1 j jM J 1 By GLENNA BURRESS Staff Writer The women's tennis teams of the ACC will converge upon UNC this weekend for the sixth annual ACC Tour nament. Hosted by the Tar Heels for the first time, the tourney features playoffs that will determine champions at each of the six singles and three doubles positions. One point will be awarded to a team for each match won, with the tournament title going to the club which earns the highest point total. Defending champion Clemson is again the favorite go ing into the tournament, boasting a No. 9 national rank ing as well as an unblemished conference record. Clem son's top singles player, Jane Forman, will lead the 27-4 Tigers in their quest for the ACC crown. Forman, a junior from Rhode Island, is currently ranked ninth in the nation and will seek to defend her 1982 conference singles title. ' Aiming to dethrone Forman and the Tigers is UNC, which has a conference record of 5-1, The 19th-ranked Tar Heels suffered an 8-1 loss to Clemson last weekend, but the 9-0 thrashings of Duke and Virginia this week have given them momentum going into the tourney. "I don't think we've all played this well all year long," said Pam McNierney, who will be the top seed in the tourney at the No. 6 singles position. "It's, perfect timing. We've just been hoping that we could all start playing well at the right time, and we are." In addition to peaking at the crucial point ih the season, the 21-9 Tar Heels now have the confidence needed to upset the top-seeded Tigers. "I think our awe of them has been broken," freshman Eileen Fallon said. "They're beatable, just like anybody else. We'll be more relaxed going into the ACCs and won't have the pressure that Clemson has." "We know that Clemson is beatable," Coach Kitty Harrison said. "I hope the players see what I see, and that is that the gap (between the two teams in their first meeting) can be closed. We can be in there neck-in-neck and win the thing." UNC's No. 1 singles player Nancy Boggs has a similar attitude toward a possible rematch against Forman. , "She (Forman) is a fantastic athlete, and to beat her I'm going to have to play well," said Boggs, who is cur rently ranked 27th nationally. "I'm going to give it my best shot. I have nothing to lose, and she has everything in the world to lose." The Tar Heels also point to the fact that the tourna ment will be played on their home courts as a distinct ad vantage. "It's better being at your home courts because you don't have to travel, and all your friends will come out and watch," said Fallon, the No. 2 singles player. UNC has given Harrison her fifth straight 20-win season and is aiming to add a fifth ACC title to her list of coaching accomplishments. The tournament will be played Friday through Sunday at University Courts, with singles matches beginning at 9 a.m. each day. . Tar Heel volleyball and rugby clubs dominate in competition By LEE ROBERTS Staff Writer The rich athletic tradition at the Uni versity of North Carolina brings to mind images of Kelvin Bryant, slashing his way to six touchdowns in, one1 game, or of James Worthy swooping downcourt with The Pass of 1982. Some less familiar names are keeping up the UNC tradition in grand fashion this year. The men's volleyball and rugby clubf have proven that North Carolina boasts some fine non-scholarship athletes to go along with its national sports heroes. The UNC Volleyball Club showed its worth this week when it defeated Duke in the finals 15-12 and 16-14 to win the 1983 USVBA State Championship. - Mark Southerland, a zoology grad student, led the Tar Heels to victory with his setting, spiking and defense, which earned him a spot on the All-State team and MVP of the tourney. Southerland's great play was accented by the powerful outside hitting and precise passing of Steve Hursting and the , intimidating net force of 6-6 West Ger man biochemistry grad student Dirk Hoppe. Other contributors were Steve Burns, Rob Boggs, Dave Orren and team captain Kevin Kirk. The team, an assortment of grad stu dents, squeezed practices in between papers, research and exams. As time wore it ( A film by Paolo & Vittorio Tavianl Daily 7 & 9 v - Sunday 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 Trlt OttOlirifl TMCflTRt 4?Vti 1 Discount Tickets Available at the Student Union Late Show Fri & Sat. Sean Connery . J ! Late Show Fri & Sat. It's going to take everything. Lilly United Artists fi fl STARTS TODAY 4 i J MORE FUN THAN GAMES Joe Don Baker 7:30 9:30 W:1:IMIH:'t EAST FRANKLIN STREET 942-3061 n CAROLINA CLASSIC Walter Pidgeon Anne Francis Leslie Nielsen Robby the Robot in' ' FORBIDDEN PLANET 3:00 5:15 i Jennefer Beds in FLASH DANCE STARTS TODAY EAST FRANKLIN STREET 942-3061 2:45 4:45 7:15 9:15 on, the players steadily developed and learned to work together as a team. The vofleyballers season will continue Satur day in the regional tourney at Duke's Cameron Indoor Stadium. Meanwhile, the UNC Rugby Club has given its opponents the Carolina Black-and-Blues, running up a 10-0 record heading into Saturday's match in Raleigh against the Vipers, a local club team. Nic Addison, a first-year MBA student from Empangeni, South Africa, has been nam- ed to the United States Rugby Union Trials team, the equivalent of attaining All-American status. In addition, four other UNC players have been selected to the North Carolina Rugby Union Select Side which represents the state in national and regional compe tition. Robert Mocatta, a senior' from Surrey, England; Phil Armstrong, "a 1 senior from Raleigh; Craig Vosburg, a freshman from Tulsa, Okla.; and Damon Anagnos, a senior from Memphis, Tenn., were named to the All-State team. - f-i ' vrr in iin -9 1 f L ELLIOT ROAD X 967-4737 BARGAIN MATIN EE-ADULTS $2.00 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! HELD OVER 4th Veek! 3:15 5:15 7:20 9:20 Written by Nell Simon MARSHA MASON JASON HOBARDS DONALD SUTHERLAND PG WINNER OF ACADEMY AWARDS INCLUDING BEST PICTURE BEST ACTOR BEN KINGSLEY BEST DIRECTOR r, Y "1 V A' y-:f The Man of the Century. The Motion Picture of a Lifetime. COUITMHA nCTUItES mmomm mMi OOtDtltSt HCM UTKMAI RLMUfVIummT mm loPKMinviiDU memrtwMwm.m RICHARD ATTENBOROUGHS FILM "GANDHI" SunintBEN KINGSLEY nTheMalwint 5TCANDICE BERGEN EDWARD FOX JOHN CIELGUD TREVOR HOWARD JOHN MILLS MARTIN SHEEN pgi wiam smsa sucana'CH STUART CRAIG JOHN BLOOM TERENCE A. CLEGG RANI DURE RAVI SHANKA GEORGE FENTON MUY WILUAMS.BSr. RONNIE TAYLOH.R.ST. MKTHAELSTANLEY-EAMNS XHn"imTlEY RICHARD ATTENBOROUGH , mi OOJYSrBCoT I .,.,... 1 M mm wi . mum m nwi 1th Week! . tr i MJj yitiw ( g54f'J S0m . agj ut(tr A L. V'; ; K 'H? my' f si I N V (mm USA 7I:c:j CcllC-h 7 3:15 5:10 7:05 9:00 CDVtAE3 L. MOMTOSO pmntlTtiry CAtl 1 tSSXST Produced and Ejected by EUSCTT HOHTs . "C- -"ti w--T Vr try WiA