Wednesday, October 12, 1983The Daily Tar Heel5
Btobts
Reed looking for some answers
By FRANK KENNEDY
Assistant Sports Editor
How bad are things with North Carolina
State football? According to Wolfpack
coach Tom Reed, they are about as
miserable as can be expected.
"It's been like a hockey game," Reed
said in an interview Monday. "I've been
drawing the X's and O's, but when the
players get out on the ice we find that
they can't skate."
Now surely, coach, the situation can't
be all that bad? After all, this team is 2-3,
not a dismal 0-5 like Duke, for instance.
Surely, there's some hope?
"Well, we're not as bad as our record
indicates," Reed said. "But right now,
it's desperate. We have got to learn to
pass, block, run, throw and kick."
Reed's Wolfpack, coming off its worst
performance of the year (a 20-10 loss to
Georgia Tech), is suffering heavily from
three things, said Reed: bad blocking, a
secondary wiped out by injuries and a
wide receiver corps depleted because of
academic problems.
"We don't even have the luxury of
thinking about Carolina right now," he
said. "We have to go back to basics and
learn the things we don't know how to
do." ,
To do just that, Reed held intrasquad
scrimmages Monday, yes, the kind they
normally hold during preseason, and he
said he didn't plan to prepare his squad
for the Tar Heels until later in the week.
"We're just not a real good team right
now," he said, "and this is our biggest
game of the year in many respects."
Reed said that when he does begin
looking at the Tar Heels, he isn't going to
have much fun. "It's amazing," he said.
"I was looking at their Tech films and
they had 271 yards passing, then against
Wake they had 440 yards rushing.
"How do you stop them? I don't have
any idea. If you play the run tight, they'll
pass over you; and if you lay off the line
too much, they'll run right down your
throat."
Reed said he isn't sure what the morale
of his troops is like, but he added that it
couldn't be very high. However, he said
he hopes the Tar Heel-Wolfpack rivalry
will have a positive impact on his squad.
"It had better help," he said.
Walsh gets yet another award
From staff reports
Sue Walsh has added yet another award
to her already long list of honors.
The senior UNC swimmer and Olympic
candidate was awarded the Southland
Olympia Award at Kenan Fieldhouse
Tuesday.
The award, sanctioned by the U.S.
Olympic Committee, is designed to recog
nize and reward top amateur athletes in
the 31 Olympic sports, and has been pre
sented to Tracy Caulkins, Greg Louganis,
Carl Lewis and Alberto Salazar since the
1980 Olympics.
Walsh has received 21 All-American
honors through three years at UNC and
shares or holds 17 ACC records. She has
competed in the World University Games
twice and this summer won two gold
medals and one silver medal in the Pan
American Games.
r PLITT
J 'THEATRES
"It makes all the blood, sweat and tears
worth it," Walsh said after accepting the
award.
The trophy is a duplicate of the one pre
sented to champions in the original games
in ancient Greece.
Junior Jacky Hagenbach scored two
first-half goals to lead the UNC field
hockey team to a 4-0 victory over Ap
palachian State Tuesday afternoon in
Boone. Louise Hines and Bonnie Davis
also scored for UNC. The Tar Heels'
record now stands at 6-1-3.
UJT FMMtlli STMEt
CAROLINA CLASSIC
GASLIGHT 2:155:05
3:15
5:15
7:15
9:15
Jennifer Beals
FLASH DANCE
Richard Gere in
BEYOND THE LIMITS
NELSON PADGETT
pianist
Monday, October 17
8:0u pm
Memorial Hall
UNC Tickets $3.50 at
Union Box Office
THE Daily Crossword
by Madeline Miller
ACROSS
1 Arab A
5 Ungual
9 Freshet
14 Pro
publico
15 Field
measure
16 Big cat
17 Beige
18 Ostrich
relative
19 Regretting
20 Intensive
questioning
23 Old card
game
24 Row
25 State
positively
27 Rock plant
30 Sheriff's
group
32 Make into
law
33 Mud
34 Ready
money
38 Vend
39 Corrupt
40 Wine flask
41 Membrane
42 Blissful
abode
43 Scoff
44 Scintilla
46 Military
students
47 Elapsed
50 High
mountains
51 Single
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flavor
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quantity
65 Finch
66 Heed
67 Edible
tubers
DOWN
1 Second
actively
2 Lomond
3 Religious
initials
4 Like some
mail
5 Inure
6 Earthy
pigment
7 Salem's
state: abbr.
8 Dread
9 Emphasize
10 More, in
music
11 Spry
12 Domingo,
for one
13 Rye disease
21 Food
regimen
22 Artist's
stand
26 man
(burglar)
27 " we
forget"
28 Arrow
poison
29 Telephone .
30 Yearned
31 Algerian
port
33 Ancient
Persian
35 To shelter
36 Barracuda
37 Towel word
39 Italian
composer
43 Weakens
45 Actor Van
46 Church
group
47 Minute
openings
48 Infirm
49 Cut
50 Expiate
53 Newspaper
section,
for short
54 Thick slice
55 Vicinity
56 Sports
group
57 Stately
trees
59 "What a
good boy "
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--
1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc.
All Rights Reserved
101283
Crum downplays emotion of N.C. State rivalry
By FRANK KENNEDY
Assistant Sports Editor
The emotion and excitement of the North
Carolina-N.C. State rivalry generally stays in the
stands, UNC football coach Dick Crum says.
"The emotion isreally for the fans," Crum said,
adding that he doesn't believe it's good for his
players to get overly emotional about one game.
"(The fans) are the ones that get hyper and excited
about it," Crum said in his typically mild-mannered
fashion. "But it doesn't really, get to our youngsters
all that much."
Saturday, the Tar Heels will travel to Carter-Finley
Stadium in Raleigh to face a Wolfpack team that,
frankly, has been something of a mystery in recent
weeks.
After opening up the year by falling to Fast
Carolina, the Wolfpack came back to trounce The
Citadel, only to fall to the likes of Virginia, roll over
Wake Forest, then get outplayed by previously
winless Georgia Tech.
"I don't pay attention to their past record, because
you can't really do that in this game," Crum said.
"Their kids played hard, and their defense has done
a pretty good job."
Crum said that State will give the Tar Heels its best
shot, regardless of how it's been playing lately. "In
(quarterback Tim) Esposito, (fullback Virice) Evans
and (tailback Joe) Mcintosh they have three very
good guys back there in the I-formation," he said.
"We'd take those guys on our club."
But it's a good bet that State coach Tom Reed
could find many more players he'd like to draft from
UNC than Crum could ever hope to find on the
Wolfpack.
Crum on the UNC tailback situation: "We haven't
decided who will start this week (Ethan Horton or
Tyrone Anthony). We'll wait until later in the week.
I'm comfortable with either guy, it's just a matter of
who happens to be in there on the first play."
On Eddie Colson's performance against Wake:
"His emergence as a 100-yard back enhances our of
fense, and gives other defenses another little prob
lem. In the past, our fullbacks have been blockers,
not runners."
Notes:
UNC right tackle Joe Conwell was chosen Atlantic
Coast Conference player of the week, along with
quarterback Mike Eppley of Clemson. Conwell was
graded at 90 percent in his line duty against Wake
Forest.
APPoll
The Top 20 teams in the Associated Press
college football poll, with first-place votes in
parentheses, season records and total points.
Points based on 20-19-18-17-16-15-14-13-12-11-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1:
1. Nebraska (55) 6-0-0 1,195
2. Texas (5) 4-0-0 1,144
3. North Carolina 6-0-0 1,014
4. West Virginia 5-0-0 983
5. Auburn 4-1-0 866
.6. Ohio State 4-1-0 861
7. Florida 5-0-1 ' 836
8. Georgia 4-0-1 725
9. Arizona 5-0-1 702
10. Miami, Fla. 5-1-0 600
11. Alabama 4-1-0 588
12. So. Methodist 5-0-0 583
13. Michigan 4-1-0 515
14. Iowa 4-1-0 416
15. Oklahoma 3-2-0 314
16. Maryland 4-1-0 277
17. Washington 4-1-0 246
18. Arizona State 3-0-1 245
19. Illinois 4-1-0 209
20. Brigham Young 4-1-0 96
? IX XI lO-l2 1963 United Feature Syndicate, Inc.l I ,..,
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DAjE: Thursday, Oct. 13, 1983
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PLACE: TudENT STORES
TIME: 10:30-3:30
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