Friday, November 4, 1983The Daily Tar Heel7 V-ball gets 1st ACC loss Mistakes cost UNC in Raleigh ACC football statistics By MIKE WATERS Staff Writer When North Carolina and N.C. State, the ACC's two un defeated volleyball teams, got together in Raleigh Wednesday night, the outcome was sure to have a great effect on the pair ings for the ACC tournament Nov. 18-20 in Durham. The 15-12, 15-9, 7-15 and 15-7 Wolfpack victory came close to clinching the tournament's top seed for N.C. State. The loss dropped the Tar Heels into the opposite bracket as the tourna ment's No. 2 seed. Only two N.C. State losses in its last two conference matches can keep the Wolfpack from occupying the top berth. The match was a demonstration of how the Tar Heels' incon sistent play has hurt them in several important matches this season. North Carolina was plagued by mental errors and unforced mistakes that State turned into two quick and demoralizing vic tories. "We lacked mental toughness and overall intensity," coach Beth Miller said. "We made a lot of mental errors. We were out of position and we lacked on-court communication." The statistics back up Miller. In just four games, North Carolina had 19 serve-receive errors, which means the Tar Heels weren't setting their big guns at the net or forcing State to play the controlled, physical game the Tar Heels enjoy. "I thought N.C. State played well, but we made too many mental errors," she said. "We'll have to go back and work on the fundamentals now." The second game of Wednesday's match, which N.C. State won 15-9, and the third game, which North Carolina won 15-7, displayed the inconsistency that has crippled the Tar Heels. UNC was victimized by seven serve-receive errors, effectively awarding the game to the Wolfpack. North Carolina turned the tide in the third game as Linda Kantz passed for 12 assists and freshman Jill Berkebile drilled seven kills. "It was more understandable earlier in the year," Miller said. "We should have more mental toughness and on-court com munication by now, though." Miller still thinks the Tar Heels are capable of beating State if the teams were to face each other again in the ACC's. "I don't think we're the favorite, but we're also not the dark horse," she said. "This year maybe we'll have a little bit more to prove in the tournament.'' Total Offense Rushing Punting Yds Avg PerG No Yds Avg PerG No Yds Avg Bennett, Duke 2007 5.1 230.9 Horton, UNC 150 884 5.9 110.5 Newsome, WF 42 1909 45.5 Esiason. Md 1512 6.7 216.0 Mcintosh, NCS 150 746 5.0 93.2 Hatcher, Clem 34 1506 44.3 Schofield, WF 1709 5.9 184.7 Lavette, GaT 151 628 4.2 89.7 Tolish, Duke 41 1786 43.6 Esposito, NCS 1478 5.5 171.4 Joyner, Md 150 695 4.6 86.9 Earnhardt, UNC 24 963 40.1 Schuchts, Va 1371 6.1 171.4 T. Anthony, UNC 117 640 5.5 80.0 Sadler, Md 43 1722 40.0 Stankavage, UNC 1329 6.6 166.1 Petty, Va 115 619 5.4 77.4 Rice, GaT 46 1817 39.5 Eppley, Clem 1084 6.9 135.5 Mack, Clem 87 557 6.4 69.6 J. Walker, Va 41 1618 39.5 Horton, UNC 864 5.9 110.9 Ramseur, WF 91 478 5.3 68.3 Martinussen, NCS 40 1539 38.5 Mcintosh, NCS 746 5.0 93.2 Driver, Clem 100 516 52 64.5 Lavette, GaT 649 4.2 92.7 Flowers, Clem 93 492 5.0 61.5 Joyner, Md 695 4.6 86.9 Badanjek, Md 89 477 4.8 59.6 T. Anthony, UNC 640 5.6 80.0 Jenkins, Va 75 471 6.3 58.9 Passing Scoring Punt Returns Att-Cmp-Int Yds TDs Pts TD XPT FG P PerG Stankavage, UNC 175-108- 4 1346 15 150.0 Paulling, Clem 0 27 11 60 7.5 No Yds TD Avg Eppley, Clem 122- 72- 6 1037 9 144.9 Atkinson, Md ,0 22 12 58 7.2 Badanjek, Md 19 218 0 11.5 Esiason, Md 197-108- 6 1325 10 130.5 Barwick, UNC 0 34 8 58 7.2 Black, UNC 32 345 1 10.9 Schofield, WF 262-150-11 1782 13 122.4 Stadlin, Va 0 23 11 56 7.0 Branion, Duke 9 69 0 7.7 Schuchts, Va 183- 92-11 1405 9 119.0 Badanjek, Md 8 2 0 48 6.0 Farinholt, Va . 14 105 0 7.5 Bennett, Duke 354-219- 8 2132 11 118.2 Horton, UNC 8 0 0 48 6.0 Westbrook, GaT 13 104 0 6.1 Esposito, NCS 237-142-14 1579 5 110.9 Flowers, Clem 7 0 0 42 5.2 B. Davis, Clem 13 69 0 5.3 Dewberry, GaT 84- 42- 5 432 4 97.0 Ramseur, WF 6 0 0 36 5.1 D'Addio, Md 5 0 0 30 3.0 Receiving Field Goals No Yds TD PerG Grayson, Duke 52 460 2 6.5 M-A Pet Militello, Duke 48 512 .1 6.0 Atkinson, Md 12-15 .800 Owens, WF 39 339 3 4.3 Paulling, Clem 11-13 .846 B.Smith, Va 33 610 4 4.1 Stadlin, Va 11-14 .786 J. Brown, NCS 31 251 0 3.9 Barwick, UNC 9-10 .800 M. Smith, UNC 27 371 8 3.4 Cofer.NCS 7-9 .778 Russell, Duke 27 234 0 3.4 Rice, GaT 7-12 .583 D'Addio, Md 20 208 0 3.3 Harper, Duke 7-14 .500 Ryna, WF 27 378 3 3.0 Igwebuike, Clem 3- 5 .600 Wall, NCS 18 278 2 3.0 Kickoff Returns Pittman, Va Grinton, WF Neal,Md R. Williams, Clem Grantham, Duke Pounds, GaT No Yds TD Avg 15 396 0 26.4 18 415 0 23.1 10 217 0 21.7 13 282 0 21.7 14 292 0 20.9 13 191 0 14.7 Campus Cat, mn da Compiled by Reggie Holley Public service announcements must be turned into the box outside the DTH offices in the Carolina Union by 1 p.m. if they are to be run the next day. Only announcements from University recognized and campus organizations will be printed. AS announcements must be limited to 25 words and can only run for two days. In the event that the Calendar does not run because of space limitations, groups should turn in announcements at least two days in advance to ensure they run at least once. today's AcrrvrriES The Carolina Gay Association will present John D'emilia at 8 p.m. in Gerrard Hall. Admission is free. IVCF Off-Campus will meet at 6 p.m. in the Bible Church. A spaghetti dinner will be served. A $1 fee will be charged for the dinner. IVCF Northeast will have Bryan Slater speak on "Seeing people as Jesus sees them," at 7 p.m. in the conference room of Chapel of the Cross. Bring a friend. Society of Janus will meet at 4:30 p.m. at the Upper Deck. Oktoberfest will be held from 8 p.m. until midnight at the Community Church. Beer and pretzels will be served. For more information call 962-6269. Maranatha Ministries welcomes all for a miracles meeting with Nick Pappis at 7 p.m. in 104 Howell Hall auditorium. Toronto Exchange invites everyone to the all campus party at the Chi Psi lodge. The party will start at 10 p.m. The band, "Precision," will also start playing at 10 p.m. COMING EVENTS Jewish Study Group will meet Saturday at Hillel Founda tion. Undergrads, grads and faculty are welcome. The AWS and the Carolina Gay Association will sponsor a dance Saturday at 9 p.m. at Newman Center. The theme of the dance will be "Red Shoes and Dance." An admission fee of $2 will be charged. The Student National Medical Association, the minority stu dent organization at the UNC School of Medicine, will sponsor a dance at Pineview Conference Center Saturday at 9 p.m. Ad mission is $4. The UNC Audience for Jazz will meet on Sunday at 7 p.m. in the Union. Everyone is welcome. The ladies of the Theta Pi Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority Inc. invites interested ladies to a formal rush Sunday at 3 p.m. in the Di Phi chambers of New East Building. There will be a mandatory meeting of the University Rela tions Committee, Monday at 4 p.m. in the Union. The Committee for Hunger Responsibility will meet Mon day at 4 p.m. in the Campus Y. The UNC-Model United Nations Club will meet Monday at 6 p.m. in 351 Hamilton. The UNC-Outing Club will meet Monday. All new members are invited. Check Union information desk for room number. The GPSF Senate will meet Tuesday at 5:30 p.m. in the Union. Check desk for room number. The UNC-Downhill Ski Club will meet Tuesday at 7 p.m. in the Union. For more information call Doug Meis at 968-8088. ABS will sponsor a career seminar Tuesday at 4:45 p.m. in T-7 New Carroll. The event will feature Sam Colter, personnel manager for Humana Inc. Everyone is welcome. The UNC Alpine Ski Club will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday in the Union. it i- A sSM u i n V i I HI MM AM AtNMH MN IB THE CAROLINA THEATRE DOWNTOWN tWRrttn McHSM North Carolina1 PREMIERE . . s EMBASSY POURS Daily at 7:30 pm only 4, 8 pm Sat. 1, 4:30, 8 pm Sun. HZ The Swcdufc Film Uuhmk THE Daily Crossword by Dorothea E. Shipp ACROSS 1 Lippo Lippi 4 European basin 8 Aides: abbr. 13 Greeting for Don Ho 14 Fleuret 15 Santander's land 16 Without delay 18 Coin 19 Originate 20 Termini 22 Time zone letters 23 Hat 24 Ponselleor Bonheur 26 Women 29 Capital of Macedonia 31 Planes 32 File 33 Anatomical tissue 36 Carried 37 Part of Asia 40 Relative of the badger 43 Williams or Warhol 44 Word of comparison 48 Obvious 50 Michael the actor 52 Zoroastrian 53 South of France 55 Gremlin Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: I AICIAID CI1A IK 1 1 iMrnFII INIDI BOX "oTfIF" I C E icT0 LOR E V E R A F TjE R , A R 0 STE T E S SEE "TP E P R A V EMS tZ ARC SpjSJU R R E yTSJ ANAIY T TjC IjM I I rl JD E. L.Ij s THE P. P EDO FF AM A! 1 DHL LuE e V-HUG M 0 N UMElPfALE ND r IB A N US T I PJ? N PIS! L"'"1b A NOS T I PEN P S aibIaItIe mkIaIl1a!mIa1zIo io R A R ETRl j 0 ) V E ) R IS j T ) A I T I El A S f ' J F I A 5S Y ITIE IN lO IS I 11483 56 Deserter 16 Less ruddy 57 Dramatic 17 Towel word conflict 21 Roadwork 59 Money of sign a kind 25 Horse feed 61 mignon 27 Both:pref. 63 Apace 28 Vane 65 Freezers letters 66 Muddled 30 Fast guys 67 Sucre's 31 Combo land: abbr. 34 State in 68 Simpletons Bordeaux 69 Fever abbr. 35 Writer 70 Country Yutang monogram 38 Sheltered 39 Pair DOWN 40 Agt. 1 Everglades 41 Greed state 42 Run of 2 Dwells musical 3 Islets notes 4 Black or 45 Bobs Red 46 Coronation 5 Church bracelet sections 47 Like some 6 Sicilian rugs volcano 49 Tchrs.' org. 7 Donna or 51 Not final, Rex in law 8 Poisonous 53 Rodent snake 54 Against 9 Craft something 10 More like 58 Mountain a beach pass 11 Cistercian 60 Philippine abbey near city Monmouth 61 Fruit 12 Bend in a 62 Lao ship's 64 Seance timber sound f 1 1 2 H I" 4 T5 6 p 8 p 110 111 112 I 13 Ti 75 "TT" Tf 75 75 """20 IT" ""22 " ' . - 26 f- : if "29 30" ' TP" ' "32 "-" 33 l4"p5 """"" 35 TT 3iT" 39 "40 1 41 1 42" "" 43 44 45 i 1 46 47 71 49"" 50- TT" "52 """"" 53 54 """ 55 """" "56 """ TT 58"" """" W To" IT" " IT" """""" TT """" 64 " "65 "66 """"" 67 ' Ta "H To 1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc. All Rights Reserved 11483 ITEMS OF INTEREST Career Planning and the Liberal Arts Student is a course for freshmen and sophomores who are undecided about career direction and major (Special Studies 90, Section 2, Spring Semester). To register, contact the instructor in Nash Hall. Sign up for the Union squash tourney at the Union desk Nov. 1-11. Men and women of all skill levels are welcome. Prizes will be awarded. More information is available in Room 200 Of the Union. The United Christian Fellowship will be having a revival Oct. 31-Nov. 4 at First Baptist Church. Services start at 7:30 each evening. The speaker will be the Rev. Mack Timberlake. The Student Part-Time Employment Service is a free service designed to help students find part time jobs. Come by Suite D of the Union Monday-Thursday, 1 p.m. until 4 p.m. Join the new Carolina Field Hockev Ouh. Practices are Monday, 4 p.m. 5:30 p.m. and Tuesday and Thursday from 6:45 p.m. until 8 p.m. on Ehringhaus field. Dr. Fred Brooks will speak on "New Computer Graphics" Monday, Nov. 7 at 7:30 p.m. in the Dialetic Chambers in New West. Everyone is welcome. The brothers of the Psi Delta Chapter of Omega Psi Phi Fraternity will be coming around the dorms during the week of Nov. 7-1 1 to collect canned and dry foods for needy families.. Please help them to make Thanksgiving a happy holiday for everyone. A public forum will be held Monday at 7 p.m. in the Union to discuss the problems of mopeds on the UNC campu. The forum will be sponsored by the Town Relations and Transpor tation Committee. . The International Festival will be held Sunday from 1 p.m. until 6 p.m. in the Great Hall of the Union. There will be inter national booths, entertainment and food. All are welcome. The UNC Clogging and Apple Chill doggers Club will sponsor a clogging workshop at 7:30 p.m. and a square dance at 8 p.m. Tuesday at the Community Church. The UNC Women's Squash Club practices every Sunday and Tuesday from 7 p.m. until 9 p.m. at the Fetzer squash courts. 'Crush Clemson' pep rally tonight Want a taste of Orange Crush? Head . over to Carmichael Auditorium at 7 p.m. tonight for the Crush Clemson pep rally and spirit contest. Woody Durham will be special guest for the event, which is be ing sponsored by the band and cheerleaders. THE Late Shows FRIDAY, SATURDAY 11:30 TMt TlMf Rve Vmts Afttr Dm Nurttor Wor (AMERICA'S-- T SURVMXtS ..Post-Nuke Thru Freaks lookm' For A Kick NEWEST CUIT WHiKMCT fir "M p Anr lh Nucai Kiss" Positives rmom to low to pwlorni and ottwrs. . Negatives can only watch con only com . to...Caf Hmk mm I FIFTH & FINAL GROSS WEEK (p. f mm mm m m m w - 1 &zZ .-TV i Ik I SECOND CHARMED WEEK! mm w LATE SHOWS Fri. & Sat. 11:30 . A John Waters' PINK FLAMINGOS CSITY 11? I and' even worse, CAFE FLESH rvwr STEWART KLEIN, WEW-TV VINCENT CANBY, T w York Tim" WOODY ALLEN O DENNIS CUNNINGHAM. WCBS-TV iviagic JACK KROLL, tw,vttk EXCLUSIVELY AT THE VARSITY KINTEK KINTEK STEREO PG oV- TflMRfl I ACADEMY AWARD WINNER IHlMUU X BEST ANIMATED SHORT 3:15 5:15 7:15 9:15 A VARSITY THEATRE EXCLUSIVE ff"WE FUHMEST, CRAZIEST, DIRTIEST, MOST PERVERSELY BEAUTIFUL, SCIENCE-FICTIOH MOVIE EVER MADE!' David Denby, N.Y. Magazine "GEIfUEiTLY STARTLDIG! VISUALLY BRIGHT AHD ARRESHKG. The right audiences are bound to appreciate the originality displayed here, not to mention the color, rage, nonchalance, sly humor, and ferocious fashion sense. Janet Maslin, N.Y. Times J .tai mm IRl Tickets still available for Blue- White game Tickets are still available for Saturday's Blue-White basketball game to be held in Carmichael Auditorium after the Clemson-UNC football game. As of late Thursday, ticket distribution was reported to be brisk but there were still tickets available. The intrasquad exhibi tion game will be the Tar Heels' first home game this season. Game and Date Blue-White No. 1 Blue-White No. 2 Yugoslavia Term. Chattanooga Dartmouth Distribution Tune and Date Nov. 5 currently available Nov. 19.. ..currently available Nov. 23.... currently available Nov. 28 lpm, Nov. 13 Dec. 21 lpm, Dec. 4 Virginia Jan. 18 9 am, Jan. 14 Wake Forest Jan. 25 1 pm, Jan. 15 Ga. Tech Jan. 28.. . 9 am, Jan. 21 LSU Jan. 29 1 pm, Jan. 22 N.C. State Feb. 18 : lpm, Feb. 5 Maryland Feb. 19 9 am, Feb. 1 1 Duke March 3 9 am, Feb. 25 NCNBPLA. ROSEMARY I 967-8284 007 in "NEVER SAY NEVER AGAIN" 7:00 9:30 pg Richard Pryor "HERE AND NOW" 7:15 9:15 r Natalie Wood BRAINSTORM Filmed in N.C. 7:00 9:15 WCHL LATE SHOWS FRI.& SAT. 11:30 FAST TIMES Woody Aliens R Admission $2.00 Annie Hall BARGAIN MATI N EE ADULTS $2.00 TI L 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! v "A crackling contemporary comedy worldly, warm blooded and wonderfully put together." -PLAYBOY ". . .extraordinary ensemble acting. . ." -CBS-TV How much love, sex, fun and friendship can a person take? THE 11 1 1 I 1 : i. ' - . J 1 Vii VI i In a cold world you need your friends to keep you warm. :7 j R 3:00 5:05 7:10 9:15 William Hurt "One of the surprise delights of the season. A literate literary, offbeat comedy." NBC-TV "A charming contemporary comedy with stiletto-sharp performance by Micahel Caine and Julie Walters." Judith Crist "Julie Walters... is funny, touching, sage, silly, tough, sentimental." Associated Press r s - V -lJt MICHAEL CAINE and JULIE WALTERS 3:00 5:10 7:20 9:30 IMW UKHM Mm NT II tWTWli M CW.WII 'if jtr C''P-x V,. X J i OS What would you do if a total stranger proved to you that your three closest friends were Soviet agents? BMd an th IotI SHIing Novel by ROBERT LJJDLUM Dnrtedby SAM FECKINPAH jkOOEWJ Tbe one weekend of tbe year you iron ' want to miss. RUTGER KAUER JOHN HURT " THE OSIERUAfl MM CRAIG I KILSC1 DEK'lIS HOPPER d BURT LANCASTER Rggg soyuybyALAN SHARP AWbr IAN MASTERS Jjp STARTS TODAY! 3:05 5:10 7:15 9:20

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