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4The Daily Tar HeelMondav January 30, 1984 Sports UNC stops Ga. Tech Price helps turn things around By FRANK KENNEDY Assistant Sports Editor Mark Price had a challenge facing him head on. The sophomore guard's Georgia Tech Yellow Jackets were hanging tough against No. 1 North Carolina Saturday, trailing only 48-45. But then John Salley, Tech's intimidating power forward, foul ed out of the game while trying to stop UNC's Michael Jordan on a fast-break layup with 7:28 to play. Salley's departure all but eliminated the Jackets' inside threat, as center Yvon Joseph had left just minutes earlier. Jordan swished both ensuing free throws, giving the Tar Heels a five-point edge. Price knew the only hope was to make that outside bomber he has become known for. So, when the Jackets brought the ball upcourt, Price rifled a 25-footer that rimmed the basket. The Tar Heels rebounded, and Tech never got closer than five points again and fell to UNC, 73-61. For Price, there was only mild disap pointment with this defeat; there was no bitterness from the 6-foot guard who has all but turned around Tech's fortunes. After all, he remembers when the Yellow Jackets were soundly beaten week in and week out by everyone and his brother. So how could he be terribly upset with only Tech's third loss in 17 games.? "We showed a lot of people that Georgia Tech is a team to be reckoned with," Price said. "We had a chance to win. If our big men hadn't have gotten in foul trouble, we would have taken it right down to the wire." Price,. who scored 14 points on six-of-17 shooting from the field and dished out six assists, said he figured his team had already gotten over the biggest challenge: earning a little respect. "We don't come into games trying to prove anything," he said. "We just let people decide for themselves." Tech applied a tough man-to-man pressure defense that, according to Price, forced a number of missed UNC shots. On numerous occasions, UNC penetrated but could not get the shots to fall. Despite a 39-23 rebounding edge, the Tar Heels never had the game locked up until the final two minutes. "They had to play us straight up (on defense)," Price said of the Tar Heels. "Nobody can zone us because we have such a strong outside game." In fact, the Tar Heels could easily have lost. Forward Sam Perkins, who suffered a mild thigh bruise in practice earlier in the week, was advised not to play Satur day. However, the senior Ail-American insisted on playing and scored 16 points and 12 rebounds. Had Perkins been ab sent, coach Dean Smith's game plan to get the ball inside might have failed, Tech's Joseph picked up three per sonal fouls in the first six minutes of the game and was not a threat. "That was more of a factor defensively than offen sively because we couldrt match up with Perkins and Daugherty inside," Price said. . The Tar Heels frustrated Tech by converting on 17 of 21 free throws in the final 7:28, including several one-and-one situations. "Right now, we're real positive," Price said after the loss. "We've beaten everyone in the ACC except Carolina, and we get another shot at them. There's no greater challenge than being in college basketball at Georgia Tech. We're learn ing more every game, and we're getting better every time. I hope we'll be a na tional contender, hopefully before I get out of here." Tech coach Bobby Cremins knows how close his team is to that status. "We're still a year or two away," he said. "We need one more good recruiting ci&ss At 4-2 in the ACC, Tech is one of only three teams with a winning record in con ference play and stands a eood chance of 'going to the NCAA tournament. "We have confidence that we can play with anybody," Price said. "I feel good because I know I've had something to do with the turnaround." HERE'5 THE WORLP WAR I FLYING ACE SITTING IN A SMALL FRENCH CAFE... ffl' I ME IS VERY NERVOUS FROM HIS MANY PAYS AT THE FRONT... "Z . r O United Feature SynqVatgJnc HE NEEP5 SOMETHING TO CALM HIS NERVES... PECAFFEINATEP ROOT BEER, SIL V0U5 PLAIT BLOOM COUNTY by BerZie Breathed KNOW N07WW6 am powm. we KNOW YOU'RE All BULGARIAN MARXIST GU6RRIUA5. mm ItinlG HAY0EN NOW WHAT M0VT THOSe MINE (AW ' mips?' WHBR6? eveRYwHBRe. rase 5AT&trre photos show you PlANTIN"eiA ALU ovsr m amnm. rase m AKP IM ATlRNlP. keep me HAHP5W7 fcCT oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o f l Suisse Mocha ,v : GoBouccino p ' ' - r . m. i . I; OJe FrANCAB : : ljriMxha? - : po o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o n Here's a test you can actually relax for. First, To enter, print the number of the country next to w ir i r 1 c; i u- r r .i tr i rcz pour yuuibcii a leidxing tup ui vjcuciai ruuus iiic iau ui vjcuciai i uuus miciiiauuiiai v-uucca q International Coffees. Then match the six rich whose flavor was inspired by that country. O O o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o whose flavor was inspired by that country. Mall this entire ad to: G.F.I.C. Taste of Europe Sweepstake. Department 125, P.O. Box 8886, Westport, CT 06887-8888 MNEMLFOOM Name- Address- CilyStaleZip- Colleqe- coffee flavors above with the five countries of Europe that inspired them. And if your answers are right, you could be $5,000 richer. Plus one winner from your school will receive a $10 gift certificate to the college bookstore. General Foods International Coffees Sweepstakes Official Rules 1. NO PURCHASE NECESSARY. 2. To enter, complete this ad or a 3" x 5" plain piece of paper with your hand-printed name, address, zip code and the name of your college. When using the ad as entry, hand-print the answers to the six questions in the spaces provided; when using a 3" x 5" entry, hand print the six General foods International -Coffees flavors in a list on a separate 3" x 5" plain piece of paper and next to each indicate the European country that inspired it by hand-printing the number of that country's map. Mail this entire completed ad or other entry to: GFIC Taste of Europe Sweepstakes. Department 125. P.O. Box 8886, Westport. CT 06887-8388. Each entry must include either one proof-of-purchase of General Foods International Coffees (the "cup with letters GFIC" cut from the plastic lid) or the words ""General Foods International Coffees Come In 6 Flavors" hand-printed on a separate 3" x 5" plain piece of paper. 3. Enter as often as you like, but each entry must be mailed separately. Entries must be received by March 17, 1984. Not responsible for illegible, damaged, lost, late or misdirected entries; mechanically reproduced entnes not accepted. 4. One Grand Prize of $5,000 and 177 Second Prizes consisting of a $10 gift certificate to each of the 177 participating college bookstores will be awarded. Winners will be determined by random drawing on or about March 23. 1984 from among all correct entries received by Promotional Marketing Corporation an independent judging organization whose decisions are final. Odds of winning will be determined by the number of correct entries received. There is a limit of one prize per person and one Second Prize per college. Prizes may not be substituted, transferred or exchanged. Winners will be notified by mail provided they are available at the address shown on the entry or have furnished a proper forwarding address to sweepstakes headquarters (PMC. 65 jesup Road. Westport CT 06880). 5. Sweepstakes is open to registered college students 18 years of age or older at participating colleges in the US., except employees and their families of General Foods Corporation their affiliates, subsidianes. advertising and production agencies, and Promotional Marketing Corporation. Voir) wherever prohibited or restricted by law. All Federal, State and loci laws and regulations apply. Taxes are the sole responsibility of the winners. Winners may be required to sign an Affidavit of Eligibility and Publicity Release. 6. To obtain the name of the Grand Prize winner, send a stamped, self addressed envelope to: GFIC Winner List, P.O. Box 2925. Saugatuck Station, Westport CT 06880 by March 17, 1S84. Avnilnhln at fho Stllrinnt StnrPC General Foods Corporation 1984 Mer w M mp ot was e w w w o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o vs., . V. .': .:f .' r,,, .?' . .. f: . "!.. f. v : - w f V "J&$$t&yfotfr2sx "? i ' t V.t" , t . J - - ft 1 - : h x - - ' tTsrwx-? 5V: : y--':'-fi- ': x;' ij :':' -i.-:;.;.:i:.v:'; xfi: :'v?:?:? :.t.-::. X ; . . . -: ::'..:. . -V -:;: -S iy ::';-;l '-':-f::: .:' :?: i '. A a s OTHJeff Neuville X Mark Price has had a lot to do with Georgia Tech's rise in the ACC. I, I, - T TIW1TT iff TTT CCR From page 1 ELLIOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 $2.00 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! 2:15 4:45 7:15 9:45 William Hurt Lee Marvin Gorky Park R) 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 $2.00 Alt TIMES! FIRST CHAPEL HILL DOLBY STEREO ENGAGEMENT FlashdanceR) 3:20 5:20 7:20 9:20 David Naughton (R) Hot Dog: the Movie 21 and this year we solicited every department and every department chairman." . "I think two or three evaluations still got switched this year, Crowder said, "but that's good out of 300." The committee, is also working hard to change students' attitudes about filling out the question naires. "I think students' attitudes would be better if the evaluations were given out farther in advance and if the professors stressed how imrJortant it was," said Crowder. Attitudes also could be improved if the course review were broadened to include a lot more elective ;4ype courses, Crowder said. Many people take elec "tives in the Englisl) department, and that is one area that isn't covered extensively, she said. ' ' All of the departments that participate in the CCR do so voluntarily, Salemi said. The committee canvasses the faculty for participants and then returns the reports to them after the evaluation results are tabulated. . "This is not just a way for students to avoid the weaker teachers," he said. "By asking students' opi nions in an objective way, faculty get a peek at themselves as if they're looking in a mirror." s An Evening At The Prof ' an informal faculty-student get together at faculty homes. Sunday, February, 5 7-9 pm Sign up in pit Jan. 30 Feb. 3rd a presentation of the special projects committee. 'Thoroughly original. Magical!' - ORK TIMES from the producer of j "CHARIOTS OF frlFC f r , r " ' : Local Hero Friday, Feb. 3 7:00 9:30 one dollar Tickets at info desk Union Auditorium Daugherty to face charges this week The Associated Press North Carolina basketball player Brad Daugherty has been ordered to appear in court Feb. 2 on charges of attempting to injure personal property and disorderly conduct. Daugherty, a sophomore center, was charged Jan. 14 when an Apex man iden tified him as one of. three men who threw something at his car. Chapel Hill police said the object thrown was candy. Douglas Wayne Goodwin of Apex told Chapel Hill police he and his wife were sitting in their car near Granville Towers, where the UNC basketball players live, when three men approached his car. Goodwin told police the three men threatened him when he objected to their throwing the candy at his car. LSU From page 1 "It was the first time our defense didn't carry us," Dean Smith said. "But of course, in the second half Jordan put on a show and Perkins was all over the place." Jordan put on a show and Perkins was all over the place enough to counter a North Carolina man-to-man defense that was unable to contain Reynolds, and a variety of zones that didn't fare much better. The Tigers inched a 37-34 halftime ad vantage to six points with- 13:28 to play on Leonard Mitchell's 18-foot jump shot before the Tar Heels tightened up on defense and Jor dan took control. Less than 9 minutes and 17 Jordan points later, North Carolina was up by 7 and "the incident" was just seconds away. "I just wanted to create something because we weren't penetrating and the fast break wasn't producing anything," Jordan said of his scoring outburst. "I was going to the offen sive boards, penetrating." In the eyes of Dale Brown, Jordan played a part in the creation of a minor controversy over the events that interrupted Kenny Smith's season. The LSU coach thought Jordan should have been ejected from the game for pushing Tudor to the floor. But he added that the referees' failure to do so had no effect on the game's outcome. "That had nothing to do with it," Brown said. "The turning point was we weren't pa tient in the second half, whereas we were in the first half. We questioned we could win. That was the difference." LOUISIANA STATE (79) Mitchell 6-16 0-0 12, Reynolds 12-15 5-6 29, N. Wilson 0-1 0-0 0, Tudor 5-9 2-2 12, Taylor 6-16 1-1 13, Vance 1-4 1-2 3, Redden 3 9 2-2 8, Jones 0-0 0-0 0, A. Wilson 1-3 0-0 2, D. Brown 0-1 0-0 0, O. Brown 0-0 0-0 0, Cojoe 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 34-74 11-13 79. NORTH CAROLINA (90) Doherty4-9 1-Z.9, PerKJ5,5J0 9-10 19, Daugherty 3-5 3-3 9, Jordan 13-18 5-5T29, Smith 5-10 4-5 14, J Hale 1-Z, 45 6, Wotlj-1 fflb 2, Peterson 0-0 2-2 2, j Popson 0-10-0 0, Exum 0-0 0-0 0. Totals 31-56 28-32 90. GEORGIA TECH (61) Pet way 2-3 2-2 6, Salley 2-4 0-0 4, Joseph 2-5 1-2 5,Dalrymple7-14 2-2 16, Price 7-16 0-0 14, Harvey 0-3 OO 0, Neal 4-9 44 12, Byrd 2-4 0-0 4, ManseU 0-1 0-0 0, Williams 04) 0-0 0. Totals 26-59 9-10 61. NORTH CAROLINA (73) Doherty 3-6 44 10, Perkins 7-17 2-2 16, Daugherty 1-4 47 6, Jordan 6-15 9-11 21. Smith 47 44 12, Wolf 1-2 0-0 2, Hale 2-3 0-0 4, Popson 1-2 04) 2, Exum 0-0 0-0 0, Peterson 0-0 f0 0. Totals 25-56 23-28 73. PLITT-v . J TUC ATDCC 1 r r""wJ.y-ui.""' i a UiT M1M1W imfiT 4i Ml CAROLINA CLASSIC CASABLANCA jg THE BIG CHILL 3:15 5:15 7:15 9:15 TERMS OF ENDEARMENT 7:00 9:30 II OURS ALONE IN 1 jM.jj, f.'lJ II KINTEK STEREO - VMlM iliH ilmnT DR. RUTH frequent cjuest of David Letterman and Johnny Carson 1 0 I X v r m SEXUALLY SPEAKING Tuesday, Feb. 7 8:00 pm Memorial Hall Admission Free A Carolina Union Forum Committee Program KINTEK STEREO A MIKE NICHOLS FILM 5 GOLDEN GLOBE NOMINATIONS Best Film Best Actress. Best Supporting Actress. Best Supporting Actor. Best Director KtNTO M'- '"I KERYLSTREEP KURT RUSSELL CKER CTT TZYXrOOT KOYAANISQATSI Now at JANUS THEATRES, G'boro Shown in Kintek Stereo 3:00 5:00 7:10 9:10 NEVER CRY WOLF A TRUE STORW Critics All Cry: J "ONE OF v THE YEAR'S 10 BEST" cVSJ A Carroll Ballard Film from WALT DISNEY PG ?l y- GARY GARDEN For Hair ByAppt. " t. 405 W. Franklin 942-4388 942-4391 Above Trail Shop' HAIR UNLIMITED INC. oooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooooo
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Jan. 30, 1984, edition 1
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