6The Daily Tar HeelFriday, November
Vomraeini soccer Enos'liDiniss HCAA.2m).(ril rooninKd
By B. A. VELLIQUETTE
Staff Writer
They've won it for the last four years,
and the North Carolina women's soccer
team begins the quest again on Saturday
for the national championship.
After seven of the team's starters
graduated last year, the Tar Heels were
ranked only fifth in the nation, and
everyone but the players themselves
V ,
Betsy Johnson (left), other UNC
Cross country teams look
By BOB YOUNG
Staff Writer
The sweat and rain were still dripping
from his hair and the speckles of mud
on his legs courtesy of the N.C. State
cross country course were not yet dry.
The ACC championship and upset
of the Wolfpack to which individual
champion George Nicholas had led
North Carolina was not more than a
few minutes old and he was already
talking about THE meet, still two weeks
away.
"We still have to run against State
at Districts," he said. "And just because
HE'S
NOT"
Presents
C. BIGG
Friday mingM
9:00
HE'S NOT MERE
In the Heart of Chapel Hill
Franklin St. Behind Pizza Hut
15, 1985
thought that Anson Dorrance's dynasty
had at last died.
But as the team enters the tourna
ment, they are ranked No.2 and have
a record of 16-1-1 losing only to No.l
ranked University of Massachusetts.
The Tar Heels received a bye in the
first round of the tournament and will
play NCSU, who barely edged out
Radford, at 1 p.m. on Fetzer Field.
7 r
seniors soar toward berth in Final Four
we beat them today doesnt mean we
will beat them again in two weeks, when
it really counts."
Nicholas was speaking of the District
III Championships, being run Saturday
in Greenville, S.C. This meet, along with
seven others just like it across the
country, is the contest which qualifies
teams and individuals, both men's and
women's, for the NCAA Champion
ships to be run in Milwaukee on Nov.
25. About 50 teams will from the
Southeast will compete for the precious
few qualifying spots. Conference cham
pionships are great, but they don't get
fx .
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Although the Tar Heels have already
beaten NCSU twice this year by the
scores of 3-0 and 6-0, Dorrance said
that those scores were not true indica
tions of how close the matches could
have been.
"When we beat them 6-0, their
goalkeeper was on the sideline, and their
goalkeeper is their best player," he said.
If the Tar Heels win the match, they
DTH Larry Childress
Saturday at Fetzer Field
to qualify for Nationals
anyone to nationals.
The meet hasn't been too kind to the
UNC men, who have yet to qualify for
the NCAAs since the district system was
started in the late 70s. Last year, the
Tar Heeis had a chance to qualify, but
finished a disappointing ninth.
The women have fared better, qual
ifying for nationals in 1983 and finishing
the season ranked eighth in the country.
But they also had a below-par outing
last year and only finished sixth.
To get to the NCAAs from District
III this year, the men must finish among
the top four and the women must take
at least second.
Six men's teams figure to compete
for the four openings N.C. State,
Clemson, East Tennessee State, Tennes-
-49eeFfeFkfeT and-North Carolina. A ,
"Qualifying for nationals was a goal
for us since the beginning of the year,"
said head coach Dennis Craddock. "We
just have to run a consistent race, like
we've been running so far this season.
football picks
Lee Tim Scott
Teams Roberts Crothers Fowler
60-36-4 60-36-4 59-37-4
.625 .625 .616
UNC at Virginia UNC UNC UNC
Wake Forest at Georgia Tech GT GT GT !
N.C. State at Duke NCSU' NCSU NCSU
Maryland at Clemson Clem. Md. Md.
Notre Dame at Penn State PSU PSU PSU
Arkansas at Texas A&M A&M A&M Ark.
Air Force at Brigham Young BYU AF AF
Southern Cal at Washington Wash. Wash. Wash.
Iowa at Purdue Iowa Iowa Iowa
Auburn at Georgia Aub. Ga. Aub.
MM
or
3h
Give Color Poster
CAMERA
L
will advance to the semifinals which
take place in Fairfax, Virginia at George
Mason University on November 23.
But for now, Dorrance can't look that
far ahead. The second-round matches
are the ones that jangle his nerves.
"The game we are always the most
worried about every year is the second
round game because you so desperately
want to be in the finals," he said. "You
don't want to be at home reading the
papers about it."
In addition, Dorrance worries about
the motivational advantage the under
dog team sometimes has. But in the case "
of NCSU, it may not be nescessary to
worry about motivating his team.
It seems that a few of the Wolf pack
players were quoted in a Raleigh paper
saying that they thought UNC was
"good, but not that good."
"I am really looking forward to
playing them, so we can show them how
good we really are," said former Ail
American Dori Kovanen.
Defender Stacey Enos was in full
agreement with Kovanen. "They are
kind of cocky," she said. "We want to
crush them and bury them."
"Everyone is just real excited," she
said."It's hard not to think what you're
practicing for."
Because the Tar Heels have not had
any real competition since they played
Colorado College in October, Dorrance
has tried to instill a competitive spirit
into his practices. -nit
By staging one-on-one battles-and
, recording the results, he keeps the team
from becoming complacent. Practices
have also included lots of running.
"By running really hard, we know
that we're fit," Enos said, "and that will
give us a mental edge."
The tough practices are worth it if
the result is a fifth straight national
championship. As senior defender
Senga Allan put it,"What's a few more
weeks of self-inflicted and excruciating
pain?"
We shouldn't need anything outstand
ing to qualify."
The women's race will also be a six
team battle but with only two spots
available, the competition will be much
keener. Top-ranked N.C. State should
win easily, leaving Clemson, Kentucky,
Florida, Florida State, and North
Carolina to fight it out for second.
"To qualify, we're going to have to
run our best race of the year," Craddock
said. "WeVe got to be , a lot more
consistent than we were at the ACCs.
But it can happen, that's the great thing
about athletics you just never know."
Beyond the team competition, the top
five individuals whose teams do not
qualify will also earn a-, spot in..the ,
NCAA field. Last year, George Nicho-
las and Holly Murray took this route
to nationals, as they were seventh and
fourth in District III, respectively, and
should be among the top contenders
again this year.
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J
u ar Heels tmuel tie UVa
M-pursue bowl hope
By JAMES SUROWIECKI
Staff Writer
If you had told someone at the
beginning of the year that entering
their annual clash UNC and Virginia
would have identical 5-4 records, that
UNC would be coming off a remar
kable 21-20 victory over Clemson,
and had added that the two schools
would be battling for a spot in the
Ail-American Bowl, it's very likely
you would have been laughed right
out of town.
If you also mentioned that a
freshman named Jonathan Hall
would be the starting quarterback for
the Tar Heels, all you would have
gotten was one of those disdainful
looks that seem to be the special
province of sorority girls named
Muffy. For when the 1985 football
season began, nothing seemed more
certain than that with two weeks to
go in the season Virginia would be
7- 2 or maybe even 8-1, that UNC
would have lost to Clemson, and that
Kevin Anthony would be quarter
backing the Tar Heels. But as we all
know, things have changed.
Coming into this season after going
8- 2-2 last year, the Cavaliers had high
expectations for themselves, expecta
tions which seemed to be justified by
their talent and their schedule. The
Wahoos were able to boast of a
potent backfield led by junior quar
terback Don Majkowski and tough
runners Howard Petty, Barry Word
and Antonio Rice. Protecting Maj
kowski was a huge offensive line led
by AU-Everything tackle Jim Dom
browski, and waiting to race down
field with Majkowski's passes was
wide receiver John Ford, ACC
Rookie of the Year in 1984.
Virginia's schedule looked to be a
cakewalk this year, as it would face
but one tough out-of-conference
opponent, West Virginia. All the
factors seemed right for the Cavaliers
to explode into national prominence.
But just as Kevin Anthony's sup
posedly secure job went up for grabs
after a couple of poor starts, so
Virginia's supposedly secure record
went up for grabs after a couple of
key injuries.
Rice was injured in a preseason
scrimmage and has not been at his
best all season long. Word has picked
up the slack, rushing for 1,056 yards
.through nine games, but something
is missing from the Cav offense as
SigndSes resuUin ejffa cash
By LAURIE RODGERS
Staff Writer
.Health studies and experiments, let .
students earn extra money-and partic-
ipate in research.
At UNC, the School of Medicine is
running a volunteer spinal manipula
tion study. Volunteers must have a
backache less than a month old, be
between the ages of 18 and 45 and never
have been manipulated by a
chiropractor. .,
Each patient completes a question
naire about his back and consults with
Dr. Nortin Hadler, a rhumatologist,
and Dr. Peter Curtis, a family physician.
Volunteers also are needed for an
acne experiment testing three topical
preparations: Cleocin, Cleocin T and
Cleocin gel. Participants will receive $75
after completing the 12-week study,
which began Oct. 30.
Such experiments and health studies
are essential, says Dr. Douglas Long,
professor and assistant chairman of the
philosophy department. But researchers
must get participants' consent and let
them leave the experiment if it makes
them uncomfortable, he said.
"If carefully done," he said, "and if
you pick volunteers in a way that is
not coercive, experiments can be a
rewarding experience. In general,
experiments are something that has to
be done."
The UNC psychology department
uses many student volunteers for
experiments. Graduate student Silvija
Singh, for example, is looking for a
research assistant to help her with a
study of friendship among middle-age
and college-age people.
"Some things that we think are
obvious, when we do research, we find
Beings from Another Dimension
have invaded your world.
You can't see them...
but they can see you.
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TKI ADYEUTUnES
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.5 X;. ;
n a a I
Virginia prepares to host UNC. That
something is the big-play element that
Ford gave it. The slick receiver was
injured before the season began and
has been redshirted. And although
Majkowski has played well, throwing
to Geno Zimmerlink and Jon Muha
just isn't the same as finding Ford
deep on a fly pattern.
The result of all this has been that
the Cavaliers have seen themselves
snatch defeat from the jaws of victory
time and again this season by not
being able to put the other team away.
"It's been a very frustrating year,"
Dombrowski said. "WeVe had a lot
of close games and haven't been able
to win them this year." One of those
close games was last veek's 23-22 loss
to N.C. State in which Virginia
missed two conversions in the fourth
quarter.
As for UNC, many of the problems
which bothered the team early in the
year have been glossed over in the
euphoria of the Clemson victory. The
Tar Heels are a very different team
from the one which began this season.
The vaunted aerial connection of
Anthony to Earl Winfield has been
replaced by that of Hall to Quint
Smith, a combination which has been
prematurely compared to the great
passing duos of years past.
William Humes has been in, then
out, and then in again as the darling
of the Kenan crowd. The defense has
built a reputation as an inconsistent
yet at times brilliant squad. Derrick
Fenner played the role of savior for
a few games before Tar Heel fans
latched onto Hall in their desperate
gropings for a hero. A lot has gone
by the board since UNC coach Dick
Crum decided to go for the 24-24 tie
instead of a win against Virginia a
year ago. And astonishingly, the team
that struggled to go 5-5-1 last year
is now in a position to be away from
home for Christmas and, not incid
entally, save Cram's job. Well just
have to wait and see.
Series record:
UNC leads, 50-35-4
First meeting: Virginia 30,
UNC 18, 1892
Last UNC win: UNC 27,
Virginia 14, 1982
Last year's game: Virginia
24, UNC 24
out that we could be wrong," Singh
says. "That's when I find research so
interesting." ; r -a
"The way we gain knowledge is
through experiments," concludes Dr.
Marcus Waller, psychology department
professor. "The reason we persist is to
come to alternatives."
Classified
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of Steele Building at 11:00 to voice your
concern for the sudden and unexplained
dismissal of George Gamble. Don't forget
the rally in the Pit Monday at noon.
PEACE CORPS POSITIONS: Meeting
Nov. 19, 205 Student Union, 8:45
10:00pm. Science, Math, Education,
Health Seniors and others welcome. For
info, call Carl 942-4057 (days).
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right.
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