Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 22, 1986, edition 1 / Page 5
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TH1' f m "' i, ring The Daily Tar HeelMonday, September 22, 19865 ' IJI i)iii.Mi-..i.Mi.iliiii,l,,ililu.WM.xiii.iiiy..i..i)!i.i!i ..- a in., m. j -i.i .u i, ilium ..lumu wmi..KK.iwumm,mmmtiM-jM-M . wmwwwiiwwm f"" " 1111111 " ' w .111,1.11 iiiwin.i a .urn in in i. mi i.i n i i i i ii.iu i .11 l Field hockey beats top teams 0 V. k v ST VW U f i xsxvx-s.xxxxxxx at. ft xSw r . ..Tot ofc x f x?f VN s s XXXX, v.N'S Sv-.X.X .v. XXv -. v5 xx-sx :x wX .-XV V v i x X sx s s .s X; 1 .XvXxyS" HiliniWIlVl - n x x A4s .VX f ,VMV.'..w,. X o DTHTony Deifell Claire Dougherty (left) and Kathy Staley (middle) were part of a field hockey effort that produced two wins Scoreboard Focibc'.l UNC10.Fte.SL10 UNC FSU 070 a-10 0 0 10 010 UNC Stroatec 14 pass from Halt (Giiarmis kick) FSU Safety on punt biockod out of end zone FSU Lewis 28 pass from Willis (Gainer kick) UNC FG Giiarmis 24 A 57.611 UNC FSU First Downs 13 12 Rushes-yards 53-122 34-77 Passing yards 95 195 Return yards 14 69 Passes 7-18-2 14-24-1 Punts 8-40 8-49 Fumbles-lost 4-1 5-2 Penarbes-yards 1-5 4-25 Time of possession 32:56 27:04 INOMOUAL STATISTICS Ruahing UNC: Fenner 22-91. Humes 7-12, Loop 11-44. Thompson 5-6, Maye 4--42). Hail 3-0. Q. Smith 1-11. FSU a Smith 14-64. T. HoUoman 7 43. Ferguson 4-(-36). Floyd 4-12, Palmer 1-1. Fells 2-13, Willis 2--20) UNC Hall 5-132-76, Maye 2-5-0-19. FSU. Ferguson 6-13-0-86, Willis 8-12-1-109 WeceMng UNC: Loop 1-11. Thompson 2-39. StreatBr 2-23. Fenner 1-7, Lewis 1-15. FSU: O. HoUoman 2-48, & Smith 3-19, T. HoUoman 3-24, Bryant 3-51. Ross -2. Floyd 1-23, Lewis 1-2a Around Ihe NaMon In Coftege Footbel ACC N.C. State 42, Wake Forest 38 Oemson 31, Georgia 28 Maryland 24. West Virginia 3 Georgia Tech 28, Virginia 14 Duke 22, Ohio U. 7 Others Oklahoma 63, Minnesota 0 Michigan State 20. Notre Dame 15 USC 17. Baylor 14 Miami (Ohio) 21. LSU 12 Alabama 21, Florida 7 Texas 27. Missouri 25 Indiana 52, Navy 29 Michigan 31. Oregon St 12 Penn State 26, Boston College 14 Nebraska 59, Illinois 14 Kean 35. Ramapo 20 Women's Golf Ford Marcotegtet InASanta Teams: 1 -Miami, 917; 2-Furman and USC, 920; 4-Texas. 939; 5-Georgia. 943; 6-Wake Forest, 946; 7 -Kentucky, 952; 8-UNC. 959; 9-Michigan St, 964; 10-Fla St, 973; 11 -Penn St, 1007; 12-lowa. 1027. UNC Individuals: Katie Peterson (bed for 5th). 228; Donna Andrews (tied for 9th), 230; Suzy MacGuire, 240; Angela Wells, 261; Kathleen Grady. 263. Women's Tennb Btg Four Tournament At Duke Flight I semifinals Jackie Van Wijk (WF) d. Gina Gobiirsch (UNC) 6-3. 7-6 (8-6). Flight I semifinals Terri O'Reilly (Duke) d. Petra Wessels (UNC) 6-1. 6-1; Donna Preston (Duke) d. Valerie Farmer (UNC) 6-4. 6-2. Soccer teams win By EDDY LANDRETH Staff Writer It was a Carolina Sunday in Fairfax, Va., as the men's and women's soccer teams left the Patriot Invitational at George Mason University with victories. The women defeated second ranked and defending national champion George Mason 4-2. The men took American Univer sity 1-0. On Saturday, the women defeated fourth-ranked William and Mary 5-1. The men, however, did not fare as well on Friday, losing to George Mason 53. In the women's game. Sunday, George Mason took a 2-1 half time lead. In the second half, UNC outscored the Lady Patriots 3-0. April Heinrichs led UNC in scoring with two goals. 1 By JILL SHAW Staff Writer By defeating two Top-10 opponents on As troTurf field this weekend, North Carolina's second-ranked field hockey team upped its record, increased its momentum, and staked a strong claim for the No. 1 spot. After beating Iowa 4-1 on Friday, freshman forward Julie Blaisse scored two goals Sunday afternoon to lead the Tar Heels to a 3-1 victory over last year's national runner-up, Old Dominion, in the most emotional game of the season thus far. Despite the final result, North Carolina coach Karen Shelton had mixed feelings about her team's Sunday performance, which lifted her squad's record to 4-1. "We had spurts when we played well, but at times we let down defensively," she said. "We need to draw more penalty corners and take advantage of them. We only had four penalty corners as opposed to Old Dominion's 10." The ball alternated territories for most of the first half until junior forward Maryellen Falcone drove it from the left wing past ODU goalkeeper Shelley Behrens. With 2:45 left before intermission, Tracey Yurgin took a UNC penalty corner and passed to Lori Bruney who set the shot for Blaisse. Characteristically, North Carolina's Dutch import knocked it home for a 2-0 Tar Heel lead. ODU failed to capitalize on four penalty corners and took four unsuccessful shots within the circle. In its last attempt to score before the half, sophomore Jill Fisher was shut down by North Carolina back Ellen Bakken. Old Dominion played more aggressively early in the second half. Less than eight minutes in, ODU senior S telly Seltman slapped an assist from co-captain Jackie Grady beyond the reach of lunging goalkeeper Kathy Mulvey. Shortly thereafter, UNC's key midfielder, Leslie Lyness, reinjured ligaments in her right shoulder and was forced to leave the game. Freshman Kathy Staley effectively replaced her and within minutes Blaisse restored the Tar Heel's two-point lead with her second goal. Despite six more penalty corners and the skill of junior Cathy Large, the Monarchs failed to score again before the second-half buzzer that signalled a UNC victory. Shelton had positive words for Mulvey, a junior in her first season as starting goalkeeper. "Kathy was really tested in this game. She did a nice job and kept it out of the cage. Every time she fielded the ball, it was good experience for her." In Friday afternoon's win against the sixth-ranked Hawkeyes, Bruney was a force to be reckoned with. The junior midfielder scored to break a 1-1 tie after having assisted UNC's first goal, by Blaisse, just two minutes in. Iowa forward Michelle Murgatroyd evened the score by slapping in a loose ball with 19:14 remaining in the half. Seven minutes later, UNC recaptured the lead when Bruney lunged for senior forward Claire Dougherty's pass to make the score 2-1. In the second half, the defensive pressure of Lyness and back Jennifer Anderson prevented Iowa from scoring again. Meanwhile, goals by Falcone and junior Annemarie Rosenbaum accounted for the final score. Next for the Tar Heels is a trip to Temple University in Philadelphia, Sept. 27-28, for a weekend doubleheader with the host Owls and the University of the Pacific. Crum injury requires cast for 6 weeks By BOB YOUNG Assistant Sports Editor UNC football coach Dick Crum fractured his lower right leg when he was caught napping by Tar Heel running back Derrick Fenner near the end of the first half of the UNC Florida State game in Tallahassee, according to a team doctor. The injury occurred in the final two minutes of the second quarter when Florida State linebacker Fred Jones shoved Fenner out of a pass route and into the sidelines. Crum was watching quarterback Jonathan Hall scrambling back upfield and did not see Fenner until the 6-foot-4, 222-pound sophomore had collided with him. "It was just a sideline hazard," Crum said. "They were coming my way. Normally you can just jump in the air and they carry you along with them. I guess I didn't get up in the air high enough today." Dr. Timothy Taft, a UNC ortho pedic surgeon, examined Crum late Saturday night. "Dick has a non displaced fracture of his lateral tibial plateau," he said Sunday. And we all know how painful that can be . . . Less-anatomically speaking, Crum has a broken right shinbone and the fracture extends upward into the knee joint. Taft found no car tilage or ligament damage. Crum will be in a cast for approx imately six weeks. He will probably be on crutches for two weeks after the cast comes off. With Crum sitting on the bench, the UNC play-calling duties for the second half of the game were handled by offensive coordinator Randy Walker, who called in the plays from the press box to wide receiver coach , Bobby Elliott. Elliott passed them along to Hall, who relayed them to quarterback Mark Maye on the field. Normally, Crum signals in the plays. "When you're sitting back there like that," Crum said, "youVe got to let the coordinators run the ball game. I could talk to them between series, but we just discussed strategy. I really didn't have much to do with what went on in the second half." 3 oyyfczz Stoi!3yIl.Ep!zn Tha MOVE! MCAT o GRE GMAT 2634 Chapel Hill Blvd. Suite 112 uurnam, nc 27707 (9 1 9) 489-2348 (9 1 9) 489-8720 Mon.-Thurs. 9:30-9:00 Fit 9:30-5:00 Sat & Sun. 1 0-6 i-H. v T EDUCATIONAL CENTER LTD. GOLD) CONNECTION 2nd Anniversary Sale 20 Off Everything! Sept. 15th-22nd Don't Miss It! 1280 E. 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Franklin St. Chapel Hill, NC 929-7332 Mon.-Sat. 9:30-6:00 Sun. 1:00-5:00 mi. tliwL October 2nd edition of OMNIBUS UNC-CH Employees You are cordially Invited To Be Our Guest At A Seminar DATES: Wednesday, September 24th & Thursday, September 25th TIMES: Hourly, 1 2 Noon 7 PM Last meeting begins at 6 pm PLACE: Carolina Inn, North Parlor TOPICS: 1) Summary of Tax Reform as it applies to Tax-Deferred Annuities available to UNC-CH employees. 2) Prudential's New Tax-Deferred Annuity Program for UNC-CH employees. SPEAKER: Robert L Ghegan Director, Client Services Prudential Asset Management Co., Inc. HOSTESS: Martha B. Carlsen, C.LU. Agent for Prudential's Tax-Deferred Annuity Program at UNC-CH Telephone: 929-0301 N0 RESERVATIONS ARE NEEDED FOR THIS FREE SEMINAR (Bip4(BmIb(3ir Selection Save On A Specia. Of Records And Tapes tod unit N it mnn x ret.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Sept. 22, 1986, edition 1
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