Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 19, 1991, edition 1 / Page 5
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The Daily Tar HeelThursday, September 19, 19915 fetlxj GJariM CLASSIFIED AD V E RT I S I N G FOUND: Keys in front of Alumni House 91291. Claim at Student Union Info Desk or call 962 228586. FOUND: LOTS OF JEWELRY! Come to the basement of the Union to APO Lost and Found to claim. FOUND: TEXTBOOKS FROM ALL OVER CAMPUS! Come to APO Lost and Found in the Union basement to claim or turn in other "found' items. KEYS FOUND IN DAVIS LIBRARY: I received my keys, but the Swiss Army knife keychain is gone. Please return to Union desk. Thank you. LOST RHODE GEAR pannier with data structures book, green folder, black "Hawaii" hat. Reward if intact. Marc 967-3170. LOST: Basketball (Spalding) in Woolen Gym Sunday night. If found contact Steve McRae, 933-7247 or stop by 314 Grimes. LOST: Friendly grey cockatiel around 15-501S. He sings songs, flies far. Reward, 929-1401. LOST: Gold bracelet about two weeks ago. Sentimental value. Please call Sunny: 968-0964. SUNGLASSES FOUND Monday morn ing outside Carr Bulding. For identifi cation, call 968-0437. LOW COST ABORTIONS General Anesthesia Free Birth Control 1-800-782-5077 DURHAM WOMEN'S HEALTH CENTER ABORTION - To 20 weeks. Private & confidential GYN facility wSat & week day appts avail. Pain medication given. Free pregnancy tests. 942-0824. PREGNANT? NEED HELP? Free preg nancy testing 4 counseling. All ser vices confidential. Call PSS. 942-7318. NOTARY PUBLIC $1 per signature. On campus, by appt only. Call Leslie 962-0372. ACCOUNTING CPA with 5 yrs. Big Six experi ence will tutor financial, man agerial and all other accounting classes. Call Glen at 968 4072. IF YOU NEED HELP with Calculus, algebra, trigonometry, or logic, call 942-1108. Jim offers reason able rates, patience, and even guitar lessons. Leave a message. Excel! SEARN MONEY$- Healthy male vol unteers, 21-35 years old, needed for experiments designed to study the interaction between psychoac tive drugs and alcohol. Participation will involve blood drawing and will require one full day a week for six weeks. If interested, call 966-2548 on 920 or 923, 10:00an 2:00pm only! LES Let s talk about it. Contact me at home evenings or at my department. Yours in Christ Sean WSF There are only eight stars in the sky, but they are shining brightly and will forever. SER. ULRIKA, I LOVE YOUI MARV i mm i m CrKanrlttC!C547 RESUMES, COVER LET TERS, applications, term papers. Scientific, medical, foreign language expertise. Laser priming, 24-hour turnaround. Free pickup & delivery. Call Do-It-Write. 967-3786. NAME BRAND CONDOMS by mail! No embarrass ment! Package of twelve mailed in plain envelope. $5 00 includes tax, sh. Make checks payable to Prolect-Us. 4201 University Drive, suite 102 Durham, 27707. HEY BEAUTIFUL GREEN EYES I love you very much. Please give me another chance. Your Weasel Kristen, happy day after our eleventh month versary. I'm sorry about forgetting it. Love always, Chad HOUSESITTER AVAILABLE. Single gentlemen with Impeccable refer ences available to housesit, care for pets, and& plants In the Durham Chapel Hill area. For additional infor mation and references, please call (919) 990-2364. ! I WI 11 I 8B7-n7R7 1 SUUll UOm viSATOC orders 9am-5pm TheDallyTarHeel when classes are In tettloi CLASSIFIEDS $5.00 unmmum credit card charge """"""""" . nv 1 Cash Window Hots Icr DTH Bircttflttfi Field hockey thumps Duke, 3-0 By David J. Kupstas Staff Writer Scoring a goal in field hockey does not have to be a pretty thing. UNC forward Amy Cox can attest to that. She will be the first to tell you that her game-winning goal in the first half of the Tar Heels' 3-0 win over Duke Wednesday night at Navy Field took a lot more luck than it did skill. "I saw (Duke goalkeeper Ritika Bowry) come out, if you can call that skill," the junior from Houston said. "I just pushed the ball because I saw her come up, and it went in. I didn't even expect to score I thought I'd try it and it worked." Cox's score and second-half goals by Stephanie Walsh and Mary Hartzell pushed UNC to a win in its home opener, improving the Tar Heels to 3- 2. The loss dropped Duke to 3-1. Although Duke is also a member of the ACC, Wednesday night's gamedoes not count in the conference standings. The two teams will meet again Oct. 30 in an ACC contest. UNC head coach Karen Shelton was pleased that her team rebounded from Sunday's 3-0 loss at No. 4 Penn State, although the Tar Heels still have not put together a solid 70 minutes of play. "I told the girls, I think we have periods of beautiful play and also peri ods of mediocre play,'" Shelton said. "All that really is is a little lack of mental discipline. With a young team certainly you expect those kinds of lapses, so hopefully they'll become fewer and farther between as the season goes along." The Tar Heels took a 2-0 lead with 19:18 remaining in the game. Walsh fought through traffic and, from 10 feet away, scored on a shot just to the right of Bowry's reach. North Carolina pecked all game long at Duke's AII-ACC goalkeeper, who had 1 2 saves. The Tar Heels took 23 shots to Duke's 16. UNC added icing to the cake on a penalty corner with 1:48 left. Cox stopped the hit-in from Kelly Staley, paving the way for Hartzell, who scored off the foot of a Duke player. The Tar Heels took 10 penalty cor ners, while Duke had only one. 'They committed to us too close and we took advantage of it," Cox said. "Had they played off of us more, we maybe would have taken more shots. "Weweally rely on the corners to get our goals. That's why we're good at forcing corners." Calvin and Hobbes THIS WWER IS FREEZING ? I'M GOING TO GO INTO SHOCK. ANDDROJN, I just man T. ' I BET THE ureSJpfiD IS HWOLMED W SOWE INSURANCE SCAM AND SHE'S G3N&TO LET V)S AU. DROWN W RATS! QH NO! QH NO! B8d 3 OIC, F1RSV WET3E GCKNG I III AW J M I WT TO LEARN THE " DEADMAKS mM ii UP WITH TO Doonesbury BP, tuouiv youuhe TO JON THEP&- amoN I FORGET IT! IKNOUA STACKEPPECK tumisee I BP, FORGE-TIT! THE FAMILY OH, YEAH? SUPPORT 6ROJP THEN HOW PCE5NTTAKZ COMBYOU sipee,B.p. startep WE'RE HERE WITHOUT 10 MEDIATE. ME? BOCPSIE CAUEP US. SHE ruin. YOU WERE AIO0L-. AW0L11607 KICKEOOUT! I'VE HAP MY SHAREOFmN, 600P, eoop PI5CU95 YOURPAIN tVITHUS I UM...ASL0N6 AST PONT HAVE VPROPTROU 0KBEAT PRUMS. Shoe '.C BAP MEW LR 5TANPAPP ANP ftR To ""Lfc THE Daily Crossword by I. Miller 1991 Tribune Media Services. Inc. All Rights Reserved ACROSS 1 Ardent 5 Campus areas 10 Droops 14 Home of Columbus 15 Not abridged 16 Field yield 17Stumbler's statement 18 Organic compound 19 Sunscreen additive 20 Skyline sights 22 Nut 24 Eli's school 25 At the pinnacle 26 Dick Grayson's alter ego 29 Villainous 34 First game 36 Anger 37 Sue Langdon 38 Building section 39 Worship 41 Recipe word 42 Remnant 43 Tatar 44 Fireball 46 Laid waste to 49 TV's Ms White 50 Risque 51 Augury 53 Deli purchase 56 Intermittently 60 Baldwin of "Miami Blues" 61 Persian Gulf sight 63 A Gardner 64 Ratchet 65 Beneath 66 Sonny Shroyer role 67 Aspect 68 Impudent 69 Bastes DOWN 1 Courts 2 "Cat on Tin Roof" 3 Ready to eat 4 Shuffling along 5 Subdue 6 Invisible 7 Treads the boards 8 Owed 9 Trick 10 Shrimp dish 1 1 Woody's boy 12 Thug 13 Exceeded the limit 21 Sheet of stamps 23 Knowledge 25 At a distance 26 Used oars 27 Put in one's two cents 28 Refracts 30 Disintegrate 31 Like some cookies 32 Alliance 33 Sawlike part 35 Greedy 40 Import tax 41 Unlucky bus riders 43 Bridge coup 45 Level 47 Delphi denizen 48 Recipients 52 Lead to the altar 53 Fools 54 Soviet range 55 Lascivious 56 Auto pioneer 57 Sarah Jewett 58 Stream forth 59 Actor Parker 62 One million IKIOINIAUEUIAITIEIDI uwioTo idI s I y i i i isl 1 1 e I t 1 3 mm, 5 Is Tf Is i k " 110 ill 12 13 14 7i 20 21 mm: 22 23 24 25 26 27" 281 30 31 32"" 5" 34 35 T 36 37 31 39 40 "" 41 42 "" 43 45 46 " 47 49 """ 49 50 p1 51 52 " - - ,r.m...,m. mm MMyrMMii.iiMi 53 64 SS 56 57 56 59 had 60 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 69 2nd not good enough for golfers Tar Heels use fall tourneys to build experience By Amy McCaffrey Staff Writer Last year was the North Carolina men's golf team's finest, as it placed in the top three in eight of its 1 1 spring tournaments, including runner-up fin ishes in the ACC and NCAA Tourna ments. The 199 1 fall season begins this weekend, and UNC is ready to prove they are more than just bridesmaids. "Overall, I hope we do as well as last year," assistant coach Billy Williford said. "I think we're capable of doing it. But everything has to come together at the end, like last year." Lance Reid, a junior from Denver, Men's Golf Head Coach: Devon Brouse (15th season). 1990-91 Highlights: 2nd in NCAA Tourna ment, 2nd in ACC. Returning Letterwinners (8): Pat Moore, Sr.; David Wood, Sr.; Bill Smith, r.; Steve Albright, r.; Hunter Crave, Jr.; Matt Crichton, r.; Lance Reid, r.; Danny Albert, So.; Andrew Sapp, So.; David Von Canon, So.; Todd Kozlowsky, So.; Brian Mull, So.; David Rush, So.; Lex Tarumianz, So. Newcomers (5): Brian Brown, Bobby Murray, Richard Son, Malt Linley, Jesse Lanham. N.C., is equally optimistic. "I believe we'll do as well," he said. "We had a i .... liliiillBlllPili:i: f II J UNC senior Pat Moore was named second-team All-America in the spring season really good season last year, and we think we can duplicate it." But inordertoduplicate that success, UNC first needs to focus on gaining experience. North Carolina lost two golfers to graduation and a third is sit ting out the fall season. "We won't be as good of a team, for sure, but it might be to our advantage, as far as getting some of our players some experience," Williford said. The starting five for this weekend's Carpet Capital Classic in Dalton, Ga., features only two golfers who have played consistently in collegiate tour naments. Bill Smith, a junior from Buies Creek, and Pat Moore, a senior from Bismarck, N.D., head the team. Moore was named a second-team All-America last season and will play the No. I position. Junior Lance Reid and senior David Wood have both seen limited action thus far. Reid said there was a difference be tween playing in tournaments as an individual and playing toward a team score. "I probably put more pressure on myself," Reid said. "You're playing for your school." The fifth starter will be freshman Brian Brown. The Rocky Mount native was pegged a Junior All-America by the American Junior Golf Association last year and finished third overall in the team's qualifying practices. Brown has played in plenty of high school and junior events, and he is looking forward to his first chance to play college golf. "I'm not sure what to expect," he said. "I'm not really that nervous. But I think it's good to be nervous, to be standing up on the first tee with butter flies in your stomach." Tom Scherrer, a junior who tied for fourth in last year's NCAA Tourna ment, will not compete this fall. Scherrer played earlier this month in the British Amateur and the Walker Cup, an invitation-only tournament which pits the top ten amateurs from the United States against those from Great Britain and Ireland. He has decided to spend the rest of this semester focused on academics. "In a way, Tom not playing in the fall will give other guys a chance in the lineup," Smith said. The fourtournaments scheduled over the next two months should get UNC's heels wet. Smith said the team's two biggest goals were winning the ACC and NCAA titles. "I think we all think can get back there again and win it," Smith said, referring to the NCAA. "We got really close this year, and we hope we can win it." (ttdprsity iliptand (US Shop 124 . FRANKLIN ST. 929-1119 Be a Breadhead! Join the Dreadmen's Study Hall Group between 2 & 5 M-F 337 W. Rosemary St. 7:00 am-1 0:00 pm Only A Phone Call Away! Since 1980 "D ii Since 1980 DallGons Helium Balloons Singing Messages Cake, Candles, etc. Unsusual Gifts & Toys Portable Helium Tanks Imprinted Balloons Party Supplies Care Packages Decorating Service m 967-3433 & 208 W. Main St., Carrboro (conwr ol Main 9 Wavr, diagonal from Town Hall) aooa wcmMmmvrwes, infun. rime rib grilled fajitas teriyaki steaks children's menu nilm Plaza Mall, 115 South Elliott Road S57-7C54 ervlng lunch and dinner daily and brunch on Sunday from 11:30-2
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 19, 1991, edition 1
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