Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Sept. 27, 1991, edition 1 / Page 7
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The Daily Tar HeelFriday, September 27, 19917 Game and time: North Carolina State (3-0, 1-0 in ACC) vs. North Caro lina (2-0, 0-0), Saturday, 12:08 p.m. Site: Carter-Finley Stadium, Ra leigh. Playing surface: Natural grass. Tickets: The hottest ticket in town is a complete sellout. TVRadio: The game will be re gionally televised by Jefferson Pilot Sports on Channels 2 and 5. The Tar Heel Sports Network will provide a live radio broadcast, with Woody Durham and Mick Mixon calling the action. The flagship stations are WCHL (1 360-AM) and WZZU (93.9-FM). The network extends to more than 70 stations across the Carolinas and be yond. Series: North Carolina leads, 52-22-6. Last meeting (1990): N.C. State 12, North Carolina 9. Last week: North Carolina defeated Army 20-12 in West Point. N.C. State demolished Wake Forest 30-3 in Winston-Salem. Personnel update: N.C. State There are no injuries to report. North Carolina LB Dwight Hollier (foot) and FL Julius Reese (knee) are out. N.C. State offense: The Wolfpack managed only seven points in its opening-game win over Virginia Tech, but scored 77 points in its previous two wins over Kent State and Wake Forest. Tailbacks Anthony Barbour and Aubrey Shaw lead a rushing attack that has averaged 196 yards per game. Quarterback Terry Jordan and split end Charles Davenport will be the main hookup in a passing game that has been effective in the past two games, but struggled against Virginia Tech. This game will be a major test for the State offense. NInrth Pnrnlinn m? Tar Heels N. C. State Wolfpack North Carolina offense: Head coach Mack Brown has made it clear that UNC will not defeat N.C. State without a balanced offensive attack. Quarter back ChuckieBurnette must be on tar get. Corey Holliday and the receiving corps must make the catches. The of fensive line must continue to give Burnette time to pass, and must provide better blocking for the run. Tailback Natrone Means, if healthy, should be a monster. And fullbackMikeFaulkerson, UNC's best-kept-offensivesecret, must continue to make the key blocks and . clutch passes out of the backfield. N.C. State defense: Three points. Three games. It doesn't matter if the Wol fpack 's three opponents were Huey , Dewey and Louie, one point allowed per game is a pretty nifty accomplish ment not to mention tops in the country. The Wolfpack also leads the nation in turnovers caused with 1 7. This week, N.C. State will face an offense that is on the move. In order to stop the Tar Heels, inside linebackers Billy Ray Haynes (32 tackles) and David Merritt (2 1 ) must roam the field. State has given up only 88 yards rushing per game, but that Means nothing to Natrone. Cornerbacks Sebastian Savage and Dewayne Washington (5 interceptions combined) will be counted on to help halt an improved UNC passing game. State snatched five interceptions from Will Furrer, Virginia Tech's highly touted QB. North Carolina defense: They will stagger onto the field Saturday, many of UNC's defensive players having missed practice all week due to minor injuries. Linebacker Tommy Thigpen, defensive tackle Roy Barker and safe ties Rondell Jones, Cookie Massey and Bracey Walker all missed consid erable practice time. Outside line backer Eric Gash will be counted on to lead the defense on and off the field. The secondary must improve on the 199 yards passing it gave up to Cin cinnati. Final analysisprediction: There is really no reason why UNC should win this game. The rash of injuries to the defense makes the Tar Heels vul nerable to even a satisfactory Wolfpack offense. The yet-to-be-stopped State defense will make it tough for North Carolina to get a bal anced attack going. The Wolfpack, which has won its last three meetings with UNC by a combined 100-18 margin, should provide the No. 23 Tar Heels with quite a long afternoon. They should. However, there are times in sports when the unexplainable hap pens, when sports becomes fantasy and all one can do is watch and won der. It's not common to predict such things, but there is something about this game. In 80 matchups, UNC has never lost four straight to State. Brown's program is on the periphery, ready to burst onto the national scene. This game just might be the one in which North Carolina makes the na tion take notice. Final score: UNC 24, N.C. State 21. Warren Hynes DTH Picks of the Pick Mark Neil Warren Stew Anderson Amato Hynes Chisam Record 14-6 16-4 15-5 14-6 Winning Percentage .700 .800 .750 .700 UNC at N.C. State NCSU UNC UNC NCSU Wake at Northwestern Wake Wake NU NU Duke at Virginia UVa. Duke UVa. UVa. Ga. Tech at Clemson Clem Clem Clem Clem FSU at Michigan Mich FSU FSU FSU Colorado at Stanford Colo Colo Colo Colo Air Force at BYU BYU BYU BYU BYU Miami (Ohio) at Cincinnati Miami Miami Miami Miami Connecticut at Villanova Nova Nova Nova Nova Auburn at Tennessee Tenn Tenn Aub. Tenn You say Amato. I say Amato. What ever it is we say, we must admit that our senior assistant editor is off to a blazing start in his pigskin pickin'. As you can see, Mark is following the strategy pf last year's editor, Jamie Rosenberg. Jamie fell behind early to his most experienced assistant, only to come from behind late to win. At least that's what Mark claims he's doing. We just let Mark say what he wants. Warren and Stew, still recovering from I-95-lag, sort of drifted in, made their picks, and mumbled something about a Roy Rogers in Virginia. By the way, Kevin Schwartz, The Daily Tar Heel's valiant general man ager, picked the Tar Heels to stomp MooU. 17-6 Saturday. Of course, Kevin is a Purdue grad, so what does he know? Sports on TV Friday, September 27 7:30 p.m. Baseball: Minn, at Tor.; ESPN 7:30 p.m. Baseball: Phil, at Mets; W0R 8:30 p.m. Baseball: Atlanta at Hstn.; TBS 8:30 p.m. Baseball: Chicago Cubs at St. Louis; WGN 10:30 p.m. Baseball: San Fr. at LA; ESPN Saturday, September 28 Noon College Football: North Carolina at N.C. State; 2. 5 Noon College Football: FSU at Mich.; 8, 11 12:30 p.m. College Football: Florida at Mississippi State; TBS 2 p.m. College Football: Air Force at Brigham Young; HTS 2 p.m. Baseball: Chicago Cubs at St. Louis; WGN 3:30 p.m. College Football: Georgia Tech at Clemson; 8, 1 1 3:30 p.m. Baseball: Atlanta at Hstn.; 2, 5 7:30 p.m. College Football: Auburn at Tennessee; ESPN 8 p.m. Baseball: Seattle at Chicago White Sox; WGN 11 p.m. College Football: Southern Cali fornia at Oregon; ESPN Calvin and Hobbes TBI WE THIS ISN'T A SP1TBALL.Y fVVVVVlWAO Doonesbury JZr CAU.YOUON HAV&A have a SrrJ B00P9,7HAVB SACK TO am or y9itrZ, , in& most inans-.,. your I PONT Beueve THIS! I DO NOT... A GIRL LIKIS weecAUfP BY A BOY ON mPHONt. OKAY, HOW HOW ABOUT ABOUT IT? WHATTm) HPVUlii- 1$ this? THE Daily Crossword by Richard Thomas 1991 Tribune Media Services. Inc. All Rights Reserved ACROSS 1 Salad item 6 Scorch 10 Polish 44 Bisect M5 Distinctive atmosphere 16 Over: Ger. 17 City on the Ruhr 18 Stuff 19 Traditional - knowledge 20 Chargers? 23 Hi-fi knob 24 Speechified 25 Tourist item 28 Bottom 30 Macaw 31 Hockey shot 33 Places 37 General Lee 41 Handbill 42 Nourish 43 Nav. off. 44 Regulates one s eating habits 46 Joint sealer 49 Overseas 52 Ballesteros of golf 53 Beethoven work 59 "La Boheme" heroine 60 Veracious 61 Caravan carrier 62 Vipers 63 Knot or loop end 64 Piano piece 65 Hotbed 66 Quid pro quo 67 Brief DOWN 1 Huntley or Atkins 2 Impulsive 3 Otherwise 4 Sylphlike 5 Near graduate 6 Secrete 7 Damage 8 Bedouin 9 Cannoneer's implement 10 Sofia's site 11 Underwater predator 12 lance 13 Unbound 21 Grind the teeth 22 Dubliners 25 Leg part 26 Seed case 27 Biblical wise ;ien 28 Air passages 29 Domed area in church 32 Garret 34 Expedition 35 Sea eagle 36 Procedure: abbr. 38 Pleasure seeker 39 Experiment 40 Barely beats 45 Wharton and Bunker 47 Shore bird 48 Ruling body 49 Hussein's city 50 Gem State capital 51 Wins easily 52 Expensive 54 Burgeon 55 Polynesian dance 56 Chin, border river 57 Turner and Williams 58 To shelter Tl E G A 0F1B A L MflA 0 A P All A ii A R F OAijiii S JiNiPE 1 S SID T HE B0 ATT -1G A E I SjCl AT T A L E N TtZJR A T RjA C E i R e n TFT? o o TCtTb e n DON I RjO C K T HjT BOA T A M ir'lR A S HOB E U S E I A WIT E R JtjTZj CAR T E II !!TS R TtlA GATE !" I wthesTameboa T 0 D R I CTDU E I nV OlTlE D2ii iJlii VOTE 111 II III! E JR. i N. LASTS-NEED -DEED I . I 1 2 3 fJ 5 p i 5 i0 111 12 1 13 21 22 23 m 24 25 26 27 W 28 29 " 30 wipm JJ 32 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 . .. , " 44 45 " 46 47 48" 49 50 61 ' " """ 52 """ 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 ""' 60 "" 61 62 63 64 65 66 67 J. L Net quartet strings to tourney By Doug McCurry Staff Writer Three members of UNC's 19th ranked men's tennis team and one UNC women's tennis player are competing in Wilmington this weekend in the 1 99 1 ITCA National Clay Court Champion ships, one of college tennis' four Grand Slam tournaments. Junior Roland Thomqvist and sopho more Woody Webb both won their first round matches Thursday and will hit the courts for second-round action to day. Thornqvist defeated Princeton's Greg Hartch 6-4, 6-3. Webb brushed back five match points and nipped Nevada's Tony Matkulak 4-6, 6-0, 7-5. Senior Bryan Jones must make his way through the qualifying rounds to Tennis Fri., Sat., Sun., Wilmington earn one of four additional spots in the main draw. Junior Cinda Gurney, last season's ACC Player of the Year, has already advanced to the second round by grind ing out a 5-7, 6-0, 6-4 victory over South Florida's Kristi Bastian. The tournament, which began Thurs day and ends Sunday, boasts an excep tionally strong field, including the I9S9 and 1990 champions. The remaining competition consists of top players from each of the ITCA's eight regions. Webb, UNC's second seed, is ranked (27th in the country. Thornqvist, UNC's top-seeded player, is rated No. 30. Allen Morris, head coach of the men's ; squad, said all three men's players ; played well in the Tar Heel Invitational ; last weekend. Jones reached the; quarterfinals, Webb defeated the 17th-; ranked player in the country and ; Thomqvist won the hard-court touma-; ment, soundly defeating Webb 6-0, 6-2 , in the finals. ; "The surface is going to be different than last weekend's," Morris said. "But I think they have a good chance. They J are all good clay-court players." Thornqvist, a native of Farsta, Swe- '. den, might have a better chance than the '. others. The tournament has been won : by a foreign player the past four years. ; "1 think they can go a long way in the tournament," Morris said. He said all three were playing well thus far. Field hockey nips VCU; ODU is next Staff reports Senior captain Nancy Lang, who was not expected to play because of a con cussion, scored the winning goal Thurs day in a 2-1 victory for the UNC field . hockey team over Virginia Common wealth in Richmond, Va. North Carolina, now 6-2, took the lead midway through the first half on an unassisted goal by junior Mary Hartzell. Only 1 :44 later, VCU's Heike Kost tied the game. Lang knocked in the game-winner with 17:25 left in the contest. UNC outshot VCU 22-9, but Rams' goal keeper Mary Ellen Hostetler collected 18 saves. The squad travels to Norfolk, Va., Sunday to take on defending national champion Old Dominion. The battle will pit the Tar Heels against the No. 1 Monarchs in a rematch of the past two national championships. Old Dominion leads the series 14-12 since 1 978, but UNC is the only team to , have defeated the Monarchs during the past three seasons. Volleyball comes home The UNC volleyball team (5-6) re turns home this weekend after a recent six-game road trip. A full slate of action awaits the Tar Heel women as they take on three non-conference opponents. Friday night at 7:30 p.m., North Carolina hosts Kentucky inCarmichael Auditorium. Saturday morning.the team will jtake on La Salle at noon. Furman awaits the Tar Heels at 7:30 p.m. Satur- day, also in Carmichael. UNC will start conference play Wednesday, hosting Virginia. Women's soccer heads to Omaha The top-ranked UNC women's soc cer team heads west to Omaha, Neb., for weekend matches against Creighton and Wisconsin-Milwaukee. TheNo. lTarHeels(7-0)are coming off a 3-0 shutout victory against Radford Wednesday and have allowed only one goal this year. Women's tennis opens in Raleigh The UNC women's tennis team opens up its season in Raleigh this weekend at the Wolfpack Invitational. The format will consist of individual singles and doubleschampionships. Noteam scores will be kept. Play begins at 8:30 a.m. today and continues through Sunday. Women's golf in Seminole Invite A tough test awaits the North Carolina's women's golf team this weekend in Tallahassee, Fla. UNC will compete with 13 other teams at the Lady Seminole Invitational at Florida State. The Tar Heels head into this week end with one first-place and one second-place finish in their first two tour naments of the year. Men's soccer visits No. 6 Virginia The fourth-ranked UNC men's soc cer team resumes conference play Sun- Lookingfor back-to-school SAFE SEX SUPPLIES? ZPG-Seattle has got you covered! Low-cos( condoms an J more by mail from a nnn-nrntit service. I Send 114.95 for 36 Kimono extra I sensitive condoms, or SASE I X for FREE catalog: ZPG-Seattle, dent. Hint 4428 Burke N. Seattle, WA 98103 12061 633-4750 USED FURNITURE Dressers Bookcases Sofas Tables Large Selection of Unfinished Furniture FREE Delivery with this ad lllE TRADING POST 106 S. Greensboro Street 942-2017 Carrboro Frisrf Cfcrra. Ccis XT g ., A BP. &.i'- m flashed ici3tz 337 W. Rosemary St. Open All Afternoon COUPON1 fOR WOMEN Ofily Rams Plaza Shopping Center 929-8860 Mon.-Thurs. 9-9 Frl. 9-8 Sat. 9-3 Sun. 1-4:30 FaH Omni 3 MONTHS FG $ )lniim IDS AD Benefits: Weight Loss Lqwer cholesterol More energy Lower Diooa pressure Heaucea stress 'First time members only ThE Club ffiy w i I 1 ! GIVES YOU A CHOICE!!! EXAM SPECIAL: 12" Pizza with 1 Topping AND 2 sodas ONLY $5.67 MANAGERS' SPECIAL: 12" Pizza with ANY 3 Toppings for $7.47 PLUS the second for only $4.00 968-FAST Call for specials by name! SPECIALS START AFTER 5 pm. Prices do not Offer may expire include tax. without notice. day at 2 p.m. against sixth-ranked and previously No. 1 Virginia in Charlottesville, Va. The Tar Heels are fresh off a 2-0 victory over Appalachian State Wednes day night that brought them to 7-0-1 . Since 1987, North Carolina has dropped six in a row to the Cavaliers, but head coach Elmar Bolowich is opti mistic sort of. "We go there, and we have nothing to lose but the game it self," he said. ; Rugby club battles ASU The North Carolina rugby club will play its first home game Saturday at I ' p.m. on Carmichael Field. The Tar Heels, state runners-up the last two ' years, will host Appalachian State. Sports radio the UNC way Gold ... Ruff ... Manuel. The greats are all there. Sundayat 10p.m. .UNC'sonly sports radio talk show, 'Sports Rap,' hits the airwaves. Hosts Scott Gold, Sam Ruff and John Manuel will welcome special . guest Mark Maye, former UNC quar terback. The show has provided ample time for callers to either ask questions or to simply rap sports. So listen in. Check out this week's best buys! ! TVs JVC 1 AV 2060(D) I 20 stereo TV AV 2760(D) I 2T stereo TV wtrt I Surround SOur-d CS 1320(0! 13' TV Mitsubishi CS 2070(D) 20' stereo CS2771 (D) 27' stereo TV wilh PiP CS3505 35" slereo TV VCI?s Mitsubishi HS-U62 (D) S-VhS Hi-ti VCR HS-U61(D! S-VhS Hi d VCR HS-U54ID) HMiVHSVCfl HSU34 (D) VHS VCR JVC hrfc ioou comto VCR S400 ,299M 1 SEPARATFS Yamaha REG. SALE AVX500(D) aurjio-vdeo prologic imeoatea amp. 60 wans Iron! and 15 wans rear $550 399 AVX700 (D) audio-video prologic integrated amn an wane 3 15 wans 1 3 $700 '499Mi CX830(D) $700 REG. SALE TOT '349" Vor"549" $300 '229" $500 '369" $1000 '799" $?2oo '1799" S REG. SALE $1099 '699" $900 '549" $500 '449" $330 '299" '499- '699' REG. SALE $500 '249" nrcamn tuith romma DCX1000(D) pre amp with remote $1200 r. SSS !s!';i aifSiS'Mi!!.i::ii Yamahs CDC-500(D) 6.1 CD changer CDC -610(D) 10-d'SC changer CDC 605(D) Carousel CO changer CDC-705(D) Carousel CO changer Kenwood DPR 99 (N) Carousel CD changer $600 $300 $400 399" '219" 299" $?50 169" RECEIVERS Kenwood REG. SALE KRA5520ID) 100 wans. ch $400 249 KRV6020 (D) 70 wans-ch front 5 rear surround $400 249 KRV 8020 (D) 125 wanschannei troni .25 rear surround $6 9 339 NAD 7225 (D) 85 wans power envelope $330 279 Mitsubishi MRSOiOID) 125 wans front 25 rear surround, prologic Yamaha RX830 (D) 70 wanslrorrt 15 rear surround $.400 '899" SPEA KEF C 55 (Nl Doois-e'i C75 !N) lowe-s C 85 (N) towe-s KLIPSCH KG-2 (D) PooKs-e KG 4 (D) cooks'-ef Polk 7C (Di uooenet1 3 1 (D! towe-s Yamaha NS570 (N) towers $600 '399" KERS REG SALE $600 pr '199" $?50pr '250 $1050 or '325.. $485pr M75 $679 pr '235 . $579 p. '215 $?oocp- '750 $300 pr '85 (D) Demo (N) New Ai pTiOucts have full rnanu'acturer's warrarty 251 South EUiott Road, Chapel Hill i Next u. Spa Health Club) 929-9998 TF 10 7. Sal 10 6. Timed Monday
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Sept. 27, 1991, edition 1
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