®ljp Sally ®ar Heel
SPORTS BRIEFS
(INC Women's Golf in 2nd,
Trails Devils at Duke Invite
DURHAM Led by Kelly McCall,
the UNC women’s golf team is tied for
second with Wake Forest with a two-day
total of 621 in the Duke Invitational. The
invitational, led by Duke with a total of
602, will conclude today.
McCall, a sophomore from Mahopac,
N.Y., shot a 74 Monday and trails Duke’s
Pam Soliman (72) by one stroke for the
individual title. Other Tar Heel scores in
the tournament are: senior Meredith Tucker
andjuniorßachelPoston(ls7,l9th place);
junior Staci Aber and sophomore Patricia
White (163, 42nd); senior Mandy Kuhn
and sophomore Megan Morgan (164,48 th);
sophomore April Wolfe (173, 79th).
Man Who Stabbed Seles
Avoids Prison Time Again
HAMBURG, Germany The man
convicted of stabbing tennis star Monica
Seles avoided a prison sentence for a sec
ond time Monday, a decision that brought
outrage from the tennis community.
Judge Gertraut Goering ruled that Seles
failed to convince the court that the 1993
attack was responsible for her not resum
ing her career.
The judge also said there was no evi
dence Guenter Parche, who contends he
was not trying to kill Seles but disable her
so Steffi Graf could regain the No. 1 rank
ing, intended to do more harm to Seles.
The athlete wrote a letter to the court,
saying Parche’s attack had “destroyed my
life.” But the judge said testimony from
Seles herself was necessary to support such
a claim.
Goering added that a likely explanation
for the fact that Parche’s five-inch knife
didn’t cause a graver injury was that “he
didn’t want to kill her.”
“We can’t rule out that he meant to do
more than he did to Miss Seles, but we also
can’t prove this,” the judge said.
Seles, who lives in Sarasota, Fla., issued
a one-sentence statement through IMG,
her management firm.
“I am as surprised as everyone else, and
I just don’t understand this," she said.
Athletics' Ace Eckersley
First to Sign New Contract
OAKLAND, Calif.—Dennis Eckersley
became the first player to agree to a major
league contract in more than three months,
returning Monday to the Oakland Athlet
igs with a one-year deal. _ ,*
Eckersley, 40, is coming offa $7.5 mil
lion, two-year contract. Oakland declined
to exercise a $4 million option last fall and
instead paid a $300,000 buyout. Terms of
the new deal weren’t immediately avail
able. The A’s have an option for 1997.
No player has agreed to a major league
contract since Dec. 22, the day before own
ers attempted to implement a salary cap.
The union boycotted signings through Feb.
5, and owners then refused to bargain indi
vidual deals.
U.S. District Judge Sonia Sotomayor
issued an injunction last Friday that forced
owners to operate under the terms and
conditions of the expired collective bar
gaining agreement.
Eckersley has saved a club-record 291
games for the A’s. He had his best year in
1992, when he saved 51 games and won
both the American League MVP and Cy
Young awards.
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This Love’s Not Blind; He’s a Masters Favorite'
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS
AUGUSTA, Ga.—Davis Love fought
back tears after a victory in New Orleans
gave him a last-minute place in the Masters
and turned him into one of the tournament
favorites.
The tears, however, almost certainly
would have flowed had he known of the
applause from a deathbed in Austin, Texas.
Ben Crenshaw told the story Monday
following the death of Harvey Penick,
coach and teacher, mentor and friend to
several generations of Texas golfers.
cilllpiaUijalarlippl
m
Tony
McCall
Track & Field
1994-95 Final UNC Men's Basketball Stats
nY G FG-FGA FG% 3P-3PA 3% FT-fTA Fl% REB AVG A TO S PTS AVG
Stackhouse 34 215416 51.7 37-90 41.1 186-260 71.1 280 8.2 93 Tt 150 652 19.2
Wallace 34 240-364 65.9 1-3 33.3 89-141 63.1 279 8.2 35 52 17 566 16.6
0. Williams 34 189442 42.7 87-218 39.9 61-97 62.9 100 3.4 82 39 24 526 15.5
Mclnnis 34 155-316 49.1 44-112 39.2 66-99 66.7 138 4.1 180 72 44 420 12.4
Calabria 33 120-237 50.6 66-133 49.6 41-57 71.9 159 4.7 87 60 38 347 10.5
Landry 34 44-97 45.4 23-58 39.7 22-27 81.5 55 1.6 54 38 15 133 3.9
Zwikker 34 39-80 48.8 00 0.0 21-31 67.7 102 3.0 12 12 5 99 2.9
Sullivan 12 9-17 52.9 1-5 20.0 9-12 75.0 18 1.5 6 8 2 24 2.0
S. Williams 28 12-31 38.7 6-20 30.0 18-21 85.7 12 0.4 20 8 7 48 1.7
Geth 17 15-28 53.6 00 0.0 3-11 27.3 24 1.4 1 11 3 33 1.9
McNairy 12 6-12 50.0 OO 0.0 0-3 0.0 8 0.7 3 4 1 12 1.0
Lynn 12 1-8 12.5 1-6 16.7 1-2 50.0 2 0.2 3 2 3 4 0.3
Neal 11 14 25.0 0-2 0.0 1-2 50.0 3 0.3 1 1 2 3 0.3
Barnes 5 0-3 0.0 (FI 0.0 00 0.0 0 0.0 0 0 0 0 0.0
UNC Totals 3410442055 50.8 266648 410 517-763 678 129037J9 576 437211 287184.4
Opp Totals 34 960-2326 41.3 299-879 34.0 297423 70.2 123036.2 503 434226 251674.0
Blocked shots: Wallace 93, Stackhouse 59, Zwikker 14, Calabria 4, D. Williams 3, Landry 2, Geth,
Sullivan. UNC: 172. Opponents: 94.
UCLA
FROM PAGE 1
do. I think he had 17 rebounds, 31 points
he did everything but sell popcorn.”
The Razorbacks (32-7) were unable to
utilize the talents of juniors Corliss
Williamson and Scotty Thurman.
Williamson managed only 3 of 16 from the
floor for 12 points.
Thurman found the going even rougher,
scoring only five after averaging 15.7 on
the season.
UCLA exploded out of the dressing
room to begin the second half, pushing
their lead to 5545 on a fast-break back
wards dunk by Bailey.
The Bruins continued to dominate until
the 11 minute mark when the Hogs man
aged to put together some semblance of a
comeback.
Corey Beck hit a running one-hander,
Dwight Stewart followed with two straight
baskets, and Beck hit a trey to pull the
Razorbacks within four, 67-63.
After a sloppy turnover and an official
timeout, UCLA decided it was time to get
serious.
O’Bannon and Bailey combined for 12
of UCLA’s next 14 while Arkansas’ shoot
ing became frigid.
When Bailey took the ball coast-to-coast,
split two defenders and finger-rolled it over
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He L&u
Penick, 90, head pro at the Austin Coun
try Club for almost a half century and golf
coach at the University of Texas for more
than 30 years, died at his home Sunday
following a lengthy illness.
“You know Mr. Penick and Davis’ fa
ther were close friends,” Crenshaw said
before a practice session at the Augusta
National Golf Club.
“Tom Kite was talking to him Sunday
afternoon and told him Davis was leading
New Orleans. Mr. Penick couldn’t talk
very well at that point, but he clapped his
Athlete IWeek
How fast is Tony McCall? The total time he
spent competing Saturday in three races was
70.69 seconds, and that includes 300 meters run
by three of his teammates. In the No. 4 UNC men’s
track and field team's win over topranked Ne
braska and seventh-ranked Michigan. McCall won
the 100-meter dash (10.4), 20Ometerdash (21.07)
and ran a leg for the 4xloo relay team, which won
in a school record and first-place time of 39.22.
Joining the Ocala, Fla., sophomore in the record
setting jaunt were John McCaskill, Milton Campbell
and Curtis Johnson.
The top-ranked women's team also fared well
at Saturday's meet at Fetzer Field, topping No. 2
Tennessee, No. 3 Nebraska and No. 4 Michigan.
the rim, UCLA went up 81-71 with 1:25
remaining. From there on, the Bruins hit
the free throws, avoided the press and
proceeded to do a little tailoring on the
Kingdome nets.
Both teams shot the ball well in the first
half, and UCLA managed to cling to a 40-
39 halftime lead. Arkansas found itself
down 34-26 when Bailey connected on a
jumper from the left side. The Hogs then
picked up the pace and finished the half !
with a 13-6 run.
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SPORTS
hands, real loud,
three times.”
The victory by
Love, who played
college golf for
UNC, saved the
Masters from poten
tial embarrassment.
Although he’s
been having a good
year his win in
New Orleans
vaulted him to third
on the money-win
ning list —one of
the world’s top golf-
DAVIS LOVE 111,
shown here as a Tar
Heel, won last week in
New Orleans.
ers would have been left out of Augusta
this week.
Ironically, the man Love beat in the
Calvin and Hobbes
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VIE DONT VAUJE CRAreMMW VUTHOUT AH APPRECIATION FOR HOVI CAH A PERSON TAKE TOO HAD TWO DATS TO ) T
AW MORE/ ALL WE VALUE IS GRACE ANO REAUTV, THERE'S PR\DE \H U\S WORK WHEN WRITE THAT PAPER J U
RUTHLESS EFFIOEHCI, AND No PLEASURE IN CREATING SKILL AND CARE ARE LS
I SAT WE DEW OUR OWN THINGS At® NO PLEASURE IN CONSIDERED LUXURIES' C
HUMAN ITT THAT WAV.' HAM\NS TUEM.' OUR LWES WERE NOT MACHINES.’ WE TWO DAVS ? ' i
y ' ARE MADE DREARIER, RATHER HAVE A HUMAN NEED TOR TWO DATS >
THE Daily Crossword by CF Murray
ACROSS
1 Noisy closing
5 Desert garments
9 Visit briefly
13 Detroit
headache
15 Village or hamlet
16 Mishmash
17 Hersey’s bell
town
18 Hawks' place
19 Grandmother
20 Cop’s quarry
22 Final word
23 Merriment
24 Gaffe
26 Skipped
wedding
expenses
30 Mine feature
31 Mischievous
Norse god
32 River of Hades
35 Ad scheme
39 Spread compost
41 polloi
42 Houston pro
43 Interest in an
enterprise
44 Vienna’s land:
abbr.
46 Math course,
briefly
47 Hairs ,
49 Evaluate
51 Coast
53 Animal food
55 Stylish
56 Cop’s quarry
62 Long and lean
63 Posted
64 Roger or Demi
65 Exhort
66 Robt.
67 Supine’s
opposite
68 Borscht
ingredient
69 Modern-day drip
70 Stepped on
DOWN
1 Chunky portion
2 Queen of Sparta
3 for All
Seasons"
playoff, second-year pro Mike Heinen, had
already qualified because he won once last
year.
So now Love becomes one of the favor
ites, along with Ernie Els, Nick Faldo,
Nick Price, Greg Norman, Bernhard
Langer, Corey Pavin and Peter Jacobsen.
But last year’s winner, Jose Maria
Olazabal, is likely to have some trouble.
Like Crenshaw, a former winner, he’s
got a sore big toe on his right foot.
Olazabal is on the mend from surgery
on the toe in January. Limping noticeably,
he missed the cut in New Orleans last week
and cameto Augusta earlierthan expected.
He declined any comment after a prac
tice round at Augusta National, but his
manager, Sergio Gomez, said he is not
limping as badly as he was earlier.
4 Pianist
Thelonious
5 Sun-dried brick
6 Frozen dessert
7 British composer
8 Like a cathedral
9 Swindlers
10 San Antonio
shrine
11 Coat insert
12 Bank business
14 Osloite's land
21 Auto pioneer
25 Moreno or Gam
26 "Desire Linder
the —”
27 Bumpkin
28 Tex. neighbor
Monday's Puzzle solved:
IBIA| N|G ■ A D O R ; E | COM A
AG E Els OW E RBA V I V
B E R T E "A JralT
A D D T C f| S P I ?D LET
■Ha lTa . ■ s n a’gBBHW
P U R|L O I Ws | E N L
“ °llj
s ALL JL£.B A 1 D
c h y |r e P T I L E s~
■■l T D | D OU R BE
0_ A L I-iTB S N e_ JR
o x e rT||p l e at|s Tjz~ e
Te a n[e l t e|e tb e
IEINIDIs'JDIVIN I E [ S J S | H j A | O ;
Tuesday, April 4,1995
“I think he’s getting used to limping,”
Gomez said. “Since we came here, he has
felt comfortable; not confident, but com
fortable.”
Crenshaw, who also missed the cut io
New Orleans, was considerably less
comfortable after his first practice session
at Augusta.
He has calcium deposits and a bone
spur on the toe. It sometimes slips out of
joint, as it did in New Orleans.
“It’s like somebody is sticking a knife ill
there,” Crenshaw said. “And being where
it is, I can’t push off on the swing.” j
Crenshaw said the problem is the out*
growth of a burst of temper after he in
putted in the Colonial in Fort Worth 16
years ago. He kicked a trash container and
damaged the toe.
© 1995 Tribune Media Services, Inc.
All rights reserved.
50 Electioneer
51 Portion
52 Depend
53 Underground
worker
54 Did something
55 Cudgel
29 Dip
30 WWII foe
33 Certain Asian
34 One addressed
36 Raison and’ —
37 Rainbow
38 Egg
40 Legatee
45 Chore
48 Decrease
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tl |lhr H
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20 21
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27 28
31 - ~~ ■■32 — [33 34 ■■3s 36 37 38
39
43 p^^^46
■■47
52 54
55 ■■si - 57 58 59 60 61 ;
~ ■* ? t •** j
65 Mpe
68 flp9
11
57 TV part
58 Haven
59 Boggy plain
60 Cartoonist Peter’
61 Prerequisite fc