SV Daily Sar Hpfl Hoyas Deal UNC Second Straight Loss STAFF REPORT The 15th-ranked North Carolina women’s lacrosse team dropped its second straight contest Wednesday afternoon, los ing to 13th-ranked Georgetown 10-7 at Kehoe Field in Washing ton. The Tar Women's Lacrosse UNC 7 Georgetown 10 Heels (9-3) held a 5-4 lead after going on a three-goal surge m the first half. But early in the second, Georgetown’s (6-2) Stacy Duca posted back-to-back goals, giving the llflt y m Hoyas an 8-6 lead they would never re linquish. UNC’s Carla Nappi scored with 10:19 left, but UNC got no closer. The Hoyas’ de fense completely shut down UNC freshman Erin McGinnis, the fclub’s leading scorer, holding her without a point. Katie Loovis led the Tar Heel attack Tar Heel freshman ERIN McGINNIS was held scoreless vs. Georgetown. with a pair of goals, while Duca paced Georgetown with four goals and an assist. The Hoyas outshot UNC 25-20. H Contemporary Fashions g q < Fresh New Fashions ra H jjgf are Beginning to Sprout! W jjj Come In & See Tliem When Li M 171 E. Franklin St-'j Hill 929-0803 H North Carolina Center for Reproductive Medicine EGG DONORS WANTED Please help our infertility couples. Will pay SISOO for completed donation. FOR MORE INFORMATION CALL 1-919-233-1680 1 * <fi wcflTion s with tfiniTUDE : Anew venture in financial journalism on the Web seeks talented, y energetic and hungry men and women with editorial experience and an obsession with the markets. If you have the skills, the passions and the stamina - plus the daring to Join a start-up (what we believe will be a lucrative start-up) either fax your resume and selected clips to (212) 747-0087 or send them today to William C Burdick, 30 Wall Street (ninth floor), New York, NY 10005. For more sl=ji Information, call Mr. Burdick at (212) 269-1833 and he will put you r 1 In touch with the principles behind this enterprise. Catch Up with E Tar Heel Notes B MESS \&£r\ CHEM4I X" CHEM 62-Co DRAM 16 ANTH4I ECON 10 BIOL 11-H GEOG 10 BIOL 1 GEOG 11 BIOL 45 GEOG 20-M BIOL 52 GEOG 20-H ■f§p®OyJ| BIOL 54 HIST 18 BIOL 62 PHAR 53 BIOL 63 PHIL 21 EHHm| BUS 71 PHYS 24 CHEM 11 PSYCH 10-M BHI CHEM 2UP PSYCH 10-K ■ CHEM 2 1-D To pick up your complete set of notes, go to the STUDENT STORES Qet all the notes from day one now! Tar Heels Use ‘Lost Art’ to Top Mountaineers BYROBPATON STAFF WRITER Bunting has become somewhat of a lost ait in baseball today, but apparently North Carolina coachMikeßobertsdoesn’tagree. The Tar B . „ Heels bunted ,**,!. for four base Appalachian State .. 6 hits to help pro- UNC 8 pel them to an 8-6 victory over Appala chian State on Wednesday night at Boshamer Stadium in front of a crowd of 143. Down 6-4 in the bottom of the sixth inning, UNC (21-17) closed the gap to one, courtesy of an RBI bunt single by shortstop Brian Whitlock. It was Whitlock’s second bunt base hit of the game. Men’s Tennis Seeks Perfect Mark, No. 1 Seed in Match Against Duke BY ALEC MORRISON ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR UNC’s quest for perfection ends today. The 17th-ranked North Carolina men’s tennis team faces No. 10 Duke at 2:30 today in the Tar Heels ’ final ACC match of the year. UNC (17-2, 7-0 in the ACC) arrives in Durham seeking an undefeated conference season, its first since 1992. But Duke (14-4, 5-1) may have other plans. While the Tar Heels can secure the top seed in next week’s ACC tournament In the eighth inning, with ASU (22-14) still leading 6-5, rightfielder Julian Dean led offwith abunt that hugged the first base line. Catcher Josh Rowell followed with a single, advancing Dean to third. Rowell stole second, and then Dean scored the tying run on pinch hitter Chris LaMarsh’s sacrifice fly to right field. But the Tar Heels weren’t content with just a tie. With two out and and Rowell on second, centerfielder Jarrett Shearin stepped up to the plate. “With a runner in scoring position I was just trying to hit the ball hard,” Shearin said. Shearin did just that, smashing Phil Falco’s offering over the left field fence for a two-run homer, making it 8-6 UNC. That was all the Tar Heels needed, as with a victory, the Blue Devils could claim that spot for themselves with a win today. “It’s a great position (for UNC) to be in,” Tar Heel coach Sam Paul said. “I still think Duke’s the favorite, though. They’ve beaten teams that have beaten us... but it’s going to be a great match.” North Carolina rolled through its first seven conference matches, allowing no opponent to win more than one individual match each time. Top-seeded and 21st ranked David Caldwell, No. 2 Brint Mor row and No. 4 Tripp Phillips all have 7-0 conference marks this year, and the other three UNC singles players hold 6-1 records. Duke, meanwhile, has posted its own strong numbers. Senior Rob Chess, ranked 11th in the nation, is 6-0 in ACC play and will give Caldwell perhaps his stiffest chal lenge of the yearatNo. 1. Dmitry Muzyka owns a 4-1 record in the ACC at No. 2. Sven Koehler, who has split time at the second, third and fourth spots, rounds out a trio of Blue Devils ranked in the top 70. Doubles play will also be crucial. Last season in Chapel Hill, the Tar Heels cap tured the doubles point to gain the momen tum which eventually secured the match. Both teams will attempt to do the same today, and the battle may come down to the top spot among the tandems. And if the two teams needed any more incentive, there’s always the rivalry factor looming behind every shot the players hit. The Blue Devils have established them selves as perennial ACC frontrunners, and the Tar Heels would like nothing better than to claim that role for themselves. “Definitely, when you play Duke in anything, there’s added emotion,” Paul said. “We try to take every ACC match seri ously. But with Duke being a cross-town rival... the kids are going to get up for it.” The Student Mind During a Final Exam. Eewy, iM.eeiA.ij, ihe yrof never rainy, moe... read the book,. ! haye the curve Is really low, $ Jflll I S4OO ! SPORTS sophomore hurler Corey Richardson set the Mountain eers down 1-2-3 in the ninth inning. Richardson en tered the game in the eighth with the Tar Heels down 6-5, but became the winning pitcher when North Carolina scored three runs in the fi nal frame. “I just wanted to keep (UNC) in it, UNC pitcher COREY RICHARDSON got his fourth win of the year Wednesday night and do my best and just try to shut them down,” Richardson said. “■Whatever happened, happened ... Dilbert today was a bad day. FIRST THE VENDING MACHINE STOLE fAY YvONEY .. THE Daily Crossword by Dorothy B. Martin ACROSS 1 Get the lead out 6 Garbed 10 Hem and— -13 Poe’s bird 14 US attorney general 15 Scarlett's home 16 Violin maker 17 Site ot the tree of knowledge 18 Sun and moon 19 Make a watery landing 21 Atop 22 King of beasts 23 Accompany 25 Foam 29 Roguish 30 Jai 31 Middle East prince 34 Lessen 38 Carlo 40 Drama by Euripides 41 Relating to birth 42 Musical Lee 43 Takes to court 45 Bribes 46 Have status 48 Certain residence: var. 50 Resist 53 Heath 55 Humdinger 56 Reach port 62 Mideast nation 63 Bulwer-Lytton, heroine 64 Varnish material 65 Sell 66 Consumer 67 Apia's land 68 Shoe width 69 Hari 70 Printing mistakes DOWN 1 Notable periods 2 Incline 3 Relating to grandparents 4 Bristle 5 Maroon 6 Belief s|a|n|dHi|n| tTol7TnTcTh] E I E EH N E R V eWn O V A M A S S W T RE A dßt OI L I N T ||M I D A T eIo N I T ■ T|A mlb|T eTnTo I N I T I A T eHmACIeI M ARppiT A*r“MM“AT ONE A V A I Lit D E M A "S 1 M A n'n aHVs O N PH|M C S Wtu i kJMBT ndlil cla t e 'A A A oMI ET THsJT AL A TAT AMS TEL AMT R E Y ° M i' Tfcy! E l E !iMilj4-?-S 1 1 1 1" 111 ' M" o s;s hopefully we’d win the game, and that’s what happened thanks to (Shearin’s homer).” Despite the late-inning flurry, UNC started slowly and seemed primed for a fourth consecutive defeat. An example of North Carolina’s early sluggishness occurred with two outs in the top of the second. ASU’s Scott Musgrave was caught in a run down when he unwit tingly tried to advance to an occupied third base. But when Tar Heel first baseman Mike Stoner threw the ball away, Musgrave was ableto retreat safely to secondbase. Stoner’s error allowed Chris Rodriguez to score from third, giving the Mountaineers a 3-1 edge. In the fifth, Brent Payton added to ... AND BY THE END OF THE DAY I HAD BEEN SENTENCED TO DEATH BY THE DIRECTOR. OF HUMAN E-mail: SCOTTADAMS@AOL.COM 7 Lured 8 Once more 9 One of Santa’s reindeer 10 A Marx 11 Bower 12 Didn't exist 15 Renew a line of communication 20 Employ 24 Scrutinize 25 Reading light 26 Healing plant 27 Sharp flavor 28 Alight 29 British composer 32 en scene 33 Chit kin 35 Above 36 Recording 37 Otherwise 39 Nestling 44 Ancient Greek colonnade 47 Boredom 49 Hemingway 1 p [3 [4 |5 HP [7 [8 [9 111 112 _ 2Q H ■■22 HH23 24 25 26 27 30 ■■3i|32 33 ~■■34 35 36 37 38 3^ 42 ' 50 51 52 J|H53 54 55 ■8156 - 57 58 59 60 61 62 H- H 164 Til Hll'./ 68 ' bßto Thursday, April 11,1996 UNC’s woes, smacking a three-run homer to make it 6-1 ASU. But despite the early mishaps, the Tar Heels managed to claw their way back behind the power 0f... the bunt. “The thing I liked about tonight’s game was that we made some mistakes, but we really played baseball,” Roberts said. “We had four bunt base hits, which to me is Carolina type baseball, and we haven’t played that in a long time.” BASEBALL UNC 8, Appalachian State 6 ASU 120 030 000 - 6 7 1 UNC 100 013 03 - 8 11 4 ASU: Muss lave. Falcc (61 Craws (7). UNC Potter, Stain (6). Wallace (7). ftchardson (B|. WP - ftchartton (4-0) If - Crews (6-2). Attendance 143. f the execution I'VE BECOME 15 SCHEDULED TOTALLY FOR TOttOR DESENSITIZED R O GO. I TO TRAGIC SHOULD CALL news) (, C 1996 United Feature Syndicate. Inc (NYC) © 1996 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All rights reserved. 54 Verdi’s forte 57 Artist Bonheur 58 Potter’s medium 59 Sisal 60 Melville work 61 Inlets 50 branch (peace symbol) 51 Process in a blender 52 Aircraft 53 Painter Claude 11

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view