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10 Thursday, March 23, 21)00 Familiar Face Takes on UNC By Brian Murphy Senior Writer There will be no hamburgers and hot dogs at this family reunion. Instead it will feature zone defenses and slam dunks. There will be little time for the small talk, but plenty of time for coach talk when Tennessee coach Jerry Green and North Carolina meet again Friday in Austin, Texas. For Green, who worked UNC sum mer camps two decades ago, this meet ing will contain little of the fare that nor mally accompanies reunions. “I think Fm probably an adopted part of the family - not having played there, but worked camps there,” said Green, who was an assistant at Kansas for three seasons. “I’m adopted off the (Kansas coach) Roy Williams side of the family.” Green, whom UNC coach Bill Guthridge calls “a member of our extended family,” was first introduced Wf ”C| With this coupon or feojuL "C 1 J r JJL ®jpT UNC Student ID, M 1 | Jj get $1 OFF Dinner Buffet! j* 5H Come try the largest J Chinese Buffet in the Triangle! E j CL+dM ll; Dine-in Buffet Only 968-3488 1 Day til Beervana • hoppy, malty, diverse, aromatic J MARCH 24 25 T"~ 7th Annual I ' v / " Southeastern (1 . I i o ' / ll] Microbrewer's 1 \ „ | jI! Invitational I- J vTjp J i! The Durham Marriot at The Civic Center I'l ' / Tickets available today! j $20.00 at the door Tickets are limited! Buy yours today! Local Ticket Outlets: 7 7 7 Carr boro: Weaver Street Chapel Hill: Carolina Brewery, Market and Tyler's Mellow Mushroom, Good Restaurant & Taproom Fellows and Wellspring Grocery EVENT SPONSORS: CAROLINA * BE BLONDE'' an Additional Sponsors: North Coast Brewing Company, Fit South, Clock Work Advertising and Promotions, Tyler's Restaurant & Taproom, Armadillo Grill, Mellow Mushroom, Cottonwood Grill and Saw Mill Taproom. www.beerhunter.org • for info call 484-1128 News about great brews: subscribe@beerhunter.org A portion of proceeds to benefit Single Women With Children, Inc. NORTH CAROLINACREW ACC-Big 10 Double Dual Saturtiav. March 25 Out-goon Lake Wheeler* (take 40E to exit 297 - follow signs) Free Admission, Free Food, Free T-Shirts, and Free UNC Cameras!! Other Upcoming Women in I I Sports Tour2ooo Events: | Wednesday, March 29 - Women's Lacrosse Saturday, April 1 - Women's Tennis to the Tar Heel clan in 1972, when UNC was recruit ing one of Green’s players at Hunter Huss High School in Gastonia. .After meeting Guthridge and then-UNC coach Dean Smith, Green worked at UNC’s summer camps. There he met other young coach es on their way up, notably Williams. “I made a lot of good friends and learned a know how of how Coach Smith ran his program,” Green said. At the time, Green was coaching in western North Carolina, adopting the principles he learned from Smith and producing quality players, such as for mer NBA player Sleepy Floyd. Since those days in the mid-19705, Green has traveled a long way. He first coached at Ashe Central in Jefferson in 1968. Then, after a two-year stint in the army, Green moved to Charleston (S.C.) High School. From there, it was back to North Carolina and a four-year stay at Hunter Huss, where Green went 78-19. But Green’s success would quickly take him into the college ranks. He moved to UNC-Asheville as an assis tant coach in 1976. Four years later, he became the head man in Asheville. Then an old friend called. Williams invited Green to join his staff at Kansas. The four-year stint with the Jayhawks had a profound effect on Green. “I’ve modeled (the Tennessee pro gram) on what Roy taught me about his life at UNC: how to treat people, how to deal with players,” Green said. Green then continued his trek west ward, accepting the head coaching job at Oregon. He went 20-37 in his first two seasons, but then led the Ducks to post season play twice in the next three years. Now Green is at Tennessee, quickly rebuilding a program that had slipped. The Vols’ previous two head coaches were 101-137. In two seasons, Green is 41-18 with two NCAA appearances. He’s been able to keep Tennessee’s best high school players, starters Tony Harris, Vincent Yarbrough and C.J. Black, among them, in state. “We didn’t cheat, I can tell you that,” said Green in his witty, Southern drawl. “But we did recruit very, very hard.” The hard work - at camps, in high school, as an assistant, across the coun try - has paid off. Green has the Vols in the Sweet 16 for the first time since 1981. Now his former mentors will get a chance to see just how far Green has come. Just don’t expect the Tar Heels to bring the buns. The Sports Editor can be reached st sports@unc.edu. a wMof Research i Opportunities Emory, renowned as a premier research institution, is seeking candidates for a number of exciting research opportunities with the School of Public Health, the School of Medicine, Yerkes Primate Center and Emory College. Among our extensive research facilities are the newly renovated Woodruff Memorial Research Building, the state-of-the-art Rollins Research Center, the Winship Cancer Institute, the Biomedical/Dental Building and the recently completed Yerkes Vaccine Research Center. Emory's newest research building, the Whitehead Research Building, is scheduled for completion in 2001 and will be among the largest buildings on campus. In 1998-99, the school received $142.8 million in research funding, ranking us 21st among American medical schools for federal research expenditures. Friday, April 7 • 2pm-spm • Cox Hall, Emory Campus • Atlanta, GA | join us at our Research Job Fair, where you'll have the opportunity to meet and interview with scientists/principal investigators for Staff Research Technician positions (non-faculty/non-post doctoral appointments): Research Specialists (all levels) Research Project Coordinators (all levels) All positions require a minimum of a BS degree in a science or related field. I /Tf \I For more details and directions, rH l\ /II |K Y please see our website. AA/EOE www .emo ry.edu Deadline This Friday /TJAACE IH Next DTH Editor The Daily Tar Heel is seeking students to serve on the panel that will choose the editor of the DTH for the 2000-2001 school year. Applications for the seven at-large positions on the DTH Editor Selection Board are available at the DTH Office and the Carolina Union info desk kiosk. Applicants must be available for an orientation meeting from 5-6 pm Wednesday, April 5 and from approximately B:3oam-4pm Saturday, April 8 to conduct interviews and make the selection. All students may apply for at-large positions except current DTH news staff members. If you have any questions about the process, please contact Rob Nelson (962-4086, rnelson@email.unc.edu) or Janet Gallagher-Cassel (962-0520, jgcassel@email.unc.edu). Sports Sr - • m Hr BT\ ij DTH/GREG WOLF North Carolina midfielder Austin Garrison battles a Duke defender for the ball in the Tar Heels' 13-8 loss at Koskinen Stadium on Wednesday night. Garrison scored UNC's fourth goal on an assist from Jeff Sonke. Duke Makes Tar Heel Lead Disappear By John Zhu Staff Writer DURHAM - North Carolina and Duke took turns playing Houdini in their men’s lacrosse game Wednesday night at Kosk in e n Stadium. While No. 7 UNC made Duke’s attack invisi- Men’s Lacrosse UNC 8 Duke 13 ble in the second quarter, holding the Blue Devils scoreless to take a 7-6 lead, it was UNC’s offense that pulled the dis appearing act in the second half. The No. 9 Blue Devils held UNC to one goal in the final 30 minutes en route to a 13-8 victory, snapping the Tar Heels’ six-game winning streak. “The whole second half, I think Duke had the ball 25 minutes of the 30,” UNC coach Dave Klarmann said. “That’s not good.” After outscoring Duke 4-0 in the sec ond quarter to take a one-goal halftime lead, UNC (6-1, 0-1 in the ACC) man aged seven shots for the rest of the game to finish with a 33-27 shot deficit. Duke (3-3, 2-0) took advantage of UNC’s offensive struggles to take con trol of the game. TJ. Durnan keyed the Blue Devils’ comeback, scoring three of his four goals in the second half. After Bobby Gormsen scored 2:25 into the third quarter to give UNC an 8-7 lead, Duke answered with two goals in a span of 20 seconds to take the lead for good. Craig Schubert tied the game with 9:42 left in the third on a give-and-go *kum Officially Recognized Student Organizations: . v . ‘3 Nominations for n , . utstanding enior Don t miss out on this f chance to recognize the avori e acuity individuals who have /\\ A /( I ( Q made significant 1 1 rrmtrihutinnd are due sPm’ 5 P m ’ Thursday, March 30 in iUIUI iUUUUI IS. o \ Steele Building (Nomination forms can be picked up at the Union Desk. George Watts Hill Aiumni Center or in 01 Steele Building.) B Miguel Algarin, poet I open poetry readin§ ’ B Skylight Exchange Cnt,C ’ I 4057, Rosemary Street 1 Sunday, March 26 3-spm founder the L Talk/book signing famous 1 Bingham Hall Room 103 Nuyorican K UNC campus PoetS P Monday, March 27 4pm in NYC I Any questions ’ 1 call 962-4031 . . I Pad of UNC Latlna/o Visit | Cultures Speakers' Series SPORTS SHORTS Today At Carolina... THURSDAY, MARCH 23 Men’s Tennis vs. Wake Forest 2:3o pm at Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center Women’s Tennis vs. Clemson 4:00 pm at Cone-Kenfield I I Tennis Center rs/l / I Hardee's Students & Faculty Admitted FREE w/ID! aljr Daily (Car Hrrl < with Greg Patchak on the right wing. Chris Hartofilis followed with one of Duke’s six unassisted goals for a 9-8 lead. “Watching (UNC) on film, we could see that if you beat your defenseman, they weren’t going to slide to you,” said Duke attackman Jared Frood, who scored two goals. “Our attackers got by their defensemen and we were finishing.” Duke then slowed down on offense to run down the clock and its defense clamped down on UNO’s trio of attack men. After combining for three first-half goals, Chase Martin, Matt Crofton and Jeff Sonke were shut out in the second half. “We just didn’t have the ball,” Martin said. “They just played harder than us. They beat us to ground balls. If you can’t have the ball, it’s hard to score.” The Sports Editor can be reached at sports@unc.edu.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 23, 2000, edition 1
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