Carolina's football team could go howling again rr r,iu nr - COLLEGE PARK, Md. - Gator, Peach, Rose, Liberty, Astro-Blue Bonnet, Sun, Hall of Fame, Orange, Sugar, Cotton, Fiesta, Tangerine. This is the time of year when a football team if it's good enoughand its fans start to think about the possibility of going to a post-season bowl game. And, if the possibility is there, they like to think of which game they'd like to go to, if they had their druthers. Carolina's football team, now 6-2, is being eyed by several bowls including the Tangerine, Peach, Sun and Hall of Fame Classic. And the chances look good that the Tar Heels will go to some bowl game, but they must win at least two of their last three games, preferably all of them. Bowl scouts say they would be tickled if Carolina ranked in the Top 20 this week and knocked off another Top 20-ranked conference opponent, Clemson, this weekend. "We'd take a team that's 8-3, even though they'd have to have a lot else going for them," said Norman D. Pless of the selection committee of the Hall of Fame Classic before the UNC-Maryland game. "Of course, I'm going to be honest with you; we want a team with a big following." The Hall of Fame Classic is a new bowl and will be played the night of Dec. 22 in Birmingham, Ala., at Legion Field. Proceeds from the game go to the National Football Foundation and the Hall of Fame. "We're football crazy in Alabama," Pless said. "We want two good teams." He said some of the teams being considered for the Hall of Fame Classic are Florida, Nebraska, Florida State, North Carolina and Maryland. "In fact, a great matchup would be Nebraska-Maryland," he said before Carolina tripped Maryland 16-7. Monday Morning By GENE UPCHURCH The Sun Bowl also got a chance to see Carolina's defeat of Maryland. "Two of the most exciting games in our bowl's history have been furnished by North Carolina," said John Thompson of the Sun Bowl selection committee of Carolina's 32-28 win over Texas Tech in 1972 and 26-24 loss to M ississippi State in 1974. The Sun Bowl will be played at 1:30 p.m. Dec. 31 in El Paso, Texas and will be televised nationwide by CBS. Thompson said that because Carolina's defense is so strong, which normally results in a fairly nonexplosive game, chances remain good that it could receive a bowl bid. . "Bill Dooley always has a big offense," he said. "It still would be an exciting eame." su Mr I 111 r l aft 4 vi football 4 Tom Biddle, UNC's placekicker, booted three field goals, the longest a 30-yarder, to put Carolina over Maryland 16-7 in College Park Saturday. Staff photo by Joseph Thomas. Continued from page I. "After we got the lead, we knew they'd pass the ball," Caldwell said. "We knew they'd try to nickel and dime us with short passes. But if they do that, they'll -come short-changed." Jim Dickey, who coaches the secondary, said no changes were made during halftime. "After the game gets going and you're having problems on offense," he said of the Maryland team, "you gamble a little more. They tried to get things turned around. They tried it and we robbed them." Amos Lawrence, Carolina's leading ground gainer, spun and twisted for 93 yards on 21 carries, picking up mostly small yardage against the Terrapin defense. Fullback Bob Loomis carried 12 times for 49 yards, while Billy Johnson and Doug Paschal rushed for 41 and 29 yards respectively. Monday. October 31, 1977 The Daily Tar Heel Carolina field hockey versus High Point In a possible preview of the North Carolina Association of Intercollegiate Athletics for Women Hockey Tournament finals, UNC takes on High Point on James Field today at 3 p.m. in its last regular season match. High Point, the number-one seed in the tourney on the basis of last Tuesday's record, will face the winner of Tuesday's Appalachian State-East Carolina game Wednesday at 9 a.m., while second-seeded Carolina plays Duke at 1 1 a.m. Wednesday in the semi-finals. UNC and H igh Point wins would set up a rematch in the finals. High Point is not the type of team most coaches1 Would want 'to play twice' in three days because, in addition to being fast and aggressive, it is an extremely rough squad. "It is a very aggressive team, and a very, very fast team," UNC Coach Dolly Hunter said. "They have two halfbacks that fast break like Bashi Buba (UNC's leading scorer V-ball takes second UNC's women's volleyball team finished second in the Maryland Invitational Tournament this weekend after a 15-12, 8 15, 15-14 loss to Maryland in the finals. Carolina eliminated N.C. State in the semi-finals 13-15, 15-11, 15-8. The Tar Heels lost to Delaware early in the tournament but went on to defeat Virginia and Georgetown to be ranked No. 1 coming out of their pool before advancing to the semi-finals. and top fast breaker), and that can dribble as fast as a normal person can walk. Our defense will have to be marked tightly, and we'll have to cover well." "They're as aggressive as UVa. (whom UNC lost to 3-2 earlier this season) but not nearly as skilled. They don't have the finesse coupon; or stick work we do. While they're aggressive, they're also rough." The Heels feel that their tougher schedule should have been taken into consideration in the seeding. Also, a win today will give Carolina a psychological first place finish over High Point if not a real one. - ISABEL WORTHY 15-501 Bypass at Eastgate 929-0289 208 W. Franklin St. 942-5149 on 1 1 Our Customers know the dljference! Get LI the price of any medium or large Remember... you get a great plcca at a great price! Good thru Nov. 30 1lp & Save An 571 VJ 1 in jliJL. (I .- IlL 1 y-vwAv-wWw;v Htov oz. (jZwhm juice tvtiC .ozruc& foxo text Ji&AxiztC '"nr. r,i jAn - For a free booklet on mixology write:GIROUX, P.O. Box286G, Astoria Station.New Yprk, N.Y. 1 1 102. Giroux is a product of A-W BRANDS, INC. a subsidiary of IROQUOIS BRANDS LTD. Tar Heel soccer clobbers UNC-C By TOD HI CHF.S Staff Writer The season's most lopsided contest ended Saturday with the Heels having wiped the U NC-Charlottc soccer team off Keter Field, 9-1. Carolina hopes it does as well today when the powerful Maryland Terrapins visit Feter Field at 2 p.m. With four home games remaining on UNC's schedule, the Heels ( 10-3-1 ) must win them all to keep themselves in the running for a bid to the national tournament. The lust step on the path is also the most difficult. " 1 hcy're real good." Dorrance said ol the Icrps. "We'd hae to go in as the underdogs. It's a vital, must-win if we are to get the bid. I hey're strong all over, but we've especially got In stick their midfielder. Claude Inglund. who got a hat-trick in the Terps' recent 3-0 w in over Duke. It's one of those rivalry-type matches where either team could win." Fears ol a Carolina letdown Saturday following Wednesday's big win over N.C. UNC netters fall to Cavs By WILL WILSON Staff Writer Kitty Harrison has said often this fall she could play her No. 6 UNC women's tennis player at No. I and not lose any team effec tiveness. In other words, Carolina has six starters ol nearly equal ability not great at the top. but not weak at the bottom. I hroughotit the season, it has often won matches even though losing at the top one or two positions. Against Virginia here Friday, the balance between losing and w inning pushed a little further down the ladder, and the result was a 5-4 UNC loss to the Cavaliers, a team it had finished ahead of in winning the Atlantic Coast Conference Tournament three weeks ago. Virginia took the top four singles matches and the No. I singles match to win its fourth in five dual matches this fall. Carolina's loss was its second against eight wins. The key wins for Virginia were at the se cond and third singles positions. At No. 2, Beth Bondurant defeated UNC's Carney Timbcrlake 7-6, 6-4, reversing the result when the two met in the ACC tournament se- Women's harriers win UNC's women's cross country team swept the first four places to win the North Carolina Association of Intercollegiate Atheletics for Women meet in Winston Salem Saturday. Carol Jennings finished first, Dorothy Laud second, Linda Nells third. Juice Brisco fourth and Cindy Hoffner eighth. The team competes Saturday in the ACC Invitational in Chapel Hill. eond flight finals. Timbcrlake fell behind 3-5 in the first set but came back to force a tiebreaker. However, Bondurant ripped off the first four points there and took it 5-1. I he biggest suprise of the match was at No. 3. where Virginia's Cindy Blinker dealt Lloyd Hatcher her first loss of the season, w iping her out 6-0. 6-3. At the ACC tourney. Hatcher won the third flight, while Blinker was fourth. Janet Shands kept the far Heels alive entering the doubles by edging Keri O'Donnell 6-7, 6-1, 7-6 in the longest match ol t he day. Shands, who dropped the first set after leading 4-0. kept her cool and came back from 4-5 and 5-6 deficits in the fina' set to win. taking the tiebreaker 5-2. Stale dissolved as the score mounted against the 49ers. The disparity between the two teams was further evident in that the L'NC starters gave way to the second string before the first half ended, and the subs punched home the final five goals. 1 he Heels got rolling nine minutes into the game on a beautiful lead pass from Roy Baroff to Dick Drayton, whose goal began what proved to be a long afternoon for UNC-C. With 28 minutes left. Sean Naber drove down the right-hand side and placed the ball into the left-hand corner of the goal on a line crossing shot. 1 he Charlotte goalie hurt his hand on the play and had to leave the game. At the 19-miiuite mark, Steve Scott angled a pass in from the left to David Blum in the middle; the score stood 3-0 Carolina. Within three minutes. Naber had his second goal of the game and made it 4-0 on an instant replay of his first scoring shot. UNC came out in the second half and scored a quick goal, but the Carolina subs put on an offensive show of their own. Off a pass from Scott, John Mansfield scored on a line-drive from 20 yards out. With 30 minutes left. Scott scored when his shot deflected off a Charlotte fullback and into the goal. The bulk of the half then dissolved into a kick-and-run contest, until Butch Bernard scored on a breakaway down the middle with just under six minutes left. Charlie Yowell and Billy Propster scored UNC's last two goals. GURDJIEFF Readings and discussions Monday Evenings at 7:30 Community Church - Chapel Hill Make Your Own Halloween Costume iBe a horrible hobgoblin, a ghastly ghost or a tricky transvestile with our Halloween Fixin'sc at the PTA Thrift Shop. We have wigs, hats, tuxedoes, old timey clothes, formal wear,: K gloves, and some ready-made costumes. IfcOpen Tues.-Sat. 9:30-5 p.m., 508 W. Franklin.; Also open on Mon. Oct. 31 All Hallows Eve But come early for best pickin's. PTA Thrift Shop "a boootiful place , for Halloween Costume" HONORS SEMINARS: SPRING 1978 The following honors seminars for the Spring 1978 semester are open to all students with a minimum 3.000 QPA. Permission from the Office of Honors (303 South Building) is required for enrollment. These seminars are limited to an enrollment of 15 students and, in most cases, will be offered only once. HONORS 21, Stctl. "D M Uwrsnce ndJmM Joyce," Prol W Thotnlon,EnglihDept ,3 00-4 30MW. HONORS 28, 8cl. 2. "Th Sense ot Sight. Vituel Meening in Fiction" (Q Eliot, Promt. Woolt, FeulKntf , Simon). Prol Diane Leonard. Comparative Lit. 3:00.-5 30 M. HONORS 28, Sect. 3. "Medicine and Human Values." Prot Larry Churchill, Schoolot Medicine, 2.00-4.30 W. HONORS 28, Seel. 4. "Personhood and Social Reality A Philosophical Examination In Light ol the Contrasting Perspectives ot Sciences and Humanltlet," Prol E. M. Adams, Philosophy Dept.. 8 30-10:45 TTh. HONORS 28. Seel. t. The City ol Rome." (Urban development and problems, art. architecture, literature, social and historical development). Pro! Q Houston. Dept. ol Clasalea, 9:30-10:48 TTh. HONORS 28, Seel. 8. 'The Novel and Lyric Poem." (Tolstoy. Faulkner, Mandelshtam, Pasternak. Auden, Eliot, Williams) Prol P Debrecieny. Dept. ol Slavic Languages, 10 00-10:50 MWF. HONORS 29, Sect. 1. "Medicine in Society" (Humanities and Social Sciences related to Medicine and Health in Modern Society). Prol Axalla Hoole. School ot Medicine, and Prol. Jensen, Dept ol Psychiatry. 7 00-9 30 W. HONORS 30, Sect. 1. "Women in Management." Prol James E Allen, Health Administration, 7:00-9 30 M. HONORS 38H, Sect. 1. "Great Works ol the Western Tradition." (Cervantes. Swift, Goethe, Kierkegaard, Dostoevski. NieHsche. Freud. Jung presented by guest lecturers) Prol W Thornton, English Dept 3 30 4 45 TTh and Thursday evening discussion rtCOUUJrfniTrfryiMLjU TCldy BUTZ CJwatvays! It looks just like the traditional office football pool Only the prizes are something elsel Each week, five peo ple win $100 Gift certificates, good toward any item at any Harvey's Warehouse Store. And. this giveaway is repeated every week during the entire college football season! Con yoi CUTZ Horvsy? Each week, you'll find your official BLITZ form in this newspaper (copies of the form are also available at every Harvey's store). Select the winners and then predict the score in one "tie breaker" game Bring your entry to Harvey's, and place it in the official entry box. Be sure you have filled in the actual date of your entry. Entries close at 9 PM each Thursday evening. Each week, the five people with best percentage of winner selection, whose entries were received earliest in the week, will BLITZ Harvey and receive a $100 Harvey's Gift Certificate. The "tie breaker" game score will be used in the event that more than five people have the same percentage, with matching entry dates. How wISI you know when you'wo DUTZZ9 Hurvy? At the end of the week following each weekly contest, the names of the five winners will be simultaneously posted in every Harvey's store. Entries are limited to one per customer per day. and any attempt to defraud will result in disqualification. Entries will be removed from each box and sealed at the end of each day. We recom mend that you keep a copy of your entry each week. b tH BUTZ on? You bet it isl Enter this week and every week during Harvey's $5,000 College Football BLITZ I Make this your winning season! N0 PURCHASE NECESSARYI I WM. & MARY CITADEL W. VIRGINIA PITT. WAKE FOREST DUKE V.P.I. QD FLA. ST. V.M.I. VIRGINIA TENN. MEM PH. ST. TENN. ST. TENN. -MARTIN NOVEMBER 5 TENN. CHAT. BOWLING GREEN RICHMOND FURMAN N. CAROLINA ST. PENN. ST. MARYLAND VILLANOVA E. CAROLINA APPALACHIAN ST. AUBURN P MISS. ST. ALABAMA LSU i . Ti Blakr Predict the winner and TOTAL number of points scored. Winners will be selected on the closeness of points to the actual score. N. CAROLINA CLEMSON TOTAL POINTS NAME .ADDRESS. .PHONE. .DATE. .CITY. .STATE. .ZIP. SPECIAL fZ .THIS WEEK tfl"! onlyiii rO JVC V PcctabnSosfd-StBtaTV. Supr-Portttlt 7 lb. TV f as!u its 3-wy power option, varactar dbda. contact-laa UKF tunar. 3" speakar and contrast and brightneu control. Modal 304MV. en "WWW In,. r n n GREENSBORO 1016-18 W let St. 1 Mile E. ol Coliseum 275 8701 RALEIGH 622 628 Downtown Blvd 8211870 CHARLOTTE 3133 Independence Blvd 3 m ? DURHAM South Square Moll U.S. If 501 Business 493-2212 CARRBORO CorrMillShp. Ctr. 100 N. Greensboro St.

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