Newspapers / Daily Tar Heel (Chapel … / Nov. 20, 1978, edition 1 / Page 5
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V B radley9 def eiie9 WiePs points hi Monday, November 20. 1978 The Daily Tar Heel 5 nMght 'IBliie- White OTHAndy James Senior Randy Wiel By BILL FIELDS Staff Writer If any of the fans in Carmichael Auditorium Saturday for the annual Blue-White basketball game expected to see the unexpected, they got what they came for. In an aggressive, scrappy exhibition among Tar Heels, Randy Wiel provided the unexpected, scoring 24 points irt 31 minutes of playing time to lead the White team to a 78-67 win over the Blues. The fans did not expect Mike O'Koren, the Tar Heels pre-season All American, to have such a dismal day from the floor. O'Koren! hampered by a sprained wrist, went five for 14 and scored 15 points. On the other hand, the Blue-White game provided some of the ordinary. Dudley Bradley, playing for, the winners, went six for 10 from trie field and scored 13 points, but it was his defense which brought raves from a near-capacity crowd and plaudits from Coach Dean Smith. - v Bradley tallied seven assists and had eight steals, once stealing a ball at mid court then dribbling down and slamming it to the delight of the crowd. " "Bradley would have been the MVP in this game," Smith said ol the Edgewood. Md, senior. "Bradley was just outstanding. He's such a smart player, has so much savvy. Smith said the Blue-White game was typical of most and, as usual, found both good and bad in his team's performance. "We lost the ball too much. 1 thought the game would be closer. We could have Carolina wrestlers win in five weight classes By GEORGE BENEDICT Staff Writer The UNC wrestling team was not a very gracious host this weekend at its Carolina Invitational Wrestling Tournament. Tar Heel wrestlers won five of 10 weight classes. Leading the UNC squad was CD. Mock, voted by the coaches as the tournament's Most Outstanding Wrestler. Mock won the 126-pound weight class by decisioning Ike Anderson of Appalachian State in the finals, 5-2. Anderson's only points came on escapes. Mock was joined by four other Carolina wrestlers as individual winners in the tournament. Sophomore Bob Monoghan, and seniors Dave Jaergens, Mike Benzel and Dean Brior all had winning decisions in the finals. At 118 pounds, Monaghan had to come from behind to take a 6-5 decision over fellow UNC wrestler Dave Cooke in the finals. All of M onaghan's points came in the third and final period. Juergens had an easy time in his finals match at 150 pounds. He scored a 17-5 decision over Tim Davidson of Old Dominion. Wrestling at 167, Benzel won a close 3 2 decision in his finals match. H e defeated John Biller of Appalachian State. Brior also had a close. final at 1 77. Brior held off a late charge by Vic Northrup of East Carolina to take a 5-3 decision. . Besides Cooke, the only Carolina defeat in the finals was in the 158-pound class. Junior Carter Maricr was upset by Steve Goode of East Carolina 4-3. Head coach Bill Lam said he was disappointed with Mario's defeat. "Mario's a good kid and a good wrestler," he said. Before the tournament Lam had named Mario as one of three possible AU American candidates on the squad. Though a team championship was not awarded, UNC won the most individual titles. Georgia won two individual championships, and Old Dominion, N.C. State and East Carolina each had one individual winner. Next weekend UNC also will be in tournament competition. The Tar Heels will wrestle in the prestigious Southern Open in Chattanooga, Tenn. Lam called this a tough tournament for Carolina. Other schools participating include Oklahoma State and Michigan, both with strong wrestling teams. From that tournament, UNC will go directly to Clemson, S.C., to meet the Tigers. Tar Heel volleyball takes fourth in Southern Regional tournament By NORMAN CANNADA Staff W riter The UNC women's volleyball team played well this weekend, finishing fourth in the AIAW Sourthern Regional II tournament in Durham. I thought we played better overall, tri captain Mary Alice Abdalla said, comparing the regional-tournament with s the Heels' -performance In the North Carolina AIAW last . weekend. On the first day of the tournament, the Tar Heels were in pool play, where they needed to win two of the three games to advance to the double-elimination championship round the next day. Carolina faced Duke University in the first match of pool play. "We didn't have a super match against Duke but we still played pretty well, Abdalla said. The Tar Heels beat the Blue Devils for the fourth time this season 15- 9, 9-15 and 15-7. In their second match of the day. the Heels played what a Abdalla called "our best match of the tournament" against a Sourth Carolina . team that had beaten them handily earlier in the season. The Tar Heels defeated the Gamecocks 17-15 and 15-10. "We passed the ball around a lot and really had a great match," Abdalla said. Having already qualified for the championship round. Carolina played a very bad match against eventual champion. Northern Kentucky, losing 1 5-7 and 1 5-5. "We tried to get up for them, but we were physically drained from the South Carolina match," Abdalla said. In the first match of the winner's bracket with archrival N.C. State, the Wolfpack wound up on top, beating the Heels 12-15, 15-5 and 18-6. Carolina had problems in the rematch with Northern Kentucky, losing to the regional champions in two games 15-9 and 15-7, to be eliminated from competition. a i I TODAY'S CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS words 1 Pack down 63 French river 5 Treaty 64 Star 9 Snap 66 Bastions 14 On the 67 Man's name ocean 68 Adroit 15 Oriental 69 At : nanny Bewildered 16 numerals 70 Being 17 Montreal 71 Learning cathedral: 2 branch words DOWN 19 One at 1 Dance 20 Tropical tree 2 Not 21 Insistent Nobody person 3 Field rat 23 First-born 4 Upstart 25 Rent 5 Mat 26 Close 6 "I'll draw 28 Crueler you " 32 Undergoing 7 Ruminant rebirth ' quadruped 37 Hackneyed - 8 In that place 38 Dine 9 Commends 39 Steeple 10 Electric 41 To a chair: Slang, 42 Sidestep 2 words 45 Resists: 2 11 Skip words 12 Docile 48 Scrawnier 13 Sunday 50 Sulk punch 51 Quarrels 18 Comforter 54 Rascals 22 Man's nick 58 Result name 62 5280 feet: 2 24 Labels Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: HTAJW SflM A R A TfD E CIO 27 Corded fab- 47 rics 49 29 15-nation ,52 pact: Abbr. 53 30 Hebrew letter 31 Bank 55 32 Actual 56 33 Roof part 57 34 Portico 35 Insect egg 58 36 Snare 40 Son of Seth 59 43 Puts into - 60 44 Dispirit 46 Relating to a 61 nobleman 65 Endurance Smash into U.S. lake Printing term: PI. Gold digger Cloth fold Sp. artist's works Code word for "A" Trick Beginner: Var. Fedoras Female deer i Fz p p 15 6 7 is r 19 To J7i 12 77"" U Ts TS " 17 us ' 75" " ' 20 " 2I """ 23 2T " 2! "" 26 277 28 ! 29 j30 3 32 Ui J34 35 1 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 - 44 ' " 45 46 47 .... 48 49 50 51 52 153 """"" 54 " 55 156 157 58 bv 60 "' ' 61 ' """""" 62 . 63 """"" 64 ' 65""" " : 66 67 ' 68 69 70" " V ' 4 . v 1 x rj Sports Gary Hofstetter in NCAA Cross Country Championships in Madison. Wis. football From page 1 selected the teams better." Smith said. "There at the end of the game I don't think we looked in all that good a condition," he said. The White team, in addition to Wiel, Bradley and O'Koren, started Ged Doughton "and Jeff Wolf. Doughton played 15 minutes with a sprained ankle which he injured last week. He said after t he game it was sore but had not been re injured. Freshman Jimmy Black saw 31 minutes of action on the White team and scored 12 points. With about three minutes remaining the White team went into the four corners offense and Black got his chance in the middle. Junior Dave Colescott stole the ball from him on'one occasion, but the freshman blocked Colescott's layup attempt on the Duke rated first, CarolinaNo. 16 The Duke Blue' Devils, last year's NCAA runners-up, have been picked by the Associated Press as the nation's No. I college basketball team. Duke got 38 first-place votes to outpoint second-place UCLA and third-place Notre Dame. Carolina is rated 16th in the poll; while N.C. State is 12th. Last year's NCAA champion Kentucky lost four of its top six players and were picked to finish 1 1th. UCLA received eight first-place voters, Notre Dame one and Kansas one. The overwhelming selection of Duke is based on the return of its 10 top players from last year's team and the addition of freshman Vince Tavlor. breakaway. John Virgil paced the Blues with 19 points, most of them coming on jump shots from the 1 3-1 5 loot range. Al Wood and Rich Yonaker. shot less than 50 percent and scored 1 3 each, and Colescott scored 12. Until around the l()-minute mark of the first half the Whites were unable to break open a large lead, but then led by as many as eight before three straight baskets from Virgil cut the White's halftime lead to 36-32. Wiel and Black helped the Whites open up their lead to as many as 4 points with 1 1 minutes left, then a Virgil three-point play with 8:53 left cut the margin to 61-54. Players had mixed reactions after the game. think I played pretty good offensively," Wiel said. I was more sixth touchdown of the year. Bernie Menapace's interception and 32-yard return set up Sharpe for a seven-yard run to make it 21-6. Sharpe finished with 100 yards on nine carries and completed six of 1 1 passes for 82 yards. Lawrence spun and swerved for 131 yards and a touchdown on 25 carries. It was enough for Bestwick, who's team is now 2-8. Amos Lawrence is the best running back I've ever seen." said Bestwick, who saw Lawrence gain 286 yards against him last year. "He's better than Dorsett all of them." Crum praised Lawrence for his faking which allowed the other backs like Doug Paschal (51 yards) to get loose. MHe set up our other backs a lot of times by faking into the line and taking some punishment." Crum said. "He'd go inside and set up the outside." Joyce and Harold got a kick out of the squirming and digging l.awrence'and the rest too, like Chuck Sharpe's 66-yard option run, Donnell Thompson's sack, interceptions by Francis Winters and Steve Streater. They stayed till the end as Harold counted with the UNC students, "One, two, three" up to 38. "They're not used to having their team score so much, are they?" Joyce said. Team 1. Duke (38) 2 UCLA (8) 3 Notre Dame (1) 4 Louisville 5 Kansas (1) 6 Texas 7 Michigan State 8 Michigan 9. Syracuse 10 Indiana 11. Kentucky 12. N.C. State 13. Southern Cat 14 LSU 15. Rutgers 16. North Carolina 17. San Francisco 18 Marquette 19 Alabama 20 Nevada-Las Vegas 1977 Record 27- 25- 3 23-8 23- 7 24- 5 26- 5 25- 5 16- 11 22- 6 21-8 30-2 21-10 14-13 18-9 24-7 23- 8 23- 6 24- 4 17- 10 20-8 Points 918 764 685 492 429 390 348 342 243 210 199 182 142 128 108 104 95 74 72 62 Thanksgiving Special MON, TUES, WED ONLY All Sandwiches With Turkey On Them 12 PRICE For Delivery Call Iff J QOQ7KC N STORE ONLY ifiif IP c mi if if i athj mx worried about guarding John Virgil than about scoring." Wie! said he thought he succeeded in keeping Virgil away from the basket, which was his primary goal. "You can't let him inside on you." O'Koren, meanwhile, was not pleased with his game. "I'm just very disappointed with my performance." he said. . .. ' - Wolf said the aggressive nature of the scrimmage was : indicative of the pre season practices. "Practice has been more physical this year than any other time since I've been here," he said. "Getting to play in front of a crowd breaks up the pre-season practice." Freshman Chris Brust was the only Tar Heel who didn't play. Smith said he hasn't yet received the doctor's go-ahead to start practicing. 2 'I JK h w aw m au, AWAY REGISTER IN ONE O:THE FOLLOWING STORES FOR VALUABLE CHRISTMAS GIFT .CERTIFICATES! audio; WOB FINE FEATHER FLORENZA IQK FOREVER VOL GARDETOFtEDEN GROWINVGREEN TUC UI TQ ' t C lUSIC JAlNTEWLiilD PHIDIRPIDES PHOTOSYNTHESIS THE SHRUNKEN HEAD STEREO SOUND STUD iiy 7- STORES 3rd Plfcc 3 Certificates WINNERS TO BE ANNOUNCED IN THE DECEMBER 8 WEEKENDER! Ik How Government's spending can price you out of work Inflation's danger is very real to you because it threatens your chances of landing a job. We say our government, by trying' to give us everything we want right now, actually causes inflation. Here's why. If government collects enough taxes to pay its extra bills as it goes, those taxes raise everybody's costs. You pay more yourself in taxes on your incomei And companies pay more income tax and taxes on the materials and services they have to buy. So everybody's tax bill goes up. But as we all know, government is spending money even faster than it can collect taxes. Everybody still pays, be cause government handles the deficit either by borrowing money or printing it. Borrowed money costs extra to pay the interest and our national debt is now more than $550,000,000,000. Extra printed money simply dilutes the value of all the money in circulation. Either way, costs go up for everybody and that s inflation. You 11 pay $2.25 today to buy what a dollar bought only 20 years ago. It now costs business $45,300 to create the average American job. (Armco's cost is $57,520.) Every time the cost of a job goes up, fewer jobs can be created with the same amount of money. Some companies can't earn enough extra money these days to create so many new jobs. This threatens your chance of finding the job you want. 93,000,000 Americans now hold jobs. But you're among 17,000,000 more men and women who'll be looking for work in the next 10 years Plain talk about INFLATION It's often fashionable to blame business labor for higher prices. But that result and making it the cause. The ernment tacks on additional charges, the higher costs have to go. And the more government spends ( (f ) V W J if" . usf X X X ;and s taking a , more gov tomorrow's money today, the more prices rise to cover the cost. Most of all, the more causes and tasks we insist our government take on, the more money government must spend to carry out our will. Our federal deficit is running at least $60,000,000,000 a year, now. That's a million and a third jobs we're missing, right there. What can we do? We all have favorite programs we'd like our government to spend money on. But maybe spend ing only what we've paid in taxes is the most important service our government can provide us. If we could get government to set priorities with every worthwhile goal in relation to all others then maybe we could stop spend ing money so fast we create inflation. Next time somebody says government ought to do some thing, think about the job you want when you finish school. Then ask that person why you should give up your job or buying power for somebody else's pet idea. Let us hear YOUR plain talk about jobs! Well send you a free booklet if you do Does our message make sense to your We d like to know what you think. Your personal experiences. -Facts-io-prove or disprove our point. Drop us a line. We 'd like your plain talk. Fjpr telling us your thoughts, we'll send you more information on issues affecting jobs. Plus Armco's famous handbook, How to Get a Job. answers 50 key questions you'll need to know. Use it to set yourself apart, above the crowd Write Armco, Educational Relations Dept. U-5, General Offices, Middle- town,. Ohio 45043. Be sure to include a stamped, self-addressed business-size envelope.
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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Nov. 20, 1978, edition 1
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