From page 1 first half." said Carolina's Rich Yonakor. "In the second half, the center was playing man-to-man on Moore." "In the past, he's the man who's kiiled us," Wood said. "We had a man with a hand in his face the second half. If he gets the ball inside the blue (foul lane), it's two." Moore agreed, but he had an added explanation. "They did have a hand in my face," he said, but mentioned he was getting hit on his shots in the second half. "It's just a little tap right here," Moore said, touching his right forearm. "It doesn't make much noise, and the ref doesn't notice it. "I was hoping he'd catch it, but he was probably looking inside " Moore said. "North Carolina has a lot of respect for us now," Moore said. "We had beaten them the last two years, and our crowd was fired up. "It's a very intense rivalry," Moore said. "And it can go on longer, if Furman can get a few big-name recruits. "You've got to watch out for (sophomore guard) Mel Daniel," the senior center said. "He's going to carry the program far." Furman played a Jekyll-and-Hyde North-South. Against State, the Paladins dropped behind early and never recovered, shooting 21 percent from the floor in the first half. The Wolf pack went on to a 76-56 win. State defeated The Citadel Saturday night in much the same fashion. In a defensive game, the Pack pulled off to win 57-35. State is now 14-5 for the year. Carolina had more trouble with both squads than did State, dropping behind 19-17 against the Citadel Friday after the Cadets played an excruciatingly patient first half. And for more than 16 minutes of the second half, the Cadets hung tough, down only 41-37. But Wood intercepted a Citadel pass at midcourt and raced irt for a dunk at the 3:49 mark to start an eight-point run. The Heels outscored the Cadets 10-3 starting with Wood's dunk until the final buzzer and won 51-40. The victory was Carolina head basketball coach Dean Smith's 400th Men swimmers take final event to From Staff Reports The North Carolina men's swimming team used a victory in the final event for the second weekend in a row as it nipped Virginia, 57-56 in Bowman Gray Pool Sunday. While the men scored a five-second win in the 400-yard free relay to clinch the team victory, the Tar Heel women scored an easier triumph with a 96-44 decision over the Cavaliers. "Virginia did a fine job," Carolina coach Frank Comfort said. "They were well prepared. We had to come from behind to win." The men had six first-place finishes in the competition. Bob Omainsky claimed the 200 free and 500 free, Roger Vredeveld the 200 medley and 200 back, and the team added wins in the 400 free relay and 400 medley relay. Scoring victories for the women were Gayle Hegel in the 100 medley and 200 back, Cynthia Chilcott in the 400 medley and 200 medley, Nancy Hudock in the 1,000 free and 200 free, Lynn Hape in the 100 and 200 breaststroke, Cindy Shirey in the 1 00 back and Karin Gess in 1-meter diving. The Tar Heel entries in the 200 medley relay and 200 free relay also won. Comfort called the women's victory "the best overall dual-meet win since we beat Alabama in November." The Tar Heel women are 6-1 for the season while the men are 5-4. The North Carolina wrestling team moved a It's a matter of life and breath! a Your local LUNG f Association Ir ABORTION ' The decision may well be difficult . . . but the abortion itself doesn't have to be. We do our best to make it easy for you. Free Pregnancy Test Very Early Pregnancy Test Call 781-8850 anytime The Fleming Center I Friendly . . . Personal . . .Professional Care t 1 - at a rfa?omble cot cMssMaeoi ads rates 25 words or less Students 1. 75 Non-Students 2.75 Add 5 for each additional word 1.00 more for boxed ad or bold face type 10 percent discount for ads run 5 consecutive days Reuse pnn( very clearly announcements THE ASSOCIATION FOR WOMEN STUDENTS, Pan Hellenic Council and Women Studies invite you to a special slide presentation of "Women in the University Their Place in the History of UNC," facilitated by Dr. Mary Turner Lane and Dr. Joan Scott. It begins at 7 pm in the Great Hall, Tuesday, Feb. 5. DELTA DELTA DELTA Talent Show-Wed.. Feb. 6, 7:30 pm, Memorial Auditorium. Admission: 1.00 includes after party at Mayo's! We've Got Magic to do Just for You so Join Us! ALL SOCIAL CHAIRMEN (of dorms, RH. (rata, sororities) are urged to attend a meeting with the Union Social Committee, Feb. 4 at 7:30 in the Great Hall. lost & found LOST NEAR CAMPUS: black'cockerpoodie mix; no collar: very friendly. Call 967 7947. f w DTHAndy James Dean Smith gets win 400 career win, but Smith took it all in stride. "I'm happy this was our 14th (win) of the season," Smith said. "The 400 wins just means I'm old. "I've won more games than (Alabama football coach) Bear Bryant," Smith joked, "but we've played a few more than he has." Carolina gets right back to work at 7:30 tonight when Yale visits Carmichael Auditorium. The Elis are coming off seven straight wins and are now 10-5 for the season, including an 80-67 victory against Ivy League foe Dartmouth Saturday. Yale's leading scorer is 6-foot-4 freshman Steve Leondis, averaging 17.4 points per game. Sophomore center Tim Dahlman, small at 6-8, follows with 12.5 points and heads the Eli rebounders with 7.8. Yale is coached by Ray Carazo. step closer to clinching its second straight Atlantic Coast Conference dual-meet title by whipping the Maryland Terrapins 28-14 Friday night in College Park, Md. The Tar Heels never let Maryland gain any momentum as they swept the first four matches in convincing fashion and ran out to an 18-0 lead before theTerps scored their first point. Bob Monaghan started the scoring for UNC in the 118-pound class with a 26-3 superior decision. The easy win raised his dual-meet record to 7-0 and set up his important rematch with N.C. State's Jim Zenz Tuesday night in Carmichael Auditorium. Dave Cooke followed with an 18-10 major decision at 126 pounds and Tar Heel All American CD. Mock kept the routgoingwith a second-period pin of Todd Camel in the 134 pound class. The pin was M ock's third straight and raised his overall record to 19-1. Norman Masterson registered a decision in the 142-pound class to increase the lead to 18-0 before teammate Joe Galli was decisioned at 150 for the Terps' first victory. The Tar Heels and Terps split the heavyweights with Jan Michaels and Norman ' Walker taking major decisions and Jack Parry battling to a draw with his heavyweight-class opponent. Freshman Kirk Stephen ran into bad luck in the 177-pound class. He entered the third period with a lead, but was caught in a pinning Nightly Specials All Specials with salad and bread MON Hamburger Steak $2.99 with baked potato or trench fries TUES Meat Roulade with 2.99 peas WED Texas Platter with $2.99 baked potato or trench fries THURS Spaghetti or Shrimp '2.50 2.99 AmDer Alley -Franklin St. o f o ;n n LOST: GOLD BRACELET, V thick. Lost in University Square area, or Granville Towers area, or Brady's Restaurant area, or Library parking lot area, or anywhere! Call 933 8432. FOUND: ID BRACELET, Monday morning near Bell Tower. Call 933 3106 to claim. LOST: IN OR AROUND women's locker room a gold heart pendant with small diamond. High sentimental value; if found, please call 933 4823, ask for Helen. help wanted DUE TO INCREASED BUSINESS Mayo's Discotheque is re hiring. Apply at Mayo's immediately. Excellent pay with tips. 942 8173. MALE PAID VOLUNTEERS-21 to 40 years old needed for drug study Feb. 16, 17, 23, 24 at North Carolina Memorial Hospital; multiple blood samples will be drawn. Call 966 4038 between 8:30 am 4:30 pm. MORNING WORK: someone needed who likes to play with little 'munchkins' to sit Tues. and Thurs. mornings from 9 12. Opportunity for other occasional sitting jobs, too. Please call 929 2703. MEN'- WOMEN! JOBS ON SHIPS! American, Foreign. No experience required Excellent pay. Worldwide travel. Summer job or career. Send 3 00 for information. SEAFAX. Dept. H 12 Box 2049, Port Angeles, WA 98362. MEN! WOMF-N! JOBS! CruisvshipsVSailing Expeditions!, Sailing Camps. No Experience. Good Pay. Summer. Career. Nationwide, Worldwide! Send l4 95 for application info referrals to CRU1SEWORLD 132, Box 60129, Sacramento. CA 95860 382s&3&& UNC 51, Citadel 40 CAROLINA FG FT R PF A TP MIN Wood 5-9 4-5 5 4 2 14 36 O'Koren 3-7 4-4 4 1 4 10 37 Wolf 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 0 - 19 Virgil 1-3 1-2 2 113 10 Colescott 2-5 4-5 0 3 2 8 33 Yonakor 1-2 5-6 1 1 0 7 19 Pepper 2-3 0-0 1 1 0 4 7 Budko 0-0 0-0 2 1 10 6 Black 2-5 1-3 1 4 2 5 29 Kenny 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 1 Brust 0-0 0-0 OOOO 1 Braddock 0-1 0-0 0 1 0 0 2 Totals 16-35 19-25 20 11 11 51 200 The Citadel FG FT B PF A TP MIN Moore 5-10 0-0 7 4 1 10 35 Slawson 4-10 0-0 12 2 2 8 38 Cartwrigrtt 1-1 1-2 0 4 3 3 25 Varks 0-0 0-0 0 4 3 0 14 Nesbit 2-9 2-2 3 2 1 6 38 Gilbert 0-1 0-0 0 1 Q 1 4 Horton 1-1 0-0 1 0 0 2 3 Huguley 2-4 3-4 0 4 0 7 27 Tucker 0-0 2-2 10 12 14 Paone 0-0 2-2 0 0 0 2 1 delasPozas 0-1 0-0 0 1 0 0 3 Holland 0-0 0-0 2 0 0 0 1 Cornwell .0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 1 Sterling 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 1 Totals 15-37 10-12 28 22 6 40 200 North Carolina 17-3451 The Citadel 19-21-40 UNC 75, Furman 63 CAROLINA FG FT R PF A TP MIN O'Koren 3-6 5-7 9 3 4 11 29 Wood 8-14 4-6 5 4 1 20 23 W:" 0-0 0-2 4 3 1 0 18 Virgil 5-10 2-4 2 0 0 12 20 Colescott 2-4 0-0 0 0 1 4 13 Yonakor 2-6 1-3 7 3 2 5 22 Budko 1-1 0-2 6 1 2 2 16 Pepper 3-4 5-5 0 0 0 11 12 Black 4-8 0-0 0 0 5 8 29 Kenny 0-0 0-2 1 0 1 0 5 Brust 1-10-0 12 12 5 Braddock 0-2 0-0 1 1 0 0 8 Totals 29-56 17-31 42 17 18 75 200 Furman FG FT R PF A TP MIN White 3-5 0-0 1 1 1 6 20 McKinney 3-5 2-3 8 4 0 8 34 Moore 8-19 3-4 4 4 1 19 '38 Hunt 3-7 0-0 3 4 3 6 30 Daniel 6-11 2-2 2 4 5 14 31 Small 0-0 0-0 1 5 0 0 6 Crowe 1-2 0-0 0 3 2 2 12 Jackson 2-7 0-0 3 1 3 4 13 Hanks 2-2 0-0 1 4 0 4 14 Dredger 0-0 0-0 0 0 0 0 2 Totals 28-587-9 30 30 15 63 700 North Carolina 36-39 75 f urms.i 30-33-6j Sport Men's basketball vs. Yale at 7:30 p.m. in Carmichael Auditorium Men's and women's swimming at East Carolina at 7 p.m. combination and was pinned at 5:12 into the match. The victory secures the Tar Heels' hold on first place in the ACC standings with a 4-0 conference record, 7-0 overall. The last major obstacle to an ACC title and an undefeated season is N.C. State at 7:30 p.m. this Tuesday night. The UNC women's fencing team remained undefeated by winning three matches this weekend but the Tar Heel men could manage only to split two Atlantic Coast Conference matches. The women defeated Virginia 16-0 and only suffered 15 touches against them in the entire match. The women also edged Clemson 1 7-5 and California State (Pa.) 9-7. Carolina is now 9-0. The men's team was an easy winner over Virginia, 21-6, but lost 15-12 to ACC-leading Clemson. UNC coach Ron Miller said, "Everyone fenced well against Virginia, but we had some of our best fencing against Clemson." The Tar Heels led the Tigers 7-2 after the HAVE A VICTORY BEER BEFORE TONIGHT S GAME AT THE IT H0AGIE FACTORY 401 W. FRANKLIN COUNSELORS, over 19, for unique overnight boys' summer camp in Blue Ridge Mountains of Pennsylvania. Able to instruct any one of following: Watersafety, Waterskiing, Arts & Crafts, Boating, Soccer, Basketball, Athletics, Rockclimbing, Riflery, Ham Radio, Rocketry, Science, Archery, Track, Tennis, Golf, or Pioneering. Write: Camp Director, 138 Red Rambler Drive, Lafayette Hill, PA 19444. COUNSELORS for western North Carolina co-ed, 8 week summer camp. Room, meals, laundry, salary and travel allowance. Experience not necessary, but must enjoy living and working with children. Only clean-cut, non-smoking college students need apply. For applicationbrochure write: Camp Rnewood, 1801 Cleveland Rd.. Miami Beach, FL 33141. for sale OVER 1,000 RECENT LPs, 8 tracks and cassettes for sale. Rock, Jazz, Classical.etc. 1.0a2.50,Mon , Feb. 4th through Fri., Feb. 8th. FOUNDATION BOOKSTORE, 136 E. Rosemary, across from Old Book Corner, 12-6 pm. STARVING ON FRANKLIN? Try 300 West Rosemary for fresh seafood delights. Thurs. Friday 9:30 am-600 pm, Saturdays 10:00 am til game time. Retail wholesale market beside Perserverance Produce. for rent TWO BEDROOM CARRBORO apartment available in early May. Air conditioning; on bus route. 185. Call after 6 pm. 942 4608. SUBLEASE: MODERN. 2 bedroom duplex. Fireplace, deck, dishwasher, washer dryer hookups, cathedral ceiling, country setting 300 a month. Call 933 3004. Says O'Koren a first Games mean work for By BILL FIELDS Assistant Sports Lditor CHARLOTTE In his job with the Kansas City Kings of the National Basketball Association, Gary Fitzsimmons spends more time on airplanes, more nights in hotel rooms and more hours watching his sport than he cares to think about. Unlike the businessman whose job is to seek and sell, or the combat pilot who seeks and destroys, Fitzsimmons seeks and reports on. As one of the Kings' scouts, Fitzsimmons, the son of Kansas City head coach Cotton Fitzsimmons, traverses the country watching potential professionals now in college as well as other NBA teams on the Kings schedule. He was in Charlotte last Friday for the first night of action in the North South Doubleheader, watching games featuring N.C. State vs. Furman and UNC vs. The Citadel. His notes consisted of scribbled reminders of a player's particular strength or weakness on a roster sheet. "This is the busy part of the year," said Fitzsimmons, who has worked for the Kings for two years. "I look for college talent for the draft, with some pro scouting mixed in." Fitzsimmons said his basketball scouting is basically divided into three periods. He scouts other pro teams until December, then catches top college talent in holiday tournaments. The players high on his list then get looked at again during conference play and, if they advance, in the NCAA playoffs and post-season all-star games. "I'm with the Kings at times, but mostly I stay on the road," he said. "If I've scouted a team I try to be at a game to help us out so we know what the other team is going to do." Fitzsimmons was examining no fewer than six players competing in the defeat Virginia; women win, too first round after what M iller called UNC's best round of the year. But Clemson slowly chipped away at the. lead to gain the win. "The Clemson match was strange because we beat their top two sabre men twice each," Miller said, "but lost all three bouts against their No. 3 man." The next action for the Tar Heels comes next weekend in New York against Columbia and Pennsylvania. Led by a strong team performance on the balance beam, the North Carolina gymnastics team edged previously undefeated Duke 131.20-127.45 Friday night in Cameron Indoor Stadium. , The Blue Devils' Judy Cote won two of the four individual titles and took the all-around competition, but the Tar Heels' strength on the balance beam proved decisive as they placed four competitors with Jennifer Britt taking top honors. Britt was given an 8.45 followed by Carolina's Elsie Slobodln and Tiffany Terranova in second and third. Terranova said the balance beam was the ATTENTION STUDENTS Single Copies Self Service 8V2 x 11 or 812 x 14 canvas, oils, brushes, acrylics, sketchbooks, instruction books CAROLINA COPY CENTER Rams Head Plaza 967-2585 8:30-5:30 M-F GREENBELT APARTMENTS Jones Ferry Rd. Modern one bedroom, total electric , on bus line, fully carpeted, drapes, water, appliances included. Pool, AC, and laundry facilities. Available for immediate occupancy, 929-3821. rides SNOW ON THE SLOPES!! Are you driving to Boone Thursday or Friday (Feb. 7,8)? If so, contact Neal. 93S8827. services BIBLIOGRAPHIES DONE. RbEographu: searches of computer data bases (SDC and Lockheed). Thousands of subjects, millions of references from books, journals, government documents, technical reports, corporate information and statistical data Short searches M5J25. CAROLINA LIBRARY SERVICES. 137 E. Rosemary St.. Chapel HJI. Telephone: 919 929 4870. THE DATING BANK New, registered, progressive, serving the lonely unmarried locally by mad. Box 1S49. Winston Salem. NC 27102. 1 761-1579. A UNC STUDENT would like to tune pianos for dorms, sororities, and individuals. For further information or appointments, call Leslie Serf at 933 6042. DAYTONA BEACH Spring Break! 6 days on the beach. 5 nights FIRST CLASS OCEAN FRONT lodging, keg party, poolswie UuUrque party, only 89 50! Transportation available. BH Verch. 942 2610. r Monday, round pick NBA scout Gary Fitzsimmons North-South, including Mike O'Koren and Al Wood of North Carolina, Hawkeye Whitney and Clyde Austin of N.C. State, Jonathan Moore of Furman and Tom Slawson of The Citadel. "Each club has somebody who will probably be drafted high." Fitzsimmons emphasized that one very poor game such as Moore had against the Wolfpack (3-for-13 shooting) will be remembered by a scout, but overall opinions on a player are made after a longer period of time. "I will remember that Moore did not have a good game against a real good team," Fitzsimmons said, "but you have to remember people in the NBA have difference in the close match. "Almost everybody stayed on the balance beam," she said. "That could make or break the meet. In a close meet whoever stays on the beam usually wins." The balance beam was the only event the Tar Heels won, but they made up for it in balanced team scores. Britt and Kathy Miles took second and third on the uneven parallel bars while Carolina placed three girls in the vault. Cote ran away with the all-around competition for Duke but Britt took third and Cates and Tia Walker tied for fourth. The victory raised the Tar Heels' record to 7 1 while Duke suffered its first defeat against six wins. , '' ' Performances by Phil Farris and Lisa i " I : ' J ?,. It RALEIGH WOMEN'S HEALTH ORGANIZATION ABORTIONS $175 (ALL Inclusive) Pregnancy Tests - Birth Control -Problem Pregnancy Counseling For Further Information Coll 832-0535 or 1-800-22 1-2568 917 West Morgan St. Raleigh, N.C. 27605 The Carolina Union Gallery Committee announces the Second Annual Undergraduate Juried Art Exhibition beginning February 3, 1980 in the South Gallery of the Carolina Union Chapel Hill Classified ads may be placed at theDTH Offices or mailed to the DTH, Carolina Union 065A, Chapel Hill, NC 27514. All ads must be prepaid. Deadline: Ad must be received by 12 (noon) one business day before ad is to run. ' QUALITY HOME IMPROVEMENTS renvxlebrv. construction, additions, sundecks, brickwork, textured ceilings sprayed, roofing, concrete work All work guaranteed. Do work all days 942 5224 roommates FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted immediately to share 2 bedroom apt at Tar Heel Mnor. Own bedroom. Rent 137 50 plus futilities Call 929 6131. TIRED OF THE DORMS' Female, non smoking student needed to share large 2 bdrm Tar fVei Manor apt 137.50 & 'i utilities On bus route Call Lisa. 967 9166. wanted GIVE IT UP! Your house, that is We're t.red of our penthouse and want to rent a hnuse rwaf carrifjus starting this summer. Ca3 9?9 2X4 miscellaneous LOOKING FOR A DYNAMfl I dwi barJ f y next social7 Your party w.Ii cook with tr bj bafid tound of the Lloyd M.-nvn Orchestra 12 fmc group plays the best tA old and new rV Barl. Beach. Jaz, Rock For a very sprtuJ mjl experience 3 Rick, 7 4216 EUROPE THIS SUMMER?' R V WW W 8 with Prof James LeuUe in Oraw e, lifAlnnd, Germany June 4 23 S hovf UNC aU putttlie Vi 401 Hamilton or phone Vii VHi k more mk February 4, 1980 The Daily Tar Heel 5 pro scout bad games, too. Jonathan Moore could be a great player. You never know in one game." Fitzsimmons said O'Koren almost certainly would be a first round draft choice, for several reasons. "Mike O'Koren is an intelligent player. You have to consider him a first round pick. He can shoot the basketball and he's been a winner. But I don't know how much of an effect he'll have on the NBA when he gets there. You have to wait to see that." Just as in professional football scouting, the techniques used in the NBA today to locate pro prospects have become more specialized. Few draft decisions are made now based on a "Have you seen this kid play?" conversation. Like many others, Fitzsimmons credits the Dallas Cowboys organization for making the scouting process more scientific. "More things are being studied today," Fitzsimmons said." "We have more scouting expertise now. We study more things and I think the real reason is the Cowboys. They started it." Another development has joined the scientification of scouting and player selection, as professional teams also consider a player's personality and character when sizing him up. "We do look at the programs to a great extent," Fitzsimmons said. "I don't think that's always been the case. Character is a factor, especially now after some of the things that have happened with players in the league the past couple of years." Although factors other than a knack of hitting 20-footcrs or collecting a dozen rebounds a game mean more now than they used to, Fitzsimmons and his fellow scouts still walk into coliseums across the country looking for talent. 1 n their business, it's the bottom line. "Players either have the talent or they don't. "That's still what it's all about." Staton highlighted victories Saturday by the UNC men's and women's indoor trck teams at the New Tin Can. Farris took first place in the long jump (23 10A) and 60-yard high hurdles (7.5). Staton qualified for the nationals in winning the 60 (6.9) and won the long jump ( l8-4'4). "We didn't expect to w in that easily," coach Joe Hilton said after his men defeated Appalachian State. Richmond and N.C. Central. UNC scored 75'2 team points, ahead of ASU's 35, Richmond's 25 and Central's 10. "We're coming on really well." women's coach Hubert West said. T he Tar Heels raised their record to 3-1 by outdistancing James Madison, Richmond, Central and Appalachian. personals W M , Let's decide on a time and pUt Y(j know my number. S B MIKE KOWALSK1 m Stacy Can t take t'vu to ffjure out my number Try rfy-n. I'm t wf from Advance (n4 Cfarrv) m G anvil IF YOU LIKE donuts. prtkl joWs. sunsets, dos, kxn. Umq vIl. lUxarl movies. While Kummr, trvr '40. IMIy Joel, farms, cow barns. Pumpkin festival. qoM and okra. . . mecl me on Valentine's al lh Sandbo in Umstead Park at mdnjh. Wallace's and Btmbu's need no (om OfTKATOK INFORMATION,., Gi rr f t-s 406. Tr room occupies a brd 4 BRICKS ovt haJowd by a GRAY tlojd Fj a rt i A t- C6ti. he can receive tr pae. . , urJirfTufia!!- the yard isn't erju-i to ' Ah . . . VM t future, h .iis many proms, but it wusd t irnj yatrfng i y ha- were am as yjr r:l X!HTeit 6rwVUf a --.id TV.S Youie wwd Take far, be hi HAPPY U. C PS Wr hak' TO THE DAKK, HAMJ'OME (tad yu"re inn k m I Srm I' in ie.J to ;jari When do vaj iafit to jcf yrM ft ' I? nbtLn'd tnde ROSt S TOO tXPf NSi t v vo care Mtfh a prjril in th li Hi t U ! J on Valentine s Day Oniy I (of lb wtxj o less. DeaidoftC i 12 noon, f eb 7.