Monday, October 10, 1983The Daily Tar Heel5 Spqbts North Carolina backfield Three's company for Tar Heels ? V4YV -?i ' Slit fUL V VfT 1 1(1 - r f I-! t I A H 1 t 1 ! Jptt" I ttAcv" 1 4 ts s'VJ DTHJeff Neuville North Carolina's Tyrone Anthony (8) has Wake's Steve Lambert (81) falling for one of many moves which helped the tailback run for 157 yards in his first start of the season. UNC 30, WAKE FOREST 10 Wake Forest North Carolna 3 7 0 010 "0 10 14 630 Wake Forest-FG Newsomc 30 UNC-FG Barwick 33 Wake Forest-Owens 7 pass from Schofield (Newsome kick) UNC-Colson 4 pass from Stankavage (Barwick Kick UNC-Horton 20 run (Barwick kick) UNC-Colson 12 run (kick failed) football From page 1 WF UNC First Downs 14 28 Rushes-Yards 46-133 6O440 Passing Yards 102 48 Sacks by yards 2-21 1-6 Return Yards 0 21 Passes 11-21-0 7-15-0 Punts 7-38.6 3-38.7 Fumbles-lost 0-0 3-2 Penalties-Yards 4-30 640 Time of Possession 28:51 31:09 NORTH CAROLINA RUSHING T. Anthony 19-157; Colsbn 13-119; Horton 13-116; Humes 6-23; Winfield 1-9; Littlejohn 2-10; Jones 1-6; Stankavage 3-5; Godwin 1-4. PASSING Stankavage 15-7-0, 48 yds. RECEIVING Franklin 2-15; T. Anthony 2-14; Truitt 1-7; Smith 1-8; Colson 1-4. PUNTING Bamhardt 3-116, 38.7 yd. avg. WAKE FOREST RUSHING Clemons 26-113; Dougherty 11-30; Owens 3-11; Grinton 2-9. PASSING Schofield 21-11-0. RECEIVING Ryan 5-39; Owens 2-15; Richmond 2-35; Dougherty 2-13. PUNTING Newsome 7-270, 38.6 yd. avg. In the third and fourth quarters, the Tar Heels simply muscled their way to three touchdowns, two by Colson and one by Hor ton. Anthony got the Tar Heels moving from their 44 with another 14-yard carry. Then Colson did the rest, running around the right end 20 yards and, finally, catching a Stankavage pass inside the five and dragging a defender over the goal line with him for a 17-10 lead. After UNC fumbled a punt return later in the quarter, the Deacons got to the UNC 25 and opted to pass up a Field goal try on fourth-and-four, with Schofield trying to connect over the middle with one of his receivers, but strong safe ty Willie Harris deflected the pass to stop the drive. After the change of possession, Horton took command, breaking away for a 23-yarder into Wake territory and capping off the long drive with a dazzling 20-yarder around left end for a 24-10 lead. Later, Colson became the third back to top the 110-yard plateau when he ran the ball 44 yards in three plays to up the mark to 30-10 with nine minutes to play. (Barwick missed the extra point.) Defensively for the Tar Heels, Bill Sheppard and Micah Moon each tallied nine solo tackles. and Sheppard was in on a total of 17. Harris soloed eight times, while Fuller had four solos and a 10-yard sack of Schofield. Wake coach Al Groh said his respect for UNC was only increased by its performance. "They're the number three or four team in the country," he said. "It probably would have taken number two or three to beat them on a 60-minute span today. One thing that was very apparent to us was that nobody wins a scoring battle with them. E Franklin. Chooel Mill W-,kS LAST DAY THURSDAY mm THE Daily Crossword by John H. Hales ACROSS 25 Despises 1 Certain 27 Close at yarns hand 5 "Ad per 31 Resplen- aspera" dence 10 WWII town 32 Be disdain- 14 Money, fulof slangily 33 Extinct 15 Condescend bird 16 Fellow 34 Corrode 17 Lily plant 35 Hardship 18 "Marching 36 Isle as " 37 Gun org. 19 Lacosteof 38 Greek city tennis state 20 Groundkeep- 39 Perfume, , ers equip- in a way ment 41 A poet 22 Pretend laureate 23 Startled 43 Cavalryman observer 44 Fishing 24 Fish sauce boat Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: WtITmisTsJT rTTsteI Cs p o T HneTn ZTl IMJLAI R MJLU a II n JL u. it s. j E A R. it 31 i. L A. L 0.R.I H 1 11M E B.IIN G ID G E GL.AN.A GJLJLJLJL.L RYE PEP E C. A V. I T E "A J V EjOOVE 'Z l.Ai HIlD i 1 R. I C.P.A EVjLRYJNOWAN.n Lit-Lit 11 it i H I R. N. I n H. A N. K t s a IUhioIm E RUE T N A 111083 45 Ridiculous failure 47 Iridescent lining 49 French police 52 Profess 53 Dog 54 River of Zaire 55 Negri of thesilents 56 Pioneer's conveyance 57 Blend 58 Warhol or Griffith 59 Coin . receivers 60 Pronoun DOWN 1 Bedouin headband 2 Composer Bartok 3 Vacillates 4 One having a strong voice 5 John and Mary 6 Vermont ski resort 7 Popular film, 1975 8 Heard on the veldt 9 Mo. 10 Movies 11 O'Neill play 12 Auld syne 13 Store sign 21 Contrary girl of rhyme 22 Flutter 24 Cherub 25 Deputy 26 Strident noise 28 Sounds from a byre 29 Din 30 Spud 32 Farm building 35 Promising 38 Burning heap 39 Place for a sala 40 Cover a pie 42 Part of Scandinavia 43 Women 46 Smelter's item 47 Cal.wine valley 48 English river 49 Target 50 Essayist 51 Spanish painter 53 Druggist's measures I 2 3 4 1 5 16 17 8 IT-" 10 111 112 1 13 77 75 75 "23 """" 24 25' 1 26" """"" 27 28" 29 30 7i : """ 17" 33 "34 IT" 36 "37 ir" "" 39 1 40 " 7i "iT" J "" 43" Ti "" 45 IT" " ' TfTilT mmm" 4" 50 161 II """"IT" ' """54 " "55 " 56"""" ! "51 - - 1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc All Rights Reserved 111083 3:00 iy I B IVIMJ MM m I 7:10 I 5)5 ltFAVW i 9:15 I "UUI, OUI 4 Ebert 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30 JSooa Greelc ZGngsivood The Apartment People Now accepting limited applications for guaranteed fall occupancy. Avoid' the lottery blues. Apply now! All apartments on the bus line to U.N.C. Call today for full information. 967 223 1 or 967-2234. - IRVING R. LEVI HE NBC News Correspondent jT- N if 1Th vl-fw from Washington: a correspondents report." Tonight Memorial Hall 8:00 pm a presentation of the Carolina Union Forum Committee By MICHAEL DeSISTI Sports Editor A tired but smiling Eddie Colson was asked after the 30-10 win over Wake Forest Saturday how it felt to be the other runner once removed in the North Carolina backfield. "I wouldn't know," he said, with little visible reflection. The answer wasn't surprising, considering the. fullback had just rushed for 119 yards on 13 carries and scored two touch downs. But it became surprising upon considering the folks he was running with. Colson was the second leading rusher in the game, and that by only three yards, with the first and third leading rushers having lined up just behind him in North Carolina's I-formation all afternoon. The Tar Heels had three runners in triple digits for the first time ever Saturday as tailbacks Tyrone Anthony and Ethan Horton, in less than overshadowing but more than simply com plementing Colson's performance, wheeled for 157 and 116 yards, respectively, with Horton winding up in the end zone twice. "I don't really consider me another guy," Colson said. "No matter who's getting all the limelight during the game, it's all considered one group 11 players." Colson's 100-plus effort was his first in four years at North Carolina, and had the senior walking out of Kenan Stadium a firm believer in goal-oriented philosophy, as well as the pro phetic vision of UNC offensive coordinator John Matsko. Matsko had read an article quoting Colson as saying he wanted to run for 100 yards at least once before the season was through, and approached the fullback in practice. "He (Matsko) said, 'You want 100 yards, huh?' " Colson said. " 'Well, we're going to work for that this week.' " And you thought Nostradamus was something. Colson wasn't the only back to have some out-of-the-ordinary verbal interaction with the coaches last week. Horton, after star ting the first five games of the season and having 585 yards to show for it, said he was told last Monday he wouldn't be on the first team for the Wake Forest game. His replacement? Anthony, who had snapped-to just days earlier against Georgia Tech after having run himself into ob scurity most of the month before. The senior accumulated 91 yards on 11 carries, and scored one touchdown against the Yellow Jackets. Horton: "I didn't say anything to them (the coaches, after receiving the news). All the backs are really close, even more so off the field." Anthony: "They (the coaches) didn't say who was starting, and I didn't ask any questions." Anthony most likely didn't ask any questions because he didn't want any answers. That doesn't necessarily mean the senior was bitter about his playing time, or feeling slighted by his status relative to Horton. He'd been saying neither of these things were true all along. What it probably means is that Anthony, was content to con sider the season as having started anew in Atlanta. If he could pick up 91 yards and score one touchdown without starting, that was fine with him. "I got off to a sloppy start, and I'm more or less trying to catch up," Anthony said. ; "I've always been told I was a cold-weather back. I guess the weather's getting cooler now." After playing behind Kelvin Bryant in 1982-83, still picking up 705 yards, Anthony had been asked to start the current season on the sidelines as well, this time to make way for the junior Horton. Anthony hasn't been one to complain. But getting just over half of Horton's carries and virtually none of his headlines in what many thought would be Anthony's year has had to hurt. And so when Anthony shuffled off the field early in the se cond quarter Saturday to make way for Horton, after Anthony's 12-yard touchdown reception was called back for il legal motion and his 17-yard run had been nullified by a per sonal foul just three plays before, there was no smile. The head was down, the chinstrap having been unsnapped with frustra tion. With less that a minute to play in the third period, Horton knifed and knuckled for 20 yards and a 23-10 North Carolina lead "The best run I've seen in a long time," head coach Dick Crum said. When Horton reached the sidelines after the run, there was a teammate waiting for a flying high-five, a slap on the helmet and a hug. It was Anthony. "We've got to realize that we have to help each other out," Anthony said. "Just because one's playing more than the other, that's not going to affect anything. "Friendship should be everlasting." Amen. '. IBAMAnDdDS t Tuesday, Oct., 11 9 pm Great Hall Carolina Union Social Committee Fall Clearance . (as? on selected athletic shoes for men & women by famous makers such as Adidas, Brooks, Nike, and others. ALSO: $3.00 OFF all running shorts 30 OFF all SUB-4 " Warm-Up Suits r . Sales ends 101583 merchandise limited to stock on hand Open weeknites til 8 pm 942-1078 University Square (next to Granville Towers) 133 W. Franklin r cordially invites Seniors , to the Carolina Inn on Tuesday, October 11th at 7:00 p.m. Meet our executives and enjoy refreshments. Tell us about your career goals and hear about the exciting Executive Development Program at Lord & Taylor, America's leading fashion specialty store. Even if you have not previously thought of retailing as a career, you may want to know about the many interesting opportunities at Lord & Taylor. If you have proven abilities and a record of achievement, and look forward to the challenge of managing a profitable business in just three years' time, lord & Taylor looks forward to meeting you.