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Sports
Finish ACC slate
Wrestlers win i , lose 1
By BOB YOUNG
Staff Writer
Fresh from its upset win over N.C.
State Thursday night at Carmichael
Auditorium, the UNC wrestling team
went on the road last weekend to take on
its last two conference opponents of the
season.
The results were mixed as the Tar Heels
defeated previously unbeaten Virginia,
20-15 but came up short at Maryland,
22-13. With that loss, UNC lost a chance
to take the ACC regular-season crown.
Virginia is now 4-1 in the conference, as is
Maryland. UNC finished the season at
4-2.
Against Virginia, the Tar Heels started
off strong, winning the first two weight
classes. At 118, Chip McArdle defeated
Hans Houser, 15-7, and at 126, John
Aumiller won 10-7 over Buddy Blaha.
At 134, Virginia's John Parr defeated
Wes Hallman by a count of 10-2, and at
142, UNC's Randy Lowery scored a 6-3
decision over John Placek.
After that match, the Tar Heels went
on a slide, as thev ctH not ivin -r,v of the
Nesbit qualifies for Olympic Trials in 3,000 meters
From staff reports
UNC senior Joan Nesbit qualified for
the Olympic Trials Saturday in the Vitalis
Invitational track meet in New York as
she finished fifth in the 3000-meter run
with a time of 9:12.18.
Nesbit, who qualified for the NCAA
championships last weekend at the
Princeton Relays, bettered that tirrie by
more than 1 1 seconds Saturday in a very
competitive field.
According to coach Don 'Lockerbie,
Nesbit's performance puts her among the
top seven female distance runners in the
nation. She is the only UNC track athlete
to qualify for the trials so far this season.
Freshman Diane Thomas also com
peted in the Vitalis meet. Her time of 8.7
seconds placed her fifth in her heat in the
60-yard hurdles.
In other UNC track news this weekend,
junior Jack Morgan, freshman Walter
Deneen and sophomores Shunta Robin
son and Becky Calhoun all registered
first-place finishes to lead the North
Carolina men's and women's track teams
in the St. Augustine's Meet of Cham
pions, held Saturday at the New Tin Can.
Morgan ran a smart race in the mile,
finishing in k 'time 6f 4:14.14? four
seconds ahead of the second-place
finisher.
Deneen, who has shown great promise
in early-season meets, continued to look
impressive in winning the two mile in a
time of 9:30.20.
Calhoun got things started off for the
UNC women by edging out teammate
Karol Dorsett in the mile with a time of
5:03.52. Dorsett's runner-up time was
5:08.9.
TH E Daily Crossword by
ACROSS
1 Hearty
5 Marble
10 Fastener
14 Harbinger
15 Twig broom
16 Ancient
strong box
17 Jackknifed
trailer,
- for one
20 Residue
21 Ponselleor
Bonheur
22 Papal
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for troops
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prob
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Isle of
Play with
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paid
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61
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23 "The Censor" 47
24 Add on
26 Duds 48
29 Cephalopod
30 Norse 49
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next four weight classes.
At 150, Virginia's Gary Fischbein was
a winner over Jon Cardi, 8-7. Buddy Ken
beat Tad Wilson, 4-2, to take the match
at 158. At 167, Bill Gaffney tied
Virginia's Steve Vittorio, 1-1. Chris
Mussmando was the victor at 177 as he
overcame Craig Spivey,7-5.
At this point in the match, the Tar
Heels were behind, 15-12. They regained
the lead when Bob Shriner scored a
superior decision over Neil Blandford,
15-3, to take the match at 190. Tommy
Gorry then held on to get the decision at
heavyweight, 5-3, over Roger Mello.
Against Maryland, the Tar Heels
scored only three wins. McArdle won at
1 18, 12-0, but UNC lost the next five mat
ches. At 126, Aumiller lost, 5-2; Hallman
lost at 134, 7-2; at 142, Lowery was
defeated, 9-7; Cardi lost at 150, 7-6; and
at 158, Wilson was beaten 9-3.
Gaffney broke the spell by winning
12-0, at 167, but Spivey lost at 177, 7-2,
Shriner won at 190, 7-3 but then Gorry
lost at heavyweight, 13-5.
Robinson, who holds the school record
in the shot put, gave the UNC women
their second victory of the day as she easi
ly outdistanced the field with a thrpw of
46-5.
The North Carolina baseball team
defeated New Orleans 11-7 Saturday to
gain a split of its twojgame series.
New Orleans won Friday night, 7-5,
with a grand slam in the bottom of the
ninth inning. The game scheduled for
Sunday was rained out.
In Saturday's game, the Tar Heels
jumped out to a 7-1 lead, saw the lead cut
to 7-6 and scored four runs in the last two
innings for the win.
UNC went ahead 3-0 when freshman
Devy Bell knocked in a run with a single,
and Jeff Hubbard scored two more with
another single.
Roger Williams started and got credit
for his and the team's first win of the
season. Williams was relieved by Ken
Turner, Tim Kirk, and Bob Mulligan.
Mulligan picked up a save.
Scott Bankhead was the starter Friday
night, but Gordon Douglas was the loser.
Scott Johnson led the Tar Heels with a
four-for-hine weekend, " including ,!theT
team's first home run of the season. B.J.
Surhoff went four for eight, while Walt
Weiss got three hits, including two
doubles on Saturday.
The North Carolina gymnastics team
returned to Chapel Hill Sunday, having
lost meets on Thursday and Saturday in
Alabama. But coach Derek Galvin still
called the meets "by far the best Carolina
gymnastics performances ever."
Sidney L. Robblns
Oriental
sauce
Law school
highlights
Rainbow
Pierced
with horns
Ethnic
group
Orient .
Roly-poly
Copycat
DOWN
Israeli ;
dance
Minor
prophet
Rachel's
sister
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Clerics
Plaster of
parts
Movie dog
Rocky crag
Big bird
Enmity
Believer
suff.
Berate
Glass
section
Algerian
port
Office
machine
Lawmaking
group: abbr.
Jordan port
25 Insect
stage
26 Falanaof
song
27 Dutch
cheese
28 Mineral
milieu
29 Pipe parts
31 Heron
32 Untamed
33 Make better
34 Heraldic
band
36 Type of
barbershop
37 Top-notch
38 Landlord's
due
42 Man of the
cloth
43 Era
44 Aid's pal
45 State in
Brazil
46 Root for
perfumes
47 Hamlet's
friends
48 Rose's man
49 Discharge
50 Detergent
51 Single
time
52 River in
Belgium
54 In the past
55 Throng
56 George's
brother
Inc.
Heels' women lose
to N.C. State, 74-68
By MICHAEL PERSINGER
Assistant Sports Editor
Sixteenth-ranked N.C. State extended
the North Carolina women's basketball
team's late-season slide Saturday, handing
the 15th-ranked Tar Heels a 74-68 loss in
Carmichael Auditorium, and UNC coach
Jennifer Alley said she didn't know why
UNC was slumping.
North Carolina, after starting its con
ference season with seven straight wins,
has dropped its last three games and is
now 7-3 in the ACC and 17-5 overall. The
win made the Wolfpack 18-5 overall and
7-3 in the conference.
"I don't think we're in a slump," Alley
said. "We just lose pur intensity for some
reason, and I don't know if it's physical
fatigue, or what. We played very well in
segments, and then we let down.
"I don't know the answer."
The Tar Heels suffered a letdown mid
way through the second half. After a
Stephanie Israel basket tied the score at
53-53 with just over 11 minutes to play,
North Carolina went almost nine minutes
The team lost dual meets to No. 5
Alabama on Thursday, 181.2-173-8, and
to Jacksonville (Ala.) State, the No.
1 -ranked team in Division II, on Satur
day, 176.1-174.65, but set several school
records along the way.
The team's score against Alabama,
173.8, broke the old school record of
172.55, and against Jacksonville St. the
Tar Heels scored 174.65 points to break
the record they had set just two nights
before.;
Against Jacksonville State, just
minutes after Suzanne Van Slyke had tied
the school record in the beam with a 9.20,
Sue Tonietto broke the record with a
9.25.
Van Slyke and Tonietto also excelled in
other events against Jacksonville State.
Van Slyke tied for first in the floor exer
cise with an 8.95 and finished second in
the vault with the same score. Tonietto
placed second in the uneven parallel bars
with a 9.0 and second in the all-around
competition with a'35.50. .
The team's record in dual meets fell to
3-2, but Galvin wasn't disappointed. ,
"Even though we lost both meets, I
feel like we won," he said. "We shattered
some school records and, after the
Alabama meet, the girls finally realized
they are capable of competing at the top
level."
UNC next competes in the ACC cham
pionship in Chapel Hill on February 25.
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CAROLINA CLASSIC
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Pam Hammond's jumper with just
under two minutes to play broke the
drought, but by that time the Wolfpack
led 71-63 and, with North Carolina hav
ing to foul to get the ball back, N.C. State
hit enough free throws to seal the win.
Linda Page led the Wolfpack with 29
points on 13 of 21 shots from the field
and three of four from the foul line.
Priscilla Adams added 12 and Debbie
Mulligan had 10 for the Wolfpack. Tresa
Brown, the ACC's leading scorer, scored
22 for the Tar Heels.
"Our rebounding was a problem
again, like it was (in the losses) against
Maryland and Virginia," Alley said. "We
were hurt by (forward Dawn) Royster go
ing out with her fourth foul practically as
we were coming out of the locker room
for the second half."
"Maybe our confidence is broken,"
Alley said, adding that she doesn't think
her team will get down on itself.
"I think they are disappointed, but I
don't think the team is the type to get
down on themselves," she said. "They
are real fighters."
The women's fencing team suffered
perhaps its most frustrating loss of the
season Saturday- when Fairleigh Dickin
son downed UNC, 9-7, in Fetzer Gym. In
Saturday's second match, the Tar Heels
trounced Hollins College, 14-2.
The men's fencing team had no dif
ficulty in its home meet with Virginia.
Military Institute, winning 20-7, as no
UNC starter fenced more than two bouts,
and coach Ron Miller chose to give his
younger fencers 'ome experience.
Karen Marnell accounted for most of
the Tar Heels' points as she went 4-0
against FDU and 1-1 in just two bouts
against Hollins.
Lorinie McCullough and Greg Burcher
led the men as they both went 2-0 in the
sabre division. Chris Heinlein and Scott
Echols in the epee division also posted 2-0
marks.
Both the men's and women's 'teams
return to action Thursday night in a dual
meet with N.C. State at Fetzer Gym. The
meet will begin at 5:30 p.m. with the men
fencing at 7:00.
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SAT. &
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Linda Rage (left) had 29 points in
Arkansas
teams, scored just six of those points in the first half.
By the time Arkansas had opened up a 10-point
lead just 2:29 into the second half, Razorback for
ward Leroy Sutton was on the bench with his fifth
foul. When North Carolina's Daugherty sat down
with foul No. 5 more than 1 1 minutes later, it was a
57-55 Arkansas advantage. Neither disqualification
was cited as a deciding factor in the game, however.
UNC's loss brought with it the eternally
unanswerable but nevertheless always asked question
of whether a team entering the NCAA tournament
undefeated was one ripe for a setback.
The outspoken Al McGuire, NBC's color commen
tator for the game, had some thoughts on the matter.
McGuire was in a men's room at Adam's Field Air
port in Little Rock, Ark., after the game, changing in
to more comfortable clothing and lamenting his wife's
habit of overstuffing his travel bag.
. "I think (the loss is) a blessing in disguise," he said,
buttoning his green plaid flannel. "I really do. There
are no more undefeated teams winning the national
championship. Those days are gone."
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Monday, February 14, 1984The Daily Tar Heel7
x r
DTHGharles Ledlord
N.C. State's victory over UNC Saturday.
From page V
Smith" agreed that the loss may have its positive
aspect in part, at least.
"It will help us to be in this kind of a game," he
said. "It would have helped us a lot more if that last
shot had gone in."
NORTH CAROLINA (64)
Doherty 2-9 1-1 5, Perkins 5-10 7-8 17.
Daugherty 0-3 2-2 2, Hale 5-9 5-5 15, Jor
dan 9-15 3-5 21, Wolf 0-1 2-2 2, Peterson
1-2 0-0 2, Popson 0-0 0-0 0.
Totals 22-49 20-23 64.
ARKANSAS (65)
Balentine 4-8 2-2 10, Sutton 5-6 1-2 11,
Kleine 5-12 10-10 20, Norton 1-3 0-0 2,
Robertson 3-7 3-6 9, Rose 0-0 0-0 0, Kitchen
0-0 0-0 0, Bedford 6-6 0-0 12, Ratliff
0-0 1-2 1, Poerschke 0-1 0-0 0, Brannon
.0-0 (W) 0.
Totals: 24-43 17-22 65.
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