6The Daily Tar Heel Friday. September 21, 1984
UNC 's West has different ideas
SCOREBOARD
Intramurals
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Calendar
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MI NN SOCCER at Palriot Invitational. Fairfax. Va.. 2 p.m.
WOMEN'S TENNIS at Big Hour Tournament. Durham. TBA
Vol I FYBALl. at Wolfpack Invitational. Raleigh. TBA
Saturday
MEN'S CROSS COUNTRY at Western Ontario Invitational. London. Ontario.
Canada. TBA
FIELD HOCKEY vs. Iowa, at Philadelphia. I p.m.
FOOTBALL at Boston College. 7:30 p.m.
MEN'S SOCCER at Patriot Invitational. Fairfax. Va., 2 or 4 p.m.
WOMEN'S SOCCER at Lady Patriot All-Star Classic (UNC vs. Missouri-St. Louis),
Fairfax. Va.. 10 a.m.
WOMEN'S TENNIS at Big Four Tournament. Durham. TBA
VOLLEYBALL at Wolfpack Invitational, Raleigh, TBA
Sunday
FIELD HOCKEY at Temple, 1 p.m.
WOMEN'S SOCCER at Lady Patriot All-Star Classic (UNC vs. Wisconsin-Madison),
Fairfax, Va., 10 a m.
WOMEN'S TENNIS at Big Four Tournament, Durham, TBA
TV-Radio
Saturday
Football
Noon Chs. 2 A 5. Wake Forest at N.C State or Maryland
3:30 p.m. Chs. 2 A 5, Nebraska at UCLA or Iowa at Ohio
7:30 p.m. ESPN, North Carolina at Boston College.
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for over ten years veVe given Carolina students the
best selection and best prices on: rock, jazz, soul, .
country, blues, raggae, cutouts, bluegrass and import
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Peanuts
MAJOR CATASTROPHE I
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irj-REC Officials
The 1M department is looking for student referees. This is a rewarding experience with
some pay. Due to shortage of officials, some tag football games may have to be run
unofficiated. Anyone interested in being a referee should come by the IM-Rec office
in 203 Woollen Gym and see Janis Matson or Donna Hovis.
The dates of the track and field
All classes are full for this semester except the Mo re head class, which meets Mon.
Wed. from 5:30-6:30 p.m. in the Mo re he ad Cellar (Cobb Dorm).
Men's competitive division: Firm Members defeated the Quantum Ducks, 13-6, to win
the championship. Team members: Tim Graves, Greg Butler, Joe Edwards, John Parker.
Steve Lindsay, Steve RiddelL Kathy Strieker, Dave Filipelli, Dave Spuria, Rusty Barnes,
Dave May berry, Jeff Gray and Jay Young.
Men's rec division: Morriaoa Frozen Ropes defeated the Mispaired Bases, 8-4, to win
the championship. Team members: Art Valentine, Chuck Smith, Jim Tomlin, Mike
Piper, Rod Waddell, Gary Beam, Eddie Willis, Spero Zacharias, Alan Ewing. Rich
Fennell, Jeff Guillebeau, Alan Keiger, Anne Tripp, Andrea Shaw, Lisa Pfrogner, Danny
Grady and Scott Thompson.
Women's division: Squatty MAMi defeated the Cobb No-Hitters, 17-0, to win the
championship. Team members: Donna Hovis, Kim Helms. Mel Croft, Judy Murray.
Heidi Mallett, Tammy Wiliams, Lynn Boykin, Sylvia Cobb, Andrey Vanden HeuvcL
at West Virginia.
State.
Cathy Pntchard. Kathy Mittelstadt, Linka Schiltz, and Robin Harlicavitch.
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OUR. REPORTERS ARE) PETAlLS
VON THE SCENE ATELEVEN J
1964 UntWd FeaKStoate.lnc.
Track and Field
meet have been changed to Oct. 2 and 4.
Aerobics
Grail Softball
Forcast from pase 1
Other economists agree that the
state's economic picture looks good.
"Although we're already seeing a
slowing down in the big three durable
goods textiles, apparel, and furniture--when
you talk about North Carolina,
you're looking at a healthy economy,"
said Frank Russell, an economist at
NCNB National Bank in Charlotte.
"The state mimicks the nation with
heavy dependence on manufacturing.
But the state outperformed the nation
with respect to output and growth (over
the last five years)."
"I think next year the economic
recovery will continue. ItH be at least
1986 before we see any kind of tran
sition, like a recession," he said.
IN -TME MEANTIME,
VOUlL JUST MAVE
TO 5UEAT IT OUT
..rbckon wey
IPO, H0R5eFACe.
1 QUIT.
1.1 i
73x?,
By KIMBALL CROSSLEY
StafT Writer
UNC men's soccer coach Anson
Dorrance and his senior starting
sweeper, Ken West, don't always see
things the same way.
Which isnt to say that Dorrance and
West don't get along. They just have
different perceptions on almost every
thing that has to do with West, soccer,
and most recently, the way the UNC
sweeper has become probably the most
valuable player on this year's team.
For instance, after a recent 6-1 win
over South Carolina, Dorrance was
raving about the way West had saved
the game for the Tar Heels by contin
uously stopping USC scoring thrusts in
the game's first 15 minutes, during
which it seemed the other UNC players
were on the field chasing grasshoppers.
As Dorrance continued to laud his
sweeper, West walked up to offer his
congratulations to the coach. . Imme
diately, Dorrance directed lavish praise
on West himself. West replied with a
shrug and a simple smile.
So much for cocky athletes and
sewer-tongued coaches.
If the season keeps going the way it
did Sunday, that scene might be played
over and over again. In fact, it is one
that has been played before, like
whenever Dorrance talks about West's
UNC career.
West, who was recruited out of
Lathonia, Ga., to play left wing, came
into his own his junior year, and became
a starter at defensive back, Dorrance
said.
West said he was probably good
enough to start as a freshman and
sophomore, but he holds no grudges.
Dorrance attributes a lot of West's
improvement to a change in attitude
Odefta
people has sparked her exploration into
areas outside music, and her command
ing physical presence has made these
ventures into drama (she played Tituba
in a Canadian production of Arthur
Miller's The Crucible) and the teaching
of consciousness-raising classes all the
more successful. "I love to teach,"
Odetta said. "There's no better way to
learn."
What Odetta most likes to learn
about, of course, is people. She pointed
to her tour of the Soviet Union when
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IX,
after taking a sports psychology course
as a sophomore. West said the course
was fun, and encouraged all athletes to
take it. But what about that attitude
change? "Well, if Anson says it, then
I guess it's true," West said.
Depending on whom you're talking
to, West's switch from forward where
as a freshman he scored the only goal
in a 1-0 win over Clemson to sweeper
came about, according to Dorrance,
because "He was very good facing
players, but not so good with his back
to them," or according to West, "I just
learned to play defense real well."
Whatever the reason was, the switch
to defense was made, and West was
having what Dorrance called "probably
the best year of any outside back weVe
ever had in our program," when last
year's freshman starting sweeper, Frank
Gilhooly, went down in the middle of
the season with a broken leg. The choice
for a replacement at the position was
obvious, and West has been Dorrance's
starting sweeper ever since.
What does West think of all these
position changes? Well, that's not such
an easy question to answer. West has
said that playing defense is more fun
than playing offense but has also said
he likes playing sweeper because he can
make long runs with the ball, which he,
likes because he loves offense.
But it all begins to make sense when
you listen to Dorrance talk about the
sweeper role , in soccer. Dorrance calls
the sweeper a supporting player on
offense or defense, a player who can
often be seen behind the fullbacks or
upfield leading a break, but whose main
responsibility is picking up breakdowns
in the defense.
Dorrance likes West as his sweeper
because "He's deceptively fast . . . has
Richard M. Nixon was president as her
most memorable learning experience.
She fondly recalled the flowers and
other emblems of affection she received
at every performance and described the
people of the Soviet Union as "warm,
gracious and curious."
In comparing the Soviet and U.S.
governments, she concluded that "we're
both going to hell, but doing it in
different ways."
Of her future after the national tour
that brings her to UNC and next will
Enterprises, Inc.
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Presentation:
October 4
209 Hanes
5:00 p.m.
October 5
Hanes Hall
Interviews:
JLiIk mi
Kenny West
very nice control . . . can keep his
composure . . . and can cover up for
our mistakes."
UNC's big problem so far this year
has been mistakes, as the Tar Heels have
lost three games which they probably
could have won, one of them the result
of four defensive errors. Dorrance says
the team has been experiencing more
breakdowns this season than ever
before, which is why he says West is
more valuable than ever and that he
is looking to his senior sweeper to be
a leader of the young defense.
In the meantime, West responds to
Dorrance's call to glory in three
sentences:
"It bothers me when we get scored
on. We need to play better team defense.
I just want to win every game."
from page 1
take her to California, Odetta offered
few predictions. She is scheduled to play
the Broadway lead in a musical by Toni
Morrison titled New Orleans, but she
is also interested in recording an album
with the New Black Ego Jazz Band, a
Boston-based ensemble with whom she
has performed frequently in recent
years.
"I'm not sure what I want to do when
I grow up," Odetta said with a laugh.
Gone is the "sense of hurry" that once
affected her. While the limited sales of
her albums is probably responsible for
her persistent anonymity in certain
circles, posterity through recordings
doesn concern Odetta as much as it
once did.
"It occurred to me," said the timeless
and ageless singer whose career has
already spanned three decades, "that I'd
be singing at 97 even if I couldn't sing.
I'd be croaking something."
-Odetta will perform tonight at 8 p.m.
in Memorial Hall. For ticket informa-'
tion, call 962-1449.
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