im T-uim Ta ii'm' li"Hi"'u uii '"HJ "miiI "m ""Mi ""WOm "Wil'uii 'M1Nr'"'l 11 aJJ"'tt ' 'IM '"mm1 "l "1 mi attijJ 'ajl'r'''lt"'""lt' MTigT m'w$fmaTtfnry rg i mimi iim m Hi iim iimi mi itm am 11 nfi Wi wrrimtTmwfm i i n mi iiiiiiirtaM Volleyball y By PHYLLIS A. FAIR Staff Writer UNC took two wins from the West Virginia Mountaineers and the Florida International Sunblazers to raise their overall record to 23-12 in weekend volleyball action. The Tar Heels defeated the Moun taineers in straight games 15-5, 15 7 and 15-9 Friday night, but it took four games Saturday to block out the Sunblazers' rays: 2-15, 15-2, 15 12, 15-3. The volleyball team designated Friday night as senior night for two outstanding players, Jill Berkebile and Dawn Wood. Wood and Berkebile played in the last home of their volleyball career Saturday, but Friday night was when they showed West Virginia why seniors do it better. With support from the rest of the team, both of the seniors put on an impressive display of blocking and spiking. It didn't take the Tar Heels any time to show West Virginia they meant business. "I think our girls played well," said Collage Football UNC 27, Virginia 7 UVa UNC 23 60-451 93 42 9- 18-2 4-38 4-2 10- 95 33:15 First downs 15 Rushes-yards 40-48 Passing yards 218 Return yards 21 Passes 16-31-3 Punts 7-35 FumWes-kwt 3-2 Penalties-yards 5-34 Time of possession 26:45 Virginia UNC 0 0 0 77 10 0 3 1427 UNC FG Miller 48 UNC Fenner 68 run (Gliarmis kick) UNC FG Gliarmis 24 UNC Fenner 73 run (Gliarmis kick) UVA Ford 10 pass from Secules (Gaffney kick) UNC Streater 9 pass from Maye (Gliarmis kick) A 28,000 INDIVIDUAL STATISTICS RUSHING: Virginia Morgan 7-26, Greggs 1 1 -22. Toiand 8-20, Warren 2-5, Secules 1-5, Rice 1-1. MajkowsW 9-mtnus-17. UNC Fenner 39-328, Thompson 9-7Z Lopp 5-31. Dom 3-14, Maye 4 6. PASSING: Virginia Majkowski 10-21-1-101, Secules 6-10-2-117. UNC Maye 9-18-2-93. RECEIVING: Virginia Mattioli 6-1 09, Ferguson 1- 41. Ford 2-36, Greggs 1-12, Toiand 1-9, Warren 2- 8. UNC Streater 4-50, Keller 3-26, Fenner 1 11. Marriott 1-6. Other Scores ACC Ctemson 17. Maryland 17 N.C. State 29. Duke 15 USC 48, Wake Forest 21 National r Miami 23, Tulsa 10 Minnesota 20. Michigan 17 Perm State 24, Notre Dame 19 CAREERS and PROFESSIONAL GRADUATE PROGRAMS in GOVERNMENT & INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS an informal discussion with representatives of both the John F. Kennedy School of Government Public Policy Program HARVARD UNIVERSITY & Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs PRINCETON UNIVERSITY DATE: Tuesday, November 18 TIME: 10:00 & 11:00 am. groups LOCATION: Please contact your Career Placement Office for this information. All years, all majors welcome. For additional information, please contact yout school's Career DevelopmentPlacement Office. xvu,t? u in kci any ivi orx H igh Quality for ligh Achievers Learn how you can prepare for a career in management. Discover how the innovative curriculum of Rice University's Jesse H. Jones Graduate School of Administration integrates the study of the private, public, and international sectors throughout the curricula to provide a superior management education. Visit our representative on your campus: On: Tuesday, November 18, 1:00-4:00 P.M. At MBA Forum Or Mail the coupon below to receive an application and brochure. Please Print Name; . ' Address . '. ' City- College Return to: Rice University Jones Graduate School of Administration . P.O. Box 1892, Houston, TX 77251 (713)527-4918 Rice University it an EOAA Institution tunes up for ACCs 11 Jolene Nagel, the volleyball coach. We had trouble with our serve reception." In Saturday's match against the Sunblazers, UNC had to regroup as a team, after getting pounded, 15 2, in the first game. It took the Tar Heels just a few minutes to do that, and then they were ready to play ball. UNC turned the tables on Florida International in the second, by breezing to a 15-2 win, and then handily won the last two games. Ann Palmer, a freshman from Tallahassee, Fla., who started in the place of the injured freshman Sharon German, came in off the bench to help the Tar Heels defeat the Sunblazers. German injured her shoulder in Friday's night match, and head volleyball coach Peggy Bradley Doppes said she didn't play German because she wanted to save her for the ACC tournament this weekend. Doppes said her team felt confi dent going into the tournament. "If we can play the last 20 feet, we can beat anybody in the conference," Doppes said. "The girls know they Oklahoma 28, Colorado 0 Nebraska 70, Kansas 0 Arkansas 14, Texas A&M 10 Georgia 20, Auburn 16 Washington 17, UCLA 17 N.C A&T 35. N.C. Central 12 Southern Cat 28, California 3 Alabama 24, Temple 14 Tennessee 22, Mississippi 10 Trenton State 30, Ramapo 19 NFL Scores Cincinnati 34, Seattle 7 Miami 34, Buffalo 24 Green Bay 31. Tampa Bay 7 Chicago 13, Atlanta 10 Detroit 13. Philadelphia 11 Pittsburgh 21. Houston 10 MY. Giants 22. Minnesota 20 New Orleans 16, St Louis 7 New England 30, LA Rams 28 Dallas 24, San Diego 21 LA Raiders 2?, Cleveland 14 Denver 38, Kansas City 17 N.Y. Jets 31, Indianapolis 16 Blue-White Game White 104, Blue 91 WHITE (104): Bucknall 6-12 5-8 17. Wolf 13 23 2-3 28, Williams 3-6 0-0 6. Ranzino Smith 11 18 0-1 23, tebo 5-12 5-6 15, Norwood 0-0 1-2 1, Chilcutt 7-1 10-014. Hyatt 0-1 0-0 0. BLUE (91): Kenny Smith 8-17 0-0 18, Reid 8 14 6-6 22, Popson 6-12 1-2 13, Hunter 5-11 7 8 1 7, Madden 6-7 0-0 1 3, Hensley 2-72-2 6. Denny 1-1 0-0 2, Hyatt 0-0 0-0 0. White Blue 58 46 104 52 39 91 Three point goals: K. Smith 2, R. Smith 1, Madden 1. Women's Soccer NCAA quarterfinals UNC 8, UC-Santa Barbara 0 UC-Santa Barbara North Carolina 0 00 4 48 State. Zip. .Degree Date- have to play defense, and we're hoping to play ball two or three more weeks after Thanksgiving." AP Top 20 Basketball 1. North Carolina (35) 28-6 1,215 2. Louisville (22) 32-7 1,196 3. Indiana (2) 21-8 956 4. Purdue (2) 22-10 935 5. Nev.-Las Vegas 33-5 901 6. Georgia Tech (1) 27-7 770 7. Oklahoma 26-9 684 8. Kansas 35-4 645 9. Navy 30-5 560 10. Iowa 20-12 531 11. Kentucky 32-4 500 12. Auburn 22-11 498 13. Alabama 24-9 451 14. Illinois 22-10 386 15. Syracuse 26-6 383 16. Pittsburgh 15-14 382 17. N.C. State 21-13 322 18. Georgetown 24-8 321 19. Arizona 23-9 299 20. Cleveland State 29-4 178 First-place votes are in parentheses. The records are from last season. Goals: UNC Heinrichs 3, Serwetnyk 2. Gebauer, Henry, Higgins. Assists UNC McDerrrtott Shots: UNC 35, Santa Barbara 6. Records: UNC 22-0-1, Santa Barbara 14-3-2 Field Hockey NCAA quarterfinals UNC 2, Rutgers 0 UNC 2-02 Maryland 0-00 Goals: UNC Bruney. Blaisse. Assists: UNC Dougherty. Shots: UNC 18, Rutgers 16. Saves: UNC Mulvey 10; Rutgers Renee Clarke 11. Comers: Rutgers 10, UNC 8 Records: UNC 18-2, Rutgers 14-6-2. Wrestling UNC 26, UT-Chattanooga 15 118 Reichel (UTC) d. Burkhead 10-4; 126 Palacio (UNC) d. Herring 11-2; 134 McArdle (UNC) d. Allison by disqualification; 142 Catullo (UNC) d. Artalona 7-3; 1 50 Sell (UTC) d. Bernstein 4-3; 158 Cardi (UNC) d. Comitos 13-5; 167 Koll (UNC) d. Hinkle, 0:38; 177 Silvestro (UNC) d. Buckshaw 10-8; HWT Wallace (UTC) d. Bradley 6-0. BACK TO SCHOOL SPECAL I I I i lafl IF YOU WANT TO BE A PHYSICIAN, WE'LL PAY FOR IT. If you're willing to invest your skills and knowledge as an Air Force medical officer, we'll invest in you and pay your way through medical school. It's the Armed Forces Health Professions Scholarship Program. It pays for: Tuition; Books, supplies, equipment and lab fees; Plus a monthly income of more than $550. Call TSgt Kirby Lindner (919) 856-4130 collect A -rr n-s SAKE ADVANTAGE OF T. DATE: Today. Nov. PLACE: Student Stores $20.00 Deposit f00 11 ative sense, but there v ative sense, but there was a real fight midway through the second quarter. Earlier in the period, tempers had gotten a little hot, and the referees had refrained from calling penalties. They reaped the fruits of that omission when the two teams tangled after a Virginia punt. The rumble was the usual, a lot of jawing and a little shoving, but UNC's Eric Lewis and Virginia's Eric Clay were kicked out of the game. Afterward, the usually mild mannered Lewis was surprised at his ejection. "I was just sitting back, watching, because I didn't want to start fighting and get kicked out," he said. "That's not me, that's not my style. Then No. 2 (Clay) just jumped in my face and smacked me. When I swung back, it was just reaction." UNC picked up a 24-yard Lee Gliarmis field goal early in the second half for a 13-0 lead. Three series later, after Maye and Maj kowski traded interceptions, Fenner retook center stage. On second and seven, Maye pitched back to Fenner, who glided to his right, waiting for a hole to develop. Lineman Harris Barton Volleyball UNC d. Fla. International 2-15, 15-2, 15-12, 15 8 UNC d. West Virginia 15-5, 15-7, 15-9 Cross Country NCAA Region III championships at Furman Top 10 men's teams Team: Florida 98, N.C. State 108, Tennessee 123, Virrginia Tech 163, Maryland 194, Auburn 195. Western Kentucky 230, Marshall 256, South Carolina 263. UNC 278 c N.C. State 46. Maryland 61 , UNC 71 . Clemson 77. Virginia 1 22. Wake Forest 1 47. Georgia Tech 1 65, Duke 1 99. Top 5 individuals: Farmer (UNC) 30:00; Flynn (Clemson) 30:02; Taylor (VMI) 30:05; Ede (Ken.) 30:06; Jager (Aub) 3O06. Next highest UNC finisher. 17. Harris, 30:48. Top 10 women's teams Team: Alabama 30, Kentucky 47. Clemson 88, Florida 1 26, Wake Forest 1 62, Virginia 1 84. Auburn 202, E. Kentucky 213, Maryland 218, Georgia 237. OTHER N.C. SCORES: 13. UNC 403, 14. Duke 437. 28. Davidson 792. Top individual: Patty Matava, 17:17. Top UNC finisher. 52. Karol Chambers. 100 COPIES - $2.95 8x11 white 20 bond One original - one visit Expires 123186 Only one coupon per visit 1 1 4 W. Franklin St. 967-0790 I I I BJIIefLB i lllllil iiiiiiiiii EES 17 TIMP 10-3 Division of Carnation Company 1 wiped out a Virginia linebacker to spring Fenner free, and the big tailback burst through the hole, leaving two would-be tacklers in the dust. He straight-armed cornerback Kevin Gould near midfield and cruised into the end zone, showboat ing the last five yards and taunting the nearest Virginia defender. "I had to make a few moves going through the hole," Fenner said of his 73-yard jaunt. "The line did a great job blocking. I just made a couple of comments at the end, just some player-to-player comments." Free speech was the order of the day at Kenan, apparently. But Chuck Tabor, a UNC redshirt transfer from Missouri, was dis pleased with two students' exercise of their First Amendment rights. The students held up a "Fire Crum" sign just after Fenner's run. Tabor leaped over the restraining fence, grabbed the sign and broke it over his knee. "I love Crum to death and I have a lot of respect for him," Tabor said. "When you see something like that, youVe got to protect him." The incident took the spotlight away from Fenner, but only for the moment. After backup Cavalier quarterback Scott Secules toosed a 10-yard touchdown to John Ford to break the shutout and make things more interesting, Fenner was given the ball again (and again and again). On UNC's last drive he ran eight times for 42 yards, shattering Amos Lawrence's single-game standard for ACC rushers. That drive ended with a Maye-to-Streater nine-yard touch down pass. The TD came after Virginia coach George Welsh inex plicably called timeout with 21 seconds remaining and his team down by 13 points. "You say to yourself, 'They must want the ball back, " Crum said. "So we gave it to them." Present this Coupon When Ordering 0d3) (5X0 Sfifc- L nj 1 UfAlkJW (FY t3Q TODAY Help meet the critical shortage of plasma by making your life-saving donation. You donation helps expectant mothers, hemophiliacs, and many others. Make up to $120 per month In your spare time by giving the gift of life. G 109&E. franklin St. 942-0251 $1 5.00 for new donors and returning students first donation with this ad Mon.-Thurs. 9:30-7:00. Fri. 9:30 - LEADING A EDGE Chosen as PC-Compatibility HARDWARE PICK or BEST BUY of the YEAR by: Wall Street JournaUPC Week. 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Carr Mill Mall Carrboro, North Carolina 919967-7499 Leading Edge b a registered trademark of Leading Edge Products Inc. Model "D" Is a trademark of Leading The Daily Tar HeelMonday, November 17, 19865 from page 1 gQQ from page 1 tance of maintaining Proposition 48, a policy that sets minimum Scho lastic Aptitude Test scores for freshman admissions. Spangler said he would report to the board after the NCAA's January convention to consider the system's next step. A report from the University faculty athletic committee and sent by Chancellor Christopher Fordham agreed that action by the NCAA would be more effective than uni lateral action taken by the Univer sity. The report advocated keeping the number of contests in some sports at the current number but extending the season's length. Reducing the number of contests could have a negative effect on recruiting unless the NCAA acts consistently for all Division I schools, according to the report. Fordham said that, if the NCAA decided in January to shorten the season lengths, the University would probably go along with the decision. "But we're pretty good at fighting our battle," he said. Fordham said Sunday he hoped the NCAA would consider ineligi bility for freshmen in men's Division I and IA football and basketball. Spangler's report was prepared from Chancellor's Special Reports not released with the larger docu ment "The First Annual Report on Intercollegiate Athletics." Currently, UNC-system officials are being sued for the documents' release. A superior court ruled last week that the documents were of public record and ordered Spangler and Arthur Padilla, associate vice president of academic affairs, to make the reports public. 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