The Daily Tar HeelMonday, September 30, 19917 1: ODU wins field hockey struggle Top-ranked women's soccer takes 2 in Omaha Staff Reports NORFOLK, Va. Defending na tional champion Old Dominion held the North Carolina field hockey team to only two shots on goal Sunday as it defeated the Tar Heels 1 -0 in a rematch of the last two national championship bouts. The loss dropped the No. 7 Tar Heels to 6-3, while the top-ranked Lady Mon archs upped their mark to 8-0. The game's only goal came off a Robin Smith penalty-corner shot with 21:34 remaining in the contest. Lady Monarchs Jill Reeve and Pam Neiss assisted on the play. UNC goalkeeper Peggy Storrar tal lied four saves on the day as the Tar Heel defense held ODU to nine shots. UNC has the week off before open ing its ACC season next weekend against Maryland. Women's soccer remains unbeaten OMAHA, Neb. The top-ranked North Carolina women's soccer team rolled again this weekend as the Tar Heels upended Creighton 9-1 Saturday and Wisconsin-Mil waukee 7-0 Sunday. UNC, 9-0 on the season, was led by junior Tracy Donahue, who scored two On Tap Wednesday, October 2 MEN'S SOCCER, vs. Furman, Fetzer, 7 p.m. VOLLEYBALL, vs. UVa., Carmichael, 7:30 p.m. Friday, October 4 WOMEN'S GOLF, at Duke Fall Invitational, Durham, All Oay WOMEN'S SOCCER, at Santa Clara, Santa Clara, Calif.. 7 p.m. MEN'S TENNIS, at Clemson Fall Classic, Clemson, S.C., All Day WOMEN'S TENNIS, at Lady Gamecock Invita tional, Columbia, S.C., All Day VOLLEYBALL, at DePaul Invitational, Chicago, III., 5 p.m. Saturday, October 5 CROSS COUNTRY, at University of Florida Invitational, Gainesville, Fla.. TBA FOOTBALL, vs. William & Mary, Kenan, 1:30 p.m. WOMEN'S GOLF, at Duke Fall Invitational. Calvin and Hobbes Calvin and Hobbes LCOVC M THM TWo IM M. dirt . it most be s , A FOSSIL ' Doonesbury I WONDER WHW PECULIAR A.NMM- THIS IAS . r'600Q NeWS! BUSH IS Sj 4 ANOTHIR ...ilpY' J cm of m1- I CHIVAS... ' y THE JETS IX THE Daily Crossword by Robert D. Wilder ACROSS 48 Baseball league: 12 Sleeping 1 The Charles' abbr. 13 Loch dog 50 Moines 21 Hillside: Scot. 5 Mooring rope 51 Half a fortnight 22 Owed 1 0 Cereal 53 Kilmer subject 25 Low card 14 "A with a 55 Wash 26 Imprint View" 58 "The 27 Spectral 15 Utah senator wearin' " 28 As (usually) Hatch 63 Dugout 30 Kaiser's place of 16 Automotive job 64 Braz. state exile 17 Aquatic plant 65 Confederate 32 Cooked in oil 18 Liturgical 66 Poke around 33 Follow vestment 67 Actor Warner of 34 Considers 19 Applications old 36 Fairy tale girl 20 Shoeshine 68 Fourth 38 Alive person dimension 41 Kind of club 22 Exploits 69 Awesome 45 Cassini 23 Angered weapon 47 Shoe width 24 Check part 70 Hair style 49 Stair parts 26 Coral e.g. 71 Kiln 52 Marsupial 29 Dull 54 A Muse 31 Shortened sail DOWN 55 Cowshed 35 Succinct 1 Steed 56 ben Adhem 37 Ear part 2 Song for one 57 Pacific island 39 Eng. composer 3 Take-out words 59 Comparison 40 for one's 4 Valuable violin word money 5 Certain supply 60 Lamb 41 Renown ship 61 "Desire Under 42 Acclivity 6 Plated animal the " 43 Venus de 7 a-brac 62 Russ. 44 Legendary 8 Defeats negative knowledge 9 Vane letters 64 Hair style 45 Concert hall 10 Wife murderer 46 A Reese 1 1 Deception goals Sunday, and freshman Tisha Venturini, who tallied three assists and one score against Milwaukee. Creighton's score on Saturday marked only the second time this sea son that the Tar Heels have been scored on. UNC's tennis best fall in tourney WILMINGTON Tar Heels Cinda Gurney and Roland Thornqvist both advanced to the third round of the ITCA National Clay Court Championships before falling to top-seeded Sunshine State foes Friday. Gurney, UNC's No. 1 women's player, defeated South Florida's Kristi Bastian and Mississippi's Paloma Collantes in the first two rounds before falling to Florida's Andrea Farley 7-5, 1-6, 6-2. Thomqvist, the top Tar Heel male, fell to South Florida's Patricio Arnold 6-3, 6-4 after rolling past Princeton's Greg Hartch in the first round and Mis sissippi State's Daniel Courcol in the second. Both Farley and Arnold were No. 1 seeds in the tournament, which is one of college tennis' four Grand Slam events. Only three Tar Heel men and one UNC Durham, All Day MEN'S TENNIS, at Clemson Fall Invitational. Clemson. S C., All Day WOMEN'S TENNIS, at Lady Gamecock Invita tional, Columbia. S.C., Ail Day VOLLEYBALL, at DePaul Invitational, Chicago, III., 10 a.m. and 5:30 p.m. Sunday, October 6 FIELD HOCKEY, at Maryland, 1 p.m. MEN'S GOLF, at Preview Classic, Albuquer que, N.M., All Day WOMEN'S GOLF, at Duke Fall Invitational, Durham, All Day MEN'S SOCCER, vs. Duke. Fetzer, 2 p.m. WOMEN'S SOCCER, at California-Berkely, Calif., 4 p.m. MEN'S TENNIS, at Clemson Fall Classic. Clemson, S C., All Day WOMEN'S TENNIS, at Lady Gamecock Invita tional, Columbia, S C., All Day 1 ) J BUT IT'S NOT rBONE. IT must bt sae prinutwe Hunting weapon or EWNQj UTENSIL FOR CWE MEN . 0 : ' WITHIN WBKS, THIS PLACE IS (SONS TO Be-A MOB 5CBNB! PILOTS! tVHIZZB! 6ROUNP CFWS! 6-26' tOGHtAPS' R- ARB IN THE ARBHBRB UtFWORKtffi! &fUGFe&' BURN AGAIN! mm. I VICTIMS' 1991 Tribune Media Services. Inc. All Rights Reserved 1 lii pi 3 " 'Is i 7 i 9 I 110 111 I12 Its Ti 7s 75 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 33 40 41 42 J- 46 47 Ti 49 50 : 51 52 53 54 """" 55 56 57 " ' si- 59 60 61 62 63 " 64 " 65 66 67 68 woman Gurney qualified for the tournament. UNC's Woody Webb advanced to the second round before falling toTexas Christian's Tony Bujan 4-6, 6-4, 6-4. Women's golf finishes third TALLAHASSEE, Fla. The North Carolina women's golf team shot a 3 15 Sunday to finish third in the 14-team Lady Seminole Invitational, 27 strokes behind runaway winner Florida State. North Carolina entered the day in second place, but Duke shot a 303 to gain 12 strokes on UNC and overtake theTar Heels. Duke finished with a 909, and UNC carded a 920. No one came close to FSU, however, as the host Seminoles placed four golf ers in the top 10, including the first two individual finishers to finish at 893. UNC's Meredith Quimby tied for eighth in individual play with a three day 229. Teammate Kim Byham tallied a 230 to take lOth-pIace honors. OtherTar Heel finishers were Debbie Doniger (231), Amber Marsh (232) and Mandy Kuhn (239). Women's tennis opens season RALEIGH The UNC women's tennis team began its fall season last weekend at the NCSU Wolfpack Clas sic. The doubles team of Scotti Thomas and Nicole Transou placed third in flight C. In flight C singles, Freddy Uihlein finished third, compiling a 2-2 record in the tournament. Defense I heard the people screaming and I saw all the players coming at me. "Every time I go to sleep I dream about something like that." The 4-0 Wolfpack has lived some thing of a defensive dream in 1991. In 1 6quarters, State has relinquished all of 10 points. The team has given up 74 yards rushing per game and 140 yards passing per contest. To cap it off, the THIS EXPLAINS MMBE T WW VOOR. CLOTHES STM ON TME FLOOR HKDSCME RaiQOJS FONCTTON I WANT THIS CLUB PUTONA BETWR MAKB THAT TEN CASPb.. I WARTIME, " , 1 H. A 1 V.1 AHA u.111 T H EiiGHT B RIG ADI TON FT. 1 0 R A T E D C A mTT r "aE H aTd I R A R Arl5 I A pas I t e s U H T H 0.1 1 IE A R B Y f i 1 ii 31 1 e ocziiT w s Lr ' io I ETTjTp G A sMtJl MOON I I G H T S 0 NAT A M 1 1 M I riT R U I Ef"C A M IE I L a i s i p i s i 1 h 1 0 1 l i e i etude nIeIsItUsiwIaipUtIeIrIsIe VIHEEE HAHNHM 1 1 SW . H S V I El State turned the ball over three times on fumbles in the fourth quarter. The Tar Heels recovered the first in their own end zone, but grabbed the next two at State's 42- and 15-yard lines. The Wolfpack defense, one of the nation's top units, met the challenge. "I really like the way our defense responded," Wolfpack head coach Dick Sheridan said. "In a game like this, all we had to do was hold onto the football and we win the game, but we turn it over the most costly thing we could do. Defensively, wego out there with fire in our eyes and respond." Sheridan, who had questions about his club's defense against the run, left Carter-Finley with all questions prob ably even all prayers answered. "They were like the No. I defense in the nation coming in, and I think they played like it," Burnette said. "We thought in order to have a good game, we had to be as good running the ball as passing the ball. We didn't have that balance today." Actually, the Tar Heels were pretty balanced offensively they could not do anything right. Against the pass, N.C. State's de fense controlled the line of scrimmage, sacking Burnette five times and pres suring him on numerous other occa sions. Against the run, the Wolfpack held the Tar Heels to a minuscule 33 yards on 37 carries, the seventh straight time N.C. State has held its opponent under the 100-yard mark. The Wolfpack accomplished all this despite the loss of leading tackier Billy Ray Haynes with an ankle injury in the first quarter. Brown said the Tar Heels did their part to make the Wolfpack look good. Wolfpack has intercepted 13 passes. After last season, the Wolfpack lost six defensive starters, four of whom were drafted by NFL teams. "The talk was that the defense was going to be the weak spot because of inexperience," Thomas said. "We had to go out and show that inexperience doesn't mean that we're not going to be good. "We took it upon ourselves this sum mer to work just as hard as we could. We were lifting every day, running ev ery day. We did everything we could as players to get ready for the season." APTop25 Rank Record Pts Pvs 1. Florida St. (56) 4-0-0 1,472 1 2. Miami (2) 3-0-0 1,398 2 3. Washington (1) 3-0-0 1,375 4 4. Tennessee 4-0-0 1,275 5 S.Oklahoma 3-0-0 1,165 6 6. Clemson 3-0-0 1,142 7 7. Michigan 2-1-0 1,123 3 8. Notre Dame 3-1-0 1,027 8 9. Iowa 3-0-0 987 9 10. Syracuse 4-0-0 936 10 11. Baylor 4-0-0 908 12 12. Perm St. 4-1-0 870 10 13. Florida 3-1-0 771 14 14. Ohio St. 3-0-0 690 15 15. Nebraska 3-1-0 604 16 16. Auburn 3-1-0 568 13 17. Pittsburgh 4-0-0 541 18 18. California 3-0-0 449 20 19. N.Carolina St. 4-0-0 347 20. Alabama 3-1-0 333 22 21. Georgia Tech 2-2-0 275 19 22. Illinois 2-1-0 232 25 23. Texas A&M 2-1-0 126 24. UCLA 2-1-0 107 25. Colorado 2-2-0 82 17 Other receiving votes: Mississippi 61, Ari zona St. 60, Texas Christian 56, Mississippi St. 47, Georgia 37, West Virginia 26, Kansas 16, Fresno St. 13, North Carolina 12, Air Force 11, Southern Cal 8, Louisville 5, Ne vada 5, East Carolina 4 Rutgers 4. Central Michigan 3, Wisconsin 2, San Jose St. 1, Tulsa 1. OUTRAGEOUS! JTI rt be Ion ol lh beat lilma r v Men this yarT bur 111 n2; CVRVB6DY'S FINE! 4 30 Only 'A Great Time AT THf movies." THE COMMITMENTS I 2:00 T:OQ 9.30 K NOW open 337 W. Rosemary St. r1 1 ' ((LJUNJ0E Hr?M Over mi n areat mea PREMIUM CHICKEN y Hours 11:00 am -11:00 pm 7 DAYS A WEEK CALL FOR PARTY PLATTERS 919-968-4844 919-942-3646 Willow Creek Shopping Center Eastgate Shopping Center Jones Ferry Road US Highway 1 5-501 Carrboro, NC 27510 Chuckie Burnette "I expected N.C. State to play good on defense," Brown said. "I was more disappointed in the way we played. I know we didn't respond the way I hoped in our running game. We didn't run it that well against Army last week, so it's probably more our problem than N.C. State's." Refusing to place the offensive fail ure on Burnette's shoulders, Brown was concerned that no Tar Heel stood up and took control on offense. "We didn't have many guys on of fense that jumped up and took the chal lenge to go score," Brown said. "That's the thing you need. You need a guy who's going to go make a play, and we didn't do much of that today." The Tar Heels did do it once, putting from page 10 But Savage said no matter how good State has played, a doubter has lurked. "It seems that after every win, you find some critic out there saying, 'Well, that team wasn't good enough,'" Sav age said. "Each time a critic complains, we're going to just go out there and play harder." As State's star cornerback, Savage has been a cornerstone of the defense, in both on-the-field performance and on-the-field confidence. "I'm going out there on the Field thinking that I'm better than the re ceiver that's across from me," Savage said. "Sometimes it pays off to be just a little conceited, and not too much. I take it to the limit." Savage said the State squad was out to earn some respect from UNC. "Carolina's the type of school, they talk, they disrespect N.C. State," he said. "We're the type of team that re spects everybody, because you've got to be a great football team to play in this conference. We just want to earn a little more respect. "North Carolina's just that otherteam that we had to beat. People here always tell us, 'We don't care what you do for the whole season, just beat those Tar Heels.' In a way, that got into me. "When I saw that Carolina blue, that adrenaline was really flowing today." And so it was for the rest of the Savage State defense, bleeding Wolfpack red. Sports on TV Monday, September 30 7:30 p.m. Major League Baseball: Atlanta at Cincinnati; TBS 7:30 p.m. Major League Baseball: Chi cago Cubs at Philadelphia; WGN 9 p.m . NFL Footbal I: Phi ladelph ia at Wash ington; 8, 11 LatefOPREDDY'S 5:15 DEAD h K TUfl 11 A 325NECESSARY7:15 ROUGHNESS1,? miy iunn afternoons. 7:00 am-1 0:00 pm 2-PIECE i STSflL Includes two pieces of our delicious chicken a leg and a thigh, roasted or fried, Plus rice and a fresh baked muffin . N or biscuit. It s a &)) great deal and a Chapel Hill, NC 27514 J from page 10 ! together a 1 0-play, 57-yard drive in the ! third quarter to score the first touch,-i down against the Wolfpack in 18 reguj? lar-season quarters. On a third-dowoJ play from the NCSU 7, Burnette rolled; left and hit Jauch in the front corner Of". the end zone for the touchdown. yr On the other side of the ball, the UN(3; defense continued to show the effects of,' missing linebacker DwightHollier.wljB; had recorded three straight games of' double-figure tackles against th., Wolfpack. In addition to an already-; bruised defense, Tommy Thigpen was immobilized and carried off the field the start of the fourth quarter. The junior linebackerstretchedanerve inhisshouj- 1 der and may miss up to two weeks. j "I was really concerned about our defense coming into the game because 1 they hadn 't practiced," Brown said. "Six ! or eight guys didn't practice all week, i and you're not going to play very well I when that happens. That's not the same"J defense we had in spring practice." ..'- The main beneficiary of the lacklus-;' ter Tar Heel defense was reserve, Wolfpack quarterback Geoff Bender' UNC might have grabbed the moirieh-4 turn on the first play of the secbrid;' quarter when an Austin Robbiris' jvjt ') broke the arm of State starter Terry; Jordan. But clutch relief play by Beridie; kept the Wolfpack in control. Aftertwo running plays, Bender faced third and 4 at the UNC 26. The redshtrt freshman picked up the blitz, changed the play to isolate flanker Eddie Gomes on UNC cornerback Sean Crocker1, Snd floated a perfect pass to Goines On a deep post for a 10-0 State lead. M October 18 8:00 p.m. Memorial Hall t i imp $ Featuring music from WEST SIDE STORYi GYPSY and many others 3 Tickets available at-1 Carolina Union Box Office 962-1449 VISA and MASTERCARD Accepted UnJI ..the man who perhaps - t '1 more than anyone else has r defined modern American VOI musical theatre..." NEW YUHK I IMtS PhntiP Cull Ammvl Vf" Since 1980 Helium Balloons Singing Massages Cakes, Candles, etc. Unusual Gifts & Toys Portable Helium Tanks Imprinted Balloons Party Supplies jT Care Packages Decorating Service HI 967-3433 cs j 208 W. Main St., Carrboro (comer of Main 1 weivor, diagonal Irom Town Hall) If you need it for Fall Break ij SID'S HAS IT! I SLEEPING BAGS TENTS ; THERMAL UNDERWEAR MOUNTAIN CLOTHING '" Surplus Sid's :: Military Surplus;: 302-A E. Main St. :- Carrboro m i TZ 11 DaiiGons L