The gamecock. (Columbia, S.C.) 1908-2006, November 11, 1991, Page 9, Image 9

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1 Lady Coc S. Florida By SEAN RYAN Staff Writer As a sigh of relief pa: throughout Sol Blatt P.E. Ce the Lady Gamecock vollej team held off a pesky squad I East Tennessee State to end | weekend matches in the Gi cock Invitational. The Ga r>r?r"Uo finicho/^ tha Inumir wvsvxv o lAiiionvu iiiv luumai with one win and two losses. USC took the first game o match 15-3, but fell apart ir second game to lose 15-4. Lady Gamecocks came from hind in the third game at 8score the final 12 points and 15-8. ETSU rallied to eras< 11-3 deficit to take the fc game 16-14. USC then cl< out the match with a tight 1 game to win the match. ^ "We played very hard, with a lot of emotion," Libby Ralston, who led the t with 17 kills. Caryn Case a< etcetera < ards Fuller. Miller suffers strained tendon in his lower leg, missed the remainder of game and is questionable for I week's came at Nnrth Pa ml Also, Fuller had his worst g< of the season, going ll-for-27 More from the NBA: Kei Anderson got housed in his f fessional debut. The point gu who should have stayed in c lege was taken to school by Is Thomas Saturday when the N lost to the Pistons. Althoi Thomas deserves little praise, did show a snot-nosed roo I M I ^ ^ F.N. V INVES 1 N are ac ST ' We are expanc alumni to send for the positioi positions avail; training. Spac personal interv I I STAN VAN 5400 GLENWt SUITE RELEIGH, N 1-800-537 k 270 k ks top ETSU, I Co takes tourney Bow 13 kills and Jodi Thompson re- n T, . corded 42 assists in the win. ByTheAssc ssed The Gamecocks opened the For the t nter, tournament with a 3-0 loss to Orange Bow fball South Rorida, who went 3-0 in \ team from the tournament, and was declared ^me,11 won I the the winner. Ramona Griffith had Notre D; ime- 13 kills in the loss. Next, USC Tennessee i tme- played S.E. Missouri St. and was Fiesta E nent defeated three games to one. national title clinch an C "We played very inconsistent between thf in the tournament, coach Bonnie winner ai ' ? Kenny said. "We did execute champion. very well, and we went after the Top-rank 3 tQ ball hard in the win." No. 2 Mian win The Lady Gamecocks resume the Orange ] 5 an SEC play on Nov. 15 against tbeir sbowd iurth Kentucky, and again on Nov. 17 Tallahassee ased against Tennessee. These will be ^'2 Eigl 5-12 the final two home matches for braska or C seniors Caryn Case and Amy on New Yea and Skidmore. This is also the last Colorado said chance to see the Lady Game- victory ovei team cocks in action this year, so ^ird conse< A An A nr\mc\ rvnt on/4 cnnnArf fKa ton?v> HD^C BOWl. iUWl wuuiv/ uui anu ijuppyu uiv/ u^aui. c ranked No. they went Notre Dam ontinued from page 8 beating the I If Miami how to run point. Charles Bark- Hurricanes * d a ley: unstoppable. Barkley had 31 ing into the left points, 15 rebounds and nine as- will be heav the sists against Golden State and is nal two reg this on an unbelievable pace. Boston Col ina. News from the wonderful home again* ime world of the NFL: Isn't it re- Nov. 30. fmeliinff tn caa "/IxrnaefA/*? tAome T?1~? 1 A . iiv/jiuug jw uj uaoij ivauu rlUI 1U<* my like the New York Giants and tougher roac >ro- San Francisco 49ers doing past Miami ard poorly? It is even sweeter that No. 5 Flor :ol- the Giants are stinking it up after Nov. 30 to i iah the New York Mets made such a While Nc [ets strong showing in this year's jq Tennessc igh baseball season. To coin a cliche, $iq Orange he go Giants and take the Mets and picture for s kie Knicks with you. New Year's Where, f Rut nf nnursp- F1?!lda,s?)< vy v ^ II 11 S M] _ ? # be the Suga ftnrlm fS battle with] \A/\A/t Vt/t %/?? up the auti beating K Another po: ^5^WUSC-FM -"Jghu "pf ,erifHorid?a ^ the Seminol 1 Fiesta, Co VOLF & CO., I TMENT BANK 10 WALL ST. .Y., N.Y. 10005 cepting resumes OCKBROKER! ling nationwide and invite all senic resumes or call. All majors are o i of account executive (stockbroke able are entry level and have comp e is limited. Call & reserve your t iew today! ?or More Information ETTEN GEORGE HUBB; )OD AVE. 621 LYNNHAVEN PA1 215 SUITE 220 .C. 27612 VIRGINIA BEACH, V -2190 1-800-582-844^ SEAN KILMARTIN 9 WATER RIDGE PARKWAY SUITE 400 CHARLOTTE, NC 28217 1-800-428-5494 EEOC Member NASD & SIPC liege teams / race hits final tw (dated Press Clnri/to mnn't rrr " A iUliUU UUIIV TT VII i hird straight year, the because it would me; '1 could feature the No. with Florida, the nation. Only this Notre Dame may 't be Colorado. major bowl despite chime's 35-34 loss to spots to No. 12 in 1 on Saturday knocked poll. The winner of lowl out of a possible Notre Dame-Penn : game and appeared to could go to the Cotton )range Bowl matchup The No. 8 Nittany > Florida State-Miami in the hunt for a big 1 nd the Big Eight ing Maryland 47-7 Sal No. 2 Miami 27, W.1 ed Florida State and At Miami, the Hur li both want to go to overcame a sluggish Bowl, so the winner of their 43rd consecutive own next Saturday in Orange Bowl, seems certain to play No. 3 Washington 14 it champ ? either Ne- At Los Angeles, ] Colorado ? in Miami ran for 158 yards ani r's Day. downs and the Was! needs an Oklahoma defense came up with " Nebraska to earn its No. 4 Michigan 59, b :utive trip to the Or- 14 The Buffaloes were At Ann Arbor, De 1 the past two times ard gained 201 all-p to Miami, losing to and Michigan (8-1) e 21-6 in 1990 and touchdowns on its rish 10-9 in 1991. plays, beats Florida State, the No. 5 Florida 45, Ge< should be No. 1 head- At Jacksonville, S > Orange Bowl. They ews threw for 303 ya ily favored in their fi- touchdowns as Fli ular-season games, at clinched a tie for its lege on Nov. 23 and SEC title. >t San Diego State on No. 6 California 27, 14 State has a much Linsdey Chapman, I. If the Seminoles get injured Russell White , they still must beat HO yards and two to ida at Gainesville on visiting Cal (8-1) hai emain No. 1. State its 14th straight < tre Dame's loss to No. No- 7 Alabama 20, LI >e cleared things up for At Baton Rouge, I Bowl, it muddled the scored on a 90-yard pi ome of the other major Alabama (8-1) and / games. don blocked a 28-yai or instance, does the attempt that would h 5-Miami loser go? game with 2:39 left, iami, the answer could No. 8 Penn St. 47, M r Bowl for an intrastate At Baltimore, Ton Florida, which can lock came Penn State's cai amatic SEC berth by passing yardage as thi entucky next week, continued their doi ssibility for the Hurri- Maryland, e Fiesta Bowl, where No. 9 Iowa 38, Indiai be matched against bit- At Iowa City, firsi re Dame. Jim Hartlieb threw tvs State loses to Miami, for Iowa (8-1) and M es would end up in the tied a school recor tton or Blockbuster, touchdowns. No. 10 Tennessee Notre Dame 34 ? At South Bend, th ]VI M ^ overcome a 24-poini I ^1 1 * beat the Irish (8-2X > **" 11 w Lincoln deflected a 1 r- -w-^ goal attempt by backu Li Leonard as time ran o kJLi JLV.k_7 No. 11 Nebraska 59, B B ^ > for A. 23452 ^ ^ ups ? begin th< rn Miami c an?a"remateh By The Associated Pre Miami regained so still go to a si?n of second place ii opping seven Associated tress cone Sunday's AP poll, setting up a No. next week's showdown with Flo State game ?ext Saturday at Tallal i or Sugar. The Hurricanes, wh< Lions stayed Washington for I x>wl by rout- UP sP?t this past w& turday. one point ahead of tl Virginia 3 after beating West Virj ricanes (8-0) Miami (8-0) recei start to win first-place votes and 1 ; game at the from a nationwide sports writers and br , USC 3 No. 3 Washington (9 Rp.nn Rrvant defeated Southern ( d two touch- 14-3, got four first-p lington (9-0) and 1,412 points, big plays. Florida State (10-0) Northwestern t?P sP?t a^r ^ow Carolina 38-10. The smond How- received 53 of 60 urpose yards votes and 1,492 points scored three ' ^Tie Florida State-M first seven ^e the first 1-^ since top-ranked Nc >rgia 13 beat No. 2 Michigan ^ hane Matth- 1989. irds and four Michigan (8-1) ren orida (8-1) 4 in this week's poll ; first official Ping Northwestern 59 Florida (8-1) moved i Oregon St t0 No. 5 after beatin 45-13. filling in for California (8-1) rosi rushed for 10 N?- 6 following a uchdowns as tided Oregon At Lawrence, freslir defeat Jones ran for school rec SU 17 yards and six touchdo )avid Palmer Cornhuskers (7-1-1) ral ant return for 17-0 deficit. Antonio Lon- No. 14 E. Carolina 48, rd field goal sippi 20 lave tied the At Hattiesburg, Jeff 1 for 361 yards and five l arvlnnri 7 as thp. Piratp.s fR-11 y Sacca be- eighth straight. eer leader in No. 15 Clemson 21, b s Lions (8-2) 6 mination of At Chapel Hill, quan Chane Cameron ran foi ia 21 and scored two touchdo t-time starter Tigers (6-1-1). 'O TD passes No. 16 Colorado 16, ike Saunders St. 12 d with four At Stillwater, Rob threw a 20-yard touchdc Ma 1 PKrietion Uoiirio r\n o 9 ii w? a a# v/iuuLiaii i auiia v/n a goal with six seconds e Vols (6-2) Buffaloes (6-2-1). t deficit and No. 18 Oklahoma 56 when Jeremy 16 27-yard field At Columbia, Mil p kicker Rob rushed for 217 yards i ut four touchdowns to lea< Kansas 23 ers f7-?.V i EAST TO f| ^B:-:?^:^^^*8H| _^|. ;.v jjj^^ jRijP'^ A. i> x^H imuj^ We ai WORKING FOR STUDE UPS DELIVE SIGN UP T ...for interviews to be conducte You MUST sign up to be int Where: Student Emp When: 9 am Many time slots available with varie available for 11 pm - 3 am i final push 1 zlaims 2nd place tory over Oregon State and Alatie posses- bama (8-1) jumped one place to n Sunday's No. 7 after edging Louisiana ge football State 20-17. I vs. No. 2 Penn State (8-2), which rida State blasted Maryland 47-7, climbed lassee. one spot to No. 8. Iowa (8-1) 3 were tied also went up a notch, to No. 9, the runner- after beating Indiana 38-21. ek, moved Tennessee's 35-34 victory le Huskies over Notre Dame boosted the yinia 27-3. Volunteers (6-2) three places to ved three No. 10 and dropped the Irish ,413 points (8-2) seven spots to No. 12. panel of Nebraska (7-1-1) stayed No. oadcasters. n after clobbering Kansas -0), which 59-23. r*o1 ifrvrnio n-> a d.ii ii.l 1 l,?ii.ui.uo icxas /\ocm was ioui, iuiiace votes lowed by East Carolina, Clemson, Colorado, Syracuse, Oklaheld on to homa, Ohio State, Baylor, Virgining South nja) Stanford, Brigham Young, Seminoles North Carolina State and Illinois, first-place Stanford, BYU and Illinois , moved into the Top 25, replacing [iami game UCLA, Georgia and Indiana. I matchup Stanford (6-3) jumped to No. >tre Dame 22 ? its first ranking since 1986 >4-19 Sept _ after beating UCLA 27-10. BYU (7-3) moved up to No. mined No. 23 after winning its seventh after whip- straight, a 56-31 victory over 1-1A whilp n: : TII!? - // "v ? ? * ? Wyoming. unnois too; graDDca up a place the final spot in the poll followg Georgia ing a 41-14 pounding of Purdue. UCLA was No. 22 last week, e one spot while Georgia was 23rd and In27-14 vie- diana 25th. / / I nan Calvin No. 19 Ohio State 35, Minnesota ords of 294 6 ~..cr?A - wiia ad uiw V/aiiud juuw, wiiu duucicu a lied from a concussion last week, entered the game late in the first half and , S. Missis- rushed for 95 yards to spark the Buckeyes (7-2) at Minneapolis. Blake threw No. 21 Virginia 42, No. 24 NC touchdowns State 10 won their At Raleigh, Matt Blundin threw for 230 yards and two touchdowns J. Carolina as thf?. Cavaliers (1-1. Wolfpack for the sixth straight teiback De- time. r 117 yards No. 22 Stanford 27, UCLA 10 wns for the At Stanford, Steve Stenstrom threw two touchdown passes and Oklahoma Tommy Vardell ran for one as the Cardinal (6-3) won its fifth in a bie James row. )wn pass to No. 23 BYU 56, Wyoming 31 fake field Ty Detmer passed for two tO lift the tfHirhdnu/nc anH ran fr?r ?M>n ?-W .. ..w * > ?* <M*? *V?4 fcTTW 11IV/IV as the Cougars (7-3) won their , Missouri seventh straight. No. 25 Illinois 41, Purdue 14 :e Gaddis Jason Verduzco threw for 189 ind scoring yards and two touchdowns in the 1 the Soon- first half as the Illini (6-3) pounded Purdue. FIND TIME AT UPS." "UPS is flexible I told them I had a problem?classes all morning and labs in the afternoon. They said, 'No problem. Could I work an evening shift?' Perfect. But that's how UPS is. They make it easy for student to work part-time. "Picking your own schedule is only part of it. I get almost $10,000 a year, paid holidays, paid vacations and medical benefits?all for working about four hours a day. "No other company understands students like UPS. And no other company offers more. They make it easy to work your way through school." -e a equal opportunity employer. NTS WHO WORK FOR US. RS EDUCATION ODAY! >d on Tuesday, Nov. 12. erviewed on Tuesday loyment Office - 5 pm ?d hours. More opportunities & 4 am - 8 am shifts