Day! s 1 if') 'S5..v V " 1 STARTING JUNE 11th: Steven Spielberg's "E.T." The Extra-Terrestnal" j 3:45 5:45 7:45 9:45 T IT 11 I . - . - - " If! THIS HOSPITAL YOUR NEXT VISIT MAY BE YOUR LAST. WEEKEND LATE SHOW nffAffifr PUTT REDUCED ADMISSION 1 TICKETS, 2 AVAILABLE AT THE i STUDENT UNION AND -NCMK CASHIER, Fri. & Sat at 11:30 PG ZiSiTiNG HOU$5 PIERRE OAVIO and VICTOR SOLNICW Present VISmNG HOURS a, HE EUXT WJUJA3I SXATXER KEXAEL IK3XSKJE - UMSA PURL Shows at 3:15 5:15 7:15 9:15 E XTOfl x4 ... tS5& r I I?, i! (in RS) f fife 4 ' A 41 v fx 5 1 1 , : JV , -i' PARAMOUNT PICTURES presents ' STAR TREK II: THE WRATH OF KHAN Starring WILLIAM SHATNER LEONARD NIMOY also Starring BIBI BESCH and PAUL WINRELD asT&RELL Introducing KIRSTIE ALLEY as SAAVIK and Starring RICARDO MONTALBAN as KHAN Executive Consultant GENE RODDENBERRY Based on STAR TREK Created by GENE RODDENBERRY Executive Producer HARVE BENNETT Screenplay bv JACK B. SOWARDS Storv by HARVE BENNETT and JACK B. SOWARDS Produced by ROBERT SALUN Directed by NICHOLAS MEYER A PARAMOUNT nnimKcrranl" DA M AVICIOM (S5 P nTl OF- JTSl. PICTURE : H SEUCTEO MWCS PGl PAnamu. cusakse sussteo o SOME MATEMM. MAY MOT 9t SUITMBLC FOR CHftjM&fl CoprntCMCMUOCaby Pmnut Pickjns Caporaton. Al Agni Rmmd STAR TREK is mgaMred trxtsmark at Psf amount Piclurm Corporation 5 v.. - EAST FRAKKUN STREET S42-3SS1 SHOWS AT 2:30 o 5:00 7:30 o 10:00 SPORTS Fans keep action alive on the side JACKIE BLACKBURN Staff Writer Coming from up "Balmor" way and head ing from the Hill down south, they travelled some three to four hours to Charlottesville, Va. They, 10,011 of them, came to see a re match of. North Carolina's 14-13 lacrosse championship of last year that was played in Princeton, N.J. vThe crowd, which filled most of the lower seating in the stadium, saw North Carolina attackman Dave Wingate score the first four UNC goals and cap the scoring with the seventh Tar Heel point The goals gave Win gate, the team's leading scorer for the sea son, 12 career goals against Johns Hopkins in three games and 11 goals for the 1982 NCAA Tournament. They saw a number of infractions in the final two quarters, including 11 slashing and unnecessary roughness calls. North Carolina amassed 10 penalties for eight and one-half minutes. The Blue Jays capitalized on the extra-man situations, hitting the goal on two extra-man shots, but they lost several posses sions when players threw the ball away. The 10,000 plus crowd saw the lowest scoring game in the NCAA's 11-year lacrosse tournament history; but while the game may have lacked the flashy offensive struggle characteristic of last year's matchup, the ac . tivity on and around the playing field cer tainly held its own aura. With 13 seconds remaining on the clock in the third quarter, chants of "Four Corners" arose from the Carolina side of the stadium as the UNC midfielders tossed the ball around the front of the Johns Hopkins defense. "God, they're going to play lacrosse like they play basketball," one spectator, wiping his forehead in the 90-degree heat, said about UNC 's slow tempo. Several people kept their eyes open for UVA's Ralph Sampson during the game. Whether the basketball standout was on the Johns Hopkins side of the field or in Phila delphia for an NBA playoff game, there were many other "celebrities" present that turned some heads: Chris Brust, Matt Dough erty, and members of the wrestling and foot ball squads came to support the Tar Heels. Several male varsity cheerleaders led the UNC fans in the "Gimme a C. . ." cheer, while members of the band sat across the field and played the fight song. Grandstand coaches were quite numerous for both teams, even in the press box, shout ing instructions and criticisms throughout the match. "They must be from (N.C.) State," one "coach" said after an official disallowed a UNC goal when he ruled Mike Burnette had been in the crease. Members of the press were quite vocal in their support for either Johns Hopkins or UNC in the fourth quarter, talking among one another and occasionally chiming in with the shouts of the crowd. And no matter how sunburned they got or how uncomfortable they were from sleep ing in a box car at the depot the night before, or how frustrated they were trying to outguess their opponents, each person was there to benefit their team. NOTE: ESPN, who covered the game on a tape-delayed basis, will play back the game at 4 p.m. June 10. 12 The Tar Heel Thursday, June 3, 1982