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8The Daily Tar HeelThursday, March 31, 1983 CAMPUS CALENDAR Compiled by Janet Olson PuMic wivW miKwncrmmU must be turned into die box outside the DTH offices in the Carolina Union by I p.m. if the are lo be run the next day. Only announcements from University recognized and campus organizations wilt be printed. A announcement must be mailed to 25 words and can only run for two days. In the event that the Calendar docs not nm because of space Mutilations, groups should turn in announcements at least two days in advance to ensure they ma at least TODAY'S ACTIVITIES Professor Ann Mayer, University of Pennsylvania, will speak on "Women and Islamic Uw in the Modem World" at 8 p.m. in III Murphey HaU. IVCF northwest chapter invites you and your friends to a very special Easter worship service at 7 p.m. in the Conference Room of the Chapel of the Cross. , FeBowship of Christian Athletes will meet at 8:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. John and Pauline, singers, will be there for a special program. Come and bring a friend. Kappa Delta Sorority Is sponsoring an Easter Egg Hunt at 2:30 p.m. at University Baptist Church. Girls who are helping should plan to stay until 4:30 p.m. UNC Cycling Club will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. There will be a slide show of Mark's cross-country trip. Professor James P. Leary, University of Kentucky, will speak on his field studies of "Fin fan-American Dance Music," at 8 p.m. in 213 Carolina Union. The Friends of the Library will hold their annual dinner meeting, beginning with a reception at 6 p.m. in the Carolina Inn. Senator Gary Hart, a leading contender in the race for the Democratic presidential nomination, will speak at 3:30 p.m. in 100 Hamilton Hall. The Baptist Student Union worship will begin at 3:45 p.m. It will be a Maundy Thursday service led by students. Women in development will sponsor a panel discussion "For Better or for Worse? Development Aid and Third World Women" at 8 p.m. at the Chapel of the Cross. Thursday's Greek Week events will be a band party in the Carolina Union and Greek games from 2 until 4 p.m. on the Ehringhaus field. IVCF mid-campus chapter will hold its annual Easter wor ship service at 7 p.m. in the Carolina Union. Come to share our celebration of this blessed event. The Granville chapter of IVCF will present an Easter musical at 7 p.m. in the Fellowship Hall in the basement of the Univer sity Methodist Church. Midwife and author Ina Mary Gaskia will speak on her ob stetrical practice at 12:30 p.m. in 228 Rosenau Hall and at 7:30 p.m. in 106 Berryhill HaU. The Buddhist Studies Association will hold its organizational ' meeting at 7:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. Check the schedule for the room number. College Foundation, Inc. Borrower Conferences will be held at 12:13, 1:13 and 2:13 p.m. in the Carolina Union Auditorium. All previous borrowers must attend to qualify for CFI loans for a future academic period. We do it daily (Site Satlg (Far !wl team From page 1 "The students on the teams worked very hard all year long and they represented the University well," Allison said. Pulver said that the Individual Events Team was the top team in an eight state district while Young earned first place in dividual honors this year. "It's good to see the Educational Foundation support this academic team," Allison said. COMING EVENTS The AXO photo contest and open house for Easter seals will be held from 2 until S p.m. April 10 at 213 East Rosemary Street. Entries are due April 8. Call 968-0057. ITEMS OF INTEREST STAND is sponsoring a day kmg lobbying trip to Washing ton to support the freeze on April 12. Look in the Pit for more information or check at the Campus Y. The Carolina Student Fund will accept applications for stu dent member at large positions on the steering committee until noon April 8. Applications are available at the Union Desk, the SCSF office, third floor South Building, or the Carolina An nual Giving Office. UNC majorette try-outs will be held April 9. Anyone in terested must pick up an information letter at the Union Desk. Applications for co-chairperson of the '83 Campus Y Crafts Bazaar are available in the Y office and are due April 3. 1983-S4 Film Committee applications are available at the Union Desk and are due Friday. A Personal Information Files Workshop will be offered. For required preregistration, stop by the Health Sciences Library Information Desk or call 962-0700. The New Well, the campus wellness resource center, is open from 9 a.m. until S p.m. Monday through Friday and is located on the second floor of SHS in the Health Education Seminar Room. Any present or past volunteers at the Murdoch Center in terested in directing, the volunteer program next year are asked to apply at the Campus Y this week. Sen. Hart to speak today at UNC Sen. Gary Hart, D-Colo., will speak Thursday at 3:30 p.m. in 100 Hamilton Hall. Hart who is a candidate for the Democratic Party's presidential nomina tion, serves on the Senate Armed Ser vices, Environment and Intelligence com mittees. From 1970 to 1972, Hart was na tional campaign director for presidential candidate George McGovern. j mmmm iPtmimmnmitiM F IT'S FUN YOU'RE LOOKING FOR, 3-D If JUL If CAROLINA'S FINEST OUTDOOR ENTERTAINMENT CENTER MYRTLE BEACH, S.C. HOME OF THE $1 0,000 LADIES1 SHORT SHORTS CONTEST JUNE 1, 1983 AUGUST 10, 1983 SPECIAL COLLEGE NIGHTS AND HAPPY HOURS during SPRING BREAIC '83 ' v ; ; THE AFTERDECK ANNOUNCES THE BEACH'S BEST LIVE ENTERTAINMENT EASTER WEEKEND '83 SEE OR BE ONE OF THE CAROLINA GIRLS DOWN AT THE BEACH CLUB WITH V: . .1 r s GENERAL NORMAN JOHNSON and 77 ri ir- i a irk sr i nr tli r nrA nn V7 77 1 nE- wn-iniviLiN ur 1 1 il Dwnnu -Y GRAB YOUR BUNNY AND HOP ON IT! XX XX I nnnnnnnnnnnnnaoaDnnnnannnnnnonnpoa i ii sj : v -0- j COUPON M t lilllH Upw r ? wy. f frin ii tf tant IKwff BE MY GUEST DURING SPRING BREAK '83. PRESENT THIS COUPON AND A VALID '83 COLLEGE I.D. FOR FREE ADMISSION APRIL 4-31, '83 OR $2.00 OFF ON EASTER WEEKEND. HAPPY HUNTING! 3- "Sic" fcfpj ZZHVJY. 17 N. ON THE INTERCOAGTAL WATERWAY. ' n )COUPON i i i 1 1 ii I, i i i i I a llllllili Silk ii fl f"" mf WQ P-" W nVaaiA ilniiaal bnaWl aaManf "frirralt fcul ndll laNaaaf Aiming for league title UNC soccer club defeats State By MIKE WATERS Staff Writer Last Sunday fourteen men in North Carolina soccer uniforms took the field at N.C. Central University, while most of Chapel Hill's citizens sat glued to their televisions watching the basketball Tar Heels. Who were these men and why were they about to play soccer in a driving rainstorm on a mud-soaked football field? Clubs The fourteen undergraduate, graduate and doctoral students com prised the UNC's men's soccer club, and as club president Larry Goodson explained, "We're out here because we enjoy it. We really like to play; we have to." A member of the N.C. Soccer League's Triangle Division, UNC entered Sunday's game trailing N.C. State's entry by a "single standings point. State boasted a 4-0-1 Record compared with the Tar Heels1! 3-0-2 mark. ' ' b . ( Before the game nobody was think ing about league standings. A slow, steady rain had been falling since mor ning. The squad adjusted. They changed clothes in the protected stairwell leading to the pressbox. One look at. the field and most people would have gone back to a warm shower; the players went out to warm up. UNC controlled the ball throughout the first half. N.C. Central managed just three shots on goal. Freshman goalkeeper Bruce Kallor knocked all three away. The Tar Heels took a one goal lead into the second half follow ing a Goodson penalty kick. During the intermission there was no locker room pep talk. There wasn't a locker room. The team briefly discussed the first half and planned for the final 45 minutes. A few players took refuge from the rain underneath the leaky bleachers. The UNC team provided the same relentless pressure in the second half. And the . Eagle defense was visibly weakening. Katey Assem, a doctoral student from Ghana, hit Goodson with a crossing pass, and the forward had no trouble finding the back of the net. Two minutes later Assem sent another pass over the middle; this time Dave Sanders was the open man. Sanders' score increased the lead to 3-0. Goodson tallied the fourth and final goal on a breakaway after faking a de fender into the mud. Five minutes later Kallor had his shutout. Is there more than just their love for the game that drives these people to play in lousy weather without the fans and the glory? "We do have a team goal," Good son said. "We want to get into the state playoffs and do well there. Some of these guys were on high school championship teams, some have always played on cellar dwellers. It's important to us to win our division." Last Sunday, N.C. State lost to Miller Atlas of Fayetteville, 5-3. UNC now leads the Triangle Division by one point as the most important game of the season nears. On April 16 the Tar Heels and State, after playing to a draw in their first match, meet on the Astroturf Field. Olympic Spirit wins first DU basketball tournament Olympic Spirit basketball team won the First Annual Delta Upsilon Roundball Classic, a 64-team smgle-elimination basketball tournament. The classic raised $1,966 for the American Cancer Society. Olympic Spirit downed the Skywalkers ' 92-74 Tuesday night in Carmichael Audi torium to win the championship. David Binion scored 33 points, and Donald Sin clair had 25 to pace Olympic Spirit. Dar ryl Summey led the losers with 28 points. In the semifinals, Olympic Spirit edged the Uniques (a team of varsity football players) 72-70, and the Skywalkers beat Mr. Wizard 83-65. Binion, who scored 52 points in the final two games, was named most valuable player of the tourney. Also named to the all-tournament team were: Donald Sinclair, Darryl Summey, Pon cho Mack, Jim Crawford, Scott Stanka vage and Mark Dale. -; 11101 gee expejptiee Tuesday, April 5 Gerrard Hall 8 p.m. wit I fillip! STATE PREMIERE A provocative new film from the director of "Return of the Secaucus 7" "YES! YES!" Siskel & Ebert , ; ' Turn i , rnr v - ' .""''"" "'I i f If MIDNIGHT Fri. & Sat. "TAXI ZUM KLO" No one under 18 3 illiill :: :::;::::,,x::-:::.::::;::: as a nn mam r a k m mm S::J::x:::::::::;:::v::::::::::::: :::v:::wx::i:x:;:::::: Linda Griffiths in a film by John Sayies " 'LIANNA' LOOKS AND SOUNDS AUTHENTIC. It's , neither slick, like 'Making Love' nor does it pretend to be about something else, like 'Personal Best.' Linda Griffiths is splendid. Her Li anna is . . . heroic." Vincent Carby, New York Times United iittsis C!:c3 Dally 3:00 5:05 7:10 9:15 "A SMORGASBORD OF COMIC SURPRISES . . . Paul Barters spicy staw of sax and murder is a taste treat second to none . . . funny enough to become the sleeper comedy of the year." Godfrey Cheshire, THE SPECTATOR 1 jw s.' 1X f "ONE OF THE FUNNIEST OFF-BEAT COMEDIES IN MANY A SEASONl" Judith Crist EXTRA SHOW Fri. & Sat. 11:30 p.m. pgy 3:S0 5:30 7:30 9:30 JJ I pon't suppose you'd CARE TO STOP WATCHING TV AND HELP ME WITH MY HOMEWORK... IS THERE ANY WAY I CAN MAKE YOU FEEL SO GUILTY YOU'LL JUST HAVE TO HELP ME? 1963 Untied Feature Syndicate, mc. I J 3-31 ( YOU GIVE UP VTOOEASY COUNTY rJf duome.. ffiig? wV0xt wfW you XW XUV&CMER U4r WHICH 15 WHY I ifM W P0IKIS6 W WW SU&tCnMT I CJZKTfUUPOJm... ' AN5WW1D A...A... 11 KI55eP. 6AG6ING I I AMF IN56CUKITI66... PEUCATE QUESTION... A ' " , ' 50t4?Ff5H f ' feS fAnP f rri ffe ? rf1 ( T'Vi NEW r U M v)km m W'&e&kim . ritz? f Ul J-wWLo t3 v - 5C "P w air wnh 07) Cfrx. cleib 1
Daily Tar Heel (Chapel Hill, N.C.)
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March 31, 1983, edition 1
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