6The Daily Tar HeelTuesday, October 18, 1983 Joan Dunlap on her soccer By KIMBALL CROSSLEY Staff Writer Not many of the University of North Carolina's athletic scholarships are as vital as Joan Dunlap's. Yes, soccer coach Anson Dorrance needed a fast forward to replace his in jured star, Stephanie Zeh. Yes, Dor rance felt he needed Dunlap to help UNC in its quest for a third straight NCAA championship. And yes, Dun lap is a superior athlete. But the reason this scholarship is so special is because it is for two people, not just one. Joan Dunlap, 22 years old, has a two-year-old son named Johnny. Dunlap's athletic scholarship is not just hers, it is also Johnny's, because it means a whole new chance for both of them. Before Dunlap got a surprise phone call from Dorrance last fall, she was working as a babysitter in Seattle. She had some tentative plans to attend col lege when Johnny was older. However, the financial aid logistical problems of attending college while supporting a child were too much to even consider. Then Dorrance called and offered Dunlap a full scholarship to attend UNC. "I thought it was kind of funny at first," Dunlap says about Dorrance's call. She was hesitant about attending UNC until Dorrance finally told her it would be a full scholarship. "There's no way I could do it without a full scholarship." Dorrance became interested in Dun lap when he heard about an incredibly fast forward playing on a championship club team in Seattle. He flew there to watch Dunlap play and was impressed "one of the best athletes I've ever seen in my life" with her explosive ness as a goal scorer. And so it is surprising that when you meet the 5-foot-7-inch, blonde-haired and blue-eyed Dunlap, you meet a fairly average North Carolina student. But Dunlap is different. She usually carries a blonde-haired, blue-eyed bundle of energy at her hip. Dunlap has a lot of weight on her shoulders as well as on her hip. She's a full-time student, athlete and mother. But she calls the responsibility a challenge, and likens it to a puzzle. Campus Calendar TODAY'S ACTIVITIES The Democratic Socialists of America will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Union. Joe Morris will lead a program on N.C. Migrant farm workers. The UNC Young Democrats Executive Committee will meet at 8:30 p.m. in the Union. Everyone is invited as we finalize plans for our seminar on economics. Senior Class Committee meeting: 3:30 p.m. in the Carolina Union. The N.C. Lesbian and Gay Health Project sponsored by CGA will meet and present a program on AIDS at 8 p.m. in the Union. Check the door of the CGA' office or at the Union Desk for the room number. An organizational meeting for all those interested in apply ing for the University of New Hampshire exchange for the spring semester will be in the Union. WENDY'S KIND OF PEOPLE You're a breed apart. Always striving to be the best at what you do. Never settling for second best. You know the importance of value, and the value of quality. It's an attitude. A way of life. You're Wendy's kind of people. You set your standards high. You're discriminating about everything. We have the best of everything: Flexible hours to suit the busy housewife and students. ntjTs. Very pleasant surroundings jjjUj Excellent starting pay ??Hl!Sp Possibility of advancement JkyW into management 50 discount on meals. We won't settle for second best, because we know you won't settle for second best. Please apply in person between 24 p.m. Wendy's 100 S. Greensboro St. Carrboro, N.C. 27510 km WHAT PIP YOUR BROTHER SPIKE SAY IN HIS LETTER? IS HE ALL RI6HT? SORT Anxious... m DJLCOM COUNTY WCOOKftTIHISMPHOMe 8LL, mm SHOW 66 MOOT 63BUCK6,t5(Mb3t PUfOhT A5 IF SGM680C7 HAP AWFUL IF VW MESS WITH OUR PH0N6 Ktt AOAlrJ, TrRU- K NO GLPZU? Been wrm ywr pinmer R?R AN ENTIRE MONTH. i ii jt m supports two scholarship The pieces fit this way: When Dunlap is in classes, Johnny stays at a church day-care center. When Dunlap and the team are on the road, Johnny stays with a team trainer's wife. When Dunlap is at home or on the field, either during practice or a game, Johnny is nearby, usually in a sandbox (the track team's jumping pit), or in another athlete's playful arms. The only piece that Dunlap has trou ble fitting in is the studying. Though she is an ambitious nutrition major, Dunlap regrets not being able to devote more time to her studies. "I'm at a point in my life where I'd really like to challenge myself in that way," she says, "but it is impossible right now." When you meet Johnny, you under stand just how impossible it must be to study with him in the same household. If he's not demanding your attention with his cute looks, he'll demand it by jumping playfully onto your shoulders, or shouting "Look it!" from across the room while holding up something as trivial as a bottle cap. "He's pretty sociable," Dunlap says. Besides being a social butterfly, Johnny seems to be quite a potential star athlete himself. "Anson (Dorrance coaches the UNC men's team as well) is already talking to me about recruiting him," Dunlap says. Unfortunately for Dunlap, Johnny's favorite sport isn't soccer, it's basket ball. Dunlap says she has a hard time keeping him off any nearby basketball court, and she's already investigating the UNC basketball ticket distribution policy to see if she can get Johnny in to see the games. Worrying about basketball in Oc tober? It seems North Carolina and the Dunlaps were made for each other. But it hasn't always been that way. The first three weeks in Chapel Hill were the toughest, says Dunlap, because she had to carry Johnny everywhere they went in North Carolina's August heat, the likes of which neither had ex perienced in Seattle. A $500, green Volkswagon Bug, the cooling of the weather, and Johnny's increased desire to walk the red brick of Chapel Hill on his own have all eased that situation. The UNC-CH College Republicans will meet at 8 p.m. in the Union. "Let the People Go" petitions will be discussed. - Professor Stanley Black will discuss the International Monetary Fund, its function and its future, at 7 p.m. in the upstairs lounge of the Campus Y. The Astronomy Club presents "Where Dreams Come True," a NASA film about working for NASA, at 7:30 in Phillips 247. Club information: 968-0704. The November 12ih Coalition for the Nov. 12 march in D.C. protesting U.S. intervention in Central America will meet at S p.m. in the Union. Any interested individuals or group representatives welcome. Mandatory candidates meeting at S p.m. in Room 230 of the Union for candidates running in CCC graduate districts 2, 3, 4 and 5 in the election to be held Oct. 25. Petitions are also due by 5 p.m. in Room 230. rrmvv Wendy's 100 Scarlett Drive Chapel .Hill, N.C. 27514 Wr HE'S FOUND HE SAYS HE FEELS OF LONELY ANP SOMEONE TO TALK ANP THAT SEEMS TO HELP.. iii 3 v I NOW GOOP WIGHT. A X i ..... ..-x.. l,,.,..t..- MtMM,. .ii.ii.lrfcaiiojlinrr-,f4v. jV'4 mill II HI II I II I I lltWWWWWaaii8MI Joan Dunlap says she is kept busy raising her son Johnny, keeping up with her studies and playing forward for the UNC women's soccer team. Other problems are sure to arise, and Dunlap will be the first to tell you that she has a long way to go until the puzzle is completed. So far, though, "It isn't easy, but it's gone a lot better than I im agined," Dunlap says. Dunlap is happy and thankful to be where she is. It is doubtful that when Dunlap was 10 years old and playing organized soccer for the first time she could have imagined just how impor tant this silly game, in which you're not even allowed to touch the ball with your Carolina Students for Rufus Edmisten will hold a meeting at 9:30 p.m., 106-B Bolinwood Apts. Any interested persons are welcome to attend. Call Kelly 929-8196 or Jay at 933-3802 for more information. The Association of International Students meets at 4:45 p.m. in the International Center. All interested persons are welcome; refreshments will be served. Interviewing Workshop at 3:30 p.m. in 210 Hanes Hall. Techniques for developing 'effective interviewing sltills will be discussed. NCSL will not meet. Meet at the Union Circle at 5:30 p.m. if you want to go to the State Fair. Delta Sigma Pi will bold a business meeting at 6:30 p.m. in the Union. There will be an Executive Committee meeting at 6 p.m. Check desk for room number. The University of New Hampshire-UNC semester exchange program is having an informational meeting at 8 p.m. in the Union for all students interested in going to NH this spring. The Phi Eta Sigma course description layout committee will meet at 7:30 p.m. in the Union. All members interested in help ing are encouraged to attend. Check desk for room number. COMING EVENTS Poet James Applewhite will read from his work on Oct. 26 at 4 p.m. in Room 224 Greenlaw. Applewhite is the author of three books of poems, all available at the Bull's Head and at the reading. Reception following. Colonel l&liutnet'js Best Kept Secret in Town! Chutney's Prime Rib Sandwich and other late night specials served until 2 am. Don't forget Happy Hour from 9 pm to 2 am Monday and Tuesday. 300 West Rosemary Street 942-7575 Luncheon Specials available at lunch 11 to 2 p.m. M-F Pizza Buffet Spaghetti Lasagna Salad Bar J. Great Potato Thurs. 11 a.m.-midnite. Fri. & Sat. 11 PRESENT THIS AD FOR 2 FOR 1 PIZZA SPECIAL! I Open Mon i F 208 W. FRANKLIN ST. 942-5149 1 HAP THIS STRAN6E frj - PREAM LAST I hV T0J e by Bertie Breathed ms wrTHiHe SLBCfRICBfLL mp no Bern FOR TWO He,cFcwRse, mmivp. S?-- e V A A i X" AV.V.'.V, A. . - O T-X'.V ' V.V. V DTHRyke Longest hands, would become in her life. Even last fall, when Dunlap was 21 and the mother of a fatherless, one-year-old boy, playing club soccer and seemingly headed nowhere, it is hard to imagine the drastic changes the game would bring about. But now Joan Dunlap is 22, attending college and supporting a son on her own, and is still playing that game. A game that suddenly doesn't seem so silly anymore. UNC Hash House Harriers will meet Wednesday at 5 p.m. on Woollen Gym steps. Join this fun and unique group. Professor Daniel Naiman of Johns Hopkins University will speak on "Simultaneous Confidence Bounds For Multilinear Regression Functions Over Rectangular Regions" on Monday at 3:30 p.m. in Phillips 324. Refreshments will be served in 316 at 3 p.m. ITEMS OF INTEREST Class portraits will be taken Oct. 24-28 and Oct. 31-Nov. 4. Senior portraits will be taken Oct. 24-28 and all others Oct. 31-Nov. 4. No sitting fee. Call 962-1259 to make an appoint ment or come by 106 Union. Rape can happen to you! Have your R.A. or organization leader request a rape awareness program for your group. Call 966-2281 ext. 275 for more info. The Student Government Hotline is now open for informa tional service Monday-Friday from 1 to 5 p.m. Answering ser vice is also available 24 hours a day. Pick up the phone and give us a call 962-5200. Want a good part-time job? Become an academic tutor. Set your own wages and hours. Apply in Suite D, Room 207 in the Union. Foreign Service Officer Exam is Dec. 3. Applications must be received by Oct. 21. Applications available in Nash Hall. 3 Nightly Specials Monday and Tuesday Pizza uffet All th Pizza and salad you can eat only $3.20 Wednesday Lasagna and Spaghetti Buffet All the spaghetti and salad you can eat or one serving of lasagna and all the salad you can eat only $3.20 $2.95 $1.95 $2.95 $1.95 - 1 a.m.. Sun. 4-U P m WEDNESDAY: 3 PM MEN'S SOCCER VS BELMONT ABBEY FETZER FIELD The Tar Heel booters are taking on impressive non-conference teams and hope to continue their winning ways! THURSDAY: FRIDAY-SUNDAY: Bpobts Despite perfect start, Tar Heels are not losing sight of ACC goals By FRANK KENNEDY Assistant Sports Editor RALEIGH Saturday's victory over N.C. State meant a lot to the Tar Heel players, especially the seniors who have never lost to a Wolfpack team. A win over a bitter rival usually does that. But there was "ho exuberant celebrating in the locker rooms after the game, no champagne on ice, no tears of joy. There was, instead, that sense of guarded opti mism that a team in UNC's position should have. The fact that the Tar Heels are now 7-0 does not come as much of a surprise to anyone. UNC wasn't expected to lose if at all until the Maryland outing, now two weeks away. So in many ways, the Tar Heels have only completed a two-month preliminary for the real season, which will feature the likes of the Terrapins and Clemson on consecutive weeks, followed by surprising Virginia. Even at this point in the season, there are only hidden thoughts and little men tion of UNC's No. 3 national ranking behind Nebraska and Texas. "As a team, we're four games from the ACC championship, and Maryland will be our biggest test of the season," quarterback Scott Stankavage said. "We're third and that's nice, but what really matters is the ACC. We want to be champions and that's where we're head ed." That is not the attitude shared by the Tar Heel squads of 1981 and 1982 squads that were often criticized for thinking ahead too soon. The difference this season is that coach Dick Crum is bringing his team along slowly. Crum's business-like, "even-keel" ap proach to each game appears to.be paying off, because no one has been too emo tional about any one opponent. Moreover, this is truly a team effort. Without name stars like Lawrence Taylor, Kelvin Bryant and Rod Elkins, this year's team has to rely on a concerted all-around effort, and it is not uncom mon to hear the tailbacks crediting their success to the offensive line, the outside defensive linemen giving praise to the in side linemen, etc. ' : r" : APPOLL " :' ' 1 - The Top 20 teams in the Associated Press col- oS'!- tlS S lege football poll, with first-place votes in paren- ,rVv?"? T , theses, season records and total points. Points J, lcmgan "J j? based on 20-19-18-17-16-15-14-13-12-11-10--7- J10" Ill 12. Iowa 5-1-0 526 13. Arizona State . 4-0-1 422 1. Nebraska (52) 7-0-0 1,154 U.Washington 5-1-0 359 2. Texas (6) 5-00 1,107 15. Maryland 5-1-0 336 3. North Carolina 7-0-0 997 16. Oklahoma 4-2-0 253 4. West Virginia 5-0-0 978 17. Ohio State 4-2-0 243 5. Auburn 5-1-0 888 18. Brigham Young 5-1-0 237 6. Florida 5-0-1 861 19. Arizona 5-1-1 186 7. Georgia 5-0-1 795 20. Alabama 4-2-0 84 Support the (TF) March of Dimes VdS& HHiBiPTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION rm reelc rum The Apartment People Now accepting limited applications for guaranteed fall occupancy. Avoid the lottery blues. Apply now! All apartments on the bus line to U.N.C. Call today for full information. 967 223! or 967-2234. C 7 PM FIELD HOCKEY VS SOUTHERN ILLINOIS ASTROTURF FIELD Now that the new conference champ has been decided, the Heels will round out their season with some formidable intersectional games. Good luck! LADY TAR HEEL GOLF TOURNAMENT FINLEY GOLF COURSE Formidable competition for the Tar Heels from Appalachian State, Duke, Florida International, Georgia, Iowa, Kentucky, Longwood Cal., James Madison, Ohio State Purdue, Minnesota, NC State, Penn State, South Carolina, South Florida, Wake Forest and William and Mary. 1800 Chapel Hill So, if any UNC has ever had a chance at a major bowl (the Orange, Sugar or Cotton) in recent years, this is certainly the one. Yet, there is still a nagging prob lem that must be worked out. Intensity. That's the intangible that's really another term for concentration. Understandably, the Tar Heels' thoughts have wandered against the early-season lightweights. The problem is, this has enabled the underdog to make things tough for UNC. That, said guard Brian Blados, will come to an end at Maryland. "We want to be known as a team that plays all four quarters," he said. "Coach Crum is going to work on that during the week off, and you'll see a big change in this team come Maryland." Feelings are mixed about the two weeks the team will have to prepare for the Terps. "It's tough on the kids," Crum said. "It kind of breaks your rhythm." He said he plans to give the team a couple of days off, then return to two-a-day practices during Fall Break. "Fortunately, we're in pretty good shape (physically)." Good shape, indeed. At this point last, year, as many as seven starters, including tailback Kelvin Bryant and quarterback Rod Elkins, had found themselves side lined for at least four quarters with in juries. Through 28 quarters this year, no starter has sustained an injury serious enough to cause problems for the team. If (and that's a big if) the Tar Heels can stay healthy the rest of the way, an 11-0 season and an Orange Bowl appearance against Nebraska for the national cham pionship is a definite possibility. Speaking of bowl games, the scouts from the Orange and Sugar Bowls were impressed with UNC's effort Saturday. Said one scout: "They've got an offense as good as anybody, and it looks like they're getting better each week." A perfect season would probably send UNC to the Orange Bowl, but the emergence of Miami (Fla.) has the Orange committee looking at the possi bility of a team much closer to home to play the Cornhuskers, who will receive an automatic bid should they win the Big Eight. West Virginia has also been men tioned as a top Orange Bowl candidate. ELLIOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 $2.00 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! 3:00 5:05 7:10 9:15 William Hurt Kevin Kline The Big Chill (R) 2:55 5:00 7:05 9:10 Dudley Moore Mary Steenburgen PG Romantic Comedy ENCORE ENGAGEMENT 3:15 7:30 Dolby Stereo $2.00 All Times! Gandhi pg - Durham Blvd. i