4 The Daily Tar Heel I Friday. October 25, 1985
lac G-UeeS spools siaHe Ho be
a bosy orae tlhis wjeeCceimdl
Once attain, this weekend. Chapel
Hill will be a mccca for any sports nut.
fry and cut your Sony umbilical cord
if you're interested in any . of the
following sports.
The women's golf team will host the
tenth annual l.ady Tar Heel Golf
Tournament at Finley Golf Course this
weekend. Led by senior captain Kandi
Kessler. who won her first individual
title earlier this season, the Tar Heels
will host thirteen teams including
defending champion Georgia.
The men's tennis team w ill showcase
its new facility this weekend when it
hosts the annual Don Skakle Memorial
championships at the UNC Tennis
Center. Players from eight area schools
will compete including ACC rivals N.C.
State, Duke and Wake Forest.
. I in hi. I unnir rii.Mni i.i til I r. i. ir
SHOWS t
MAT 2:00 V U rz?-.
v-t 3fc SHOWS 7:00 & 9:1 5
. r 0 SjJ VJ SAT & SUN 2:00 & 4:15
. rna r r- SHOWS 7:004 9:00
THE RAM LATE SHOWS
AGAINST ALL ODDS and
PINK FLOYD'S "THE WALL"
FRI & SAT AT 11:45
LATE SHOWS & R-RATED FILMS
I.D. REQUIRED
The volleyball team will play its most
important match of the season this
Saturday night at 7:30 in Carmichael
Auditorium. The opponent will be
Duke, who handed the Tar Heels a
heartbreaking five-game loss earlier this
season. Good seats are still available.
Men's soccer is on a roll. The team
has recorded three straight shutouts, but
will need to continue play on all
cylinders if it is to challenge a highly
ranked N.C. State team at 2 p.m. on
Saturday in Raleigh, i "
The first Blue-White basketball
skirmish of the 1 985 season will take
place this Saturday. The Heels will take
on the Heels in the traditional season
opener which allows fans to idolize the
established stars at play and to evaluate
some of the new recruits. If you're a
fair-weather fan this is the game for you
because the Heels will definitely win this
one. The hoops game will begin approx
imately thirty minutes after the football
game with Florida State.
There are still a few tickets remaining
for the Blue-White matchup , but if
you're looking for a Florida State
football ticket, forget about it.
March of Dimes
1 BIRTH DEFECTS FOUNDATION Vm
SAVES BABIES
HELP FIGHT
BIRTH DEFECTS
ScIlno3nll IF FEnairmmacy
Open House Consider a career
Beard Hall in pharmacy
Oct. 26 rTrr?12!
' 9-11 a.m. Jy) HOt)
before the game t-AyHJ-sJ
VARSITY
V EAST FRANKLIN3
LATE SHOWS 11:45 FRI, SAT
"PLENTY" & "KISS OF
n ip- r r-r i r s a a ill)
I nC OrlUCIi if VJmHN
hue
"ASTREEP
TRIUMPH . . .
THE STAW1B
OF GREATNESS.
This journey has been well
and truly charted. It is an
extraordinary accomplishment
and the most powerful
English-language film I've
seen since 'The Killing
riciua. II id, iiiuccu, . i-wwp-t
plenty." . . - :
Godfrey Cheshire, m- J
-'1 i
1
K
i
SPECTATOR MAGAZINE
',
TO
(fiTTII Vf
WW
KtNTEC
football picks of the week
Women's soccer fto . hosft
No. 4 (CoSoirsiSo CoMege
"Great Scott!" the masses intoned
Saturday night as the football results
came in. They showed Scott "Scoots"
Fowler standing tall with an 8-2 record
in a week that saw our other two
fearsome-smelling prognosticators
stumble their way into a combined 1 1
9 record.
Fowler's mark gave him a tidy three
game season lead over (Ug)Lee Roberts
and a whopping .eight-game margin
over Tim (1 Wish I Had A Mother)
Crothers, who has taken to following
Fowler all over campus begging for
mental tidbits. "What is your secret,
master?" Crothers repeatedly asked.
Lee Roberts, too proud to stoop to
such measures, has instead resorted to
picking teams on the basis of how many
times they have won the pre-game coin
toss and then hitting himself on the head
repeatedly after each miss, yelling
"Dammit, I almost picked (you fill in
the team)."
Lee Tim Scott
Teams Roberts Crothers Fowler
43-26-1 38-31-1 46-23-1
.623 .55f .664
Florida State at UNC UNC FSU FSU
N.C. State at Clemson Clem. Clem. Clem.
Duke at Maryland Md. Md. Md.
Virginia at Wake Forest UVa UVa UVa
Georgia Tech at Tennessee GT GT Tenn.
West Virginia at Penn State PSU PSU PSU
Southern Cal at Notre Dame USC ND .. USC
Oklahoma State at Kansas KU OSU OSU
Texas at SMU SMU SMU v SMU
South Carolina at ECU USC USC ECU
By B. A. VELLIQUETTE
Staff Writer
The UNC women's soccer team faces
its last major opponent before the
NCAA tournament when it meets
fourth-ranked Colorado College Satur
day on Fetzer Field at 10 aim.
Although the Tar Heels are ranked
No. 2, UNC coach Anson Dorrance
expects the match to be a true test of
his team's mettle. "They beat California
Berkley, a team we barely beat," he said.
Colorado College, considered the
strongest team west of the Mississippi,
has no weak players and plenty of
confidence according to Dorrance.
"They have played a good schedule, so
they are not going to come into the game
jittery," he said.
The importance of this match lies not
only in preparing the team for the
NCAA tournament, but may also
decide what seed the Tar Heels will be
in the tournament. If the Tar Heels win,
most likely they will be seeded second
and will therefore receive a first-round
bye.
Looking back over the season,
Dorrance can't help but be a happy
man. "I am very pleased with how well
we are playing this season," he said.
After losing most of his starters to
graduation last year, his goals were
modest considering the team had won
''" 1 111 IIIIIIIIIIIIINII."I-I.lll--Hll-..IM1'UI-II.IIII.UI.-H I- m
"
v
- i r- ii i if :V'v "
Coach Anson Dorrance
the NCAA championship for four years
straight.
"Preseason our goal wasn't to finish
in the top two. It was to get a bid (to
the NCAA tournament)," Dorrance
said. "We have rearranged our goals
because we are much better than we
thought we'd be."
The Tar Heels, 1 4-1-1, lost their only
match this season to third-ranked
Massachusetts, but recovered the next
day whipping sixth-ranked Conneticut,
5-0. UNC played top-ranked George
Mason to a 3-3 tie early in the season.
i7
jjail """" LAli ShowsBefore 6:00 Only $2.50
LATE SHOWS FRI & SAT. ALL ONLY SEATS $2.00
11:45 TUP A AIM AMERICAN ?fefU
i-wrrrir-r 1 1 werewolf iim m hix
, i i... rrr ir.nnriBiMmnriiin.irinn iii.ii nTif imi . u i mi i n n . i . .
f Glenn Close Jeff Bridges
r 7:00 -: ('7r2
V 9:15 3 0
CAROLINA
CLASSIC
Jimmy Stewart in
YOU CAN'T
TAKE IT
WITH YOU
2:15, 4:45
A MAN, a WOMAN, an EMPIRE and a PIG
STARTS TODAY
: I EAST FRANKLIN STREET
1 942 3061
ID P.
lull r t v
mm
N1
--
ELLIOT ROAD
E. FRANKLIN
967-4737
1 BARGAIN MATINEE ADULTS $250 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! 1
The deadliest art of the
Orient is now in the
hands of an flmerican.
tj r-- 7 V :
u lK w:
Wiin ii i a v.KSSaifii'''
3:20 5:20 7:20 9:20
3:00 5:15 7:35 9:45
The sexy sinser.The sharp manager. The streetsmart guys.
There
and in the streets, on the subways and in the clubs,
they're creating the sound nobody ever heard before.
im-A"" "" " 1 iiji,iiiuiiiiiiii in i i i .1 a m.mji m. lull 1-
si Z'
- y '.'-Si..
. "
-r.n.r.r - ,
' ....
1
WARNER BOS. PRESENTS
A DOUG McHENRY CRYSTAUTE Production A MICHAEL SCHUU2 Film "KRUSH GROOVE'
SHEJLAE RUN-DMC THE FAT BOYS iKURTiSBLQWl and introckjeing BLAIR UNOEfWOOO
Special Peffbrmance by NEW EDTfiON Co-Produced by RUSSELL SIMMONS
Executive Producers GEORGE A. JACKSON and ROBERT O. KAPLAN Written by RALPH FARQUHAR
Produced by MICHAEL SCHUUZ and DOUG McHENRY Directed by MICHAEL SCHULTZ
DISTRIBUTED BY WARNER BROS. tf(ffS
R.
WftTKICTtfl Q
Oto&HM. SOUNDTUAC OM
wjiNt neos tecum t iams
A WARNER COMMUNICATIONS COMPANY
Hear the music of Handel, Vivaldi & Bach
as it was meant to be heard .. .
on the instruments of the period.
a , m-Jt , m. . ..-it m , . , . I t n n f,
CAROLINA CONCERTS
PRESENTS
THE ACADEMY OF ANCIENT MUSIC
CHAMBER ENSEMBLE
Tuesday October 29
8:00 p.m.
Memorial Hall Chapel Hill
Admission $12 All Seats Reserved
(Season Ticket Savings Still Available!)
$34.50 UNC Students
Still to come ...
Earl Wild, pianist January 22
Prague Chamber Orchestra v February 1 1
Kavafian & Kavafian March 25
Get your tickets now from
Carolina Union Box Office 962-1449
Master Card Visa Accepted
rm oam mm mm
VOLLEYBALL vs DUKE
7:30 PM Carmichael Auditorium
SATURDAY-SUNDAY
LADY TAR HEEL
GOLF TOURNAMENT
All Day Finley Golf Course
THE WORLD
IS YOUR CAMPUS -
S E M E S T E R
Study around the world, visiting Japan, Korea,
Taiwan, Hong Kong, Sri Lanka, India, Egypt,
Turkey, Greece and Spain. Our 100 day voyages sail
in January and September offering 12-15 transferable
hours of credit from more than 50 voyage-related
courses.
The S.S. UNIVERSE is a 500 passenger American
built ocean liner, registered in Liberia. Semester at Sea
admits students without regard to color, race or creed.
For details call toll-free (300) 854-0195
or write:
Semester at Sea
Institute for Shipboard Education
University of Pittsburgh, 2E Forbes Quadrangle
Pittsburgh, PA 15260
Semester at Sea Representative
Visiting the University of North Carolina
Oct. 24 9-3, Oct. 25 9-1 Information Table Student Union
4:30 Film Presentation & Discussion
Room 208 Student Union
. 4
STARTS TODAY! 3:30 5:30 7:30 9:30