01 ff flaili} (Ear ibrl SPORTSKRIEFS UNC Women's Golf Team Home for Tar Heel Invite Eleven women’s golf teams from around the South will descend on Chapel Hill this weekend to join UNC at the Tar Heel Invitational at A.E. Finley Golf Course. Senior Rachel Poston; juniors Staci Aber, Kelly McCall and Patricia White; and sophomore Lee Shirley will comprise the Tar Heel team. Two other UNC golf ers, sophomore Megan Morgan and fresh man Jenny Jones, will compete as indi viduals. Competing against them will be teams from Alabama, Auburn, Coastal Carolina, Duke, Furman, James Madison, Kentucky, Longwood College, Methodist College, Memphis and UNC Greensboro. The teams will tee off at noon today and at 9 a.m. Saturday and Sunday. Jones in Lombardi Semis HOUSTON UNC defensive tackle Marcus Joneswasamongthe 12 semifinal ists announced Thursday for the Lombardi Award for college football linemen. This year’s nominees, announced by the Rotary Club of Houston, are: Jones; Tedy Bruschi, Arizona; Tim Colston, Kan sas State; Jeff Hartings, Penn State; Bran don Mitchell, T exas A&M; Roman Oben, Louisville; Jason Odom, Florida; Jonathan Ogden, UCLA; Orlando Pace, Ohio State; Simeonßice, Illinois; Clay Shiver, Florida State; and Bryan Stoltenberg, Colorado. The field will be narrowed to four final ists by Nov. 4, with the winner to be an nounced Dec. 7. Mariners Seek Plan B After Stadium Vote Fails SEATTLE—AmovetoselltheSeattle Mariners was deferred for a month Thurs day, as politicians scrambled to devise a new way to pay for a $325 million retract able-roof stadium. All-but-final vote totals compiled Thurs day showed a King County sales-tax in crease to provide the lion’s share of the funds fai1ing246,500t0245,418.The 1,082- vote margin was about one-fifth of 1 per cent. Anticipating the outcome, Gov. Mike Lowry already had called a meeting for today with Mayor Norm Rice, County Executive Gary Locke, County Council chairman Kent Pullen and all four state legislative caucus leaders to consider other financing options, such as a lottery or re vised tax plan. Cubs Fan Attacks Myers CHICAGO A 27-year-old bond trader ran onto the field and fought Randy Myers of the Chicago Cubs, moments after the reliever gave up a home run Thursday that could have cost his team a chance at the NL wild-card spot. The incident happened after pinch-hit ter James Mouton hit a two-run homer that put the Houston Astros ahead 9-7 in the eighth inning of Chicago’s 12-11 win. Then, a man jumped out of the Wrigley Field stands, crossed the first-base line and ran toward the 6-foot-l, 230-pound Myers. Myers saw the fan coming, dropped his glove and landed some punches. The two wererollingonthegroundnearthepitcher’s mound when several other Chicago play ers arrived to break up the fight. The fan, John Murray of Riverside, HI., was removed by Wrigley Field security. FROM STAFF AND WIRE REPORTS Calvin and Hobbes I NISH SCHOOL WOULD [IM TO MALE A BAD DM WORSE, jKg disappear forever, spend it wishing for . RIGW NoW ' I I (II ■—POSSIBLE. j -J" tami-a THE Daily Crossword by William Canine 65 Ceasel at sea 66 Was aware 67 Lacerated 68 Forty— -69 “Jane —” 70 Gusto 71 Timothy or Tyne DOWN 1 Scalawag 2 Courtyard 3 Abrade 4 Puts on 5 Take on 6 Cashier 7 de Pascua 8 Straps 9 Name in China 10 Gofer ACROSS 1 Moved posthaste 5 Passage to a mine 9 Thaw 13 Model Alt 15 Plate 16 District 17 Expiate 18 Harald’s capital 19 Antelope 20 Plebe 22 Corroded 23 Literary giant 24 Opposed 25 Artilleryman 28 Samovar 29 Was disrespectful 31 Grate 34 Orange, NJ 36 Normand of the silents 39 Neckwear 41 Milk sugar 43 Cavalry sword 44 Filler of a kind 46 Peered at 47 Moon goddess 49 Misplay 51 Sharpshooter 53 Florence’s river 55 Justice Fortas 58 Possesses 59 Clerk 62 Prior’s kin 64 Porter’s kin ■'|P|A|LB C R ATP] l h e M y H E 0 A A T e|lr E_A.D V TTHrIpIe arsM TTIMBeTs - pM E L PMIT e n HHBI ■ c R O ClojDlllL EprlE A _R S R H I N o| I O E mHb E E f L 1 v E N M M ! E : A i‘ M° n A ' nil |n nJ 1 | 1 1 Bn|n|i 1 11 1 Cone-Kenfield to Be Tennis Hotbed BY ALEC MORRISON ASSISTANT SPORTS EDITOR Cone-Kenfield Tennis Center will be a hotbed of tennis action this weekend. That is where UNC hosts its first tennis tournament of the fall, the Tar Heel Fall Invitational. Competition runs today through Sunday and features players from more than 20 colleges throughout the Southeast. Duke, South Carolina, William&Mary and Virginia Tech are among the teams competing in the tourney. The state of North Carolina will be well represented, as players from UNC Wilmington, UNC Charlotte and Davidson, among others, will show case their tennis prowess. More impor tantly, fans will catch a glimpse of the talented Tar Heel squad that hopes to lead the ACC this spring. With the exception of No. 1 David Caldwell, who is taking the semester PAUL HARSANYI the top UNC player competing at the Tar Heel Fall Invitational. off, and No. 2 Brint Morrow, who is com peting in the National Clay Courts in Bal timore this weekend, all UNC men’s play ers will compete in the draw. The Tar Heel group includes junior Paul Harsanyi, who played No. 2 singles last spring, and the sophomore trio of Robert Tedesco, Tony Thomas and David Britt, all of whom started last year. UNC coach Sam Paul said he will be watching how the Tar Heels perform. “It’s the same as last year,” he said. “No. 1, we need matches to find out where everybody is.” Paul said he expects to learn through the tournament what improvements the Tar Heels have made over the summer. He said the tourney will allow him to evaluate Volleyball Smiling Despite 2 Losses Last Weekend BYKURTTONDORF STAFF WRITER Why is everybody on the UNC volley ball team so happy these days? The Tar Heels, after all, have dropped three out of their last four matches heading into theirbattles this weekendagainstN.C. State and Duke. UNC (7-5,0-2 in the ACC), which visits Raleigh tonight for a 7 p.m. match with State (9-6,1-2) and will play host to Duke (4-8,2-0) at 6 p.m. Saturday, has emerged from its opening weekend in the ACC with a zero in the win column after tough road matches vs. Clemson and Georgia Tech. So why the optimism? Why the win ning attitude? Sophomore middle hitter Jill Peden said she has the answer. “Our performance last weekend was Tar Heels, Pirates to Resume Football Rivalry in 2001,2003 STAFF AND WIRE REPORT After a 20-year hiatus, North Carolina and East Carolina will resume their foot ball rivalry with a game Oct. 6, 2001 in Chapel Hill, the schools announced Thurs day. Two years later, the Tar Heels will make their first-ever visit to ECU’s Dowdy- Ficklen Stadium for a game on Oct. 11. “I'm sure this series will create a lot of excitement and interest in the state,” UNC 11 Philippine island 12 1.R.5., e g. 14 Composer Franz 21 Obscure 26 Fighting force letters 27 More orderly 28 Maintenance 30 Hun king 31 Eng. med. gp. 32 So! 33 Bleeding heart 35 Org. 37 Comp. pt. 38 Took charge 40 Perry’s creator 42 Closing words 45 Medics 48 Synthetic 50 “Laugh-In" name 51 Word with up or down 52 Children’s nurse i p [3 [4 [6 [7 [1 K |lO |ll |l2 ’3 rrm,-., Hib Hib 20 21 23 Hi ■■2s“ 26 27 ■pM ■BisT bbbb 31 32 33 Mm K 38 39 4; • • *l - X ' - - -* *A - V - DTH FILE PHOTO Sophomore Tony Thomas will play A Flight singles and A-1 doubles this weekend at the Tar Heel Fall Invitational. Play begins today. ment, the Carolina Classic, in October. Paul said one reason UNC has created the new tournament is to keep the Tar Heels at home. He said since the fall is dominated by tournaments, his players can now continue to get match experience “I don’t think any of us have ever seen anything like that,” Peden said. “It was unbelievable. We fought for it all the way and went down swinging.” UNC coach Joe Sagula is convinced that last weekend’s effort will carry the Tar Heels through the rest of the year. “If we play at the level we were at last weekend, we should ha ve no problem beat ing teams the rest of the year,” he said. “Although the scoreboard didn’t show it, we now know that we belong among the top three in the conference.” The Duke team UNC faces Saturday night is much different from the one that dominated regular-season play last year. In 1994, the Blue Devils (24-6,11-3 ACC) finished in the nation’s top 20 and debuted at No. 20 in this year’s preseason poll. But graduation losses and the arrival of 1979. East Carolina Athletic Director Mike Hamrick said Dowdy-Ficklen should be a better venue to watch the ECU-UNC game in 2003 than it would be now. The school plans to increase capacity there from the current 35,000 seats to 60,000 seats. “We’re excited to get the details of this worked out,” Hamrick said. “Since the discussions began about the series, there has been a tremendous amount of coopera tion and interest from both sides.” This season the Pirates are 2-2, with cmotUNa Chapel Hill Columbia St 933-8464 m, "Diane Keaton Has Crafted Something RARE: A SCREWBALL w. Comedy That Cuts if J 7 To The Heart!" "a Sweet Surprise!" mSP 7 "Andie macdowell r gut's Inr best performance since 'sex. lies, anJ vutvla/v!" ANDIE Mvc DOWELL JOHN TURTURRO MICHAEL RICHARDS W '* *i/ Unstrung V 7 '' dM Heroes f £?/,;/] ms# aw "IT'S THE SUMMER'S BEST THRILLER, BAR NONE." ■Thelma Adams. NEW YORK POST mHMp THE USUAL SUSPECTS [RI 2:10-4:20-7:10 9:20 EAST FRANKLIN 967-8665 while remaining in classes and playing in Chapel Hill. The Classic will have a smaller draw but will feature tougher competition, with schools such as Notre Dame and Michigan in the field. anew coach have gotten Duke off to a rocky start. The Devils struggled to defeat N.C. State in five games Tuesday, a match attended by Peden and her teammates. “(The Devils) are a very young team,” Peden said. “They’re going through young mistakes. They have anew coach, and they don’t really know each other on the court. That’s something I think we’ve overcome. ” Sagula said it is imperative that is team take control of the match early. “They have some gaps that we can ex ploit, some inexperience,” he said. “We have to take control and dominate early.” As with any UNC-Duke match, Peden expects the emotions to be running high. “With these two teams, it doesn’t mat ter which players they have on the court, or what the talent level is of either team, ” she said. “The matches are always crazy.” wins against Syracuse and Central Michi gan and losses to Tennessee and Illinois. C#r NCNB PLAZA ' 967-8284 MONDAY THURSDAY ALL SEATS SI.OO x FRIPAY-SUNPAY ALL SEATS $1.50 . THE NET (P 6-13) • j, *O, * 4„L, Friday, September 28,1995 me Looks To Rebound Vs. Devils BYHEIDIG SCHMITT STAFF WRITER Seven-one. That’s how tall Matt Wenstrom is. Eric Montross was bom in ’7l. But currently, that statistic does not apply to North Carolina basketball alumni. Instead, 7-1 was the final score of the UNC-UVa. men’s soccer game last Sun day. Ouch. This Sunday, the Tar Heels (6-2,0-2 in the ACC) have the chance to avenge that loss and to claim their first conference win. UNC will face Duke (7-1, 1-1 ACC) at 2 p.m. on Fetzer Field. Coach Elmar Bolowich said the UVa. TEMOC SUAHE2 h.' six goals and four assists on the season. loss was a blow to the program, but UNC will be ready to get back out on the field. “It was a low point in all our ca reers coaches as well as players,” he said. “We have to bounce back. We look forward to playing this next game. We’re going to focus on Duke. We need to win this home game.” Bolowich said that because UNC is 0-2 in the ACC, it must win the Duke game. UNC will be missing three of its regular starters. Seniors Greg Caiola and Eddie Pope and junior Victor Suarez are all out with injuries. Freshman backup Matsi Giordaze will also miss the game. But Bolowich said he still has confi dence in the remaining players. “We will be a little thm,” he said. “I still feel that we have a strong team on the field. I surely believe that the team wants to prove themselves again.” Bolowich does have leading scorer Temoc Suarez (six goals, four assists), se nior midfielder Kerry Zavagnin(twogoals, three assists) and sophomore defender Carey Talley (three goals, one assist) at his disposal. Duke returns six starters but will invade Chapel Hill with two freshmen leading the way. Forward Josh Henderson leads the Devils with seven goals and eight assists for 22 points, and midfielder Jay Heaps ranks second with eight goals and one assist for 17 points. Of Henderson’s seven goals, four have been game-winners The only other player with more than five points is junior midfielder Brian Kelly, who has 16. UNC had last week off after the Virginia debacle, while Duke defeated Davidson on Wednesday night. Bolowich said that he’s not sure how fatigue will affect UNC but that the week off was good for the Tar Heels. “Our players are looking for the next game, regardless of who it is,” he said. “When beaten badly, we can’t wait to play the next game. The long wait is good. We are excited.” mpi I Elliott Rd. at East Franklin DTS Digital Sound 967-4737 All Auditoriums SURROUND STEREO I r clockers m pfriri L Nightly 7;00,9:30 J r DEVIL IN THE BLUE DRESS [Rjl L Sat & Sun 1:00, 3:05, 5:10, 7:15, 9:20 J rBABE-The Gallant Plgll L Sat t Sun 1:00, 3:00, :OQ A r DANGEROUS MINDS IR] 1 L,St Sun 1:09,3:10, 5:15, 7:20, 53.75 ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6PM I Weaver Dairy at Airport Road Dolby Digital DTS Digital Sound I 933-8600 All Auditoriums SURROUND STEREO I "rrrrr seven cri ~ Sot a San 1:00,3:29,7*0. MS 4 Eg-TO WONG FOO [P(H3r Set t Sim 18)0.1:05,8:10.7:25. w MOONLIGHTS VALENTINOI ■ Srt* SwiliOS, 3:20, 7:10,9i20 . STEAL BN, STEAL liTTIE IEH2 . St a ■ 1 :QO, 3:30, 7:06, :M , HALLOWEEN 6 MCNMiintiEs [B] . St a Sun 1:18,3:18,8:1 S, 7:20, S:10 . r THE BIG GREEN ES 5 k St S Sun 1:10,3:10,8:10,7:19, :1S S3. 75 ALL SHOWS BEFORE 6PM SHOW TIMES FOR WEEKEND ONLY Eastern Federal Theatres for the Hearing Impaired 7