6The Daily Tar HeelFriday, September 23, 1983 Major Leagues As of Wed., Sept. 22 National League East Division American League East Division Philadelphia Montreal Pittsburgh St. Louis Chicago New York Los Angeles Atlanta Houston San Diego San Francisco Cincinnati W 81 79 79 74 68 62 L 70 72 73 78 84 90 West Division 87 65 82 79 76 73 69 68 72 76 79 82 Pet .540 .523 .520 .487 .447 .408 .572 .547 .523 .500 .480 .457 W L Pet. GB 68 Baltimore 94 57 .623 Detroit 86 66 .566 8Vi .2 New York 84 67 556 10 2 Toronto 84 69 549 11 7V Milwaukee 81 71 533 13 13Vi Boston 74 79 .484 21 Cleveland 66 85 .443 28 West Division x-Chicago 91 61 .599 Kansas City 73 78 .483 17Vz Texas- 73 79 .480 18 11 Oakland 69 84 .451 22Vi 14 California 67 85 .441 24 17Vi Minnesota 65 87 .428 26 Seattle 56 95 .371 34 x-clinched division title BARGAIN MATINEE--ADULTS $2 (X) Tit 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! 3:10 5:10 7:10 9:10 HEVY HASE NATIONAL LAMPOON'S R 2:45 5:00 7:15 9:30 (Sat. 924 Only: 2:45 5:00 9:30 DAN r EDDIE! AYKROYD ?x Al I MURPHY (A V DOUBLE FEATURE! The funniest movie about growing up ever made is back for a second look. You'll be glad you came! 3:20 7:20 At 5:20 9:20 If you thought the night before was funny, wait till you see the next day. Cpattul. IM3 TWENTIETH MNTUBY-FO, SIMON m I I'll AKvCtk ASTRAL BELLE VUlKUtSlty 19U TWENTIETH CENTUdr-fOX (j'lll l Toll k unVMH't artUdtfclltNttjf If ttsliv Y I .-.-.v.( . ... '-"v.--- V M 1 i - J :' (l X" .irT1. 1 7 sW, - - II? I ;Jr V - J o Ji ir o )! i yUl ffl Q n i l I 1 1 In a cold world you need your friends to keep you warm. COLUMBIA PICTURES Presents A CARSON rRODCOOriS GROUP, LTD. PRODUCTON of A LAWRENCE KASDAM Rim "THE BIG CHILL" TOM BERENGER - GLENN CLOSE JEFF GOLDBLUM WILLIAM HURT KEVIN KLINE MARY KAY PLACE MEG TILLY J0BETH WILLIAMS CAROL LITTLETON JOHN BAILEY SP LAWRENCE KASDAN & BARBARA BENEDEK sMARCIA NASATIR AND LAWRENCE KASDAN MICHAEL SHAMBERG ST0 LAWRENCE KASDAN liack Album fealabie On Motown Recoi And Tapes I SUDCOUMMKIuKIMUHHM " SATURDAY, SEPT. 24 7:30 pm See "The Big Chill," then stay for 9:30 "Trading Places" on the same admission! Warner an anonymous ace - ' J :v By MIKE SCHOOR Staff Writer Anonymity is the fate of most field hockey defenders. For instance, not too many people know who Meg Wanscr is. Does she feel overlooked? Wanser says no. "Obviously everyone wants to know who scores the goals," she said. "But within the team, everyone realizes what's happening." Few players are as consistent as North Carolina's junior all-region sweeper. And no one knows her role better. Not that it has always been that way. During her freshman year, Wanser just about packed it in and headed home to Long Island. The change from high school to college hockey seemed too great, the skills too hard to master. And the bench was an unknown territory. "I was impatient," Wanser recalled. "I wanted to do so much better so much quicker." So what brought about the transforma tion? Discipline and competitive drive were key factors. Says a teammate, "Meg's very competitive and doesn't think she can be beat." Certainly her love of the sport never hurt matters. "I couldn't just go to school," Wanser said. "That's why field hockey is so important (to me)." Now, Wanser is playing with experience on a team with a realistic chance at a na tional championship. Their 3-0-1 record is blemished only by Sunday's overtime draw with Penn St. Wednesday, the Tar Heels got back on track by stopping Duke, 2-0. The team now faces consecutive road games at Massachusetts and Springfield (Mass.) this weekend. Defending national champ Old Domi nion then visits Chapel Hill Oct. 4 in a match many regard as the season's most telling tale. Wanser is optimistic. "Playing good teams is only going to make you better," Wanser said. "We don't realize right now that we're half as good as we are." It is this quality of self-confidence that makes Wanser sojspecial as a player.Add to this her concentration, field vision and evasive stickwork and you've got the mak ings of a premier sweeper. - , Defense is all she's ever played, even thoughout high school, and stopping the other team has long been her main satis faction. . Wanser is the epitome of the team player. "If we played our best and lost (in the NCAA tourney). . .I'm not that upset." i i ! . . '1 , , W;V. ---.: UNCv-ball wins From staff reports The University of North Carolina's volleyball team raised its record to 3-0 Thursday night with a three-game sweep of East Carolina in a volleyball match in Chapel Hill. Senior Donna Meier and freshman Jill Berkebile both had good nights as the Tar Heels rolled over the overmatched Pirates 15-9, 15-7 and 15-9. North Carolina has yet to drop1 a single game in its first three matches and faces ar chrival N.C. State Tuesday at home in Car michael Auditorium. t .; . . :.izto? s. ,jnmr :.$k. North Ccrolina's Meg Wsnser (I) dogs Penn St. forward in Sunday's u vci iiii ivs tic. vwccpci 10 ui icaoun uiiu 10 unucicaicu in I snjj, Men's soccer playing in George Mason Tourney Mi LATE SHOWS 11:45 FRI SAT. ragcrft' THE TRIUMPHANT RETURN OF CHAPEL HILL'S ALL-TIME FAVORITE COMEDY! "urnra wum h fnir-T i rmiii PAUL WTI nAo Mwwnr it m m Fwst time eveh rB f lUMTCK STENtO 'JJ f V By LEE ROBERTS Staff Writer The UNC men's soccer team faces a big test of its spirit when it travels to Fairfax, Va., to participate in the George Mason Tour nament this weekend. After suffering an embarrassing 7-0 loss to Clemson Sunday, the Tar Heels dropped from No. 4 in the International Soccer Association of America's Top 20 clear out of the poll. "We just came out flat," assistant coach Geoff Griffin said Thursday. "And they (Clemson) embarrassed us." Today, Griffin and head coach Anson Dorrance hope to see the same intensity that brought UNC victories in its first six matches when the Tar Heels face West Virginia Wesleyan, an NAIA team. "This will be a real challenge," Griffin said, "coming back from such a difficult loss." Griffin said that Wesleyan has a good combination of American and foreign players and that the NAIA teams cannot be taken too lightly. "In college soccer, there's )not too much of a difference in talent between the top NCAA and NAIA teams," Griffin said. Griffin said that the Tar Heels need to re-establish their image quickly against Wesleyan by playing with an intensity that was Help Prevent Birth Defects iscoun missing in the first half of the Clemson loss. If they display that intensity and create a "dominating presence" the score will take care of itself, he said. . "We can play with anyone in the country," Griffin said. "We just have to establish how good we really are. We need to play with the consistency we were showing earlier in the season." After being extremely confident following early season upsets of Connecticut and Boston College, Nos. 4 and 15 at the time, respectively, the Tar Heels were understandably low after the Clemson loss. Teams in similar situations sometimes suffer blows to their morales and will collapse. Griffin doesn't see that happen ing to UNC. "Hopefully, we learned from the experience of the Clemson game," he said. "Maybe we needed that to test ourselves." The team is loose and relaxed, but mentally prepared for this weekend's tournament. If they defeat West Virginia Wesleyan to day, the Tar Heels will face the winner of the Radford-George Mason contest. After the tournament, UNC will have an eight day break to prepare for ACC opponent Virginia. "We need to prove we can knock off ACC teams," Griffin said, "but for now we have to concentrate on our next game. ' 'We got knocked down. Now we have to pick ourselves up and ask ourselves, 'What am I made of?' " Manning announces intent to play at Kansas LATE SHOWS! i&fL FRI. & SAT. 11:30 CaddyShack Woody Allen Diane Kenton ANNIE HALL 11:45 CAROLINA CLASSIC Elizabeth Taylor Janet Leigh in LITTLE WOMEN All Seats $2.25 I 2:45 5:05 EAST FRANKLIN STREET 942-3061 What a feeling. rhshcumce 3:15 5:15 7:15 9:15 David's father bought him a home computer. Now, he s r i iuuiiu a new mm, v game to play- I ' , . K MGMUA t 7:20 9:30 The Associated Press LAWRENCE, Kan. High school basketball star Danny Manning is follow ing his father to the University of Kansas, where the elder Manning will coach while his son plays for the Jayhawks. The 6-11 teen-ager, who has one year of, high school left, held a news conference Thursday to make an official announcement. Ed Manning, who played professional basketball for six years and coached for one year at North Carolina A&T in 1977-78, was named to the Kansas job Tuesday. He most recently was employed as a truck driver in North Carolina. Manning averaged more than 18 points a game last year in leading Greensboro Page High School to an undefeated state championship season. exclusive"" STATt ENGAGEMENT LATE SHOWS FRI. & SAT. 11:45 ROAD WARRIOR Kintek Stereo EATING RAOUL Living Color LaNuit deVarennes "A, brainy, compulsively absorbing film. ..played by a scintillating international cast." Jack Kroll. NEWSWEEK "Tumultuouslv funny." Vincent Canby, NEW YORK TIMES i J HARVEY KEITEL MARCELLO MASTROIANNI HANNA SCHYGULLA Directed By ETTORE SCOLA, Winner, Grandjury Prize, Cannes FesL 70 920 J presents THEilFflBOILO KIKI0BS Friday and Saturday September 23 and 24 $4 Cover Doors Open of 8 After the game make plans to see The Knobs THE FILM EVENT OFTHE YEAR! " VINCENT CANBY, New York Times "In Kintek Stereo, this is the true "NAPOLEON", one of the Seven Wonders of the Cinema. It is THE film to see this season, bar none." Godfrey Cheshire, THE SPECTATOR "This film event of the year, the decade, possibly of a lifetime, should not, must not be missed." Donnell Stoneman, GREENSBORO DAILY NEWS NAPOLEON ABEL CAIICE'S 1927 MASTERPIECE Presented in 35MM and Kintek Stereo & "'i & ' '5 tk.. MUSIC COMPOSED AND CONDUCTED BYCARMINE COPPOLA iV?- ft. J ' September 23-29 Only! Two Performances Daily 3:00 & 7:15 inttl TM1RTW1 9:00 PM QX0G3ID a6 sjr ft " 1 U .jjpi -miiniiiwmiaMiiiiiiiiiMiM.'- Mondayj peptemberl I26 Happy Hour .All evening

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