Wednesday, October 26, 1983The Daily Tar Heel5 Sports Machin responds well to different role By SCOTT SMITH Staff Writer For North Carolina women's soccer standout Amy Machin, goal scoring is almost routine. Machin, a junior midfielder forward from Dallas, Texas, led the nation in scoring last year. In a game against N.C. Wesleyan Sunday, Machin showed how routine scoring can be. She scored three goals in the first half to lead the second-ranked UNC women to a 9-0 win and their 14th consecutive game without a loss. To Machin, a two-year letter winner, this would have been commonplace last season. But after seeing her role change from last year's leading scorer to this year's playmaker at midfleld, Sunday's game was a nice change of pace. On a team that is full of talent and can score goals consistent ly, Machin has come to enjoy assisting on goals, playing defense and helping in other facets of the game since coach Anson Dor rance moved her to the playmaking role, which she has now oc cupied since the beginning of the season. "There is something about making that absolutely beautiful pass to somebody and seeing the look on their face when they score a goal," she said. "It's so much fun to see a teammate's eyes just light up before scoring a goal and know that they couldn't have done it without you." The style of game that Machin plays, which includes tenacious defensive play and accurate passing to go along with her already well-refined goal scoring strengths, can be attributed to her hard work and Dorrance's constructive criticism. In her freshman year, she was often criticized by Dorrance for shirking her defensive responsibilities. Machin is the first to ad mit this criticism was accurate at that time in her soccer career. "When I first came to Carolina, I was a very offensive minded player," Machin said, "I played center midfield, but the team I played for my freshman year had an extremely strong defense, especially the girl that played stopper-back behind me. She was a defensive maniac. "It allowed me to fall into a rut of doing a lot of offensive playmaking and I sort of had a bad habit of easing up on defense. Yeah, I was guilty as charged." Dorrance told Machin that unless she changed this defensive weakness she would never be more than a one-dimensional player a goal scorer. He told her that unless she improved on her defensive shortcomings and became a total player, she would never fulfill her true soccer potential. At first Machin felt Dorrance's criticisms were unjustified and they angered her. But after thinking about it for awhile, she said she thought Dorrance just may have been right. Dorrance's constant reminders of "play defense" during fall practices of Machin's freshman year stuck in her mind and, ac cording to Machin, she was determined to do something about it. During the spring of her freshman year, Machin lifted weights and ran more than she ever had in her life. The result was an Amy Machin who was stronger and more fit than ever. . This new-found fitness allowed Machin to play the kind of defense Dorrance had always expected of her. "Not only did I play strong defense but I started crushing people I went crazy," Machin said. "I became so conscien tious about my defense that all of a sudden during the fall of my sophomore year, the other parts of my game became easier. Also, because I played defense, I got more offensive oppor tunities and put the ball in the net more often." The culmination of this hard work ethic Machin has demonstrated throughout her collegiate career has made her more than just a goal scorer. Machin is easy to spot on the field. She is the one playing every phase of the game equally well. Buckle up Tar Heels aid make those Seat Belts Payoff! t P - A Show, Fit. iS - 11 5 "BREATHTAKING" BOXOFFICE - WEofthc NEVER NEVER CMOS THURSDAY MO 4 49 7-00 t-30 WO SUNNY WEEK! - All vJl I 'V WA 130 4 30 1 30 JO PLITT THEATRES UST MUMIHI ITMf I JM1 STARTS FRIDAY ARSENIC & OLD LACE DEAD ZONE B 7,9 FLASH 3:15,5:15 DANCE 7:15, 9:1 KXX, W 'JVK 'JW-JJJJ .WWW W V W, I Open I I I Luncheon Specials available at lunch 11 to 2 p.m. M-F Pizza .Buffet $2.95 Spaghetti $1.95 Las agna ... $2.95 Salad Bar $1,95 Great Potato $1.95 i Mon.-Thun. 11 a.m.-midnite. Fri. & Sat. 11-1 a.m Sur4-ll p.m. Monday and Tuesday Pizza Buffet Ail the Pizza and salad you can eat only $3.20 Wednesday Lasagna and Spaghetti BuffetAll the spaghetti and salad you can eat or one serving of lasagna and all the salad you can eat only $3.20 I 1 Marilyn Thompson i X Soprano Wednesday, Oct. 26 8:30 pm Great Hall a Program of Classical Music fi CP2XIAL! 208 W. FRANKLIN ST. 942-5149 THE Daily Crossword by Louis Santrey ACROSS 1 Whale group 4 Boscor Anjou 8 Sports . groups 13 Stoma 14 Hindustani 15 Stan's sidekick 16 WWII arm 17 High time 18 French president once 19 Rice dish 21 Agents 23 "Streetcar" role 25 Take the tab 26 Cheryl or Alan 28 Beefs 32 Booze hideaway 37 Wagon 38 "If I a million..." 39 Blanched chicory 42 "But on forever" 43 Damsel's cry 45 Whispers 47 Cute inden tation 50 Phase 51 Ahead of time 54 Ranked 58 Proclaims Yesterday's Puzzle Solved: I A I B 1 0 1 R ItI E I D I 3B FaIs IE Im A In I BELL I A M U H 1 IS IU In 1 1 ID RAX E " GA STSjETD gTlTo W E RlAT FffZZZ: RIPE 0 N 0 TjCfN 0 U S A NT At tO R.D.O. "TR0..S.I I n I c I e I d E id c c I IT" C C C T I r u l tin i initit li in i j N ! M i E plDlYUYlolikUL E IE M 102683 62 Estonian 27 June heroes city 29 Bucket 63 Equally 30 Therefore 64 Fly with 31 Pack the wind 32 Food fish 66 Sports- 33 Indlc writer language Roger 34 Dutch 67 Dead duck cheese 68 Beige 35 Sample 69 Musical 36 Montana the instruments actor 70 Coquettes 40 Corrodes 71 Autumn 41 Trap shoot tool ing 72 Via 44 House bigwig DOWN 46 Offer an 1 Assert opinion 2 Maniple 48 Jamaal, 3 "Ritual "Magic" Fire Dance" et al. composer 49 Sounds of 4 Taproom uncertainty 5 Cupid 52 Vanquished 6 Take on one 7 Common 53 N. Mex. talk state 8 "The only flower thing we 55 Duck have..." 56 Ozone 9 Rubber band 57 Presses for 10 Astringent payment 11 Ooze 58 Guru 12 Noticed 59 Deception 13 Young pets 60 German one 20 Kook 61 Adriatic 22 Barrel native 24 Yemen 65 Library capital word " Tl z 3 I 14 15 16 17 I 18 fl 110 111 112 I IT" TS 15 75 lo" TT" 22"" "23 2T" "25 ls TT" 2a 2r730TST" IfTM j 34 35T3T" IT" 3a ""'"" "W "" 40 1 j 41 mmm" 42 """" - TT" 44" 17" " 48"T4r 50 -" """" TT" " 52 53 "" 17" 55 S6 157 srisTTbd"""" T "mmm" 17" " TT" 64 55" 17" TT" 77" 69 -"" 73 T 72 1983 Tribune Company Syndicate, Inc. All Rights Reserved 102683 PqiK jpeeic 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 J or 967-2234. Field hockey, volleyball teams win From staff reports The lOth-ranked UNC field hockey 'team dominated Wake Forest at home Tuesday night, defeating the Demon Deacons, 6-1. A pair of first-half goals by Louise Deacons, 6-1. A pair of first-half goals by Louise Hines helped North Carolina extend its winning streak over Wake Forest to eight games. Hines now has 16 goals on the season one more than the 15 she scored last year as a freshman. Jacky Hagenbach, Sandy Smith, Ann Marie Rosenbaum and Lisa Morin also tallied goals for the Tar Heels. Coach Karen Shelton was afforded a chance to clear the bench and get all of her players into the game. "We showed our depth tonight with our freshmen playing most of the game," junior forward Mary Sentementes said. AP TOP 20 1. Nebraska (54) 8-0-0 1,156 2. Texas (4) 6-0-0 1,106 3. North Carolina 7-0-0 1,010 4. Auburn 6-1-0 944 5. Honda 6-0-1 892 6. Georgia 6-0-1 883 7. Miami, Fla. 7-1-0 792 8. Michigan 6-1-0 743 9. Illinois 6-1-0 688 10. So. Methodist 5-1-0 602 11. Washington 6-1-0 545 12. West Virginia 6-1-0 513 13. Maryland 6-1-0 452 14. Oklahoma 5-2-0 370 15. Brigham Young 6-1-0 350 16. Ohio State 5-2-0 309 17. Iowa 5-2-0 283 18. Alabama 4-2-0 92 19. Boston College 5-1-0 79 (tie) Notre Dame 5-2-0 79 ELLIOT ROAD at E. FRANKLIN 967-4737 $2.00 TIL 6:00 PM EVERYDAY! 3:00 5:05 7:10 9:15 William Hurl Kevin Kline "First class!" CBS-TV The Big Chill (R) 2:15 4:45 7:00 9:15 Nick Nolte Gene Hackman DOLBY STEREO EXCLUSIVE Under Fire (R) 2:55 5:00 7:05 9:10 Dudley Moore Mary Steenburgen (PG) Romantic Comedy TOE TO EES with the Breaks Halloween Costume Ball 8:00 pm. Oct. 31st CinC-CH 10.50 public, 9:50 CINC-ID Open floor for donee Prizes for best costume. Tickets ot Union Box Office and Record Bar a Carolina Union Presentation. BHD. ttlhl?(g Am'ti mmoDimttlhs Get right into law with intensive preparation approved by the American Bar Association. After completing the three-month program, you can take your place as a legal assistant. It's one of the fastest growing careers of the 80's. Bachelor's degree or attorney sponsorship required. Day and Evening classes available. Employment assistance. Classes conducted in Atlanta. Meet us on Campus: Wednesday, November 9 Placement Office 9:00-5:00 (404) 266-1060 39 Nam Address City State Zip College Yr. Grad. Phone: Day Evening The National Center for Paralegal llraiiiing 3376 Peachtree Road, N.E., Atlanta, GA 30326 North Carolina is 10-1-3 and faces Duke today at 7 p.m. in the final home game of the season for UNC. The team travels to Norfolk, Va., on Saturday fpr a return match with defending NCAA champion, Old Dominion, the only team the Tar Heels have lost to this season. The North Carolina volleyball team raised its record to 18-6 and remained undefeated in the ACC with a 3-1 win over Duke Tuesday night in Carmichael Auditorium. The Tar Heels, 6-0 in the ACC, needed one of their best performances of the year to down the stubborn Blue Devils, 16-14, 154, 13-15 and 15-8. Junior tri-captain Linda Kantz turned in an outstanding game. Kantz directed a balanced UNC attack and finished with 32 assists for the match. "We did a good job of mixing up our plays and taking advantage of our oppor tunities," coach Beth Miller said. "We varied our attack so they couldn't key on just one thing." Seniors Sandy Schmidt and Donna Meier, sophomore Kim Rose and freshman Jill Berkebile all had good games as North Carolina dominated the net area. The Tar Heels blocked nine at tempted kills in the first game alone. UNC will be playing in the University of Tennessee Invitational Friday and Saturday before facing ACC rival N.C. State next Tuesday in Raleigh. 'BTH' DROP SITES Post Office R.0.T.C F.L.O.B. Granville South Bus Stop Brauer Granville East Coker Student Health Granville West Stadium Dr. Morrison Fowlers Teague Craige Carr Mall Winston Hinton James Coffee Shop Davie Ehringhaus Planetarium YMCA Law Raleigh St. Cameron Ave. General Administration Lenoir Dr. Carrington Kroger Plaza DTH Office Berryhill Howell Hall Student Union Rosenau Odum Village IfiES . . . Wq that tlm3 agjanim Get your smile in the Yackey Yack. Sittings are October 31-Nov. 4 (all others). BJo cMnmig free! Either call 962-1259, 962-3912, or come by 106 Union for appointments, i ) 8J3QQ i3-s now $20430 msB mmvmm a? the : i y. V . ' v - V f. V J- S ... sswAwiW DATE: Thursday, Oct. 27 PLACE: STudENT STORES TIME: 9 am-2 pm 9 DMaion of Carnation Company