The Daily Tar HeelMonday, October 5, 19927 C 2 Final Major League Baseball Standings American Leagut Eastern Division National Leagut Eastern Division W L Pet. GB W L Pet. GB X-Toronto 96 66 .593 -Pittsburgh 96 66 .593 Milwaukee 92 70 .568 4 Montreal 87 75 .537 9 Baltimore 89 73 .549 7 St.Louis 83 79 .512 13 Cleveland 76 86 .469 20 Chicago 78 84 .481 18 New York 76 86 .469 20 New York 72 90 .444 24 Detroit 75 87 .463 21 Philadelphia 70 92 .432 26 Boston 73 89 .451 23 Western Division Western Division W L Pet. GB W L Pet. GB it-Oakland 96 66 .593 - x-Atlanta 98 64 .605 Minnesota 90 72 .556 6 Cincinnati 90 72 .556 8 Chicago 86 76 .530 10 San Diego 82 80 .506 16 Texas 77 85 .475 19 Houston 81 81 .500 17 California 72 90 .444 24 San Francisco 72 90 .444 26 Kansas City 72 90 .444 24 Los Angeles 63 99 .388 35 Seattle 64 98 .395 32 x-denotes division champion Postseason Baseball All Times EDT American League Wed., Oct. 7 Oakland at Toronto, 8:26 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 8 Oakland at Totonto, 8:37 p.m. Saturday, Oct 10 Toronto at Oakland, 3 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 11 Toronto at Oakland, 4:10 p.m. Monday, Oct. 12 Toronto at Oakland, 3:07 p.m., if necessary Wednesday, Oct. 14 Oakland at Toronto, 3:07 p.m. or 8:26 p.m., if .necessary Thursday, Oct. 15 Oakland at Toronto, 8:37 p.m., if necessary Postseason Baseball All Times EDT National League Tuesday, Oct. 6 Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 8:39 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 7 Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 3:07 p.m. Friday, Oct. 9 Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 8:37 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 10 Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 8:37 p.m. Sunday, Oct. 11 Atlanta at Pittsburgh, 8:37 p.m, if necessary Tuesday, Oct. 13 Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 8:37 p.m., if necessary Wednesday, Oct. 14 Pittsburgh at Atlanta, 8:26 p.m., if necessary Navy from page 10 Grille from page 10 Hie Far Side "Oh, it's ust Hank's little cross to bear he's allergic to down and that's that." Study "I think we could have scored in any game we've played," Chaump said. "We drove the ball in every game we've played. It's an interesting trivia thing, but I know we can score TDs." The Midshipmen could have scored on their first drive against Virginia, but they turned the ball over. The Middies couldn't capitalize when they had de cent field position against Rutgers or Boston College. It looked like the same pattern would continue against UNC. Early in the sec ond quarter, Navy drove to the UNC 23 only to miss a 41 -yard field goal. The Midshipmen moved the ball later that quarter to the UNC 35 and 38, but they punted both times. In the third quarter, they had it at North Carolina's 23 and fumbled it away. UNC recovered three of six Navy fumbles and intercepted Van Matre once. "We made a lot of mistakes and we need to overcome them," Navy's quar terback said. "After going scoreless in the first three games, it's definitely a big step." Navy held the ball 6 12 minutes longer than UNC. The Middies also outgained UNC's vaunted rushers by 60 yards. "I was satisfied with the kids' ef fort," Chaump said. "We've got to be satisfied with the improvement of every phase of our game." Navy is a program trying to avoid a long, difficult rebuilding period. It's not easy to recruit players to come to Navy, and it's only harder when the team is losing. At least now it's scoring. from page 5 Calvin and Hobbes L I i W1 1 WW ONCE SOid SME LYe4 MEI So I WHiER HWnV womU MoffEtf SLiPoERt md SUWVf. 4M otfEliSiZ&i UoK D'OEUVW? GOOD PoCTtN GWES ) ME SOOSfcBWPS. J Doonesbury : IJUST AP5Y0U He.HS!NaTHANKS.nk TWO (TP- IJM tlU RAYflPIPNT CAMBOVBi SU&f TH&MUST&SCKrOF mr urrimte TDOfL'. ; know you . fonns CMTya AFmTA5cxmmjeY't iJvnP Zai' r cr! THE Daily Crossword by Gerald R. Ferguson ACROSS ! 1 Cartoonist Al 5 Orange 10" the night before..." 14 Chills and fever 15 Soap plant 16 Wife of Zeus 17 Dispatched 18 Champions' wear 20 Wine description 21 Ponder 22 Fritters 23 Offspring in wills 25 "Chances " ' (song) 26 Lab twin 27 Ship hanger-on 32 Dress fashion 33 Olympic medals 34 Help 35 Summer skin tones 36 Rail birds 37 Before: pref. 38 Mineral 39 Boat or trap start 40 Animate 41 Sentry demand 43 Detection device 44 Asian holiday 45 Revolutionary ; general 46 On the briny 49 Author Grey 50 Feller 53 Excluded 55 Geneva, e.g. 56 Irwin, of the PGA 57 Extent 58 Farm measure 59 Aussie birds 60 Contemptuous expression ' 61 Card game for three DOWN 1 Peggy of TV 2 Author James 3 Funny endings 4 Caress 5 Everybody's Mother 6 Faulty 7 Ballot 8 Wing, of a kind 9 Sheltered places 10 "The Old Man and " 11 Whip mark 12 Funny Johnson 13 Lip 19 Farm buildings 21 Place behind the adit C1992 Tribune Media Services, Inc. All Rights Reserved 24 Extremely long periods 26 Santa 27 Uninterested 28 "When I was " 29 Duck 30 Metric measure 31 Blissful place 32 Above 33 Active one 36 Sportscaster's help 37 Assistant 39 No (easily done) 40 Behind time 42 Rocks 43 Enraged one 45 Measure precisely 46 Throb 47 Froth 48 Jim-dandy 49 District 51 Pod vegetable 52 Borscht need 54 Rather 55 Cruces . Hpi r T s IoTnI Need help with this crossword puzzle? Call 1-900- 454-3014. Your phone company will bill you 95 ' cents per minute. Rotary or touch-tone phones. i r" 3 4 I 15 R It El Is l""io 111 12 13 ieT" )S mm mm . 24 mmf ae 27 21 29 30 31 32 3J """ "" mm aMB mid mm IS J 37 5j- " 3J " 0 4J "" 43 """ 'J 44 " " 46 """" 46 47 41 4S " " 50 SI 52 M mm 55 " 7 i 6I-" " so 61 but that's something we have to do," said Means, who rushed for 1 12 yards. "I think we used a lot of emotion last week against State, and I think it showed on the field (Saturday), but we can't let that affect us." AfterTripp Pignetti kicked a 22-yard field goal late in the third quarter to put UNC up 20-0, the only questions that seemed to be left were how large the final margin would be and whether the Tar Heels could keep the shutout intact. Navy came right back and scored on its next possession, however. Fullback Cleavon Smith's 9-yard TD run with 12:56 left closed out an 11 -play, 63 yard drive. Three minutes later, Navy recovered an errant pitch by Tar Heel quarterback Mike Thomas at the UNC 29-yard-Iine. Within a minute, Jason Van Matre hit Tom Pritchard with a 27 yard scoring strike. Forget margins and shutouts. Now even the UNC victory was in danger. Thomas' fumble turned out to be his last play of the game. With Stanicek back in the game, everything seemed to click better, even simple handoffs. Stanicek hit Corey Holliday , who caught a career-high nine passes for 152 yards, for a 21 -yard gain before Means' sec ond touchdown of the day put the game away. largest emitter of air pollutants. "We want to be a good environmental neighbor, and we're working to change," he said. "No one wants to live in a dirty environment, not even companies." Federal Paper Board Co. recently spent $38 million for equipment to improve air quality control, Carroll said. Champion International in Canton, the state's fifth-largest polluter, also is making a tremendous monetary investment to reduce air pollution. The company, a paper-making indus try , is in the process of a $300 million modernization that will result in air emissions reductions, said David Karft, director of public relations for Champion. "Our largest single pollutant is chloroform, which comes from the chlorine used to bleach wood pulp for white paper," he said. "We're taking chlorine out altogether and substitut ing other bleaching agents. This will really cut back on our pollutants." Champion' s modernization efforts should be completed in early 1994, he said. PIRG's reason for publishing the study is to make the public aware of pollution levels and to increase pressure on toxic polluters to reduce and eliminate harmful emissions, Blackledge said. The other top 10 plants in the state for toxic air pollution in 1990 were DuPont in Leland, Cape Industries in Wilmington, -R. J. Reynolds Tobacco in Winston-Salem, Shuford Mills Inc. Hickory Tape Plant, Hickory Springs Foam in Conover, Texasgulf Inc. Phosphate in Aurora and Weyerhaeuser Co. Plymouth Millren. AP Top 25 Team Record Pts Pvs 1. Washington (42) 4-0-0 1,528 1 2. Miami (16) 4-0-0 1,497 2 3. Michigan (1) 3-0-1 1,393 4 4. Tennessee (2) 5-0-0 1,305 7 5. TexasA&M 5-0-0 1,252 5 6. Alabama (1) 5-0-0 1,224 9 7. PennSt. 5-0-0 1,217 8 . Florida St. 4-1-0 1,197 3 9. Colorado 4-0-0 1,048 10 10. Virginia 5-0-0 953 14 11. Stanford 4-1-0 942 18 12. Georgia 4-1-0 824 16 13. Notre Dame 3-1-1 774 6 14. Nebraska 3-1-0 772 15 15. Syracuse 3-1-0 590 17 16. Oklahoma 3-1-0 534 19 17. Georgia Tech 3-1-0 501 23 18. Mississippi St. 3-1-0 478 24 19. UCLA 3-1-0 346 11 20. Southern Cal 1-1-1 288 20 21. Boston College 4-0-1 271 22 tie. Ohio St. 3-1-0 271 12 23. Florida 1-2-0 142 13 24. California 3-1-0 121 25. Clemson 2-2-0 118 25 tie. NX. State 4-2-0 118 21 Others receiving votes: West Virginia 90, Wisconsin 74, Washington State 72, Arizona 57, Auburn 43, Hawaii 37, San Diego St. 27, Mississippi 14, North Carolina 13, Kansas 12, Kansas St. 5, Air Force 1, Oregon 1. Navy 0 0 0 14 14 North Carolina 10 7 3 8 28 First Quarter UNC Pfenetti 25 field goal. 6 58 UNC Means 16 run (PignetS kick), 805 Second Quarter UNC Jordan 65 pass from Stanicek (Pignetti kick). 3:05 Third Quarter UNC Pignetti 22 lieW goal, 257 Fourth Quarter Navy Smith 9 run (Rogers kick), 12:56 Navy Prttchard 27 pass from Van Matre (Rogers kick), 831 UNC Means 30 run (Brooks pass from Stanicek), 622 A 42.000 first downs Rushes-yards Passing yards Return yards Comp-Att-Int PuntsAvg Fumbtes-tost Penalties-yards :: Time of possession Navy 17 58-219 138 8 8 16 1 9-40.3 6-3 4-35 33:46 UNC 20 38-159 . 275 77 17-3&0 8-43.6 2-1 7-55 2:t4 Individual Statistics Rushing: Navy Van Matrs 24-70; C. Smith 13- 61; J. Williams 15-33; M. Williams 6-19. UNC Means 18-112; Pautkerson 6-21; Marshall 2-3; Jordan 6-1; Thomas 1-(-6), Stanicek 5-(-1 6). Passing: Navy Van Matre 8-16-1 138. UNC Stanicek 13-21-4) 219; Thomas 4- 14- 056. Receiving: Navy Pritchard 4-46; Screen 2-59; M. WiBiams 1-27; Smith 1-6. UNC Holliday 9-152; Brooks 3-16; .lordan 2-83; Felton2.13: Means 1-11. Athletes p5 Cancer "We saw them score, and it's like, 'We better get down there and get some : points on the board,"' said Stanicek, who threw for 219 yards on 13-of-21: passing. "No one was scared because ' we knew we were just hurting our- ; selves. We couldn't get into a rhythm of. any sort" North Carolina controlled the first half, allowing Navy but a missed field.1 goal attempt. Meanwhile, UNC' outscored Navy 1 7-0 despite having the', ball for only 10 minutes in the half..: Means scored his eighth touchdown of ' the year on a 16-yard run in the first quarter. ? In the second quarter. Randy Jordan caught a dump pass from Stanicek and . ran 65 yards for a score. After UNC went three-downs-and-; out on its first possession in the third v quarter, Brown lifted Stanicek in favor-: of Thomas. "We had 17 points and we felt like j we should have had 28," Brown said, i "We wanted to play Mike some also ' because we' 11 need him later in the year. .-' Also, there didn't seem to be much emotion in the third quarter; it seemed like it was dead." With Navy blitzing on practically every down, the UNC offense wentjj nowhere in the third quarter, gaining just two first downs. On the scoring; drive that resulted in Pignetti's field: goal, the Tar Heel offense moved onlyy 9 yards. " ' "The third quarter was atrocious,' Brown said. V Navy used its time-consuming wish-1 bone offense for the second time all i! season. Injuries to Navy 's top two quar terbacks forced coach George Chaump to move tailback Van Matre to quarter back in last week's game against Rutgers. Navy abandons its traditional offense with Van Matre at the helm because his strength is running the option. For the-! game, Van Matre threw for 138 yards and ran for 70. ,J from page 1 1 "Student-athletes (at Wake Forest) have been excluded for so long, they didn't know how to take advantage of these opportunities," Creech said. "A movement such as the one at Chapel Hill can't take place at Wake Forest unless there was a real commitment on the part of student leaders at Wake Forest to involve student-athletes." "It would take a major issue" for student-athletes to organize themselves independently, he said. Willie Fleming, the director of African-American Student Development at Appalachian State University, said student-athletes at the university were "not as involved as we would like to see them." Although some student-athletes at ASU are committee members in stu dent government, athletes do not hold any leadership positions. Fleming said this was a result of student-athletes al ready being "overwhelmed" by trying to balance classes with practice. While little debate at ASU has re sulted from recent events at UNC, Fleming attributed this primarily to the distance separating the schools and the lack of communication between them instead of student apathy. Janet Dickerson, who works at the Office of Student Affairs at Duke Uni versity, said she had not witnessed a student-athlete movement such as UNC's during her employment at the university. "I have never seen athletes unify in support of a single political stance," Dickerson said. of this kind of study, which combines scientific fields that previously have been on opposite sides of the spectrum. Also as part of the study, scientists will use molecular epidemiology and other investigative sciences to deter . mine the causes of higher breast cancer mortality rates among black women. "One important aspect of the study is the fact that when you look at black white differences, in every aspect of health, the blacks have 1-12 to two times the rate of mortality from the disease," said Michel Ibrahim, dean of the School of Public Health. 'This grant will study on several levels molecular, behavioral and oth " ers the differences in cancer rates between whites and blacks," he said. "We will investigate family history, behavioral aspects, genetic differences and other factors in the study." Ibrahim cited previous studies that showed definite medical differences between blacks and whites. "Looking at different population groups, you do find gene frequency differences," he said. "The question for us to answer is,3 'ho w do these differences affect risk for breast cancer?'" ;T Hulka said the researchers not only ! hoped to discover reasons for higher ,', rates of breast cancer in different ethnic groups but also ways of stopping breast-' cancer once it has been detected. :; Researchers have found that many I black women come into cancer research centers at a later stage of the disease .1 than most white women, making treat ment more difficult. ; "Black women have a lower rate of ; contracting the disease, but a higher.; mortality rate," Pisano said. '. "We are not sure why, but there are -several possible explanations." ; "Blacks could contract a different I form of breast cancer, one that is more 1 aggressive. V "Black women could also have less - -access to health care because of socio-", economic factors, lack of medical in- ; surance and other reasons. ; "It is probable that black women are ; getting screened less often than white women." 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