Where are They Now?

Former Carolina women’s lacrosse players have moved on to be successful in a variety of ACROSSE fields after leaving Chapel Hill. L The following is a sampling of S

’ what some former Tar Heels are doing now ...

Secondary Degrees

OMEN Julie Kickham, Masters in Geology W Kate McDaniel, University of School of Nursing Brooke Schildwachter, Continuing Education for Medical School Carla Nappi, applying for a Former All-Americas Christine McPike, AROLINA PhD in Psychology Brooke Crawford and Kellie Thompson all played C Debbie Castine, Masters in with the U.S. Developmental Team in 2001. Psychology Meghan Stringer, George Former assistant coach Jen Larsen is now the head coach at Oregon. Washington University Law School Lindsay Stone, Masters in Industrial Psychology at Hofstra University Coaching Christine McPike, Masters in Brooke Crawford, University of Notre Education at Hofstra University & Dame Assistant Coach Jen Larsen (former assistant coach), Jessica Wilson, studying ministry & University of Oregon head coach divination Laurie Milback, School of Business Teaching and Public Management, George Katie Lewis Washington University Zoe Parker Erin McGinnis Doctors Trisha Cummings Brintha Krishnamoorthy Meghan Mohler Karen Greenberg Amy Fine Meredith Meade Dentists Former assistant coach Lisa Dixon Amy Havrilla Amanda Baker works in marketing for the NFL’s Allison Baker Baltimore Ravens. Professional Sports Megan Collins, Marketing, Baltimore Ravens (NFL) Sarah Dacey, Former professional Investment Banking Soccer Player, Boston Breakers Gray MacNair, Deutche Bank Lisa Dixon (former assistant coach), Marketing, Baltimore Ravens (NFL) Sports Marketing Jenny Voishan, Octogon Politics Porter Wilkinson, Deputy Sales Correspondence Manager for Virginia Aubrey Falk, Black and Decker Senator George Allen Nicole Foran, Pfizer Pharmaceutical Katie Loovis, White House, Office of Ridgely Bennett Faith-Based and Community Initiatives Kristin Off Lynne Quattrone Journalism Jazmine Norton Erin McInnes, Weekend Sports Margaret Garofalo Producer, Fox 45, Baltimore, Md. Kellie Thompson Laurie Milback, marketing intern, ComCast Sports Net, Washington, D.C.

Social Work Lindsay Stone is pursuing a master’s degree in industrial psychology. Lori Pasquantonio

Page 18 • 2004 UNC Women’s Lacrosse Media Guide Top-Notch Support Services C AROLINA

At the University of North Carolina, athletes are still first and foremost students. While most universities make that claim, Carolina student-ath- 2003 ACC HONOR ROLL letes prove it. The women’s lacrosse team annually is among the best on the Carolina campus in the classroom. W Eight women’s lacrosse players — Brooke Dieringer, Margaret OMEN Garofalo, Meghan Kelly, Ilsa Leon, Eilidh MacDonald, Melissa McCarthy, Jazmine Norton and Lynne Quattrone — were listed on the ACC Academic Honor Roll for the 2002-03 academic year. In addition, Brooke Margaret Meghan Ilsa

Norton made the Dean’s List. Dieringer Garofalo Kelly Leon ’ Performances such as these are direct result of the emphasis placed on S

academics by the North L 2002-03 WOMEN’S LACROSSE Carolina athletic department. ACROSSE ACADEMIC HONORS In the 2002-03 academic ACC Honor Roll year, 257 Carolina student- Brooke Dieringer athletes made the ACC Academic Honor Roll, which Margaret Garofalo requires a cumulative GPA of Meghan Kelly at least 3.0 for the year. Ilsa Leon “We have an athletic pro- Eilidh MacDonald Eilidh Melissa Jazmine Lynne gram with our priorities in MacDonald McCarthy Norton Quattrone Melissa McCarthy line with the fundamental Jazmine Norton academic mission of the Lynne Quattrone University,” says Athletic Director Dick Baddour. “Our Dean’s List young people are students Jazmine Norton first and athletes second and that will always be the case at UNC Athletic Director’s the University. That is a cred- Scholar-Athlete Award FITNESS & CONDITIONING it to our coaches, administra- The women’s lacrosse team utilizes a 8,000-square-foot fitness cen- Jazmine Norton tors, support staff, but most of ter under the direction of strength coach Steve Gissleman, who spe- all, our student-athletes. cializes in sport-specific training and speed and strength development. Their accomplishments in the classroom are very impressive.” The fitness center is located below the Student-Athlete Development October 1986, North Carolina opened the doors to its new Student- Center in a wing of the Kenan Fieldhouse and features state-of-the-art Athlete Development Center, located at the east end of Kenan Stadium, equipment, free weights and Olympic weights. adjacent to Kenan Fieldhouse. This 10,000 square-foot, state-of-the-art One of three fitness facilities used by Carolina athletes, the Kenan academic center boasts an impressive array of facilities for the benefit of facility also features a performance lab where specialized aerobic all Tar Heel student-athletes in the 28-sport program. Included in the building, convenient to classrooms and dorms alike, are equipment such as stairmasters, treadmills and biocycles is used for a full assortment of computers, several study rooms, a language lab with conditioning and monitoring rehabilitation progress. The squad also tape players, seven tutorial rooms, a large classroom that can be divided makes use of modern strength, flexibility and conditioning methods in into two smaller ones and a 128-seat auditorium that is used for seminars a year-round training cycle. The result of such training is athletes who and lectures. The Center has the latest and most up-to-date computer sys- are properly conditioned for competition. tems in place. “Our goal is to assist our student-athletes in making sound academic MEDICAL CARE decisions,” says Robert Mercer, Director of the Academic Support In addition to the academic and fitness programs, the Tar Heels Program for Student-Athletes. “By providing our student athletes with receive excellent care from one of the country’s best sports medicine direction and support with their studies and their graduation planning, we staffs. are helping them to realize their full potential while they are attending the Carolina’s Director of Sports Medicine, Dr. Tim Taft, oversees a pro- University and after they have graduated.” gram that includes care by Dr. Tom Brickner, Head Team Physician. The Academic Support Program staff, which serves approximately 725 Coordinator of Athletic Training Dan Hooker directs a staff of full-time student-athletes, consists of Mercer; Associate Directors Susan Maloy athletic trainers and physical therapists, several graduate students and and Burgess McSwain; Assistant Director Wayne Walden; Academic undergraduates. Counselors Jan Boxill, Mary Brunk, Marisa Marucci, Kym Orr and The medical and athletic training facilities are located in the Student Cynthia Reynolds; Learning Specialist Michelle Nixon and Office Health Center and Fetzer Gym. Both are near Tar Heel practice areas Assistant Doug Roberts. Brunk works directly with the women’s lacrosse for easy access to the conscientious treatment and advice on the care team. The Academic Support Center is open from 8 a.m. to midnight dur- and prevention of injuries that is available from the sports medicine ing the week and from 7:30 p.m. to midnight on Sundays. staff. With a commitment to academic excellence soundly in place at the The Athletic Department also recognizes a responsibility in educat- University of North Carolina, the Student-Athlete Development Center ing student athletes on the physical, mental, emotional and legal issues becomes a vitally useful tool for helping with the education of student- involved in drug abuse. Accordingly, the department has established a athletes . . . and for proving that “student” does indeed belong as a prefix drug education and prevention program which is administered by the to the word “athlete” at Carolina. University’s Student Health Services.

2004 UNC Women’s Lacrosse Media Guide • Page 19

Henry Stadium

Frances E. — Home of the Tar Heels

ACROSSE In April of 1999, the Carolina women’s lacrosse team moved L into its new home, Francis E. Henry Stadium, a facility that is S

’ first-class in every way. Inside the Tar Heels’ spacious locker room, each player has her own full-length locker, with ample storage space and a plaque bearing her name and number. Next door is a film and meeting OMEN room with leather couches, a big-screen television, computer lab

W and a small kitchen. The coaches’ locker room provides another place for reviewing strategy before and after games. The build- ing’s entranceway houses a sizeable trophy case, which houses the Tar Heels’ one ACC and three NCAA Final Four trophies and provides space for those trophies yet to be won. The 12,000-square-foot facility could not have been built with- AROLINA out contributions from hundreds of Tar Heel supporters. Their C generosity is celebrated all around the stadium, from the engraved bricks out front to plaques on the seats in the stands. Inside, signs recognize more donors who helped make the building possible.

LEFT: Carolina cel- ebrates its win over Virginia in the 2002 NCAA Tournament that sent the Tar Heels to the Final Four. Brad Smith

BELOW: The Tar Heels celebrate their overtime win over Maryland at Henry Stadium in 2002.

Page 20 • 2004 UNC Women’s Lacrosse Media Guide Henry Stadium C AROLINA

Carolina Year-by-Year at Home Year Henry Stadium Total 1996 4-2 4-0 8-2 1997 5-2 1-0 6-2 1998 4-1 2-0 6-1 W 1999 2-1 2-1 4-2 OMEN 2000 3-0 3-2 6-2 2001 2-1 4-1 6-2 2002 0-1 8-0 8-1 2003 — 6-2 6-2 ’

Totals 20-8 30-6 50-14 S L ACROSSE

Photos by Dan Sears

Locker Room

Team Meeting Room

“The completion of Henry Stadium is an historic event for Carolina athletics and for women’s athletics here in particular. This facility ranks among the finest in the country, and it cer- tainly indicates how serious Carolina is about giving its wom- ens’ programs the best chance to succeed. “Not only is it an athletic facility, but the team meeting room has four computers and is used in conjunction with the aca- demic center as a place for our student-athletes to get their work done.” — Head Coach Jenny Levy

Coaches’ Office

2004 UNC Women’s Lacrosse Media Guide • Page 21 A Look at Carolina THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA: A COMPENDIUM OF KEY FACTS

HISTORY The University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill was the ACROSSE nation’s first state university to open its doors and the only L public university to award degrees in the 18th century. S ’ Authorized by the N.C. Constitution in 1776, the univer- sity was chartered by the N.C. General Assembly Dec. 11, 1789, the same year George Washington first was inaugu-

OMEN rated as president. W The cornerstone was laid for , the nation’s first state university building, Oct. 12, 1793. Hinton James, the first student, arrived from Wilmington, N.C., Feb. 12, 1795.

AROLINA LOCATION The 729-acre central campus includes the two oldest state C university buildings, Old East and Person Hall. Old East and , an 1852 Greek-revival building The UNC campus is recognized as one of the most beautifully land- are National Historic Landmarks. scaped spots in the country by the American Society of Landscape Architects. The American Society of Landscape Architects selected the Carolina campus as one of the most beautifully landscaped spots in the country. Chapel Hill has been called "the perfect college town" by publications That list, released in 1999 timed to the society’s centennial, is among including Sports Illustrated. the latest praise affirming the charm of mighty oaks, majestic quadrangles, brick sidewalks and other landscaping synony- UNC anchors one corner of the famed Park, which has mous with UNC. played a vital role in nurturing the economic development of North Carolina. Today, the campus is undergoing an unprecedent- ed transformation made possible in part by North Carolinians’ overwhelming approval RECENT RANKINGS In the U.S. News and World Report magazine’s 2002 "America’s Best of the $3.1 billion bond referendum for Colleges” guide, UNC was ranked fifth among the nation’s top public higher educaiton. The referendum, universities and tied for 28th overall among both public and private cam- approved in November 2000, was the puses. Among undergraduate business programs, the Kenan-Flagler nation’s largest higher education Business School rankedfifth nationwide. Carolina also was mentioned for bond package. becoming the nation’s first major highly selective public university to The bonds are bringing announce an end to early decision admissions. Carolina $510 million for renovations, repairs and U.S. News also ranked numerous graduate degree programs and special- new buildings so 21st ty areas at UNC among the top 25 nationwide, in April 2002. The maga- century students can zine rated programs in the schools of business, education, law, medicine, learn in a 21st cen- nursing and public health. Several schools, degree programs and special- tury environment. ty areas were in the top 10. Also guided by a visionary master plan for growth now coming to life, the university is THE TRIANGLE IS A STUDENT-FRIENDLY investing another METROPOLITAN AREA $600-plus million from Collegia, a Massachusetts-based consulting company, ranked the most non-state sources, includ- student-friendly metropolitan areas in three population categories. ing private gifts, for other Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill ranked first in Teir II (population between buildings essential to excel- 1 and 2.6 million). lence. The resulting capital con- struction program is believed to be TIER II the largest underway at any major 1. Raleigh/Durham/Chapel Hill American university. 2. Pittsburgh The (left) is the most 3. Austin recognized landmark on the 4. Seattle Carolina campus. All campus 5. Nashville photos by Dan Sears.

Page 22 • 2004 UNC Women’s Lacrosse Media Guide A Look at Carolina C AROLINA THE TOP 10 CITIES THAT HAVE IT ALL: According to A&E Television, Chapel Hill ranks as one of the ten cities in America that have it all.

1. Burlington, Vt. 6. Charlottesville, Va.

2. Chapel Hill, N.C. 7. Eugene, Ore. W 3. Austin, Texas 8. Portland, Maine 4. Annapolis, Md. 9. Maryville, Tenn. OMEN 5. Madison, Wis. 10. Fort Collins, Colo. “The Top American Research Universities,” in a 2002 edition, ranked ’

Carolina fifth among public universities. The publication is produced S by TheCenter, part of the Lombardi Program on Measuring L University Performance, at the University of . The rankings ACROSSE are based on data covering areas such as research, private support, faculty and advanced training.

Kaplan/Newsweek’s “How to Get into College” guide, in a 2003 edi- Carolina graduates include athletes Michael Jordan and Mia tion, ranked Chapel Hill one of 12 “hot colleges.” Wrote the editors, “… Hamm, journalists Charles Kuralt and Stuart Scott, U.S. senator with a tough economy, the hottest schools may well be the best bargains John Edwards and former U.S. President James Polk. – those offering excellent academics at affordable prices. That’s why our list … is dominated by some of the country’s top public universities, like Colleges” listed Carolina second among the top 10 “hot and trendy” the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. … As America’s oldest national universities, based on results of the Kaplan 2002 National public university, (Carolina) has a deep sense of tradition, and that makes Survey of High School Guidance Counselors. Carolina was second students feel connected. Although tradition is important, Carolina is also behind Harvard University among top schools. thinking about the future. In the next decade, the school plans to invest at least $245 million in genomic sciences." Kiplinger’s Personal Finance Magazine ranked UNC first among 100 best public colleges combining great academics and affordable tuitions. “The Unofficial, Unbiased Insider’s Guide to the 320 Most Interesting These rankings are based on cost, quality and financial aid factors. “Overall the rankings aren’t radically different from our 1998 and 2000 Franklin Street offers shopping, as well as scores of dining and surveys,” according to the magazine.“In fact, the University of North entertainment options, for the University community. Carolina at Chapel Hill tops the rankings for the third time – a remark- able threepeat for the Tar Heels.”

The 2003 Fiske Guide to Colleges labeled UNC one of 21 public univer- sities in the United States and Canada that are a "best buy university" based on the quality of the academic offerings in relation to the cost of attendance. “As the flagship campus of the state university system and the oldest public university in the United States, UNC-Chapel Hill has earned its place among the South’s most prestigious universities," accord- ing to the guide. The guide cited UNC’s nationally recognized honors program and quoted a senior: "’College town’ in the dictionary should show a picture of Chapel Hill.’"

The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education concluded in 2002 that Carolina ranked first among public campuses and sixth overall for suc- cess in integrating African-Americans. The evaluation rates the nation’s 26 highest academically ranked universities in 13 categories or factors of racial diversity. “The university is particularly strong in the categories dealing with student diversity,” according to the journal. “The university is ranked second in the percentage of total black enrollments and first in the percentage of black freshmen. Chapel Hill also fares well in most measures of black faculty. The university has nine African-American fac- ulty members who hold endowed chairs. That is the highest number in the United States."

Business Week magazine listed the Kenan-Flagler Business School’s master’s of business administration degree program 18th in its 2002 rank- ings.

2004 UNC Women’s Lacrosse Media Guide • Page 23 A Look at Carolina ty members hold or have held major posts in virtually every national scholarly or professional organization and have earned election to the most prestigious academic groups.

ACROSSE The Carolina academic community benefits from a L library with more than 5.3 million volumes and perenni- S

’ ally ranks among the best research libraries in North Americaas judged by the Association of Research Libraries. The most recent association listings place Carolina 16th among 114 research libraries in North

OMEN America. UNC’s North Carolina Collection is the largest of its kind among state-oriented collections on campuses W nationwide. And the Southern and rare book collections also are among the country’s finest.

Carolina’s 230,072 alumni live in all 50 states and in 141 countries around the world. Notable alumni include writ- ers Thomas Wolfe, Shelby Foote and Jill McCorkle; ath- AROLINA letes Michael Jordan, Vince Carter, Mia Hamm, Marion C Jones and Davis Love III; and journalists Roger Mudd, Charles Kuralt, Stuart Scott and Tom Wicker. Others include former White House Chief of Staff Erskine Bowles; former White House Communications Director Don Baer; U.S. Sen. John Edwards; Bill Harrison, chief executive officer of Chase Manhattan Bank; Scott The Bynum Fountain is a great popular spot to relax on the Carolina campus in between classes. Livengood, Krispy Kreme Doughnut chairman, president and chief exec- utive officer; Sallie L. Krawcheck, chairman and chief executive officer of Smith Barney, a division of Citigroup; U.S. President James Polk; The Wall Street Journal ranked Kenan-Flagler 12th among MBA degree geneticist Francis Collins; actors Jack Palance, George Grizzard and programs. Kenan-Flagler was the only Southeastern university program Andy Griffith, as well as actresses Louise Fletcher and Sharon Lawrence; listed among the top 15. The 2002 ranking is based on The Wall Street editorial cartoonist Jeff MacNelly; corporate banker Hugh McColl; and Journal/Harris Interactive Business School Survey focusing on the opin- fashion designer Alexander Julian. ions of recruiters who recruit full-time business school graduates. STUDENTS The Financial Times, a London-based newspaper, has issued recent rank- Recent freshman classes at Carolina have set new standards of excellence ings listing Kenan-Flagler’s MBA program 23rd among the top 100 as measured by the rigorous coursework students have taken in high worldwide and its executive education program 28th. Kenan-Flagler also school, as well as their grades and SAT scores. The incoming freshmen of was 8th among U.S. schools for top salary increases among alumni sur- 2003 are continuing that trend. Besides setting a new record for high veyed. school preparation, the newest class will become the very best group of first-year students Carolina has ever admitted. KEY STATISTICS Now in its third century, UNC belongs to the select group of 61 American UNC students have a long tradition of outstanding achievement. In and two Canadian campuses forming the Association of American December 2002, senior Morehead Scholar Karine Dubè of Canada was Universities. UNC’s academic offerings span a broad range of fields and chosen for a Rhodes Scholarship, becoming the 36th UNC student to be include 69 bachelor’s, 111 master’s and 75 doctoral degrees as well as so honored since 1902 and the 13th UNC winner since 1980. Carolina professional degrees in dentistry, medicine, pharmacy and law. Five ranks second among public universities for the number of Rhodes health schools -- which, with UNC Scholars produced. Hospitals, comprise one of the nation’s most complete academic RESEARCH medical centers -- are integrated with Attracting research funds from the federal government is among the liberal arts, basic sciences and high- major contributions the university makes to the North Carolina economy. tech academic programs. A new ranking affirms that the Carolina faculty’s ability to do just that places them among the nation’s best. The university ranks 13th overall for In fall 2002, Carolina enrolled about total funding awarded by the National Institutes of Health in fiscal 2002 26,000 students from all 100 North - a 12 percent increase. Carolina is the top public university in the South Carolina counties, the other 49 states and one of only five Southern universities, public or private, cited in the and more than 100 other countries. NIH’s top 20. NIH, part of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Eighty-one percent of Carolina’s Services, is the principal biomedical research arm of the federal govern- 15,961 undergraduates were from ment. North Carolina. Sixty-one percent of Carolina’s students were undergradu- Carolina placed 17th in the National Science Foundation’s most recent ates, 30 percent graduates and anoth- report on federal academic science and engineering obligations for fiscal er 9 percent were professional degree-seekers. 2001 - advancing three spots from the fiscal 2000 funding totals. UNC Those students learn from a 3,000-member faculty. Many of those facul-

Page 24 • 2004 UNC Women’s Lacrosse Media Guide A Look at Carolina C ranks as the top public university in the South and one of only two N.C. AROLINA A SAMPLING OF German campuses featured in the top 20 for fiscal 2001, the latest year of funding UNDERGRADUATE History reported by the NSF. UNC ranked third in the NSF’s funding for social DEGREES OFFERED Interdisciplinary Studies sciences research during fiscal 2001, the highest achieved by UNC in the AT UNC International Studies various science and engineering fields included in the NSF’s research and development expenditure tables. The department of sociology is thelead-

African Studies W Italian ing department in the nation for such NSF funding. Afro-American Studies Journalism & Mass OMEN American Studies Communication Fiscal 2002 overall research funding at UNC topped the $479 million Anthropology mark for contracts and grants awarded for research, teaching and public Latin Applied Sciences service -- up from nearly $439 million. ’

Latin American Studies S Art

Linguistics EDUCATIONAL AND CULTURAL RESOURCES L Art History From the to the Morehead Planetarium and Science Management and Society ACROSSE Asian Studies Center to the North Carolina Botanical Garden, Carolina offers a vast Mathematical Sciences array of educational and cultural opportunities. The Ackland exhibits Astronomy Mathematics from a permanent collection of more than 15,000 works of art. Biology Music Astronomy enthusiasts and schoolchildren from across North Carolina Biostatistics enjoy the Morehead Planetarium. Besides its displays of native and Nursing Business Administration unusual plants and its nature trails, the Botanical Garden offers art Nutrition exhibits, nature walks and courses on topics ranging from home garden- Chemistry Peace, War and Defense ing to botanical illustration. Classics Pharmacy Clinical Laboratory Science Professional theater also has a permanent place at Carolina through the Philosophy PlayMakers Repertory Company, which performs in the Paul Green Communication Studies Physics Theatre. The Carolina Union Performing Arts Series brings national and Comparative Literature international dance, theatre and musical performances to campus. Recent Political Science Dental Hygiene artists visiting UNC have included Bobby McFerrin, Stomp and Dance Portugese Theater of Harlem. Dramatic Art Psychology East Asian Studies Public Health Construction is currently under way for a new building to house the Sonja Economics Haynes Stone Center for Black Culture and History, funded by private Public Policy Analysis Education donations. It will house classrooms, seminar rooms, a gallery, dance stu- Radiologic Science dio and spaces for performances, lectures, meetings and offices. Now English Recreation Administration based in the Frank Porter Graham Student Union, the center is among the Environmental Sciences nation’s leading centers for research, teaching, learning and public serv- Religious Studies Environmental Studies ice related to black history and culture. The new building is scheduled to Russian be completed in 2004. the idea of incorporating traditional music into the Exercise and Sport Sociology classroom.mate. Services provided include research services, small busi- Sciences Spanish ness managerial and technical assistance, and workshops and training French programs. Studio Art Geography Women’s Studies Geology

23 2004 UNC Women’s Lacrosse Media Guide • Page 25 Athletic Heritage

Julius Peppers was the No. 2 Michael Jordan pick in the 2002 NFL

ACROSSE Draft. L S ’ OMEN W AROLINA C

Davis Love III

• In 2003, the Carolina athletic department was ranked the best in the ACC and No. 5 in the country by Sports Illustrated.

• UNC leads all ACC schools with 31 NCAA titles.

• Carolina has shared or led the ACC in team titles in 15 of the last 16 years.

• Carolina and Maryland are the only two ACC programs with at least 100 men’s championships. However, in the last 12 years, UNC has won 32 men’s titles and Maryland has won just four.

Page 26 • 2004 UNC Women’s Lacrosse Media Guide Athletic Heritage C AROLINA W OMEN ’ S L ACROSSE

• Vince Carter (left) was one of 14 Tar Heels play- ing in the NBA during the Allen Johnson 2002-03 season, the most alumni of any school.

• Carolina finished eighth in the NACDA Directors’ Cup (all-sports competi- Marion Jones won five medals. including tion) in 2003. This finish three golds at the 2000 Olympic Games. marks the eighth time in 10 years that the Tar Heels have placed in the top 10 in the country. This is also the ninth time in 10 years that UNC was the highest-finishing ACC school.

• For the third year in a row, more officially- licensed North Carolina clothing was sold at sporting goods stores in the U.S. than any other school in America.

2004 UNC Women’s Lacrosse Media Guide • Page 27 Tar Heels in the Community

The Carolina women’s lacrosse team takes pride in

ACROSSE being actively involved in the Chapel Hill community,

L annually taking part in a variety of charity events. S ’ This page is a sampling of the Tar Heels’ work in the community in recent years. OMEN W AROLINA C

The Carolina squad sponsors the annual Triangle Area Lacrosse League clinic, teaching stick skills, conditioning and strategy to area youths. The Tar Heels spend a great deal of their offsesaon weekends work- The Carolina squad sponsors an annual youth clinic in the spring, teaching stick skills and ing with T.A.L.L. strategy to area youths. clinic photos by Karen Jonas

The Tar Heels make special efforts to reach out to young fans and increase knowledge of women’s lacrosse in North Carolina.

Each year, the Tar Heels help wrap Christmas gifts for area families.

Page 28 • 2004 UNC Women’s Lacrosse Media Guide