0 Club Sports Roundup ROWING The University of Michigan's men and women's crew teams traveled to East Lansing last Saturday for a competition against Michigan State on the Grand River. In the men's division, with all distances being 2000 meters, Michigan won only the Novice Lightweight Eight division in 7:15, followed by Michi an State at 7:19, and another Michigan boat at 7:23. Michigan State 'won the Vrsity Lightweight Four division in 7:35 followed by Michigan at' 7:39. The Spartans also won the Lightweight Eight in 6:23, soundly defeating Michigan who finished in 6:53.5. In the Heavyweight Eight, the only division entered, and won by Wayne State, who finished in 6:46.2, the Wolverines finished second at 7:00, and the Spartans finished last in 7:14 and 7:49. SAILING The Sailing'Club took the week off last week; next week they will be in- volved in the Area A Eliminations at home. The top three teams will qualify for the Timme Angsten Memorial Regatta at Chicago over Thanksgiving, which is basically "the Fall National Championships," according to Doug Wefer, one of the team's members. KAYAKING There will be an open house held at the North Campus Recreational Building on November 18 from 7-9 p.m. and on November 22 from 9-12 p.m., according to Dan Dever. Instruction is now starting up for beginners, and people interested should go to one of the open houses for more information. AIKIDO The major activity of the Aikido Club was a third degree black belt test last Sunday, the results of which will be announced on Saturday. The Aikido Club has also been teaching some of the basic beginning moves to some students in physical education classes at Huron High School this week, something that hasn't been done before, said tom Blackburn, secretary- treasurer of the club. Blackburn also commented that "there has been a lot of growth in the class size lately (of the Aikido group)." Classes take place at the central I.M. Building on Thursday at 5 p.m., and Sunday at 6 p.m. There- will be a demonstration this Saturday at Arborland at 5 p.m., by members of the U-M Aikido Club also. UNDERGRADUA'TE SOCCER The Michigan undergrad soccer team closed out their season last Sunday with a 1-1 tie against Northwestern. Michigan's only score came on a penalty shot by Bruce Davidson, who said that, "We failed to score on numerous oc- casions, but also did not dominate the midfield as we have in the past." The team ends the year with a 9-2-1 record, and despite ending the season with a loss and a tie, Davidson said that "overall, it was a vety successful season. GRADUATE SOCCER The Michigan graduate soccer team lost to Wayne State 3-0 last Saturday, leaving them with a 3-3 record for the season, with one more game left against the Detroit College of Business. Mike Backfield felt that, "They were much better and we didn't play well." Another reason he felt that Wayne State played better against Michigan this time was that "they had quite a number of new people on their team this time." The Club Sports Roundup relates briefly the activities of the Michigan club sports during the previous week. This week's infor- Mnation was compiled by Daily sports writer James Lombard. a The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, November 10, 1981-Page 11 YUHN AND BOYD SHOW.STRENGTH Freshmen pace harriers By JOSIE VonVOIGTLANDER Distance running is typically a sport that favors the older and more ex- perienced competitors. Many years are required to build up the strength and endurance to become a top notch runner. For Judy Yuhn and Ann Boyd, two freshmen on the Michigan women's cross-country team, success has come sooner than expected. Both women made the top seven on this year's squad and represented the Wolverines in the Big Ten Champion- ships held in East Lansing on October 24 and in the MAIAWRegioral Cham- pionships held in Columbus, Ohio last Saturday. AT THE REGIONALS Yuhn ran well enough to qualify herself for the AIAW National Championships to be held in Pocatello, Idaho on November 21. Because Michigan placed third in the regional competition and only the first two teams qualified to compete in the natinal competition Yuhn had to be among the top ten individuals excluding the runners who were on the top two teams. She placed 18th in the overall standing and thus qualified as an in- dividual. She will accompany tiree of her teammates, who also qualified as individuals, to Idaho. These three are: Melanie Weaver, Lisa Larsen and Sue Frederick, who placed eighth, tenth, and 12th, respectively, at the regionals. Both Yuhn and Boyd were surprised with their early success at Michigan, although they both competed well in high school. In the first cross-country meet of the season, a dual match again-. st Bowling Green, Yuhn was the fourth Wolverine runner across the line. At first, she was afraid to tell her mother how well she did because she thought it was a fluke. With each meet, however, she proved herself again and again. In another dual meet against Eastern SP[RTSDIB [IF Tf FOOTBALL at Purdue, Nov. 14, 1:30 p.m. HOCKEY at Western Michigan, Nov. 13, 7:30 p.m. WESTERN MICHIGAN, Nov. 14, 7:30 p.m. WRESTLING WOLVERINE OPEN, Nov.13 CROSS COUNTRY NCAA District IV Championships at Milwaukee, Nov. 14, 11:00 a.m. VOLLEYBALL SMAIAW; Nov. 12-14 GYMNASTICS Bronco All-Around Classic at Western Michigan, Nov. 13,7:00 p.m. SWIMMING TORONTO, Nov. 13,7:30 p.m. Michigan, she tied for first place with the three teammates who qualified for nationals..Boyd, who had a harder time getting a chance td compete because she is a walk-on, also finished fourth for Michigan in her first varsity com- petition at the Western Michigan In- vitational on October 1. Weaver who usually leads the team did not compete in that meet. In high school, both Yuhn and Boyd placed high in the 1979 state Class A Cross-country championships. Yuhn had placed third with the time of 17:57.7 for three miles, while Boyd was seventh in 18:11. In 1980, when they were both seniors in cross-country, Yuhn placed fourth in the cross-country state meet, running a personal best of 18:06.3 for five kilometers. Boyd had transferred from Port Huron High School to Wayland where she had to run on the boys team because no girl's team existed. IN THE STATE track meet in the spring of 1981, Yuhn placed second in the one mile run, again in a personal best time of 5:04.7. An intense training program is par- tially responsible for the early success for theme two freshmen. Yuhn feels that she is doing more speed work and also more distance work than what she did in high school She has upped her weekly mileage to 50-65 miles. In high school, she considered a seven mile run "the ultimate", recently she did a nine mile run the day after her big race at the regionals. Usually, as a high school runner she would only run a mile or two the day after a meet. Boyd likes to run long distance on the roads. She is currently averaging 80 miles a week and would like to run around 90. She may log between 14-17 miles on a relaxed Sunday morning run. She prefers to run twice a day on the week days. Her morning run is usually 5-8 miles, while her afternoon runs are between 5-11 miles. After evaluating how well these young women did in high school com- petition and how hard they train, it does not surprise other people that they are varsity competitors as freshmen. - U r - __._ THE WORLD IS YOUR CAMPUS Two World itineraries are - , -offered in 1982, sponsored by the University of Pittsburgh. AROUND THE WORLD: sails March 4, 1982 from Ft. Lauderdale -=Spain, Greece' Egypt, Israel, India, Sri Lanka, Philippines, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Korea, Japan. AROUND THE WORLD: sails Sept. 8, 1982 from Seattle. More than tit) university courses, with ih-port and voyage-related emphasis. Faculty from t Iniversity v+ Pittsburgh and other leading universities, augmented by visiting area experts. Optioual tours, indcuding special tours into the People's Republic of China, available. Participation is open to qualified students fromi all accredited colleges and universities. Semester at Se a admits students without regard to colo, race or creed. The S.S. Universe is fully air- conditioned, 18,0H) tons, registered in Liberia and built in America. For a free color brochure, write: Semester at Sea, UCIS, University of Pittsburgh, Forbes Quadrangle, Pittsburgh,- PA 15260, or call toil free (800) 854.0195 (in California call (714) 771-6590). .I Iruhn ...running strong Michigan Grid Statistics Team Ingram........ liassel.... K. Smith . Dickey...... Mercer ... . 8 ,7 3 5 1 30 .22 19 2 0 0 0 14 0 30 22 19 5 2 3.8 0 3.1 0 6.3 0 1.0 0 2.0 0 15 8 12 8 2 Scoring Total First Downs. Rushing ...... Passlag...... Penalty ........ Total Net Yards ... Total Plays .... Avg. Per Play ... Avg. Per Game.. Net Rushing Yards, Total Attempts.. Avg. Per Play.... Atg. Per Game .. Net Passing Yards. A#I/Comp/Int ... Avg. Per Attempt Avg. Per Comp. . 'Avg. Per Game.. Pants/Yds/Avg ... Punt Ret/Yds/Avg KO Ret/Yd/Avg.. Int/Yds/Avg. Fumbles/Lost .... Penalties/Yds .. Scoring: "Total Pts/Avg Touchdowns ..... Rushing ....... Passing .... Returns ...... . PAT's/At . Field GOals/Att Third Down Con/At . success Pct.... MICH 192, 132 51 9 3758 625 6.0 417.6 2507 468 5.4 278.6 1251 157/70/7 8.0 17.9 139.0 42/1878/44.7 29/258/8.9 21/401/19.1 16/204/12.8 12/6 51/467 285/31.7 39 25 14 0 33/34 2/5 4/8 56/118 .475 Opp. 176 81 84 11 '3163 635 5.0 351.4 1239 356 3.5 137.7 1924 279/152/16 6.9 12.7 213.8 50/1969/39.4 13/29/2.2 24/373/15.5 7/11/1.6 15/6 33/278 124/13.8 14 6 8 0 13/14 0/0 9/15 43/ 127, .33$ . S. Smith...... Dickey ....... Passing PA PC m 149 67 7 8 3 0 Y't Yds TD LP .450 1177 13 71 .375 74 1 42 TDrĀ° S. imith ......40 Carter... ....1 Ricks ..........8 Haji-Sheikh ... 0 Woofok.'...4. Edwards'...... I Dunaway.......0 Bergeron .......0 Bean.......... 0 Betts .......... 0 Hassels.........0 Rogers-.......1 'Team'.........0 TDp 0 .7 . 0 0 0 2 2 0 1 1 1 0 0 TDo 0 9. 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 28-28 0 0 0 5.5 0 0 0 0 0-1 ExP 2-Pt FG TP Hassel......... Ricks ....... Carpenter .. Jackson.... Cooper"....... Rose 1....... 0/0/0/0 0/0/0/0 12/100/8.3/48 10/47/4.7/13 1/8/8.0/8 1/1/1./1 1/16/16.0/16 1/13/13.0/13 0/0/0/0. 0/0/0/0, 0/0/0/0 0/0/0/0 ' 1 0'62 .1 0-5& 0 0 48 0 3-6 37 0 0 24 0 0 18 0 0 12 0 1-2 8 0 0 6 0 0 2 0 + & 2 Field Goals 0-19 20.29 30.39 40.49 Haji-sheikh ... 0 0 ' 2-3 1-3 Bergeron......0 1-1, 0-1 0 50+ Total 0 3-6 0 1-2 Receiving Carter ....... Bean........ Dunaway.. Edwards. Woolfok .. Betts........ Brockington .. Ingram ..... Hassel ....... No. 33 9 6 6 4 2 1 1 Yds. 670 207 102 79 34 76 67 10 6 Avg. 20.3 23.0 12.9 13.2 5.7 19.0 33.5 10.0 6.0 TD 2 1 0. 0 1 LP 71 46 26 24 11 52 42 10 6 Punting No. Yds. Avg. Long 42 1878 44.7 61 UNISEX * Long or Short Haircuts = by Professionals at ... DASCOLA STYLISTS Liberty off State....:... 66.-9329 East U. at'South U.......662-0334 Arborland .............. 971-9975 Maple Village ......... 761.2733 Bracken ...... Returns PR/Yds/A v g/LP Carter......... 5/102/20.4/59 Edwards ....... 0/0/0/0 Burgei ......... 0/0/0/0 i s : , , ;. 3 KOR/Yds/Avg/LP 11/256/23.3/35 6/92/15.3/26 2/24/12.0/12 Score by Quarters ' '2" 4TOTAL/Avg MICHIGAN..........47 7 64 77 285/31.7 Opponents ..............44 37 27 16 124/13.8 Individual - Rushing English Language Institute Presents A Lecture by Charlotte Linde Aviation Accidents: A Case Study in Applied Linguistics and Sociolinguistics The lecture is intended to show that linguistics and sociolinguistics methodology"is applicable to the study of aviation accident transcripts, and that the results of such study can be expected to improve the actual performance of flight crews. WED., MOV. 11, 4:30 P.M. MICHIGON LEAGUE HENDERSON ROOM-3rd FLOOR woolfolk ...... S. Smith ....... Edwards.. fcks....... Rogers .......: Carter......... Att -185 98 66 68 9 Gain 1135 603 358 342 10i1 57 Loss 28 ,119 2 12 Yds Avg TD LP 1107 6.0 4 89 484 4.9 10 42 358 5.4 1 30 336 4.9 8 80 99 5.5 1 20 45 5.0 1 23 COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY School of International and Public Affairs FOR CAREERS IN FOREIGN AFFAIRS, FEDERAL STATE AND LOCAL GOVERNMENT, INTERNATIONAL BANKING AND BUSINESS, THE UNITED NATIONS,, PRIVATE VOLUNTARY ORGANIZATIONS AND THE MEDIA. "Making Decisions That Affect Our Lives" Collegiate Institute for Values and Science presents SCIENCE AND POLICY: C0$-BENEFIT ANALYSIS ANDITS LIMI FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 13 SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 14 4th Floor, Horace H. Rackham Building 915 East Washington Street, Ann Arbor Events in the world of politics and developments in social science techniques cotbine to make cost-benefit analysis a very important subject today with implications ranging from national defense to care of the elderly. This free public colloAuium will feature nationally known