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October 16, 1980 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1980-10-16

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The Michigan Daily-Thursday, October 16, 1980-Page 9

Hazed and confused,

I spent a good portion of yesterday
constructing the ddlemma that faces
the freshman Michigan hockey
player who was left drunk, naked,
and freezing by his teammates
during a hazing Sunday night.
He must be tearing his guts out, I
thought. He's upset, hurt, degraded,
humiliated . . . he probably has all
these feelings just jumping around
inside him, ready to be released at
any moment.
I tried so desperately to see the
other side. If he were to take any
public action, such as criminal
prosecution, that would only place
him at the risk of being further belit-
tled by the men with whom he must
practice every day. He knows that a
trial, or some other eye-catching
event, would only cause further
damage to a team that is suffering
through its most forlorn hour.

The anguish and sympathy in me
roared back, and demanded to be
heard immediately. The damage
has already been done, I ventured.

well give them a taste of his own
medicine. Aw, heck-take them to
trial! Send them to the pen, get them
off the ice, and then transfer to a

Alan Fanger

Hold it right there, says the
diplomatic one, in an effort to lay the
issue to its final rest. The guy has
dreamed of playing for Michigan all
his life. Sure, he was beaten
something brutal, but can one night
of terror be sufficient cause for not
allowing the dream to come true?
He could eventually mold back into
the fold-even the players them-
selves are eager to see him put on
that uniform and skate onto the Yost
Arena ice to play in his first college
hockey game. The coaches had in-
vested so much time in developing
him into a first-rate player-that in-
vestment would produce absolutely
no returiA, for either him or them, if
he were to throw it all away now.
Then at once, both sides, joined
together in agreement on one thing
... I wouldn't want to be in his shoes
right now, I sighed.

POETRY READING
with
Larry Goldstein and
David Victor
Reading from their works
at 7:30 P.M.
Thurs. Oct. 16
ADMISSION: FREE
REFRESHMENTS
GUILD HOUSE, 802 MONROE

NOON LUNCHEON
Home-made Soup & Sandwich
75ยข
Friday Oct. 17
Margo Morrow,
ERA Choir, Michigan NOW;
"THE ERA AND
THE RIGHT WING"
(662-5189

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sLW.48 Mnday Tuesday We asa '10Fr2 srd
Eo -- LADIESNN 4M

He's going to have it hanging over
him for the next four years. It's
going to be, at times, a painful ex-
perience to live with. He might as

school that will breeze through the
playoffs and into the NCAA finals.
Find a team that won't put you
through the same ordeal.

SERIES MOVES TO KANSAS CITY:

r

^N IUGSY

Phils take 24

Bake McBride singled home
the tying run and then scored
the winning run on Mike Sch-
midt's extra base hit in the bot-
tom of the eighth, to spark
Philadelphia to a four-run in-
ning and a 6-4 victory over the

visiting Kansas City Royals in
Game Two of the 1980 World
Series.
After Larry Gura retired the first 13
batters he faced, the Phillies tagged
him for two runs in the fifth. Keith
Moreland reached base on an infield
single, Garry Maddox doubled him to

9 me
I game
third and Manny Trillo's sacrifice fly
scored him. Maddox crossed the plate
on Larry Bowa's single to give the
Phillies a 2-0 lead.
THE ROYALS cut the deficit to 2-1 in
the sixth when Amos Otis singled, John
Wathan walked, and Trillo threw wildly
to first on Willie Mays Aikens' groun-
der.
'In the seventh, the Royals went in
front 4-2 *by scoring three runs off
Carlton, the ace of the Phillies' staff.
Willie Wilson drew a walk-the first
time the speedster had reached base in
the series-he was sacrificed to second
by U.L. Washington and he then stole
third. Dave Chalk, who replaced
George Brett in the sixth walked and
advanced to second when Pete Rose,
GRIDDE PICKS
Well, it is coming up on midterm time
again-time for feverish cramming.
But for effective studying, students
should ingest food as well as facts. Plan
ahead for next weeks travails by
picking this weeks Griddes. If you win,
you can pick up a small, one-item pizza
from Pizza Bob's: Just turn in your
choices to the Daily (420 Maynard) by
midnight tomorrow.
1. MICHIGAN at Minnesota
(pick score)
2. Indiana at Ohio St.
3. Purdue at Illinois
4. Northwestern at Iowa
5. Wisconsin at Michigan St.
6. Alabama at Tennessee
7. Houston at SMU
8. Georgia Tech at Auburn
9. Austin Peay at Nicholls St.
10. N. Carolina St. at N. Carolina
11. Florida at Mississippi
12. Wake Forest at Maryland
13. Baylor at Texas A&M
14. Washington at Stanford
15. Columbia at Yale
16. Long Beach St. at San Jose St.
17. Kentucky at LSU
18. Syracuse at Penn St.
19. Edinboro St. at Slippery Rock
20. DAILY LIBELS at Little Brown
Jugs

, 6 4
trying to keep Wilson from scoring the
tying run, held the pickoff throw. After
Hai McRae walked, Otis doubled home
the tying and lead runs. Wathan then
followed with a sacrifice fly to up the
Royals lead to 4-2.
THE ROYALS SEEMED to have
the game in hand when manager Jim
Frey sent in bullpen ace Dan Quisen-
berry to shut the doors on the Phillies'
attack in the seventh. But the Phillies,
sparked by McBride who also had the
clutch three run homer in Game 1,
erupted for four runs to take a 6-4 lead,
which they held onto in the ninth, to
take a 2-0 lead in the Series.
Tt'Lve'sity of Mrh'g8
DEPARTMENT OF THEATRE AND DRAMA
GUEST ARTIST SERIES

n 52 28 9 3=yy M~s + .

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Culture
at student rates.
STORE COUPON
100 OFF 1 BREYERS'YOGURT.
All natural, creamy, full of fruit
BREYERS'Real yogurt at its best.

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Afleoi IWC I iewM~
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11.1

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1

Mr. Grocer: Kraft,, Inc. will reimburse you for the face
value of this coupon plus 70, handling allowance
provided you redeemed it orb your retail sales of the
named product(s) and that upon request you agree to
furnish proof of purchase of sufficient product to cover all
redemptions. Coupon isvoid where taxed, "prohibited, or
restricted by law, and may not be assigned or transferred
by you. Cash value 1/20. Customer must pay applicable
tax. For redemption, mail to Kraft, Inc. Dairy Group. RO.
Box 1799. Clinton, Iowa 52734.
Expires June 30. 1981:

r rnoto
Kansas City Royals pitcher Larry Gura points out the path of a popup
which Royals third baseman George Brett caught in yesterday's World
Series game in Philadelphia. Philadelphia Phillies hitter, Bake Mcl~ride,
hit the popup which caused the final out of the inning.
SPOR TS OF THE DAIL Y:
Spikers nip Broncos, 3-1

&413Q@ &4@325

.I
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...

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Welcome

To
fIT E

By CHUCK HARTWIG
The Michigan volleyball team over-
came a mid-match slump and defeated
Western Michigan three gam%,s to one
last night at the Central Campus
Recreation Building.
The spikers raced to wins of 15-12 and
15-8 to open the contest. They then
dropped the third game, 15-6, before
bouncing back to clinch the match with
a 15-10 win.
Coach Sandy Vong said he was pleased'
that his team could slip past a squad
that, in his words, "plays a professional
style which is difficult for us."
"Under the circumstances, I think we
did a good job," he said, also referring
to the fact that his team is young and
somewhat inexperienced. He expressed
hope that his squad "will be tough to
beat" when tournament time rolls
around next month.
While several players felt the team
didn't play one of its better matches
against the Broncos, Vong singled out
Jackie Madison and Sue Rogers as two
Wolverines who played "strong games
( for us."
The spikers return to action tonight,
when they host Windsor at the CCRB.
Game time is 7 p.m.
Stickers win
The Michigan Women's Field Hockey
team defeated Hope College by the
score of 5-0 in Holland yesterday.
Michigan scored two of its goals in
the first half and three in the second.

Marty Naugh scored three goals and
Denise Comby and Sarah Forrestel
scored one goal each.
Julie Forrestel had. three assists,
tying a school record. Heather Cairns
and Nancy Hirsh shared net tending
duties combining for a shutout.

CHECK

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