' ejhe Michigi a y F. Y Hot Ath on Daily iday Bowl Tickets on sale now at hletic Ticket Office $16.50 each SPORTS Basketball vs. Youngstown State Tomorrow, 7:30 p.m. Page 7 Tuesday, December 4, 1984 Women hoopsters bomb Irish, 75-64 By RICK KAPLAN The eleven thousand people who sat in Crisler Arena Saturday, hoping to see some quality basket- ball, were a day early. En route to a 75-64 win over Notre Dame, the Michigan women's basketball team played a second half on Sunday that men's coach Bill Frieder would have been proud of. The final stanza began with the Wolverines trailing, 30-25. Three and a half minutes later, Michigan led 39-32, having hit seven out of eight shot- s. As a team, the Wolverines sank a blistering 74 per- cent of their field goal attempts in the second half. The Fighting Irish found themselves down by as much as 16 points before the buzzer mercifully ended the game. FIRST YEAR HEAD COACH Bud Van De Wege successfully changed his game plan at halftime, moving toward a running offense. "(Notre Dame) caught on to some of our plays, so we used some new plays in the second half," Van De Wege said. "I told them that they were not aggressive. If they got more aggressive they would win the game." Freshman forward Lorea Feldman quickly took out her aggression on the Irish, scoring eight of her 15 points in the first two and a half minutes after inter- mission. Feldman and teammate Wendy Bradetich, the game's high scorer with 24 points, began sinking shots from all over the floor. Guard Kelly Benintendi, another freshman starter' for Michigan, turned the game into a rout, hitting five shots from medium range in a 12-2 Wolverine spurt, making the score 59-45, with seven minutes to play. IN THE FIRST half, Notre Dame had taken advan- tage of its edge in height to score some easy hoops. Forwards Carrie Bates (6-1) and Sandy Botham (6-2) camped out in the paint and built a lead with tur- naround shots. Michigan did not appear able to stop the Irish inside game. But Van De Wege devised a defensive scheme to shut down Bates and Botham in the last stanza. "We decided to mix a man-to-man with a zone. It worked because we got great sagging help from the weak side," he said. Bradetich and center Diana Wiley caught Notre Dame by surprise with the new defensive alignment; each one grabbed three steals.. The Wolverines also began to control the boards, outrebounding the Irish 18-8 in the second twenty minutes. MICHIGAN'S BALANCED offense helped all five starters into double figures. Shooting guard Orethia Lilly scored 14 points, and Benintendi and Wiley ad- ded 10 each. The crowd of 270 was surprised by the Wolverine's sizzling shooting, but the coach wasn't. "The key for us was running. I felt we could run with them. Once we began running, good shots opened up," said Van De Wege. "We were fortunate to be down by only five at the half. I told the team that if they came out and played hard, they would make things happen." Michigan upped its record to 2-1 on the season, while Notre Dame fell to 1-3. The Wolverines travel to Central Michigan tonight for a game at 7:00 p.m. K Van De Wege ... adjusts successfully Bradetich ... high scorer ti t i i 3 i } t ! i i a , c i 9 a i Students arrested in protest (Continued from Page 1) cruise missile engines for the Navy and today builds all of the engines for missiles manufactured by Boeing and General Dynamics, Alexander said. Williams also produces some engines for industrial use and non-military air- craft, according to company spokesman Pavid Jolivette. JOLIVET'TE said the firm's officers support mutual disarmament but refuse to discuss defense contracts with protesters. "Our policy has been to protect our property and workers through prudent and legal means," he said. The protesters are calling upon Willams to convert production to non-military projects, Alexander said, adding that the firm received no money from the U.S. Department of Defense before 1975. MIRIAM HALL Grinnell, 72 of near- by Waterford Twp., said that is is dif- ficult to gauge the impact the demon- strations have on the firm's employees and area residents. "The local people are sympathetic but sensitive to their neighbors who work here, so they won't say, anything," she said. But Dorothy Whitmarsh of Ann Arbor who was arrested a second time yester- day, said "there was a real sense of things having moved along the way we had wanted them to." POLICE officers gently escorted demonstrators away, Whitmarsh said. Only two protesters refused to cooperate with police officiers by sit- ting down on the driveway. They had to; be carried away. Whitmarsh said the demonstrators expect the circuit court to find them in civil contempt of the court injunction, a charge which imposes an indefinite sentence until the protesters promise not to return to Williams. In June five protesters arrested at Williams were charged with civil con- tempt. Rather than agreeing not to return to the site of the facility, they fasted for 11 days until the firm's owner asked that they be released. The other demonstrators yesterday included Ann Arbor residents Doug Hamm and Barbara Wetula, as well as David Braun of Ann Arbor Twp., Jeff Smith of Grand Rapids, Dean Abbott of Detroit and Carfon Foltz of Pontiac. RABBINICAL SCHOOL-GRADUATE SCHOOL-SEMINARY COLLEGE OFJEWISH STUDIES -CANTORS JEWISH STUDIES o AT ANY LEVEL w IN JERUSALEM-IN NEW YORK o Visit for a semester with credit z or enroll in a degree program. Open to all academically qualified U students. For information on opportunities call or write. a AND ">.nm TejeinSmnr THE i'om The Jewish Theological Seminary of America WS -t lUN 3080 BROADWAY. NEW YORK, NY 10027 NOT r - cONSUMED (212) 678-8832 S. 01'>I'I32I'OtLt'Iv.SItintQF- OOH.7s lt-'( I N~t21)2I1'i.-'i4-'v s:s123 3Hsa IaiIC-s-7oo as Rabbi Morris Allen, Director of Recruitment, will be at Hillel to answer questions and with information about JTS programs. THURSDAY, DEC. 6 9:30 -3:00 for appointment call 663-3336 Protestors discuss activism (Continued from Page 1) EMPLOYEES' reaction to the group's presence has been mixed, ;Dougherty said. "We hear everything from 'Keep up the good work' to being called com- munists. But an awful lot of the workers try to pretend that you're not there," he said. To date, four employees have quit because of the cruise missile project, Dougherty said. The firm employs about 1,450 people. "THERE'S good people at Williams, people who just want to do their jobs and we respect that. But I think it's im- portant to realize the effects of all the jobs that we do," said Maria Ringo, one of the five University students among those arrested yesterday. Ringo, an LSA senior, watched her sister Anita go to jail for civil disobedience at Williams last year. Af- ter working extensively with local disarmament groups, Maria decided she had to follow her sister's footsteps. "I think my sister really put it well last year when she said that she had to go from saying 'no' to being 'no,' " she said. "I'M TIRED OF writing my congressional representatives. I'm tired of rallies and marches and words. What I'd love to do out at Williams is really disrupt business as usual," she added. Ringo said her decision to block the entrance to Williams drew everything from classmates' praise to comments like "You're lucky you live in the United States. If you lived in Russia, you wouldn't be able to do this." Coming from a family which has long been involved in protest movements - her parents participated in Vietnam War protests and the farm workers' struggle - Ringo said it is her duty to fight the injustices she sees. "WHATEVER I do in my life to make money is secondary to what I've got to do all my life to resist the nuclear mad- ness," Ringo said. She is a candidate for a Bachelor of General Studies degree in community activism. But for many, making the decision to commit an act of civil disobedience isn't so easy. Because it is a non-violent form of protest, activists must agree to submit passively to arrest and avoid violent confrontations. They must ac- cept what a criminal record could mean to their careers. Some must face disap- proval from family and friends. And they must be willing to face prison. For University graduate student Brian Larkin, making the decision to par- ticipate in yesterday's protest took almost a year. As a local canvass direc- tor for the Committee for a Sane Nuclear Policy (SANE), civil disobedience could jeopardize Larkin's ability to fight the stockpiling of weapons through legislative channels. But he said he must take that risk. "I FEEL the need to state more clearly my feeling that we need to stop building nuclear weapons," he said last mu wek- "Mont nf the dialogue (in ts the people who build these weapons,"' he said. IF HE GOES to jail, Larkin said he will work for improvements in the prison environment. Protestors at Williams International in the past have been sent to Oakland County Prison in Pontiac. That in- stitution, like most prisons across the country, is so overcrowded that one out of four prisoners is typically forced to sleep on a cold floor withouta blanket. The lights are on all day. A mist of cigarette smoke usually fills the jail cells. As part of their civil disobedience, protestors, including Residential College junior Mike O'Neill, do not cooperate when police ask routine questions about their sexual preference and previous criminal records. THOUGH THE blockade yesterday was the first time O'Neill has been arrested for civil disobedience, he has protested weapons research before. Last fall he participated in the sit-in at University Electrical and Computer Engineering Prof. Thomas Senior's radiation laboratory to protest defense- funded research being conducted there. O'Neill said he has been fighting military research on campus ever since freshman orientation, when he read about a multi-million dollar contract the University won from the Air Force. After the Williams protest, O'Neill said he will turn his attention back to weapons research on campus. "PEOPLE DON'T realize the impact civil disobedience will have on their life and how it kind of sets you up to have the energy to do more," he said last week. s* Residential College junior Ken Jan- not, who was also arrested yesterday said civil disobedience is the only way to focus the public's attention on nuclear disarmament. "There's only so much that can be done within the system like writing let- ters - and you still aren't listened to," he said. JANNOT SAID he has not written let- ters or participated in marches or rallies. For him, yesterday's action was as much an effort to "get my feet wet" as it was an attempt to change attitudes at Williams. s*** More and more students, like Jannot, say they are looking toward civil disobedience as a way to express their concern about the build-up of nuclear weapons. Many say fears that the United States will become openly in- volved militarily in Nicaragua have impelled them to take action. This fall an "affinity" group for sup- porters of civil disobedience formed on campus. Currently, there are about 30 members. The group is patterned after the Ann Arbor Peace Community, another affinity group. LSA senior Lori Peters said she joined the campus group after collec- ting information on nuclear weapons for a couple of years. "I've got to a noint where it's useless Put some a Winter Sch, Tak ctivity into your edule.- e a course in the lm ADULT LIFESTYLE PROGRAM Choose from Swimming, Track, Aerobics, and many more! 0? See page 100 in your time schedule for course list 1429 HILL ST. I