Wrestling vs. #1 Penn State Saturday, 7:30 p.m. Crisler Arena SPORTS Wednesday, January 28, 1987 Men's Swimming vs. Illinois Friday, 7:30 p.m. IM Building M ichigan Deily Page 7 JUNIOR GUARD LEADS WOMEN CAGERS Feldman flourishes in silence By GREG MOLZON The total attendance for last weekend's women's basketball games at Crisler Arena was a lowly 599. Throngs of basketball fans who stay away from the women's games. are missing out on an opportunity to see one of the University's best and most accomplished athletes, Lorea Feldman. "I think there's no question that she has to be considered one of the best they've ever had here," Michigan head coach Bud Van De Wege said. F E L D M AN entered this, her junior season, ranked seventh on Michigan's career scoring and rebounding lists. This season she has averaged 17.6 points and 6.2 rebounds a game to move up to fifth on both lists. Feldman's list of records is much longer, however. Last season she set Michigan single season records for rebounds (214), field goal percentage (.522), free throw percentage (.911), and also set a Big Ten record with a free throw percentage of .923. Awards have also been quite common during Feldman's career. Her outstanding shooting and passing skills helped her earn Big Ten Player of the Week honors twice last year. She was also named honorable mention All-Big 1 Daily Photo by DANA MENDELSSOHN Loren Feldman has showcased her talents for the women's basketball team this season. She is averaging 17.6 points and 6.2 rebounds per game. BARB'S Women can write sports.. By arb McQuade ... bee, bee, h ee Ten each of her two years at Michigan and was named the team's most valuable player as a freshman and co-most valuable player as a sophomore. Still, Feldman would trade in all these individual honors if she could play for a winning team. The two losses this past weekend lowered Michigan's record to 1-6 in the conference, 8-8 overall. "I THINK it's most important to me that we go out and win as a team," she said. "If I'm scoring 12 points a game and we win, I'm happy." In fact, the 6-0 Bourbon, Ind. native lists last season's 58-56 upset victory of a highly-ranked Iowa club, in which she poured in 22 points, as her biggest accomplishment at Michigan. "I'll probably always remember that as long as I live," she said. "We played really good. We should have been playing like that all year. This year has been a difficult one for the Wolverines. Eight of the 15 players weren't with the team last year, and the inevitable adjustments have put the team, and Feldman, through some hard times. WHILE THE team has slumped through the first half of the Big Ten season, the quiet and shy Feldman has tried to assume more of a leadership role. She also Tigers get two Braves DETROIT (AP) - The Detroit Tigers yesterday traded two pitchers, right-hander Randy O'Neal and left-hander Chuck Cary to the Atlanta Braves in exchange for two outfielders, right-handed hitting Terry Harper and minor leaguer Freddie Tiburcio, a left-handed hitter. Harper, 31, a lifetime .254 hitter, batted .257 last season with eight home runs and 30 runs batted in. Q U A L T Y T Y P I N G 1 (313) 973-1313 *typesetting " resumes cover letters . research papers (A.P.A.) e dissertations. *wordprocessing photocopying notary walk-in service 24-HR TURNAROUND AT NO ADDITIONAL COST! call now for FREE PICKUP / DELIVERY (Ann Arbor/Ypsi Area) conveniently located in Arborland Consumer Mall US23 at Washtenaw Ave. (take stotrs o elevator to lower level) I think there's question that (I Feldman) has t considered one o best they've eve here.' -Bud Van De Women's bask has had to adjust to play instead of forward. Although Feldman is rah, outgoing type of le realizes she has to co more on her leadersh especially with all the n on the team. s no Lorea u lr% o be f the No matter what role Feldman f he assumes for the rest of this season, r. had her success will unquestionably have a large effect on the outcome Wege, of the team's final games. ,etball Unless the team gets a sudden coach boost in attendance, Feldman will probably continue to be one of the best kept secrets on the Michigan sports scene. ing guard But at least one person realizes the great ability and importance of n't a rah- Feldman to the Michigan team. ader, she "She means a great deal to us, ncentrate that's a plain and simple fact," said hip role, Van De Wege. "I definitely ewcomers wouldn't want to be without her this year, that's for sure." . GUS'S PIZZERIA 310 MAYNARD - (INSIDE DOOLEY'S) 665-5800 J - SMALL 10" PIZZA with 4 items AND 1 QUART of POP $4.99 plus tax exp. 3/1/87 "I try, but I'm really not used to being a verbal leader," she said. "But this year I have to be more of a leader than I have been in the past." "T hese are the sportswriters from the Michigan 1 Daily..." The Big Ten public relations man shook hands with each of the three male reporters before reaching me. "And who are you, honey?" Such are the hazards of covering sports if you happen to be a woman. Never mind if you know mare about a playbook than atcookbook. There are just some people not quite ready to accept females in the coveted domain of the press box. Those types are scarce at Michigan. In fact, the 0 athletic department has always treated Daily reporters, male and female, with respect and fairness. Well, insofar as possible. The hockey game at Yost Ice Arena has just ended and reporters are crowding the steps to the locker rooms, trying to beat their deadlines. They nudge past children and teenagers who are screaming at the equipment manager for broken hockey sticks. - As I near the front of the crowd, I hear someone say, "Here you go, honey." I look up to see the smiling equipment manager extending to me one of the sought-after sticks. A bit humiliating, but I got over it. The best gystem for handling post-game interviews is that used by the Michigan basketball team. After the game, -ach coach addresses the press while the players dress. Then, all or none of the reporters are allowed into the locker room to interview the fully clothed players. Some teams could learn a lesson from that setup. The Wolverine hockey team has just completed a sweep of Ohio State in Columbus. After interviewing head coach Red Berenson outside the Michigan locker room, I am walking down the tunnel toward the press box to file my story. Just before I pass the trainer's room, an Ohio State player darts out, wearing nothing but an embarrassed smile. There are risks in any job. I was "saved" from another such embarrassment in September while covering the Michigan football team's victory over Notre Dame in South Bend, Ind. Outside the Fighting Irish locker room, I ask the security guard at the door if I may speak with a player. He looks too old to have played on any of Knute Rockne's teams. "Ho, honey, you don't want to go in there. flee, hee, hee. They're all'in their birthday suits.". I'm in no mood to reason with Methuselah, so I ask if he will bring the player out when he is dressed. "Hee, hee, hee. Well, I don't know." He couldn't figure it out. Why would a woman want to cover sports? There are times at press luncheons -when I look around and realize I'm the only woman in the room who isn't an employee. And when a coach begins a press conference with "Well, men...", you can't help but feel'out of place.. But as far as having the opportunity to cover sports, a woman has nothing to complain about. At least not at Michigan. Besides, there are moments of poetic justice. For instance, anyone who has ever walked around the concourse at Michigan Stadium at halftime knows the disparate phenomenon of restroom lines. The lines are 30 to 40 people deep for the women's restroom. Often there is no line outside the men's room. In the press box, where men outnumber women tremendously, a woman can walk past the line for the men's room triumphantly and enter the women's restroom without a wait. But that's not why I chose to cover sports at Michigan. Look, Methuselah, I love sports for the same reason anyone else does - the excitement of the action, the intensity of the players, the strategy of the coaches, the display of athletic ability. The problem isn't that women can't write about sports. The problem is they haven't. CA R R E N r A t RENT A NEW CHRYSLER, FORD, OR GM PRODUCT FOR A SPECIAL WEEKEND Only * PER DAY '3 Day Min-Must Include Sat.-Sun. 150 Miles Free Per Day Renter Must Be 21 Most Major Credit Cards Accepted Tax, Fuel, CDW, PAl, Not included For Reservations Call 971-6600 Merrill Lynch will be on campus Feburary 5 At Merrill Lynch, the creative thinking of our professionals has helped us earn a legacy of innovation that's lasted more than 100 years - providing financial services to clients in Indi-