Page 10 - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 19, 1989 Adam Schrager As if Wisconsin football coach Don Morton wasn't enough of a martyr already. Adding to his already dismal 1-4 record, Morton is now faced with possible NCAA sanctions due to salaries that he paid his assistant coaches during this past summer. Because of Wisconsin's budget cuts, Morton's assistant coaches were not given two of the six weeks' salaries they had previously been guaranteed. The losingest coach in the Big Ten for the past three years took out a personal loan of $14,100, a personal loan, from his own bank account, to be able to pay his nine assistant coaches the two weeks they didn't get paid. Poor Don Morton. Literally, poor Don Morton. NCAA rules state that money cannot be paid to a coach from an outside source, and according to Rick Evrard of NCAA legislative services, a head coach is an outside source "when he's using his own funds or using his own salary." In the world of college athletics where athletes such as former Okla- homa State wide receiver Hart Lee Dykes can get four schools in Morton pays through the nose Fired Up Green sparks team with inspired play trouble for recruiting violations, it's ludicrous that a coach could get penalized for paying his assistant coaches out of his own pocket. This situation is not one where Due to spatial restrictions, one is unable to list all of the ridiculous NCAA penalties purported over the past few years. For example, further mention of former Indiana basketball player Steve Alford's suspension for a game because of an appearance on a sorority charity calendar, or former Florida State football/baseball star Deion Sanders ability to earn $20,000 playing minor-league base- ball for the New York Yankees two summers ago is impossible. "He saved our butts," said Badger defensive coordinator Mike Daly who lost two weeks of his contract due to budget cuts made last winter. "All of a sudden in August, we didn't get a paycheck." Poor Don Morton. Literally, poor Don Morton. It's actually irrelevant, but it just doesn't seem right that Morton, whose team has an offense that couldn't score on the Ann Arbor Bantam B team, is being attacked for paying his assistants with his own money. The guy is out $14,000 and now he has possible sanctions facing him. Poor Don Morton. Literally, poor Don Morton. Pea Jim Poniewozik Every k~eknd S Morton by Matt Rennie Daily Sports Writer The opposing attacker drives uncontested toward the Michigan goal. She is about to score when, at the last possible moment, the ball is kicked away by the Wolverine goalkeeper. The ball is dead, but the action continues as the goalie celebrates her save by waving her arms and pounding her stick into her pads. "What is she doing?" a fan asks, as he watches in bewilderment. "Oh, that's just Joanne," comes the reply. Joanne is Joanne Green, the goaltender for the Michigan field hockey team. Goalies are always the most visible players on a team simply by the nature of their position. Green, however, is even more notice- able because of the visible and vocal enthusiasm she exhibits during a game. "I'm just that type of person," said Green. "I can go from zero to sixty in about thirty seconds. I really get pumped up before games. Hopefully, if I show a lot of emotion, then the rest of the team will get fired up, too"s GREEN'S STATISTICS are starting to receive as much attention as her celebratory antics, and rightfully so. She leads the Midwest Collegiate Field Hockey Conference in saves and is second in save percentage, with a mark of .883. She also has recorded five shutouts, the latest being a 2-0 victory over St. Louis University this past weekend. Michigan head coach Patti Smith has said that she is "the one player on our team who doesn't get enough credit." Green, as an Ann Arbor native, went to Pioneer High School, where she excelled in softball as well as field hockey. She was the first sophomore in Pioneer history to start in goal. "The first thing you notice about Joanne is her incredible work ethic," said her high school coach Nancy Cox. "She has both a devotion to the team and to improving herself individually." When the time came to select a college, Green chose the Maize and Blue for academic reasons. "I grew up watching Michigan hockey, but I came here for the engineering school." HER DECISION pleased Karin Collins, the field hockey coach at the time. "I think I was recruited because Karin noticed my athletic ability, more than my hockey skill," Green said. A knee injury forced Green, a fifth-year senior, to miss her sophomore and junior seasons. Having overcome this injury, she is thrilled with all the work she is getting this year. Goaltending carries with it a unique responsibility, but she is accustomed to it. "I don't always feel a lot of pressure. The thing is if you make a mistake, it counts in the record book." THE 1989 WOLVERINES have experienced more success than any of the teams of which Green has been a part. She says that coaching and depth is the difference in this year's squad. "We've got a brand new coaching philosophy this year. Patti's done a great job. But the big thing is our depth. Everyone has to fight every day in practice to get playing time." The Wolverines feel ready to upset the Iowa Hawkeyes, ranked sixth nationally, when the two teams meet this Friday at. Tartan Turf. As Green's career nears its end, games like these become even more important. "I've already planned my victory celebration," she joked. "We need to get some breaks, but if we work hard, we can pull it off." "This may be the biggest game of her career," Cox said. "If there was one thing I could wish for her, it would be a shutout against Iowa." When reflecting on her career, Green is grateful for her experience. Despite this being her last year, she still looks toward the future of Michigan field hockey. "I'm just really happy to have played. The success this year is just a bonus. If this year could be used by future teams as a starting block, then I'd be really thrilled." S FI Morton was caught paying his assis- tant coaches money to help in re- cruiting or obtaining illegal substan- ces, but to help them pay bills plain and simple. Poor Don Morton. Literally, poor Don Morton. p U U MARINE SYSTEMS! OCEAN ENGINEERS Lockheed Missiles & Space Company of Sunnyvale, CA, will be on campus October 20 interviewing candi- dates with backgrounds in Marine, Ocean, Mechanical, and Electrical Engineering to work on marine systems projects such as: MARINE VEHICLE/ COMPONENT DESIGN/DEVELOPMENT ELECTRICAL/ELECTRONICS DESIGN/DEVELOPMENT ACOUSTICS SONAR SYSTEMS/DATA ANALYSIS MISSION ANALYSIS ROBOTICS Signups and interviews will be conducted at the Naval Architecture & Marine Engineering Building N Missiles & Space Company Thursday Pitcher Party Night " TP ucedpitcher prices I Quake delays World Series Friday Greek Night *No cover for Greeks -------------------------- Pizza * Subs * Salads Sun-Fri 3pm-2 am Sat 12-2 am San Francisco (AP)-Game three of the Bay Bridge Series between the Oakland Athletics and the San Fran- cisco Giants was postponed for a second straight day, after city officials were not able to assess the damage both physical and mental. The earthquake which struck the Bay area at 5:04 p.m. PDT Tuesday a half-hour before game time, regis- tered a 6.9 on the Richter scale, the second strongest earthquake since 1906. So far more than 250 have been reported killed and hundreds of others injured. However, none of the 60,000 spectators who were in San I Francisco's Candlestick Park at the time of the earthquake were injured. There seemed little thought by baseball officials to cancel the Series, which Oakland leads 2-0, and the possibility remains that the game could be played Thursday if the stadium were deemed safe and if transportation could be worked out. Fay Vincent, baseball's commis- sioner said the the damage done to Candlestick Park and the Oakland Coliseum was "not significant." But, he said, "the proper people have not examined it yet." He also added that even if the game could be played in the Bay area he wondered if it would be appropriate right now. "Like anyone else, the players' first concerns were for their families and their homes. Everything seems OK," said Donald Fehr, head of the Major League Baseball Players' Association. The other possibility is that th* Series could be shifted to a neutral site for the first time ever. The strongest alternative is Dodger stadium in Los Angeles. San Diego and Anaheim are also possible choices. UM News in The Daily 764-0552 Giving sh ape to imagination. 994-6500 310 MaynardI I UII''I Want to Know Where Your Liberal Arts Degree Can Lead? Your bachelor's degree, combined with a Master's from the Annenberg School of Communications, can take you into a management career in mass media, telecommunications, public policy, corporate communications, and more. Here's what some recent graduates of Annenberg's M.A. program are doing: kinko's 1 the copy center HOURS OPEN 7 DAYS OPEN 24 niversity Michigan Union 540 E. L 9070 662-1222 761-4 OPEN 24 1220 S. U 747-, HOURS Liberty 4539 4 Paramount Pictures Vice-President, TV Programming Walt Disney Co. Director, Consumer Marketing The Disney Channel MGM/UA Director, European Sales & Marketing International Home Video J. Walter Thompson Sr. Account Supervisor Capital Cities/ABC Research Manager Black Entertainment Television Vice President, Operations Goldman, Sachs & Co. Manager, Telecomunications Pacific Telesis Director, Strategic Analysis National Cable TV Association Director, State & Local Regulatory Issues Office of Technology Assessment Research Analyst American Diabetes Association Public Affairs Director Price Waterhouse Senior Telecommunications Consultant 1 __ ' Michigan Individual Entrepreneurial Project Presents The Seventh Annual PRJORi A !49U.L' $3,500 PRIZE Awarded To The Best Business Plan Written By U of M Students & Submitted By May 4, 1990 INFORMATION MEETING & LECTURE "Entrepreneurship In Russia, China & The U.S." By Professor Kiesner Winner Of The 1989/90 Zell/Lurie Fellowship 4 4 If you are interested in a career in communications, come to a talk and Q & A session about professional opportunities and graduate programs you can consider. Speakers from the Annenberg School of Communications, University of Southern California, Los Angeles. Martin Kierszenbaum, Michigan '88, currently completing the Master's degree at Annenberg while working in the International Publicity Department of Warner Bros. Records, will also speak. SUE I I arr ** Wensdy Otbe 5,18 ** I I I I Wednesday, October 25. 1989 I T