Page 2-The Michigan Daily --Sports Monday October 12, 1992 A 0* * M'Sports Calendar Monday, October 12 No events scheduled. Tuesday, October 13 No events scheduled. Wednesday, October 14 No events scheduled. Thursday, October15 Men's Tennis at Volvo Tennis/Collegiate Championships, all day, Austin, Texas. Friday, October 16 Volleyball vs. Iowa, 7:30 p.m., Cliff Keen Arena. Women's Tennis at North Carolina State University SClassic, all day, Raleigh, N.C. Men's Tennis at Volvo Tennis/Collegiate Championships, all day, Austin, Texas. Saturday, October 17 Football vs. Indiana, 3:30 p.m. (ABC-TV), Bloomington. Women's Swimming & Diving vs. Michigan State, 10 a.m., Canham Natatorium. Softball NSK Exhibition Invitational, 10 a.m.,12 p.m. and 2 p.m., Elbel & Alumni Fields. Volleyball vs. Minnesota, 7:30 p.m., Cliff Keen Arena. Ice Hockey vs. Notre Dame, 7 p.m., Yost Ice Arena. Field Hockey vs. Penn State , 12 p.m., Iowa City. Men's Golf at Stanford Invitational, all day, Stanford, Calif. Women's Tennis at North Carolina State University Classic, all day, Raleigh, N.C. Men's Tennis at Volvo/Collegiate Championships, all day, * Austin, Texas. Sunday, October 18 Women's Cross Country hosts Michigan Invitational, 10 a.m., U-M Golf Course. * Men's Golf at Stanford Invitational, all clay, Stanford, Cal if. Men's Cross Country Michigan Invitational, 10:45 a.m., f U-M Golf Course. Softball hosts NSK Exhibition Invitational, 10 a.m., 12 p.m. and 2 p.m., Alumni and Elbel Fields. * Field Hockey at Iowa, 11 a.m., Iowa City. Men"s Tennis at Volvo/Collegiate Championships, all day, Austin, Texas. The top 25 teams in the Associated Press 1992 college football poll, with first-place votes in parentheses, records through Oct. 10, and how they fared in Saturday's action. Team Record 1. Washington (30.5) 2. Miami (30.5) 3. Michigan 4. Alabama (1) 5. Texas A&M 6. Florida St. 7. Colorado 8. Sta nfo rd 9. Penn St. 10. Georgia 11. Nebraska 12. 13. Notre Dame Ten nesssee 5-0 5-0 4-0-1 6-0 5-0 5-1 5-0 5-1 5-1 5-1 4-1 4-1-1 5-1 4-1 4-1 4-1 5-1 2-1-1 3-2 4-0-1 5-2 5-0 2-2 3-0-2 4-1 How they fared beat No.24 California, 35-16 beat No.7 Penn State, 17-14 beat Michigan St., 35-10 beat Tulane, 37-0 idle beat North Carolina, 36-13 idle Beat No. 16 UCLA, 19-7 lost to No. 2 Miami, 17-14 beat Georgia Southern, 34-7 beat Oklahoma St., 55-0 beat Pitt, 52-2 1 lost to Arkansas, 25-24 beat Rutgers, 50-28 beat Au burn, 14-7 beat Maryland, 28-26 lost to Clemson, 29-28 beat Oregon, 20-10 beat No. 10 Virginia, 29-28 idle Beat Texas Tech, 48-13 beat Oregon St., 35-10 beat LSU, 28-21 idle beat Kansas St., 31-7 ::::ifa se to C)S ri E ::y&cubi1e hot th::: Dr.p.off.yor .cs ae $ ude Publiaions #4. ::Prdea Wiscnsin :: Michiga St::ate at Min::: < <:::::.:........:............< < .: otnCleg tPn t 9.ff ! A la a a t T n e ..e> ..::: :::>:::< ':i:';..: ;: i:?:: i::4: 13. ~ : Du:atC:mo 14. Syrie alrt< 1:> : f1" 1+ce,::::..:: < s<....Texas A& M: :..i i: ?.:?'.. 16. C-li:ria t*US 20.e Columbia#.1:..° .::......t..........................................:::. :.:e . M i: .:: :.:hi:.:::: :.:::n::::::..::.:::::::.:: . ::n:::.;a:: .:;: : .: ;...:< : : ::t:::::a<.< : : >:: . :":>:> :: : :. ::p::::.:i: . :::;;:: :: = :::::::ho n e: :::::::::: :::::: :: :> : ;: : :: :: : : ::: + 14. Syracuse 15. Mississippi St. 16. Georgia Tech 17. Virginia 18. Southern Cal 19. Clemson 20. Boston College 21. North Carolina St. 22 Washington St. 23. Florida 24. West Virginia 25. Kansas VOLLEYBALL Continued from page 1 team in Big Ten play going into the match. And they more than demon- strated how they reached their unde- feated mark, blitzing the Wolverines in three sets. i The first set was all Penn State, which punched out 12 kills - be- hind Laura Cook and honorable mention all-American Leanne King - en route to a 15-4 win. Michigan battled back in the second set, regaining some of its of- fensive attack that seemed lost in the first set. But after taking a 10-2 lead, the Wolverines saw the Lady Lions capture the next 13 points to win the set, 15-10. Penn State kept the momentum of the second set alive in the third, raising its offensive and defensive efforts. The team pounded 16 kills in the set and held the Wolverines to a neager .100 hitting percentage. Third-ranked Lady Davidson With the two losses over the weekend, Michigan drops to 4-2 in the Big Ten and 12-5 overall. But despite the losses, the Wolverines remain optimistic about the rest of the season, which includes home matches this weekend against Iowa and Minnesota. "I see us definitely still compet- ing for the title. I don't think we are afraid of anyone," said Davidson. Lions slip2 by Jim Foss Daily Sports Writer To make it to the dance, you have to win big games against good teams. For the Michigan field hockey team, the dance is the NCAA Regional Tournament. This weekend the Wolverines came very close to winning the first of several upcoming big games on their sched- ule, losing to third-ranked Penn State, 2-1. The game against Penn State was the first of a two-game series be- tween the Lady Lions and Michigan. The Wolverines play Penn State again in Iowa City Oct. 17 before facing No. 2 Iowa the next day. The loss was the second straight for Michigan, dropping the team's record to 6-3 overall (2-2 Big Ten). Penn State moved its record to 7-0 (2-0). The Lady Lions drew first blood in the game when Christine McGinley scored on a direct corner on assists from Chris Blais and Amy Stairs. The goal occurred with 21:43 to go in the first period. This was the only goal of the first period, though Penn State had 18 shots on goal. Michigan managed four shots in the first period and had nine for the game. Entering the game, Michigan had hoped to launch an aggressive offen- sive attack to try to rattle Penn State's freshman goalie, Shelly Meister. by stickers "Their goalie played well," Michigan senior forward Katie Vignevic said. "However, we didn't put as much pressure on her as we could have." The Wolverines tied the game in the second period when Vignevic scored on a penalty stroke with just under 25 minutes to play. However, Penn State grabbed the lead for good five minutes later when Jennifer Colletta scored from inside the circle on an assist from Kirt Benedict. Vignevic's goal gave the Wolverines a chance to win, a posi- tion Michigan head coach Patti Smith had hoped to be in late in the game. "I felt really good about getting the game tied against Penn State," Smith said. "But good teams always find a way (to score inside the cir- cle), and that is what Penn State did." Despite the loss, the Wolverine players seemed optimistic about their performance. "It was a really good game be- cause it was so close and Penn State is ranked third," Vignevic said. "Considering how good they are, the game was really even." Playing Penn State again this week helps Michigan in formulating its game strategy. "We know that we need to con- centrate on stopping their short pass- ing the next time we play them," Vignevic said. TICKETS Continued from page 1 chances of getting the full-season plan. Klemz felt that 3,100 was a fair estimate of the demand for stu- dent season tickets. "The 3,100 number was come up with based on past season-ticket sales," Klemz said. "Very rarely, if ever, have we gone over 3,100. Last year with the Fab Five coming in and the huge marketing campaign we only sold 3,300 tickets, and even with that, not everyone showed up to every game." However, a number of students felt that the amount of tickets set aside for them and the procedures for applying for tickets were unfair and confusing. Some students began waiting in line for tickets as early as 5:30 Saturday afternoon thinking they would get priority in what package they received based on how early they applied. Yet under the current system set by the ticket office, distribution of full- and spilt-season packages was not affected by whether one was at the head of the line and applied at noon, when the doors opened, or at 3 p.m., when the application procedure ended. "I think it should be first-come, first-served," LS&A freshman Chris Glushko, one of the first people in line, said. "I mean, if you made the long haul, you deserve the full sea- son. All those wimps down there at the end of the line who came this morning do not deserve the full sea- son. We were here the entire night and deserve the full season." "I feel if I've sat here, I should get a full ticket," Engineering freshman Alisha Jefferson said. Jefferson said she knew she would be one of the first people to get to a split-season package due to never having season tickets before. Many of the students' complaints stemmed from not being aware of how the application procedure was supposed to work in the first place. The ticket office dispersed a flyer outlining how the system would be run inside each student season foot- ball package in August and handed out the same flyers a half hour be- fore the doors were open. Despite this fact, many were not familiar with the procedures being used. "I had no idea (how it was to work)," LS&A freshman Rachael Geisthardt said. "I just heard about it from other people but I never saw it around campus at all." While some were confused by the system, most people felt that it was equitable and that the applica- tion process proceeded smoothly. "Since I've been out here since five o'clock in the morning, it would be nice to get a good seat," first-year graduate student Sue Huther said. "I don't like the seniority part because I haven't had three years here, but I guess its fair." "I like this way a lot better," LS&A senior Mike Herford said. "It's just a pain you have to wait so long in line." Students will find out what sea- son package they received when they pick up their tickets during the week of Nov. 16. At that time, those who received the split-season plan will also be able to pick up refunds for their full-season deposit. Michigan set the previous attendance record against Ohio State on Nov. 17, 1979 with 106,255 fans. Saturday's crowd broke that record, when 106,788 football aficionados packed into the big house. 0 ON SALE MIDNIGHT TONIGHT!! Michigan Daily Athlete-of-the-Week WHO: Karen Harvey TEAM: Cross Country HOMETOWN: Paris, Ontario YEAR: Sophomore ELIGIBILITY: Sophomore WHY: In Saturday's State of Michigan Intercollegiate meet, Harvey placed first, setting a new meet record with her time of 17 minutes, 54 seconds. BACKGROUND: Harvey, Michigan's No. 1 runner, led the Wolverines to victory at the Notre Dame Invitational two weeks ago while scoring a season-best time of 17:41.8. In 1990, Harvey was a silver medalist at the OFSAA Cross Country Championships. WE GUARANTEE LOWEST PRICES ON THESE DISCS! STATE COUPON 1 CRESTGILLETTE TOOTHPASTE SENSOR RAZO.R 4 .6 oz 1 1"1 T EXPIRES 1LIMIT 1 EXPIRES 10-19-92 L m............. ....... J m - m m...n...... I . - --- -- STATE COUPON SKIN LOTION I 10 oz. $1.09 LIMIT 1 EXPIRES 10-19-92 1 Lf - m m m ~ . GOLDEN KEY HONOR SOCIETY MASS MEETING Wednesday Oct. 14 7:00 PM Michigan League Room D Plan to attend... LAW DAY Monday, October 12, 11:00 am - 3:00 pm Michigan Union Thce nversit fMcia Career Planning sPlacement 1992 -Meet with admissions officers from US law schools -Investigate employment options available to graduating seniors -Gather information on law related campus organizations and services Special Presentation... 0 bm m m m m m m No J I