12 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, September 14, 1993 Griddes! Drop off your picks at the Michigan Daily sports desk on the second floor of the Student Publications Building at 420 Maynard by noon Friday.The winner will receive a $15 gift certificate to O'Sullivan's Eatery & Pub. Contestants are limited to five entries per week. 1. Ohio State at Pittsburgh 3. Boston College at N'westem 5. Michigan State at Notre Dame 7. Kansas State at Minnesota 9. Cornell at Princeton 11. Arkansas at Alabama 13. Missouri at Texas A&M 15. Tennessee at Florida 17. Colorado at Stanford 19. BYU g at Colorado State 2. Penn State at Iowa 4. Iowa State at Wisconsin 6. Arizona at Illinois 8. Kentucky at Indiana 10. Florida State at North Carolina 12. Virginia Tech at Miami 14. Syracuse at Texas 16. Nebraska at UCLA 18. Louisiana Tech at South Carolina 20. Dartmouth at Penn Tiebreaker - Michigan St. at Notre Dame Total Points: Name: Phone: LA-L \ < on the Diag Today! These organizations will be there, will you? 31 Academic/Professional groups 24 Athletic/Recreational groups 5 Environmental groups 7 Greek groups 3 International groups 33 Minority/Ethnic groups 8 Performance groups 33 Politically/Socially Active groups 29 Religious groups 18 Service/Honorary groups 17 Student Affairs groups over 220 opportunities to get involved! Free Pop & Popcorn Kickers get first win, 4-2 over Irish By TIM SPOLAR DAILY SPORTS WRITER Despite 106,000 or so eyewitness reports to the contrary, Michigan did beat Notre Dame in Ann Arbor this@ weekend. Sure, there was that little debacle that took place in Michigan Stadium last Saturday, but the Wolverines knocked off the Irish in the European version of football Sunday afternoon at Mitchell Field. The members of the men's soccer team regained a little of the pride lost by their somewhat larger and much less fortunate classmates with* a 4-2 win. The victory, the first on the young season for the Wolverines (1-1-2), saw Michigan spread the scoring load across a number of players. After Notre Dame opened the scoring ten minutes into the firsthalf, Guy Metzger knotted the score off an assist from team captain Brian Rosewarne. The Irish took the lead once again with a goal five minutes into the second half. However,afewminuteslater, fresh- man midfielder Dave Colliver drew a Notre Dame penalty on a run into the, penalty box. Dave Nordwall converted the ensuing penalty shot for Michigan's second tally. Steve Moore put the Wolverines ahead to stay, with Rosewarne again drawing the assist, and Ian Kurth add- ing an unassisted insurance goal for thr final score. Coming off back-to-back scoreless ties, the goal splurge was directly attrib- utable to a change in Michigan's strat- egy.The Wolverines shifted from amore traditional 4-3-3 lineup (four defensemen, three midfielders, and three forwards) to a 4-4-2. The shift enabled the Wolverines to take greater control of the midfield and control play all over the pitch. "I think one of this team's biggest strengths is its depth at the midfield position," Rosewarne said. "The change enabled us to get an extra player in where we could takeover the pace ofthe game and things started to fall into place offensively." SHARON MUSHERIDaily Jennifer Lupinski and the Michigan field hockey team upped their record to 5-0 this weekend, achieving shutouts in each game. Field Hockey stays undefeated, blanking il road trip opponents By CHARLIE BREITROSE DAILY SPORTS WRITER The Michigan field hockey team found the goose eggs more valuable than gold on its trip to Boston, as in the kind found on the scoreboard. The Wolverines (5-0),behinda solid defense and great goaltending from sophomore Rachael Geisthardt, didn't allow a goal in three matches. Thursday Michigan defeated Springfield soundly, winning by three goals. In the weekend matches, Northeastern and Boston Col- lege were the victims of the Wolverine shutout machine, losing by identical scores, 1-0. "It was nice to have a weekend of shutouts," senior forward Keely Libby said. "Rachael played three really great games." Senior defender Lelli Hose ap- plauded the play of her goalie, as well as the Wolverines' defense. "Our goalie made so many great saves," Hose said of Geishardt's play, which earned the stopper Big Ten player of the week honors. "She was incred- ible. "Our goal was not to let any goals for the three games ... we didn't, so I was really pleased. We (the defense) clicked as a group." The win over Northeastern was by far the most dramatic of the trip. Sopho- more forward Jennifer Lupinski knocked in the rebound off of a Kalli Hose shot in the final two minutes of play. Although the game came down to the last minutes, Michigan felt it thor- oughly outplayed the Huskies. "Through out we put pressure on them," Lelli Hose said. "They couldn't finda shot. They we're containedby our defense." "We played them really well," she said. "Wejust werenotlucky. We should have won 2-0 or 3-0." In the Boston College game, senior co-captain Shay Perry scored the game winner. " WORK SMARTER. NHARDER. 6 Engineering student? Smart. Math or science major? Also smart. On tests, you probably run equations over again to make sure they're right. So you're working harder. You don't have to do that anymore. Not when you use the TI-68 Advanced Scientific or TI-85 Graphics Calculator, with their last equation replay feature - and many other smart functions. We've spent years with students like you and educators like your profes- sors to develop the TI-68 and the TI-85. That's why they're so highly recommended. 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