12 - The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, October 18, 1994 FOCUS Continued from page U Beaver Stadium in State College after the Nittany Lions' victory Sat- urday. The mob overwhelmed po- lice officers stationed in the area and tore down the goalposts in the stadium. Over a dozen people are expected to be charged with minor offenses.. In preparation for the possibil- ity of such an occurrence, the nor- mal goal posts had been replaced with an older set, so as not to dam- age the ones used on game day. PREP PASSER: Louisville Male quarterback Chris Redman had an opportunity to see Saturday's game. While many prep standouts come to Ann Arbor on recruiting visits, Redman is one of the nation's top- five high school signal callers. Friday night, Redman completed 20-for-31 passes for 430 yards and seven touchdowns as his team, de- feated Seneca, 60-0. He has 41 touchdown passes this season and 86 for his career. 4, Three wins necessary to . FIELD HOCKEY NOTEBOOK avoid losing mark in '94 J OI N I N t R id f t = R fd i A D V E R T IS I N G D IS P L A Y S T A F F LISA WRIGHT GREG ROBIN MARY COLES MISTY KITZL GAIN VALUABLE ADVERTISING SALES EXPERIENCE! BE AN ACCOUNT EXECUTIVE FOR FALL/WINTER TERMS! PICK UP YOUR APPLICATION TODAY! APPLICATION DEADLINE: 10/28/94 STUDENT PUBLICATIONS BLDG " SENIOR STAFF OFFICE * 420 MAYNARD Center for Overseas Undergraduate Programs Year and Semester Programs in Paris INFORMATION SESSION Wednesday, October 19 5:00 p.m. Rm. 9, International Ctr. 603 East Madison Applications are now being accepted for the Spring 1995 semester and for the 1995-96 academic year. As a COUP student you will be able to: *Design a course of studies matching your academic needs. *Choose from offerings at the University of Paris, at specialized institutes, or from our own courses, *Have the option of staying with a French family or making your own housing arrangements For further information come to Rm. 9, International Ctr. at 5 p.m. on Wednesday, October 19 By MARC DILLER Daily Sports Writer The Michigan field hockey team entered this season with high aspira- tions, but thus far it has not lived up to those goals. The team's record has fluctuated around the .500 mark all yearlong. The Wolverines are7-8 over- all and 3-4 in the Big Ten with only four games remaining. The Wolverines haven't finished their regular season with a sub-.500 record since 1988, former head coach Karen Collins' final season at the helm. Sunday's 5-1 loss to Penn State marked the third time in 1994 that Michigan's record has slipped below .500. The Wolverines will need to win three of their last four games in order to prevent Michigan coach Patti Smith H EARTBEAT Continued from page11 dergo further tests Thursday to deter- mine the condition's severity. "It's something that has never hap- pened," Knuble said of the irregular heartbeat. "I noticed it after a check .>: - (against York)." Hisstatuswas originally day-to- day, but he won't be returning to practice until at least Thursday, jeopardizing his chancesofreturn- ing for the week- enuble end set with the Tigers. "Maybe I'll be back for Saturday's game," Knuble said. "We'll just have to wait and see." Berenson, however, is preparing for the weekend as if he will be without the service of his top right wing in both contests. "The team knows that he leaves a big hole," Berenson said. "But in this situation, players can step up and I know you sometimes see that." Sophomore right-wing Warren Luhning fills the vacant spot in the Wolverines' starting line. He tallied 13 goals and six assists a year ago. Knuble led the nation in power- play goals with 21 and was named to the All-CCHA second-team a year ago. from suffering her first losing season in Ann Arbor. "When we think about this year it feels like we're having a great season," sophomore Michelle Smulders said, "And then we look at our record and it's shocking." Smulders' teammates agreed. "Our team's a little disappointed with the record," junior goaltender Rachel Geisthardt said. "We're much better than what our record shows." Michigan has a losing lifetime record against its two conference foes from last weekend, Ohio State and Penn State. Friday's 4-3 win in Colum- bus improved the Wolverines' overall record against the Buckeyes to 11-13- 2. Sunday, Michigan failed to record its second-ever victory the Lady Lions. Instead, the loss left the Wolverines at 1-5 in three seasons of competition against Penn State. The team still has to face some tough conference competition before it can better its season mark. Still remain- ing on the Wolverines' schedule are Iowa, Northwestern and Michigan State. Each of these three teams has had no problem disposing of Michigan in the past. The Hawkeyes have never lost to the Wolverines in 26 contests between the two. The Wildcats also have been a thorn in Michigan's side over the years, boasting a 24-1 record in the series. The Wolverines' mostpromising game then seems to be against the Spartans who have only won 17 of 38 games against Michigan, with six ties. IN THIS CORNER: The Wolverines have struggled all season long with the penalty corner shot. However, in Friday's Ohio State game, Michigan defender Sherene Smith converted on three direct goals from the penalty cor- ner. Smith now becomes the leading penalty corner scorer on the team with six points. Theonly other two Wolverines who have scored penalty corner direct shots were Smulders and freshman Brenda Beaudry. In each of the games when Michigan scored a direct shot penalty corner, it won. "With penalty corners you kind of need to get in a zone or a rhythm and then you're unstoppable like Sherene was against Ohio State," Smulders said. Trebeiorn canned as Chicago manager CHICAGO (AP) -The Chicago Cubs got rid of their 11th manager in 12 years yesterday, firing Tom Trebelhorn after a last-place finish in the NL Central. Trebelhorn, hired last October, was the fifth manager fired since the players' strike ended the season Aug. 12. "All I can say is I'm hoping to have a manager and coaching staff in place for the team's organization meetings the first 10 days of Novem- ber," general manager Ed Lynch said by telephone. "I will interview Tony Muser, but I have not made up my mind and will probably interview at least one or two others." There had been speculation Lynch, hired last week, would pro- mote Muser, the Cubs' third base coach, to manager. While an execu- tive with the San DiegoPadres, Lynch in 1992 interviewed Muser for a Triple-A managerial job. Chicago finished with a 49-64 record this season, second worst in the league. Trebelhorn's firing completed a shakeup in the Cubs' front office. Andy MacPhail was hired last month as the team's president from the Min- nesota Twins and Lynch was hired from the New York Mets. "This is not an easy thing to do, but sometimes a managerial change is necessary for an organization to move forward," Lynch said. Trebelhorn, who formerly man- aged the Milwaukee Brewers, was hired last year by former general manager Larry Himes, who himself was demoted to a scouting job two weeks ago. Trebelhorn, 46, was promoted to field manager on Oct. 13, 1993, after he had spent the previous two sea- sons as a coach under manager Jim Lefebvre. Trebelhorn has a career record is 471461 in his six-plus seasons as major league manager. 0 U S- . o I opI i ; 0304 S.STATE STREET* 4 doors South of Liberty. 998-3480 ON ALL UNIVERSITY OFtiC ,txAdHIGAN' 'I VWIE OFT SEIRTS t 3. in U Urn m.:.SENE l COME HERE COMEE MEET COME HEAR COME SEE! billy pilgrim live in person I1 Wednesday, october 19, 1994 41 2:30pm S3:30pm I 1 - -1 _- .. . a. I