Men's Crew at Head of the Charles Sunday, all day Boston S RTS Men's Soccer vs. Adrian Tomorrow, 4 p.m. Mitchell Wolverine stickers 1* . cruise past Wildcats By JENNIFER DUBERSTEIN Daily Sports Writer Last night the Villanova field ckey team was stung by a swarm of ees, angry bees, dressed in maize and blue. The Michigan field hockey team circled in for its attack and came out with a 3-0 win over the Wildcats. The No. 20 Wolverines (3-4 Big Ten, 8-8 overall) blanked Villanova (3- 10) at Oosterbaan Field House, while out-shooting the Wildcats 16 to five. Junior back Sherene Smith netted 4 e second hat trick of her collegiate eer. All three of her goals were scored in the first half, coming within 10:00 of each other. Her first goal was scored off of a penalty stroke. "Usually officials won't give pen- alty strokes. They just give you another corner," Smith said. "I was nervous, but it was exciting because we have been practicing the stroke all year." Smith's second and third goals oth resulted from penalty corners. 'en Lupinski and Gia Biagi assisted on both of the corner goals. "Offensively, (my play) was great," Smith said. "I could've been better on defense." Smith's first collegiate hat trick came against Ohio State less than a week ago in Columbus. All of her goals in the Buckeye game came off f penalty corners. Because the Wolverines were trampling the Wildcats, coach Patty Smith started to substitute players in the late minutes of the first half. "(The substitutes) played great," coach Smith said. "It's nice to give people playing time. They got achance to make a good thing happen." Sophomore Michelle Smulders agreed with coach Smith: "They layed great. Amy (Helber) came in t goalie and she had her first couple of saves. They held their own." The Wildcats are in the Big East, so this win will not help the Wolverines in the Big Ten standings. "Our record doesn't reflect the way we play," Sherene Smith said. "We have come together as a team." Coach Smith stated that the team's hcord is at .500 because Michigan as played tough teams and lost a few close matches. It doesn't get any easier as Michigan soon hosts both No. 1 Northwestern and No. 14 Iowa. Spartans spike Blue in four New lineup cannot prevent sixth consecutive loss By RODERICK BEARD Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING - As the old saying goes, "If it ain't broke, don't fix it." But if it is broken, then something has to be done. After losing two matches last week- end, the Michigan women's volleyball team extended its losing streak to five matches. Something was definitely bro- ken, and Wolverine coach Greg Giovanazzi had to mend it. His tinkering came in the form of a new lineup for the match with Michi- gan State (3-6 Big Ten, 11-9 overall) last night. The ploy was not successful, as Michigan (1-8, 5-15) bowed to the Spartans, 15-9, 11-15, 15-5, 15-5, at Jenison Field House. Veronica Morales, a freshman out- side hitter from Argentina, fronted the Michigan State attack with 20 kills. CorieRichard and Dana Cooke added 13 and 12 kills, respectively, for the Spartans. Suzy O'Donnell led the Wolver- ines with 13 kills, while Colleen Miniuk added 10. Shareen Luze chipped in 10 kills, and Sarah Jackson contributed eight kills and I I digs for Michigan. "We played two games hard, and they played three and a half games hard," Giovanazzi said. "We're still learning what it takes to win out there." The story of the match was defense. The Wolverines had difficulty with the Michigan State blocking tandem of Cooke, Courtney DeBolt and Val Sterk. Cooke tied a career high with eight block assists; Sterk added eight, and DeBolt had six. For the match, the Spartans totaled 32 block assists, two short of their single-match record. "It's always frustrating to get blocked," O'Donnell said of the Michi- gan State defense, which ranks second in the Big Ten in blocks. "Their blocking was impressive," Giovanazzi added. "They were taking advantage of our youth, and it was frustrating." Spartan coach Chuck Erbe spoke highly of his team's play. "We played disciplined defense, the bestof the year," he said. "We made good reads on their hitters, and keyed on their primary players." One bright spot for Michigan was the play of freshman setter Linnea Mendoza, who played the entire match in place of veteran Erin McGovern. Giovanazzi also started Luze and Jack- son in the spots that Kristin Ruschiensky and Aimee Smith usually occupy. The new squad jumped out to early leads in each of the first two games of the match, but had diffi- culty maintaining the momentum. The Wolverines gained a 4-0 lead in the first game before falling behind and losing it. Michigan led 7-2 in the game two, and let Michigan State close to 8-7, but eventually closed out the game, 15-11. Mendoza staked her claim to the starting position with a sterling perfor- mance. She posted career highs with two service aces and 16 digs, lifting apparent kills off the court like a human spatula. "A lot ofplays I made kept the team going," she said. Michigan returns home to face In- diana Saturday. Michigan could not block the Spartans' attack in East Lansing last night. AROUND THE BIG TEN- Unbeaten Boilers battle for Bowl FrU Deloitte& Toe LLP Management Consulting By ROY SALINS For the Daily If someone told me at the begin- ning of the Big Ten football season that Saturday's game between Purdue and Ohio State would have Rose Bowl implications, the thought of Purdue in a big game would have shocked me. Purdue, in second place in the conference, is off to its best start since 1978. The Boilermakers have not paid a visit to Pasadena since 1967. Ohio State, Illinois and Indiana are all 2-1 in the Big Ten and neither have played the Nittany Lions yet. Purdue does not play Penn State, so the Boilermakers will probably have to win the restof their games and hope one of the above three teams is able to knock off the top-ranked squad in the land. Purdue shouldn't get too excited yet. Midnight comes for every Cinderella, and playing in Ohio Sta- dium could end the Boilermakers' dream. Purdue (2-0-1 Big Ten, 4-1-1 overall) vs. Ohio State (2-1, 5-2) Since when has a late October Big Ten game been so important to Purdue? Its last minute tie at Wiscon- sin kept Purdue undefeated in confer- ence play going into Saturday's tilt in I Business Analyst Program The Deloitte & Touche Business Analyst program gives individuals with superior academic and extracurricular background significant experience in Management Consulting. This challenging 2 - 3 year program is an excellent stepping stone to top MBA schools -- This year, Business Analysts will attend Harvard, Stanford, Wharton, Kellogg and Michigan. Deloitte & Touche recruits exclusively at high-quality undergraduate programs such as U of M. We invite interested candidates to attend our information session this October 20, in the Michigan League's Vandenberg Room from 7 - 9 pm. The firm will also interview on campus in November. Please address resumes to Mr. Stephen Linn, 600 Renaissance Center, Suite 900, Detroit, MI 48243, no later than November 4. Purdue wants to avoid this scene against the Buckeyes Saturday. Columbus. Ohio State also finds it- self back in the run for the roses with a must-win against Purdue followed by next week's battle at Penn State. After amassing over 250 yards passing against Wisconsin, Purdue quarterbackRickTrefzgermust con- tinue his good play if the Boilermak- ers expect to win. Most importantly for Purdue, fullback Mike Alstott and tailback Corey Rogers are on pace to gain over 1,000 yards apiece on the ground this season. Purdue's run defense will be tested again this weekend. 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