10 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, March 13, 1996 WJbe £irhiagrn &du and Since 1948 1996 NCAA Southeast 1. Connecticut 1. 8. Duke 23 9. Eastern Michigan RCA Dome Indianapolisn 5. Mississippi State March 14 & 16 3. Va. Commonwealth 4. UCLA 4. 13. Princeton Rupp Arena_ Lexington, Kentucky 57. March 22 & 24 5. 11, Boston College 3. Georgia Tech 35 6 14. Austin Peay na rlando, Fla. 50. 7. Temple March 15 & 17 't. 10. Oklahoma 2. Cincinnati 3. ational Semifinal 15. UNC-Greensboro Saturday, March 30, 1996 Meadowlands Arena East Rutherford, N.J. We~st g 1. Purdue 16. Western Carolina 8. Georgia 10. 9; Clemson University Arena Albuquerque, N.M. 51. 5. Memphis March 14 & 16 11.- 12. Drexel 4. Syracuse 12. 13. Montana State McNichols a 58. 6. Iowa 22 & 24 13. 11 Washington rizona; 14. Valparaiso University Activities Center Tempe, Ariz. 52. March 15 & 17 10 Santa Clara 2. Kansas4 16. 15. South Carolina State er 19 Free Pizzas for the best prediction Bb-all41mpionship1 What Yo War 1. Massachusetts f finish in first place, you win 10 large one-topping Cottage Inn pizzas - 16. Central Florida 10 FREE PIZZAS! If you finish in 41.8second, you get absolutely nothing. lWhat It Costs Civic Center 9. Stanford Absolutely nothing. Zilch. Zero. 53. Providence, R.I. How To Play March 14 &16 5. Penni State M 4&t There are two ways to play. The easy- as-pic king-Kentucky-in-the-first-round 12. Arkansas way is to fill out the winners of all 63 4. Marquette games on this very piece of newspaper. Also, pick the total points of theAwo teams in the champions iggame. 13. Monmouth Then, bring thi s sheet of paper 59. DomeAtianta with ur and telephone number March 21& 23 6. North Crolina t the sports desk of the second- 21.loor offices of The Michigan Daily, 420k 11 11ew Orleans Maynard, right next to the Studet' 43.3h Activities Building. Then you o ango 3. Texas Tech home and become one with your 22. television set for three weeks and hope Richmond Coliseum 14. Northern Illinois your teams pull it out for you. The 54, Richmond, Va. second way to play is slightly more e March 15 & 17 7. New Mexico complicated, but - good news! - involves much less energy. First, fill out the form. Second, send an e-mail 10. Kansas State message to dally.contest@umich.edu 2. Georgetown with the winners of all the games r numerical order as labeled ons page t National Semifinal (i.e. 1. Connecticut,.D e, 3. Naiionai Saturday,.March 30 1996 15. MississippiValley St. Mississippi State,,to.) Again, make Meadowlands Arena sure you in your name and phone Cham pionshipEast Rutherford, NJ. num en you can sit at home and Etu orfor pizza. Game Midwest How To Score Monday, April 1, 1996 62. 1. Kentucky You get one point for each correctly Meadowlands Arena East Rutherford, N.J. 25.picked first-round winner, two for each 16. San Jose State second round winner, four for each 45. regional finalist, eight for each 638 Wisconsin-Green Ba semifinalist, 16 for each finalist and 32 26. for the champion. (Maximum points: Reunion Arena 9. Virginia Tech 192.) But here's the catch: if you pick Total PointsD _ the champion and the exact number of (tiebreaker) March 14 & 16 5. Iowa State total points in the final, you get 21.4 Name:__ _27.extra points. Why 21.4? Why not? If Nae2.there is a tie, the entrant closest to Phone number: 4612. California the actual number of total points will 4. Utah get the pizza, and the other entrants 28. can huddle together and weep quietly. The Metrod13. Canisius When To Enter 6t. ois All entries must be taken into the Daily 6. Louisville by 5 p.m. today or e-mailed to 4229.daily.contest@umich.edu by 10 a.m. 11. Tulsa tomorrow. 3. Villanova The Rules - ~One entry per person. Employees of The ey Center \ 14. Portland Michigan Daily and Cottage Inn and 56 Portland their immediate families may not enter. Milwaukee 7. Michigan The Daily reserves the right to disqualify any contestant in the event 31- of an illegal entry. 48.. 10. Texas Any2Questions? If so, e-mail dally.contest@umich.edu 32, with the subject "question" or call the 15. Northeast Louisiana Daily at 747 36. Capiche? _____ _____ L ~ Lacrosse team scores sweep on trip to Sunshine State i. J 1 Be a display advertising account executive for sprng/sumer terms at ei e Miejn a~ Gain business experience while building upyour resume. * Sell advertising to local and national businesses * Manage your own account territory " Meet and communicate with business owners " Work for an exciting student run newspaper * Earn commission"based pay * Sales experience helpful but, not necessary * Internship credit possible If you are creative, ambitious and highly motivated, pick up an application today at: By Pranay Reddy Daily Sports Writer FT. LAUDERDALE, Fla. -Spring break and Florida go hand in hand for your typical Michigan student. The warm weather, beaches and endless parties are just a few of the reasons why droves of college students head south every year. The Michigan men's lacrosse club, though, had a different agenda as it headed to the Sunshine State over its vacation. The Wolverines used the week to hone their skills against top notch competition. The Wolverines swept the Ft. Lau- derdale city team, and the Florida and Auburn lacrosse clubs in a span of four days last week. On top of that, a third of the team did not even make the trip. Not exactly a relaxing break. The "vacation" started last Wednes- day when Michigan faced Ft. Lauder- dale. The game posed the biggest chal- lenge of the week for the Wolverines, since Ft. Lauderdale was entirely made up of former varsity lacrosse players from top Division I and III college teams. "These (players) weren't in their 50s," Michigan coach Bob DiGiovanni said. "They were all young (players) in their 20s who knew how to play the game." The younger and undermanned Wolverines opened the game with a surprising 2-0 lead, with midfielders Spencer Alstodt and Daniel Moo scor- ing the first two goals of the game. Ft. Lauderdale quickly showed why it was such a formidable opponent, as it scored two quick goals to knot the score at two at the end of the first quarter. The second quarter began as a de- fensive struggle before Ft. Lauder- dale flexed its muscle, once again scoring two goals at the end of the period. The third quarter was an offensive showcase, as scoring went back and forth for the entire period. Michigan attackers Bill Argesinger and Tom Lal 1, as well as midfielders Brian Molitor and Chuck Garner, each added a goal. After the dust settled, the Wolverines still found themselves down 7-6 going into the fourth quarter. Ft. Lauderdale opened the final stanza by adding a goal to its lead, making the score 8-6. Garner and Argesinger then scored two unan- swered goals for Michigan to tie the game, 8-8. Ft. Lauderdale answered with two goals of its own to bring the lead back up to two. The Wolverines were down at this point, but they were definitely not out. Michigan found the scoring touch again, adding two goals near the end of the fourth quarter to send the game into overtime. The last goal came within minutes of the end of the game, as Molitor scored his second goal. The Wolverines, propelled by their momentum from the fourth quarter, won the game as Argesinger put in the final goal just three minutes into the sudden death overtime period. Michi- gan completed the comeback, win- ning 11-10. College club teams like Florida and Auburn didn't pose nearly the chal- lenge to the Wolverines as the power- ful Ft. Lauderdale team did. Michi- gan came away with convincing vl tories against both squads, winnilef 9-6 and 13-3, respectively. Scoring was spread evenly among the Wolverines over the entire trip, as six players had at least six attack points, given for either scoring or as- sisting a goal. Garner led all Michigan players with 12 attack points. Molitor followed with, 10, while Argesinger was next with seven. Three Wolverines - L Alstodt and Succarde - each had six. Despite the balanced scoring at- tack, the defensive effort was the strongest aspect of Michigan's game over its three-game trip. The Wolver- ines struggled defensively in the first game of the season against Michigan State. Coupled with the fact that the players who didn't make the trip de- pleted the Wolverines' defensive corps, Michigan seemed destined for an unsuccessful road trip. "We sat back on our heels when we played (Michigan State)," DiGiovanni said. "We played more aggressively this time. Do'n't leave your ho.e out n the co Find it some summer lovin' by advertising in the