16A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 22, 1998 Going clubbing Michigan women's rugby Home games in CAPS When Opponent Where Tomorrow Purdue West Lafayette Saturday, 4 p.m. COLUMBUS Ocker Field Remember, The Michigan Daily sports department is ,.-anxious to print the results, schedules or news about your club team in every Thursday's paper, as well as yin SportsMonday. Just call the Sports Desk at 647- °3336, or e-mail us at: clubsports.daily@umich.edu. KLEINBAUM Continued from Page 1A The answer was expensive - $100,000 expensive. Just two weeks after Reese's death, a fund was formed to raise the hundred grand necessary to endow a scholar- ship in memory of Jefferey Reese. Then, during the next 10 months, a pretty incredible .4hing happened. The student athletes rallied around Reese's cause, and their community actually grew tighter. -"There's a lot of support from a lot of different ath- $tes," wrestler Damian Logan said. "I don't want to say that Jeff's death made us tighter, but my freshman year, 'VWasn't like this. There's a lot more of a unit now." WIt's trying times that offer the truest test of a commu- nity. The fact that Michigan's student-athletes are able to come together as they have is a testament to everyone who dons maize and blue. "The athletes at Michigan are all athletes that grew up with Jeff," wrestler Joe Warren said. "Every time some- thing bad happens, it's great when everyone comes ,tgether to get something good out of it." The athletes did what they could to raise the money. They had car washes, dances, they even made T-shirts. But the $3,500 they raised wasn't close to enough. Two weeks ago, the SAAC decided to take a new approach - a raffle. The prize? A chance to stand on the field of Michigan Stadium, holding the Go Blue banner before the Michigan-Penn State football game. It's a great prize, something that every Michigan fan would remember forever. But it's irrelevant. The prize could be a two hours of root canal, and buying a ticket would be worthwhile. Reese embodies every single person on this campus. As a Michigan student-athlete, every time he took the gnat, he did it to represent us. . "He had an unbelievable opportunity to represent Michigan on the highest level," Potts said. "He was always proud to fight for Michigan." .