2B - The Michigan Daily - Monday, October 25, 1999 ==CLUB SPORTS CORNER: EDITED By DAVID DEN HERDER Game on: Roller hockey rocks Michigan outscores five weekend opponents, 29-7 The Michigan roller hockey team found a flood of success on the banks of the Red Cedar this past weekend. At a round-robin style hockey weekend in East Lansing, the Wolverines came away with a tie and four sound victories, including a 10- 0 shutout of Ball State yesterday, Other victims of Michigan's tear were Ohio State, Rose Hulman and Eastern Michigan. Illinois salvaged a 4-4 tie. "We've had a pretty good year so far," said club president Jason Wells. "We have five new freshmen that are performing well." Headlining Michigan's freshman class is Dan Bachman, who has 10 goals on the season, Wells said. Club icers beat up Spartans to earn weekend split The Michigan men's hockey club split this weekend's games with Kent State and Michigan State. Friday night, the Wolverines lost for the first time this season to the Golden Flashes, 3-2. Saturday night, the Wolverines bounced back to dispose of the Spartans, 8-3. The win improved Michigan's record to 5-1 as the team now xvill turn its attention to this weekend's home games with Miami (Ohio). The Wolverines will not be play- ing at Yost Ice Arena, though. Because of a conflict of schedules with the varsity team, the Wolverines will play the RedHawks Friday night at the Farmington Hills Civic Center and Saturday night in Toledo. With 28 games left in their season, the Wolverines are in first place in the Midwest Collegiate Hockey League. This leaves Michigan in a good position to meet its season goal, qualifying for the American Collegiate Hockey Association's national tournament in Minneapolis. Michigan qualified and was elimi- nated by Central Michigan in last season's tournament. "Our goal is to make it to Minneapolis," defenseman Jeremy Motz said. "Our chances are really good as MICHIGAN MEN'S ROWING: at the 35th Head of the Charles in Cambridge, Mass. - Championship Eights, Governor's Trophy Twenty-sixth place overall* 16:09.93 The Wolverines are working to qualify for the College Roller Hockey League Tournament at sea- son's end. Wells said that five teams from Michigan's region will qualify for the national tournament. "We definitely expect to make the tournament," Wells said. "And we expect to have a good showing as well." Last season, Michigan qualified, but was eliminated by Penn State in the round of 16. Although they spent all of last weekend in East Lansing, the Wolverines did not play Michigan State. They will get their chance to take on the Spartans in two weeks. - David Den herder long as we play well. As long as we play well, we can play with anyone." - Raphael Goodstein Men's rugby earns invitational bid The Michigan men's rugby club has received an invitation to the Midwest Rugby Tournament Oct. 30- 31. This Saturday and Sunday, the scrummers will travel to Bowling Green State to compete in the invita- tion-only tournament. The squad will square off against clubs from Michigan State, Purdue, Cincinnati, Ohio University and Wisconsin, senior captain Ryan Gaylord said. Although the club's record is 1-3- 1, it received a bid to the tournament because two of its three losses have been by fewer than five points. On Oct. 16, the Wolverines lost to Grand Valley State, 17-15. Another close loss came against Ferris State, where five points were the differ- enec. Many other teams in their confer- ence share similar sub-par records because two of the teams in their conference are dominant. Since Michigan's and other team's records are similar, close losses have paid off and helped Michigan earn its bid. Senior Rvan Gaylord and sopho- more Mike Livanos look to lead the team this weekend, along with fresh- man fly half Andrew Marcus. - Dave Roth *The top collegiate finisher was Brown University, 15:08.19 Championship Fours Sixteenth place overall** 18:14.56 **The top collegiate finisher was Wisconsin, 17:14.96 M' SCHEDULE MondayOctober 25 Women's Golf at Stetson Hatter Fall Classic, all day Tuesday October 26 No events scheduled Wednesday October 27 No events scheduled Thursday October 28 No events scheduled Friday October 29 Mens Golf at Stanford Invitational, All Day Field Hockey vs. Penn State, 3 p.m. Soccer vs. Alabama (Lexington, KY), 5 p.m. Men's Swimming vs. Eastern Michigan, Michigan State and Oakland, 6 p.m. Volleyball at Iowa, 8 p.m. Saturday October 9 Football at Indiana, 3:30 pm. Ice Hockey vs. Yale, 7:05 p.m. Women's Cross Country at Big Ten Championships, in State College, 10:45 a m. Men's Cross Country at Big Ten Championships, in State College, 11:30 a.m. Volleyball at Minnesota, 5 p m. Sunday October 10 Soccer at Kentucky (Lexington, KY), 3 p.m. Men's Golf at Stanford Invitational, All Day Field Hockey vs. Ohio State, noon ROWING RESULTS Michigan rowing team at the Head of the Charles. Cambridge. Mass. Top 10 finishers of 30 teams, women's eight event: 1. Rowing Canada,.Ontario 16:31.41 2. U.S. Rowing, New Jersey 16:32.56 3. Danish Rowing Federation 16:36.14 4. Southern Cal. 17:0656 5. Virginia 17:16.23 6. Michigan 17:16.83 7. Brown 17:17.93 3. Princeton 17:30.51 9. Wisconsin 17:38.75 10. Boston University 17:40.28 COLLEGE FOOTBALL EAST Akron 35, Navy 29 Army 35, New Mexico St. 18 Brown 44. Penn 37 Dartmouth 20, Cornell 17 Fairfield 24, St. John's, NY 16 Harvard 13, Princeton 6 Lafayette 22, Bucknell 21 Lehigh 62, Holy Cross 8 Marshall 59, Buffalo 3 Massachusetts 26, Delaware 19 Miami 31, Boston College 28 Pittsburgh 38, Rutgers 15 Rhode Island 23, Maine 14 Slippery Rock 27, Shippensburg 21 Villanova 45, Northeastern 16 West Virginia 20, Temple 17 Yale 41, Columbia 29 SOUTH Davidson 24, Randolph-Macon 16 E. Kentucky 54, Tenn Martin 7 Florida A&M 41, Hampton 6 Furman 48. ETSU 21 Georgia 49, Kentucky 34 Georgia Southern 34. The Citadel 17 Grarbling St. 24. Arkansas-Pine Bluff 19 Janes Madison 48. Connecticut 14 Liberty 34. Charleston Southern 14 Louisville 39. Houston 33 MVSU 18. Texas Southern 13 Maryland 45, North Carolina 7 North Carolina A&T 51, Howard 0 NC. State 31, Duke 24, OT Southern Miss. 28, Cincinnati 20 Tennessee 15, Alabama 7 Vrginia-Wise 17, Jacksonville 12 Wake Forest 47, Alabama-Birmingham 3 William & Mary 35. Virginia Military 14 SOUTHWEST Arkansas St. 14: North Texas 10 Hawaii 35, Tulsa 21 Kansas S. 4t4, Oklahoma St. 21 Oklahoma 51, Texas A&M 6 Prairie View 21, Panhandle Rice 42, TCU 21 Stephen F.Austin 38, Nicholls St. 7 Texas 24, Nebraska 20 Texas Tech 35, Baylor 7 MIDWEST Colorado 16, Iowa St. 12 Drake 53, Butler 6 Eastern Michigan 20, Toledo 13 Illinois 35, Michigan 29 Illinois St. 55, S. Illinois 48 Indiana 38, Iowa 31 Kansas 21, Missouri 0 Ohio 17, Bowling Green 14 Ohio St. 20, Minnesota 17 SE Missouri 28, SW Missouri St, 23 Tennessee Tech 14, E. Illinois 7 Valparaiso 14, San Diego 7 Western Michigan 28, Ball State 0 Wisconsin 40, Michigan State 10 FAR WEST Cal State-Northridge 24, Montana State 21 Portland State 31, Weber St. 14 Team 1. Florida State (55) 2. Penn State (10) 3. Virginia Tech (5) 4. Tennessee 5. Florida 6. Kansas State 7. Georgia Tech 8. (tie) Mississippi S 8. (tie) Nebraska 10. Georgia 11. Wisconsin 12. Texas 13. Marshall 14. Alabama 15. Michigan 16. Brigham Young 17. East Carolina 18. Purdue 19. Michigan State 20. So. Mississippi 21. Ohio State 22. Texas A&M 23. Miami (Fla.) 24. Oklahoma 25. Mississippi COACHES' Record ?8-0 8-0 6-0 5-1 6-1 7-0 5-1 t. 7-0 6-1 6-1 6-2 6-2 7-0 5-2 5-2 6-1 6-1 5-3 6-2 5-2 5-3 5-2 3-3 4-2 5-2 Pts 1,733 1,684 1,603 1,515 1,456 1,412 1,329 1,180 1,180 1,072 1,010 992 921 805 649 634 545 511 446 434 388 264 244 174 171 AP POLL Associated Press Top 25, Oct. 24 (first place votes in parentheses) Pvs 1 2 4 5 6 7 8 12 3 14 17 18 15 10 9 19 20 16 11 21 22 13 23 Who: Lauren Clster Hometown: Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania High School: Mt. Lebanon Sport: Soccer Year: Senor UJ~~~ce £IDtm &tu r Why: in yesterday's 6-0 route over Butler, Clister recorded a shutout in her first career start on Senior Day. Clster is the Wolvernes emo- tional leader but does not receive much playing time because of starting goalkeeper Carissa Stewart. Clister gave up no goals in tne time she saw. Background: Academic All Big Ten, 1997-98 ... Michigan Athletic Academic Achievement, 1996-99 ... Dean's List, 1996-99 .. Student, Division of Kinesiology t uiister Defending their crown 0 ATHLETE OF THE WEEK POLL USA Today/ESPN Coaches' Top 25, Oct. 24 (first place votes in parentheses) Team 1. Florida State (41) 2. Penn State (16) 3. Virginia Tech 4. Tennessee 5. Florida 6. Kansas State 7. Georgia Tech 8. Mississippi State 9. Nebraska 10. Georgia 11. Wisconsin 12. Texas 13. Marshall 14. Michigan 15. Brigham Young 16. Alabama 17. East Carolina 18. Texas A&M 19. So. Mississippi 20. Michigan State 21. Ohio State 22. Purdue 23. Miami (Fla.) 24. Syracuse 25. Stanford Rec. 8-0 8-0 6-0 5-1 6-1 7-0 51 7-0 6-1 6-1 6-2 6-2 7-0 5-2 6-1 5-2 6-1 5-2 5-2 6-2 5-3 5-3 3-3 5-2 5-2 Pts. 1,456 1,427 1,355 1,261 1,232 1.199 1,114 1,022 1,021 941 862 786 729 630 613 539 508 448 351 332 323 245 191 147 82 Prev. 1 2 4 5 6 7 8 11 3 14 16 18 15 9 19 12 20 10 21 13 22 17 23 24 4 0 " NFL RESULTS Yesterday's scores Detroit 24, Carolina 9 Indianapolis 31, Cincinnati 10 Minnesota 40. San Francisco 16 NY Giants 31, New Orleans 3 Tampa Bay 6, Chicago 3 Dallas 38, Washington 20 Miami 16, Philadelphia 13 New England 24, Denver 23 St. Louis 34, Cleveland 3 Green Bay 31. San Diego 3 Seattle 26. Buffalo 16 Oakland 24, NY Jets 23 SPORTS BRIEFS State cheerleader, coed, tackles Wisconsin mascot MADISON (AP) -- Becky Badger took one for the team Saturday. The costumed Wisconsin mascot was tackled by a Michigan State cheerleader as the 17th-ranked Badgers defeated No. 1 Michigan State, 40-10. Bucky Badger was waving a Michigan State flag, which bears a white S' in a field of green. That apparently triggered some territorial anger by the member of the Spartans cheering squad. "He came at Bucky really hard and tackled him," said Jaf Frazer. a senior who witnessed what happened from the student section. The tackle occurred during the usual horseplay between the two parties, University of Wisconsin police Sgt. Kenneth Kerl said. "During this rivalry stuff, it got some- what out of hand," Kerl said. The Spartan cheerleader was led away from the sidelines by stadium security, JOANNA PAINE/Dadly Temperatures were in the 40s as Jesse Coleman and the Michigan men's gymnastics team displayed their skills on the Diag last Friday. The defend- ing national champions host a scrimmage Dec. 3. Yankees rempaain; lead World Series, 2-0 ATLANTA (AP) -- First, they hon- ored Babe Ruth, Lou Gehrig1, Joe DiMaggio and the team of the centu- rv. Then. David Cone, Bernie Williams and Derek Jeter drove home why the New York Yankees arc the franchise of the century. The Yankees stormed halfway to a record 25th World Series title, hum- bling the clumsy Atlanta Braves 7-2 last night for a 2-0 series lead. A night after they waited for an eighth-inning rally to win 4-1, the defending champions wasted no time pounding Kevin Millwood in their 10th-straight World Series victory. Cone exactly duplicated the one- hit, seven-inning pitching of Orlando Hernandez in the opener, and Atlanta finished with five hits, three in the ninth inning. The sellout crowd of 51,226 was still buzzing at the sight of Pete Rose, Ted Williams and Hank Aaron on the field together -- along with Yogi Berra in a Yankees hat and Roger Clemens in a blue pinstriped suit - when New York went to work. Chuck Knoblauch, Jeter and Paul O'Neill started the game with singles, and Tino Martinez and Scott Brosius delivered RBI singles with two out Ricky Ledee's double chae Millwood in the third, and it was 7-0 by the fifth. Now, the Braves' best hope is a repeat of the 1996 Series, when New York lost the first two games at Yankee Stadium to Atlanta before taking the next four. Still, here's a key statistic: Of the 45 teams to take a 2-0 edge in The Series, 34 have gone on to win. And another: The Yankees have won incredible 16 of their last 17 postsea- son games. Game 3 will be Tuesday night in New York with Tom Glavine, scratched from his Game I start because of the flu, pitching for the Braves against Andy Pettite. Braves manager Bobby Cox got no major benefit from a major lineup switch in which he benched NI- Championship Series MVP Eddie Perez, Bret Boone and Walt Weiss. M1~ ;. , _ , "' ,. AP F e U.S. national rowing team at yesterday's Head of the Charles Regatta in Cambridge, Mass. The Michigan men's varsity eight placed 26th overall at the fvrdd-famous event. PHoTo *V 'AiS"TRyA A 0CND . SCOTLANDl . CHINA I At Fermi National Accelerator laboratory, each scientific advance we make allows us to look back in time and discover crucial clues that will help us determine the urigia of the universe. Sure, unraveling humanity's oldest mystery sounds like something to be debated in your campus coffee shop. Truth is, this quest is very much a reality at Fermilab. As the global leader in high-energy particle nhvsic research. we're lonking for , , , n&L -" li1l - .4 iaea- vaa-.T The University of Michigan r Office of International Programs . op * G-513Michigan Union 734 764 4311 tel 530 South State Street oip@umich.edu Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109-1349 www.umich.edu\-iinet\oip : STUDY ABROAD . - INFORMATION MEETINGS THIS WEEK: Monday. October 25,1999 Academic Year Program: H Beijing, CHINA L 0 TuesdayOctober 26,1999 Academic Year, Semester & Summer Programs: 1:4 -,,.1 eT n1T A 2 (Insdi e of dnitt iute m older 20 MeY section of Urac) Engineers Technicians " Mechanical * Mechanical * Electrical s Electrical