The roundup Michigan's basketball and hockey teams are reviewed. See Page 16. StmtSanig Summer Orientation 199515 -. - ., ..... SPORTING VIEWS: Autumn will bring out thousands of ''fans By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor Sitting in the tailgater's parking lot at Ann Arbor Pioneer High School, sucking down hot $logs, you can hear it. You can watch it rush by you. You can feel it. Two hours before game time, at your traditional tailgate spot, there is no mistaking what is about to take place down the road. The Michigan football team must be squaring off against its latest enemy. The hoards and legions of maize-and-blue-painted fans are here once again, all trying to park in the same space. 106,000 of them. They form a human sea, swallowing up cars nd buildings as they head down Hoover Street. Pouring out of cars with "The Victors" blaring on the radio, students, alumni and just-plain fanatics invade Ann Arbor, eating at Amer's, walking around the Diag and clogging up every avenue. Autumn Saturday afternoons transform the Michigan campus into a college football mecca. It could be Notre Dame, Penn State or Colorado. Who cares? Northwestern, Memphis and Miami (Ohio) will work too. The opponent doesn't matter. The fans will make the pilgrimage. 106,000 of them. Some of them will sit when the game starts. You won't. Students wrap around the northwest end zone, standing and screaming. You will sing "The Victors" a thousand times, and you will never get the timing right. You'll be pelted with marshmallows, hot and sticky at the beginning of the season, cold and hard near the end. You'll stand sideways on the metal bleachers and will get to know your neighbor a little too well. i On the field, the Wolverines will beat the big boys. The Irish. The Nittany Lions. The Buckeyes. They'll run for touchdowns, throw long passes and make diving catches. They'll sprint out and touch the "'M' Club Supports You" sign before every game, and the fans will roar. 106,000 of them. But beware. Michigan will break your heart t,% hP'I ne t..o .- the. Itl ivThWdrn Carr to coach this fail By Nicholas J. Cotsonika Daily Sports Editor The new era of Michigan football may have to wait. The Wolverines' next head coach will not be named until after the 1995 season in the interest of "stability" and "continuity," said Michigan Athletic Director Joe Roberson. Interim head coach Lloyd Carr, who replaced former head coach Gary Moeller on May 4, will continue to lead the Wolverines through the fall. Moeller resigned after his arrest on charges of disorderly conduct and assault and battery, follow- ing an incident ata Southfield restaurant. "Under the circumstances, (Carr)is the best man for the job," said Michigan linebacker Jarrett Irons. "Coach Carr is a Michigan man, and it will be easier to make the transition with him." Roberson said the Carr's ties to the Wolverines SEE Cus, PAGE 16 Colorado's Michael Westbrook steals Michigan's glory as he grabs the "Hail Mary." U The Illini. The Badgers. Your soda will be watered down and your hot dog will be cold. Your legs will hurt and you will writhe with pain when the Wolverines fall to the dreaded "Hail Mary" (See Colorado, 1994). The fans will weep. They will mourn. 106,000 of them. Football at Michigan is religion. Coaches sit under a microscope and are forced out at the first sign of trouble. Players are held to the same standards, finding themselves on national television week after week. Fans buy sweatshirts with the 'M' logo from Malibu to Miami to Maine. The season never ends. But each game will. Don't bother planning to study, though. Parties and picnics fill up nights after games, and after you witness the conquering heroes or vanquished victors perform, it's time to eat, again. Your tailgate party is waiting, and you need to return to the parking lot. Your day will end where it began - if you can make it back. After all, you have to wade through all those crazy fans again. A I1 i 01 OM ther Computer paper Mixed office paper Telephone books Magazines & Catalogs Cereal boxes Gray cardboard Corrugated cardboard Pizza boxes Publications Brown paper bags Newspapers Green glass Clear glass Brown glass Pyrex Juice boxes Milk cartons #1 PET plastic bottles #2 HDPE plastic bottles #3 PVC plastic bottles Ceramics Steel cans Aerosol cans Aluminum cans Aluminum foil and trays. Everything else is just plain garm Get ready to recycle all these materials in your residence hall this Fall. Recycling program by: University of Michigan Grounds and Waste Management phone: 763-5539 age.