Monday, May 21, 2012 The Michigan Daily -- michigandaily.com Monday, May 21, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily1com Call: #734-418-4115 Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com Join the Michigan Sailing Club and learn to sail this summer! Windsurf, canoe, & kayak too! michigansai inclub org RELEASE DATE- Monday, May 21, 2012 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 1 Pound of poetry 5 Hourglass trickler 9 Salami and turkey jerky, e.g. 14 Steak and hamburger, e.g. 15 Jene sais_ 16 'That's plentyfor me" 17 Chicago footballer 18Sputnik launcher 19 Girl who says "Lindle" 20 Add a little gin to a partydrink, say 23 KGB coanterpart 24 Like poppies and kittens 25 Game requiring full 25-square coverage to win 31 Lao Tzu's"Te Ching" 32"SmokeGets in Your Eyes" composer Jerome 33 Item in asquirrel's stash 35Sandwich rolled in atortilla 37 Fx, asnwom hrakes 40 Europe's highest active volcano 41 Leadingthe league 43 Prefixnwith -syncrasy 45 Catthegrass 46 Efcint 50 Minnesota's "crazy" state hird 51 Bubble anaptfilter 52 Front page staple, and, in away, what 2-, 25- and 46-Across begin with 58 Salami type 59 "Dang it!' 60 Lake south of Niagara Falls 62 Ignoramus 63 "Ouch!" 64 It may lose its mate inthe laundry 65"Please, 'ldoh that' 66 Ch ky behavior 67 Youngster DOWN 34 "Don't reckon so" 52 Formally tum over 1 Flow back 36 Where to see 53 Military group 2 Puzzle pair? sharks with cues 54 Ellington/ 3 Bring in from the 38 Sum up Strayhom's "Take SeI 39 Denies _ Tramn" 4 Chad'scontinent knowledgeof 55Grandsonof Eve 5 Tight game 42 Divide according 56 City fooled by a 6 Vienna's country: to ownership horse 7Small snack 44 Baby's boo-boo 57Ailing 8 Lead the 4 sBayspiggy" 58 Hodges of the orchestra 46Rankles Dodger 9 Trifling matter 49Author 61 Squeeze (out), as 10 Cardinal's Hemingway a living hononfic, after ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: "Your" 11 Words after R E S T E A S Y A C C E DE gimmeor wait E X PECTTO L E A NE D 1t Jeran .~c o P R 0 6 0 M A N T I L T A T one: Ahr L E T I N 0 N F I L L E D0 21tPantsey Y DS D UO S SR S 22 Brit's watering C A V i A R F I L S hole M A R T NE T B O NE S 2oeowlstomes P O N Y I N G H E A R T E N 26 Averse A A T R E S O 27Preiousmetal AVA9T REEDSTOP 2 rLetdoas A G A R OTUE P T L one's hair PELHAM CABFARE 29"1haven'tadue" P A S S O N C ORAL S E A 30 "... hut theel O NT P E A E couldbe wrong E 31 Bill featuring STATES ADAMBEDE Jefferson xwordeditor@aol.com 05/21/12 SUMMER PARKING BEHIND 420 Maynard St. $100/Mo. 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Duties include greeting clients, answering phones, and routing mail, data entry and retrieve, schedul- ing and calender maintenance ldeal can- didates will have proven customer ser- vice skills in an administrative setting and experience with Microsoft Office applications email resumes toscot.- jack909@Tgmuii.com IF INTER- ESTED Softball from Page 1A advantage of rest while the Cardi- nals had to play Ken- KENTUCKY 2 tucky in an MICHIGAN 3 elimination game LOUISVILLE 1 Last MICHIGAN 2 year's stun- ning loss to Ken- LOUISVILLE 0 tucky in the MICHIGAN 4 Regional Final saw a top-20 Michigan team upset, but this year, the Wolverines played the role of the underdog and avenged the previous season's early exit. Hutchins doesn't believe that's the case though. "I don't even think about last year," Hutchins said. "I'm all about 2012 and I'm all about the next game and the next pitch." Wagner - pitching her third game in as many days - endured the hot weather to pick up her 32nd win. She went the distance, allowing just five hits and one walk. Wagner's defense, however, recorded three double plays to save her from some tight situations, "Louisville definitely came out swinging and they had already seen me," Wagner said. The Wolverines got on the board in the first inning, working pitch counts from Louisville starter Tori Collins, who struggled with her control. "It's smart on their part because I wasn't finding the strike zone," Collins said. Michigan began with a walk to sophomore left-fielder Nicole Sap- pingfield and a single by Chidester, before Sara Driesenga was walked to load the bases. Junior second- baseman Ashley Lane slapped a single to score both Sappingfield and Chidester for a 2-0 lead. The Wolverines would tack on another run in the second inning, this time off of Louisville pitcher Caralisa Connel, who came in for relief of Collins. Sophomore right- fielder Lyndsay Doyle started the inning with a leadoff single and advanced to second on a sacrifice bunt and then to third on a pop out. Driesenga hit a single to score SEEKING PROGRAM Manager We are hiring a new Program Manager to continue our not-for-profit College Prep program in Hamtramck, Michi- gan. Candidate must he knowledge- ahle ahout the ACT test, college uppli- cation process, and be able to recruit and manage student volunteers. See ad- ditional program details at: http://ascot- tfoundation.org/Hamtramck/overview.- html Send inquiries & resume to: ascottfoundation@gmail.com 734-846-3436 THESIS EDITING. LANGUAGE organization, format. All disciplines. 25 years' U-M experience. 734-996-0566 or www.writeona2.com Michigan's season ends after series loss to Nebraska Doyle and reach base for her 31st consecutive time this season. Leading off the fourth inning, Evans extended her hitting streak to 13 games this season - the lon- gest streak by any Michigan player this season. She would move to second on a Sappingfield ground- out before Chidester recorded her 199th career RBI with a single. Louisville would attempt a comeback in the seventh inning with back-to-back singles, on hits by Alicja Wolny and Jordan Trim- ble, though it would fall short after Wagner closed out the inning. "We wanted to come out and attack them," Chidester said. "I thought that our energy level right from the start was great. We exe- cuted our game plan perfectly and it worked to our advantage." Michigan will take on Alabama next in a Super Regional matchup in Tuscaloosa, Ala. The Crim- son Tide are ranked second in the country and won three straight games to advance in their region. "They're going to need good momentum going into Alabama," said Louisville coach Sandy Pears- all on Michigan's upcoming series. "They are going to have a tough Super Regional, but if they can do some of the things they did this weekend then I think they're in the top four of the bracket." But the Wolverines - now on a nine-game winning streak - won't be thinking about the College World Series. They'll be thinking about the first pitch on Friday. H,.-,OK By LIZ NAGLE Nebraska right-hander Ryan Daily Sports Writer Hander gave up two consecutive walks, before sophomore first Saturday marked the end of baseman Brett Winger doubled to the Michigan baseball season. right-center field, knocking in a Though the farewell was bitter in pair of runs. a rubber-match loss to Nebraska, "We just got timely hits," said there was a semi-sweet aftertaste, sophomore right-fielder Michael like a reminder that the weekend's O'Neill. "Our pithing obviously series wasn't as disappointing asit held a little better on Friday than may seem. on Thursday." On Fri- NEBRASKA 15 In the series opener on Thurs- day, senior MICHIGAN 2 day, the bullpen littered the right-hander scoreboard, allowing the Corn- Brandon Sin- huskers to score 15 runs off of 20 nery pitched NEBRASKA 5 hits. Freshman right-hander Matt a full game MICHIGAN 6 Ogden saw the first start of his to become rookie campaign, but had a prob- just the sixth NEBRASKA 7 lem finding the strike zone, giving Wolverine to MICHIGAN 3 up three walks in the first inning. pitch more Nebraska's damage was deep than 100 innings in a single sea- with its entire starting lineup son. He earned the 6-5 win, giving posting at least one hit, led by cen- up runs in just two innings. ter-fielder Rich Sanguinetti, who "Everyone wanted to rally went 4-for-5 with four RBIs and around Brandon because it was his three runs. last start," said senior third base- A triplet of pitchers was yanked man John Lorenz. "It was great from the mound and too many that we could help him out, and it balls ended up in the dirt. Michi- was a great way to end his career." gan coach Rich Maloney was But the Cornhuskers (14-10 Big running out of options and sent Ten, 34-21 overall) attacked the redshirt junior right-hander Chad plate in the fourth frame. Third Jasman into relief and sophomore baseman Josh Scheffert singled to catcher Cole Martin behind the left field and advanced on the next plate. two outs before stealing home and Putting in Martin was an easy posting the first run on the board. choice since Maloney saw him With runners on the corners, as a better defender all year, but second baseman Pat Kelly cleared it seemed like a risky decision the bases, sending a bomb to left using Jasman on the mound since field and propelling a4-0 lead over he came in with a total of three Michigan (8-16, 22-34). But that innings of work this season. was the last of Sinnery's troubles, The poor defensive delivery and the Wolverines came back in gave up the last four runs, and the the bottom with a bit of luck. Wolverines had minimal hit pro- duction to factor in. "You don't feel good about it, that's for certain," Maloney said. "We had expectations for more.... We struggled in a lot of facets of the game, not just one." Though Michigan came back with Sinnery's win, Nebraska spoiled the high spirits in Satur- day's rubber match. Players left the field buried under defeat - the season finale was anything but grand. "I don't feel like it's over yet - I know it will hit me eventually," Lorenz said. "But seeing all the other seniors and other families and how emotional everyone's getting, it's kind of depressing." Junior right-hander Ben Bal- lantine started the final contest, and his performance was promis- ing. But a string of four hurlers in the eighth inning alone allowed Nebraska to rally a win. Though Michigan was left scoreless through six frames, it took a narrow lead in the seventh. With two outs, freshman short- stop Dylan Delaney struck out swinging, but reached first base on a wild pitch and advanced on junior center-fielder Patrick Bion- di's single to center field. For the first time all season, Lorenz was stuck in the two-hole. But good things came from the change in the batting order - he tripled to tie the game at two. "He's a good hit and run guy," Maloney said. "I just didn't do it earlier in the year, but I said give him some more at-bats, it's his senior weekend." Following Lorenz, O'Neill dou- Senior Coley Crank played his final series ina Michigan uniform this weekend 1 2 3 14 17 20 25 26 31 35 41 46 52 53 56 62 65 By Jeff Chen 7 s 10 11 12 13 15 16 121 5 6 18 22 19 023 24 6 27 28 29 30 1] 32 33 34 36 37 38 39 40 42 43 44 45 47 48 49 50 51 3 54 55 56 57 59 60 61 63 64 66 67 mne Media Services, Inc. 05121/12 bled down the left-field line, tack- ing on the leading run. He closed the season with the team-high batting average at .329. Though he missed a large chunk of con- ference play due to injury, he still notched 30 RBIs and six home runs. The slim difference turned to Nebraska's favor with the quad of pitchers that suffered two costly innings en route to the 7-3 loss and Things didn't work out the way Maloney had planned. The Wol- verines were fairly optimistic at the start of the season, coining their motto "Flip It" in regards their last place Big Ten finish in 2011. "If you just mix a few parts in, it can change quickly," Maloney said. "We really believe we've got a good young nucleus here.... We'll have an opportunity to make big 99.5% ISU RANCEJ$ ACCEPTED AND GUT OF} TATSE REFILP 1112 SGuth Uni versity Avenue Ann Arbor, M 48104 (734) 663-553 (c)2012 Tribu