61 Tuesday, May 1, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com INVESTMENT From Page 1A ment. "What differentiates us from other venture funds is that we also quantify the social impact the businesses are having," Greenberg said. "We find it to be particu- venture fund to consider that as a key criterion for making an invest- ment." Greenberg said the company's use of technology to work with lesson plans made LearnZillion an attractive prospect. "(The videos) are going to be a really effective tool, just to use and be able to combine teacher Greenberg said. expand its videos to other subjects The Washington, D.C.-based in the near future, according to company was founded last sum- Guerrier. mer by Eric Westendorf and Alix "Going into the next school year, Guerrier. LearnZillion develops it will be math and literacy, which video lessons for students grades we're very excited about because 3-10 and also collects data, which actually there are many fewer liter- aims to help teachers across the acy resources online than there are country improve their lessons. math (resources)," Guerrier said, LearnZillion, which primarily adding he hopes the new additions provides math lessons, plans to will please customers. Call: #734-418-4115 Email: dailydiaplay@gmail.com RELEASE DATE-Tuesday, May 1, 2012 Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis ACROSS 68 Heat-resistant 32 Con men 50 Hard tennis shot 1 Short trips glassware 33 King of the ring 51 Screwball 5 Daylong march 69 Out oflcontrol 35 On and on and on 52"Your Song" 10 Baseball cards and ... singer John asit DOWN 36eAverage marks 53 Fur tycoon 14 Swiss river 1 Taloned bird 37 Ice cream brand 5Zubin with a 15 Stereotypical dog 2 Pacific island on 40 Revealing, like baton name whicmuck ot Ike heart insa Poe 59 Oren Hornet's 1e _Sator, "Losfwastflmed tile sidekick Mongolia 3 Hard copies 43 "We're in!" 60 State westoft 17 *Steady, 4 Contentious 45 Mess up Minn. unobtrusive confrontation 47 More than a 62 Bet-up-and-go backgund 5 tireckonal ending midemeaor 63 Income - sound 6 etalhe itening 19 Pixarfish agent ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE: 20 "Roots"hero 7Frenchorder- 0 21S asMo_- 8origcat S N A P S A P E G FO0R M Kinte carrying craft C0MIC NEA ENYA 21 Chinas Mao..8- SFormer coin oft O AC NEA tung Spain AMP L E TACO L E E R 22Gap rival 9 Cockney's"in this R O M A N C A T H O L I C 23 The Blue Jays, on place" F I E R Y M O Z A R T scoreboards 10lStrict observance W SJ C CC GSA L EA 24*Highlycharged, of formalities A L E I T E R T B0OU T asatoic 11Warning N E A P O L IITIA N H O R S E 26 Bste olactivity 12 Brie cn role 28 Kids'touching 13 Familiar D I N A R C A N I T I E R game 18 Only planet with A GRE STA O XO E DS 30 Automakerwitha exacyonemoon S NI L 0 NH C L O N E four-ring logo 22Sensei'steaching V E N E T I A N B L I N D 31 *Sleeper sofa 25 Baloney F L E A S E B B A E B I E 34 Soothing words 26 Scornd a bole-in-FLEA SERB AERIE 3S Bk.gbesordJob onedon D O R K I N C A S N A K E 39Slow-movingtree- 27Unitoftreality? R O S Y S T A R E A S E D anginani 29 Silly xwordeditor@aol.com ud01/12 diPirnnocxn DON'T MISS OUT ON THE BEST LOCATION ON CAMPUS! University Towers is right on Central Camapus with the Best amenities, the Best service and the Best prices! **LIMITED UNITS AVAILABLE* Call us for a tour today 734-761-2680 www.UniversityTowers-MI.com FULLER APARTMENTS www.800fuller.com (734) 769-7520 2 bdrm., modern, clean, quiet 5 min. walk. Free Wi-Fl. AVAILABLE FALL. STUDIOS, One & Two bedroom apartments loctaed on UM Campus. Call Michigan Commercial Realty. 734-662-5500. www.michcomrealty.com AVAILABLE FALL. FOUR bed- room duplex in a quiet neighborhood. Walk to football games and Kroger. Call Michigan Commercial Realty. 734-662-5500. www.michcomrealty.com AVAILABLE FALL, 6 bedroom houses near central and north campus. Call Michigan Realty at 734-662-5500 or www.michcomrealty.com ARBOR PROPERTIES. DISTINC- TIVEAward-WinningrentalsinKerry- town, Central Campus, Old West Side, Bumns Park. Now Renting for 2012. 734-994-3157. www.arborprops.com WE HAVE BRAND NEW LUXURY APARTMENTS ON The 2nd Floor These apartments have State of the Art Kitchens and Baths. Beautiful furmishings and great views of the campus and the city. Your new home has many amenities just waiting for you... Located right on Central Campus on South University Ave. Can't get a better location!! THE BEST AMENITIES, BEST SERVICE AND BEST PRICES! Call us for a tour today 734-761-2680 Or email us at The2ndFloorSU@aol.com THESIS EDITING. LANGUAGE organization, format. All disciplines. 25 years' U-M experience. 734-996-0566 or www.writeona2.come PERFECT SUMMER JOB! 10-12 hrs/wk available for experienced gar- dener. Must have reliable transporta- tion. $12/hr Contact jackie@dentaladvisor.com [f &,' Guerrier added that implement- ing LearnZillion means overcom- ing the technology limitations of school districts. "It's more that the structure in schools actually makes it very hard to effectively use technology. Sometimes there's bad connec- tivity, sometimes there's crappy and old hardware, but also there are rules about it," Guerrier said. "There are rules about using stuff in class, and rules about where you can use it, and then from our per- spective, there are a lot of educa- tion products that are more built with a school district in mind rather than an individual teacher, if that makes sense." Guerrier said LearnZillion appreciates the SvF investment and connection to the University the investment brings. "Being introduced to and hav- ing access to interested students is great," Guerrier said. "We have an intern, in fact maybe two coming from Michigan ... that's awesome." Guerrier added that LearnZil- lion continues to improve with help from professors and students in the School of Education at the University. "One of the things that's impor- tant for us as an education organi- zation, providing an (education) service directed at teachers and students, is being able to measure the impact that we have on learn- ing for our users," Guerrier said. "Basically access to that academic mind at the Ed. School helped guide that research, and that's a relationship that's continuing." Business Prof. Gautam Kaul oversees SvF and said it is a two- year program with an application process that includes intense work and research in making invest- ment decisions. Kaul said the nature of the fund goes back to the roots of business as a tool for social welfare. "I believe business was created to serve society, and I think that's what our business proposition is," Kaul said. Kaul added that the goal of the fund is to display the positive effects of financial ventures and the impact they can have on the well-being of society. "We are very keen on showing to the world that doing good is financially sustainable," Kaul said. "It is not that you can only make money by serving the rich, we want to prove that entrepreneur- ship in creating things for people who do not have the resources most of us are fortunate to have is a viable business model." By LIZ NAGLE work on Friday, Sinnery gave up Daily Sports Writer seven earned runs. Though he was plenty capable of finding the strike After the series loss on Sunday, zone, the Indiana batters worked Michigan baseball coach Rich off the momentum - meanwhile, Maloney looked defeated, and his the Michigan pitching staff con- voice trailed off close to a whisper. tinued to fall. "I don't Due to frigid weather on Sat- really know INDIANA 8 urday, the Wolverines faced Indi- what to say." MICHIGAN 1 ana in a doubleheader on Sunday. The Wol- Starting on the mound for Michi- verines (4-11 -----_ gan was junior right-hander Ben Big Ten, 17-27 MICHIGAN 1 Ballantine, who only lasted three overall) were -innings, giving up five hits, six swept by _----_. .earned runs and four walks. He Indiana (8-6, INDIANA 11 came in with a 3.44 ERA and 22-23) this IMICHIGAN 5 walked off the mound with a 4.19 weekend, ERA. and all hopes for the playoffs are "In general, we just didn't get it slowly disappearing. done. We didn't get the job done," It seemed as though Michi- Maloney said. "Too many free- gan's pitching staff was caught bies." off guard whenever the Hoosiers In all three games, Indiana entered the batter's box. Time and scored early and often, taking time again Indiana took advantage advantage of Michigan's defensive of the downtrodden Wolverine downfalls. But glimmers of hope hurlers, crushing them 8-1, 11-8 appeared on the field throughout and 11-5. the weekend of disappointment. The consistent mound problems After the Hoosiers scored first overwhelmed all offensive efforts, on Sunday with first baseman Sam starting with senior right-hander Travis' solo home run, the Wol- Brandon Sinnery on Friday and verines retaliated in the second trickling through the bullpen. inning. Recovering from Friday Unfortunately for the Wolver- night's poor performance, when ines, the eight pitchers after him he went 0-for-4 on three consecu- were letdowns - they served the tive strikeouts, sophomore first Hoosiers three wins on silver plat- baseman Brett Winger smacked ters. one over the left field wall. In the first three innings of Following Winger's solo home run, Michigan put runners in scoring positions, but failed to capitalize. With two outs, sophomore catcher Cole Martin singled on a near perfect bunt that stayed fair down the third base line, and freshman second baseman Eric Jacobson found the hole in right field for a single. Martin advanced to third on a fielding error, and with runners on the corners, freshman shortstop Dylan Del- aney struck out swinging. That was the recurring theme through- out the back-to-back stints. "We would shoot ourselves in the foot," Maloney said. "Unfortu- nately, the way it worked was just a dink there, a dink here." Though Indiana posts the low- est defensive ranks in the confer- ence, Michigan slipped up and gave the Hoosiers a series win on 13 walks and six errors. The Wolverines claimed a nar- row 3-1 lead over the Hoosiers in the first game on Sunday. But in the fourth inning, Ballantine and junior right-hander Kyle Clark gave them seven runs. "A big part of them scoring so many runs was giving up a lot of walks," Lorenz said. "They got some key hits. ... That was a big deal." It was apparent that Indiana didn't need the insurance runs and went scoreless in the final Tuesday, May 1, 2012 The Michigan Daily - michigandaily.com BASE BALL Pitching problems leave Michigan without a win three innings. But Michigan tried to make a comeback in its last chance. In the bottom of the ninth, the Wolverines were down by seven runs, but freshman Kevin White hit his first career bomb, driving in three runs to tighten the gap. With two outs, Maloney called on the semi-healthy freshman left fielder Will Drake. In his first at-bat since April 11, Drake came in as a pinch hitter, but struck out to finalize the series loss. "Every little thing is magnified for us," Maloney said. "We haven't been able to play over it, pitch over it or make the next play." In the final contest, freshman left-hander Trent Szkutnik gave up five earned runs in 2.2 innings. The defensive woes settled in the third inning when sophomore right-hander Alex Lakatos stepped up with a 5-1 deficit to work with. In his 4.1 innings of action, Lakatos struck out six batters, giving up no earned runs and just two walks. But he couldn't recover from a few mental mistakes. "Lakatos was (good) today, for a while," Maloney said. "Then he kind of hit a blunder.... But outside of that, he was sharp." The Wolverines belted what would seem like a successful num- ber of hits - they tallied 35, but stranded 26 base runners. It had a multitude of opportunities to score, but Michigan just couldn't find the timely hit. Though the Wolverines strug- gled in crucial moments, there were a handful of players that encouraged Maloney at the plate. Senior third baseman John Lorenz extended his six game hit- ting streak - four of which were multi-hit outings. He manned the hot corner with experienced defensive plays and consistently made contact at the plate. Lorenz posted solid numbers, going 5-for-11 with four runs on four singles, a double and three walks. Equally impressive was White, in his rookie campaign, who cleared the bases with two con- secutive-game home runs in oppo- site-field shots. "We've had guys, especially right now, like ... Lorenz that are playing really well and it's nice to finally get in there and contribute to their success," White said. "It feels good." Though a number of players are satisfied with their own efforts, they're unhappy with the way the team pieces it together. To them, nothing really matters when Michigan sits at the bottom of the Big Ten and gets swept by Indiana. "I feel okay," Lorenz said. "It's good to start helping out the team a little more. ... But it just doesn't feel good losing." 41 Fneea perp 42 Arnaz-Ball studio 44 *Nouveau riche 46 Feudal slave 48 Chou En-- 49 Intractabe beast 50 *Especially favorable agreement 54 Dallas sch. 56 Shopping meccas 57 D-Day craft 58 They're often cluttered in offices 61 Enbi.. 62 Mr. who debuted 5/1/1952, or in a way, what thetfirst word oftthe answersto starred clues can he 64 Hershey'stoffee her 65 barGay: WWII1 plane 66"See pa 67 Sngar pies 1 2 3 4 s 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 36 39 40 41 46 4] 48 49 SO 51 52 53 54 5 56 57 68 59 60 61 62 63 67 66 69 Wolverines come up short against Purdue in tournament By SCOTT FREEDMAN Daily Sports Writer The Michigan women's tennis team came up short in the final match of the Big Ten Tournament against Purdue on Sunday. Losing the dual match, 4-3, the No. 15 Wolverines failed to cap off the weekend in Columbus success- fully, despite having captured a share of the Big Ten regular season championship a week ago. Michigan entered the tourna- ment as the second seed, earning a first-round bye. The team went on to trounce Indiana and Illinois on its way to the final showdown against Purdue. Friday's match against Indiana marked the fifth-straight match in which Michigan claimed the coveted doubles point. The Wol- verines, strengthened by the ninth-straight victory from the No. 10 duo of freshman Emina Bektas and sophomore Brooke Bolender, used the momentum of the doubles victories to surge past the Hoosiers, taking the overall match, 4-2. Saturday was the high point of the weekend, as Michigan blanked Illinois with a final score of 4-0. Bektas and Bolender, who secured the doubles win yet again, locked up individual victories as well. Also performing impressively was No. 121 junior Mimi Nguyen, who coasted to a straight-set victory, despite trailing 4-0 in the first set. When the dust settled on Sat- urday, Michigan had taken every single match from No. 20 Illinois, cementing the Wolverines' domi- nance over the Illini this season. Sunday was where the Wolver- ines seemed to run out of magic. Despite jumping out to an early advantage, nabbing the doubles point, Michigan could not capital- ize on the solid start and ended up falling just short in the final sin- gles match. The weekend marks yet another disappointing finish for the Wol- verines in the Big Ten Tourna- ment. Historically, in each of the past eight seasons, Michigan has advanced to the final match of the weekend. Despite constant appearances, Michigan has lost all eight-consecutive Big Ten Cham- pionship matches. The Wolverines have only won the title once in the team's history, grabbing the cham- pionship in 1997. Michigan coach Ronni Bern- stein, while dissatisfied with the tough loss, asserts the importance of moving on, especially with the NCAA Tournament rapidly approaching. "We've had a good year, and we have to look at the big picture," Bernstein said. "This is definitely disappointing, but it's also some- thing that we can hopefully learn from. I want to see them go after it and play to win rather than be scared to lose. "We still have the postseason, and that's what we're looking forward to now. You want to play matches like this, win or lose, because it makes you better just to compete like this. This definitely hurts, but once we get back home and start practicing, we'll really focus in on the NCAAs." The Wolverines will return to Ann Arbor to await their selection for the NCAA Tournament. The selection show will take place on May 5. By Don Gagliardo and C.C. Burnikel (c)2012 Tribune Media Services, Inc-. 05/01/12