100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Download this Issue

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

This collection, digitized in collaboration with the Michigan Daily and the Board for Student Publications, contains materials that are protected by copyright law. Access to these materials is provided for non-profit educational and research purposes. If you use an item from this collection, it is your responsibility to consider the work's copyright status and obtain any required permission.

October 02, 1995 - Image 22

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1995-10-02

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

8B - The Michigan Daily - SPORTSMonday - Monday, October 2, 1995

Hale Irwin fires final-round 65 to
Five birdies on front The three-time U.S. Open cham- 'Irwin is on one of the hottest streaks
nine Aow Senior pion and Senior PGA Tour rookie of his storied golfing career, which
came into the day tied at 10-under includes 20 wins on the PGA Tour.
Tour rookie to take with leading money winner Dave He has shot in the 60s in 14 of his last
11 .Stockton. Irwin took command on 16 rounds and is a combined 103-
home $225,000 prize holes 3-7 on his way to winning the under-par in nine events since joining

capture v
Irwin has won $714,009 on the Se-
nior Tour - an average of $79,300
per tournament.
Stockton took the lead when he
birdied the first hole to go 11-under,
but Irwin caught the million-dollar
money winner on the short, par-5 third
hole -the first in his string of birdies
that propelled him to his second Se-
nior Tour victory of the season. He
won the Ameritech Senior Open in
July with a 21-under-par score.
Stockton stayed within striking dis-

ntage Championship
tance when the pair, playing in the But disaster struck at the next hole
final group with Mike Hill, birdied after he had closed within three of
No. 5. But Irwin birdied the next two Irwin.
holes, helping him to a front side 31. Hill's tee shot at the 182-yard hole
The bumpy and sandy greens fi- sailed way left into the water and he
nally caught up with Stockton, one of had to settle for double bogey. Hill
the game's best putters, at No. 9 where then dropped another shot at No. 13.
he three-putted for a bogey, missing a Meanwhile, Irwin took advantage
3-footer after almost holing his first of the course's shorter par-5s, playing
putt from about 40 feet. those holes in 9-under.
Hill, who started two shots off the Walter Morganmade the 14thhole-
pace, had three birdies in a row on the in-one on the tour this season, at the
front side, then eagled the par-5 13th. 154-yard second with an 8-iron.

CLEMMONS, N.C. (AP) - Hale
Irwin broke away with five straight
birdies on the front nine Sunday in
winning the $1.5 million Vantage
Championship with a closing 7-un-
der-par 65.

$225,000 top prize in one of the rich-
est events on the tour with a 17-under
199.
Stockton, who shot a 70, finished
second at 203, while Ray Floyd shot
67, closing with four straight birdies
and a back nine 30, for third at 206.

the 50-and-over circuit in June.
He didn't have a bogey all tourna-
ment and had only four 5s on his
scorecard over 54 holes. Irwin's win-
ning total on the 6,706-yard
Tanglewood course included a 66 in
the first round and 68 Saturday.

i

S

ee

k

i

n

g

T

ru

t

h

A PUBLIC DISCUSSION OF TRUTH AT THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN
TRUTH: Does it matter anymore?
Truth is on trial in our culture. This is nowhere more apparent that at our universities. Today, a chorus of voices proclaim that they are true while asserting
that all truth is relative. The university, of all places, should be a forum to openly discuss issues of truth -- and more than that, to formulate answers to the tough
questions of origin, meaning, morality, destiny, and the nature of reality
The University once welcomed such questions because they contributed to the educational process. Today, students are told that truth is subjective and
personal. As one student put it: "If you believe it, then it's true for you, but it may not be true for me. Your truth may not be my truth." Isn't there more to truth
than just someone's point of view?
Ironically, our early colleges and universities were founded because these questions led educated people to discover that truth could be found through reason
in relationship to Jesus Christ. This search for truth led to a worldview that inspired artists, philanthropists, scientists, and civic leaders who made lasting
contributions to their society and culture.
MONDAY THROUGH FRIDAY, OCTOBER 9 -13,1995
The Veritas Forum raises tough questions and explores them in a competent and honest manner.
Since intellectual integrity is essential in the academic setting, The Veritas Forum brings together
qualified scholars from a diversity of fields. A time of Question and Answer from the audience with

Graham
edges
Green m
Fieldcrest
Classic
CORNELIUS, N.C. (AP)-Gail Gra-
ham won the LPGA Fieldcrest Cannon
Classic Sunday to claim her first career
title.
She finished with a 10-foot birdie putt
for a two-stroke victory over Tammie
Green.
Graham, a29-year-old Canadian in her
sixth season on the tour, shot her second
straight 3-under-par 69 Sunday to tie the
LPGA's best 72-hole score of the year
with a 15-under 273 total on The Penin-
sula Club course.
Laura Davies also was 15-under in the
Chick-Fil-A Charity Championship in
April.
Graham, who earned $75,000, hit her
tee shot on the par-5 18th within 160
yards of the pin, knocked her 5-iron ap-
proach off the back of the green and got
up and down for birdie.
Green, whoclosed with a 70,parredthe
hole after hooking her drive into the left
bunker.
Pat Hurst's 18th-place finish in the
tour's final domestic event of the year
gave her the Rolex Rookie of the Year
award. She had 527 points, five more than
Tracy Hanson.
Fans riot
following
Buckeye
victory
COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - Police
made 47 arrests early Sunday and used
tear gas to break up unruly crowds cel-
ebrating Ohio State's football victoy over
Notre Dame.
Those arrested in the campus-area dis-
turbance were charged with disorderly
conduct, rioting or resisting arrest.
No officers were hurt, said police Lt.
Jerry Tidall. There were no reports of
civilian injuries.
There was an undetermined amount of
property damage, but no major damage
was reported. Bottles, litter, mattresses
and other debris covered streets near the
campus.
The Buckeyes defeated the Fighting
Irish, 45-26, Saturday in the first football
game between the schools since 1936.
Things were relatively quiet until cam-
pus bars closed around 2 a.m. Sunday,
police said. The mayhem started after an
undetermined number of bar patrons
moved into the streets.
Police dressed in riot gear used tear gas
at least four times to break up crowds.
Officers on horseback also were used to
disperse people.
About a dozen fires were set in trash
bins. When firefighters tried to reach them,
some people threw rocks and bottles at
firefighters and police, said police Sgt.
Kevin Justice. Many of the fires could not

be reached and burned themselves out.

each speaker will follow each seminar and

lecture.

Dr. Phillip Johnson is a
graduate of Harvard and the
University of Chicago. He served
as law clerk to the U.S. Supreme
Court and is now professor of
law at UC,.Berkeley. He is the
author of the best-selling book
Darwin on Trial and Reason in
the kalance: The Case Against
Natqralism in Science, Law,
and Education.

Dr. Os Guinness received his
D.Phil. in Social Science from
the University of Oxford.
Among his recent books, The
American Hour: A Time of
Reckoning and the Once and
Future Role of Faith. is an
analysis of the United States
towards the close of the
American Century.

Dr. Hugh Ross, after
completing his Ph.D. in
Astronomy from The University
of Toronto, was a post-doctoral
fellow at the California Institute
of Technology for five years. He
has authored numerous scholarly
articles and books, including:
The Fingerprint of God, The
Creator and the Cosmos, and
Creation and Time.

Dr. Eleonore Stump for over
the past twenty years has taught
and written widely in the area of
philosophy and is the recipient of
numerous honors and awards.
She is a professor of philosophy
at St. Louis University. She is
currently working on The
Knowledge of Suffering:
Narrative and the Problem of
Evil.

Dr. H. Fritz
Director for

Schaefer is the
the Center for

Computational Quantum
Chemistry at The University of
Georgia. In 1991 he published
his 500th professional paper.
He has been nominated five
times for The Nobel Prize and
during the period 1984-1991 he
was the third most highly cited
chemist in the world.

Special noon-time luncheons for faculty and graduate students are scheduled.
The afternoon seminars on campus and the evening lectures at Rackham Auditorium
are free and open to the public.

a

The Veritas Forum at The University of Michigan: October 9-13, 1995
MONDAY: OCT 9 TUESDAY: OCT 10 WEDNESDAY: OCT 11 THURSDAY: OCT 12 FRIDAY: OCT 13
DR. PHILLIP JOHNSON DR. OS GUINNESS * DR. HUGH ROSS DR. ELEONORE STUMP DR. H. FRITZ SCHAEFER
11:30 Vandenberg Rm., MI League Hussey Rm., MI League Hussey Rm., MI League Vandenberg Rm., MI League Hussey Rm., MI League4
LUNCHEON LUNCHEON * LUNCHEON LUNCHEON LUNCHEON
"Creator '"Making the World Safe for "A Scientist "Wisdom and "The Way
or Diversity: A Proposal for a Who Looked and the Banality of Evil" of
Blind Watchmaker?" Public Philosophy in a Day Was Found" Discovery"
of Exploding Pluralism"
NOTE: For Faculty, Graduate Students, & Community Professionals. Lunch: $7.50 ($6.00 for Graduate Students). For reservations e-mail: veritas@umich.edu or call 313-429-4784.
Lunch served from i1:30 am till 12:10 pm. Lectures begin at 12:10 pm and end at 12:50 pm. If you are able to attend only the lecture portion, please reserve your seating also.
3:30 Rm 100, Law G-378, Dental Kellogg Aud., Dental School Lee Iacocca Aud., 1203 G.G. Aud. A, Angell Hall 1210 Chemistry
School School Brown Bldg., North Campus
Dr. Johnson Dr.Guinness SEMINAR SEMINAR SEMINAR SEMINAR
SEMINAR SEMINAR
"The "Knowledge "Knowledge is Power, "The Top Nine "Body, Mind, and Soul: "Scientists and
Established is Power, But Truth is Freedom: A Objections for Rejecting Non-Cartesian Dualism Their Gods"
Religious But Truth is Social Scientist's View of Christianity" and Reductionsim
Philosophy Freedom: Faith Beyond Skepticism" without Materialsim"
of America" (Part I1 " wn-

http://www.tenniscountry.com
The "Total Tennis" address on the Internet

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan