ACROSS
1 Shoot the moon
6 “Say from
whence / You __
this strange
intelligence?”:
Macbeth
9 Word of
possibility
14 MDX maker
15 __ Pacis: altar of
Peace
16 Tough test
metaphor
17 Where shirts may
be lost?
19 Dish man?
20 Measurement for
Sagan
21 One sending out
bills
23 Field guard
24 Bolivian
president
Morales
25 Denounce
unmercifully
27 Natl. debt unit
28 Mountain __: soft
drinks
30 White
31 Galileo’s
birthplace
32 California Marine
Corps base
35 Snowboarding
gold medalist
White
38 Begins
39 Realm of some
self-help books
45 Easy pace
46 Idle colleague
47 Conan Doyle, for
one
51 “Love __ Rose”:
Neil Young song
52 At sea
54 LAX stat
55 Fade out
57 Film with six
sequels
58 Muse for Sagan
60 Equals
62 Update
64 Kovacs of early
TV comedy
65 Tao follower?
66 “JFK” director
67 Late bloomer?
68 Skid row woe
69 Prepares for
recycling

DOWN
1 Suddenly
inspired
2 Staff span
3 Underground
shelter
4 Camera
component
5 Is visibly
thunderstruck
6 Sturdy tree
7 Encircle
8 Like 3-Downs
9 Place for an X,
perhaps
10 “That’s dubious”
11 Go for lunch,
say
12 President who
signed the
Sherman
Antitrust Act
13 Travel agent’s
suggestions
18 Razor man?
22 Patch
26 Venomous
snake
29 Informal pardon?
31 1666 London fire
chronicler
33 “__ luck?”
34 Two-by-four
source

35 Soup variety, and
a feature of five
puzzle answers
36 Classic 1986
sports movie
37 Obvious
40 Makers of many
skeds
41 Started one’s
family, casually
42 Grey area?
43 Small, made
smaller

44 Get ahead of
48 Fixture at Rosh
Hashanah
services
49 Put on course
50 Masonry and
such
53 Metallic waste
56 City on its own
lake
59 In the matter of
61 Sun. delivery
63 Acute care initials

By Jeffrey Wechsler
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
03/20/15

03/20/15

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Friday, March 20, 2015

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

Classifieds

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SUMMER EMPLOYMENT

Under current 

staff, defensive line 
coach still feels at 
home at Michigan

By JAKE LOURIM

Managing Sports Editor

In Greg Mattison’s 37th year 

of coaching, at his 11th program, 
there’s plenty of reason for him 
to be unsatisfied with the role 
of defensive line coach.

Or, 
knowing 
the 

opportunities he had in the 
off-season, 
to 
want 
to 
be 

somewhere else. There’s a new 
head coach, a new defensive 
coordinator and a new role — a 
smaller role.

But Mattison is just fine in 

his second stint at Michigan.

“I feel very fortunate to 

be able to stay at Michigan,” 
Mattison said. “I love Michigan, 
and I feel very strongly about 
the players coming back and 
the guys in this program, and I 
feel very strongly about Coach 
(Jim) Harbaugh. I’ve known 
that family for a long time, and 
it’s just great to be back.”

Mattison 
worked 
under 

Harbaugh’s father, Jack, at 
Western Michigan from 1982-
1986, first as a defensive line 
coach and then as a defensive 
coordinator. Now, he’s back on 
another Harbaugh staff.

When Harbaugh came to 

Michigan, he hired D.J. Durkin 
from Florida to take over the 
defensive 
coordinator 
post 

Mattison had held for four 
years 
under 
former 
coach 

Brady Hoke. Durkin is also the 
linebackers coach.

Then 
Harbaugh 
asked 

Mattison, 
the 
Super 
Bowl-

winning defensive coordinator, 
to stay on staff as a defensive 
line coach.

“I’ve coached defensive line 

my whole life,” Mattison said. 
“You can get guys to be better. 
You can make improvements 
there through technique and 
through hard work.”

Still, it was a demotion, 

essentially, for an accomplished 
coach who could have gone 
somewhere else.

“I had a number of offers, 

some in the NFL and things 
like that,” Mattison said. “But I 
made up my mind that if I had 
the opportunity, I’d love to stay, 
and I did. So I stayed.”

The reason was sentimental, 

just like when he left the 
Baltimore 
Ravens 
the 
first 

time to join Hoke’s staff. It 
was Michigan, the place he 
has coached at least four years 
longer than each of the other 
10 stops. And it was under 
Harbaugh, 
who had won 
in college and 
in 
the 
NFL 

and 
whom 

he 
knew 

personally.

Thursday, 

he 
had 

nothing 
but 

positive 
things to say 
about 
his 

new role: no complaints, no 
interference, not a backhanded 
comment toward the new staff.

“Not at all,” Mattison said. 

“I really respect the guy I’m 
working with and the guys I’m 
working with. I’ve done that for 
so long that sometimes you say, 
it’s kind of enjoyable just to take 
these four guys and see how 
good they can be.

“I knew that when Jim 

hired me. There’s only one 
coordinator, and what he says, 
we do. Once you get that, you 
say, ‘OK, my job now is to 
coordinate the defensive line 
and to do a great job with that.’ 
I’ve done it so long and I’ve had 
so many opportunities to do it, 
it’s about really just seeing how 
good we can get this team.”

So after four years under 

Hoke, Mattison came back to 
finish what he started. After 
all, only one of their recruiting 
classes has made it all the way 
through.

But he would object to the 

term “finish.”

“I don’t know if it’s to finish, 

because when you’re finished 
you say it’s over,” Mattison said. 
“I just wanted to stay a part 
of what Michigan is and what 
Michigan will be and what 
Michigan has been forever.

“I think that’s coming. I want 

to be a part of that, and I’m 
fortunate to be a part of it.”

He 
also 

served 
as 
a 

stabilizing 
force 
during 

a tumultuous 
offseason 
with 
the 

coaching 
transition. 
When 
players 
had 

the 
chance 

to leave the 

program for a fresh start, 
unsure of the new coach, 
Mattison kept the ship steady.

“The message was, ‘Hey, this 

is Michigan. You came here 
because it’s Michigan. Don’t be 
thinking about doing anything 
else. You’re staying here. It’s 
going to work out. Everything’s 
going to be good,’ ” he said. 
“And that’s the only thing I’ve 
ever said to them.”

It worked.
“It tells you that you recruit 

the right guys,” Mattison said. 
“And they’re Michigan guys.”

He has many of them back 

for his fifth season, and once 
again, Mattison is standing 
behind them. He didn’t have to, 
but he’s along for one more ride 
after all.

6 — Friday, March 20, 2015
Arts & Sports
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com

EVENT PREVIEW
Men! Men! Men! a 
dissection of gender

By GRACE HAMILTON

Daily Arts Writer

A fetishized bicycle, spiked 

high heels, decadent strings of 
pearls and football uniforms 
will 
decorate 

six 
dancers 

as 
they 
poke 

and 
twist 

our 
concept 

of 
gender. 

The 
hourlong 

program, 
“Men! 
Men! 

Men!” curated 
by 
Thurnau 

Professor 
of Dance Peter Sparling, is 
a 
complement 
to 
UMMA’s 

exhibition 
of 
the 
Hergott 

Shepard 
Photography 

Collection. 

The 
world-acclaimed 

collection, 
running 
through 

June at the museum with 
Mario 
Codognato 
as 
guest 

curator, 
focuses 
on 
the 

concept of masculinity and the 
complexity of male identity in 
contemporary society. Nadine 
Hubbs, Professor of Women’s 
studies and Music, and MFA 
student 
Michael 
Parmelee 

assisted in the curation of 
“Men! Men! Men!” 

Sparling, who has been at 

the University for the last 30 
years, made a name for himself 
by integrating dance with the 
visual arts, sciences, video 
and 
other 
creative 
media, 

establishing 
a 
long-standing 

relationship with UMMA. 

Sparling sent out a call for 

students 
to 
consider 
what 

it 
meant 
to 
explore 
male 

identities. 
He 
received 
six 

enthusiastic responses, from 
four current students and two 
alumni. The dancers are Maddy 
Rager and Chris Sies, Marcus 
White, 
Michael 
Parmelee 

and Amy Guilmette, Anthony 
Alterio and Tru Yunkman. 

“One of the alums, Amy 

Guilmette, 
responded 

immediately after I sent the call 
saying ‘you know, this makes 
me think of how I have always 

felt that I am a seven-year-
old boy in a woman’s body,’” 
Sparling said. 

Each piece will bravely tell a 

different story, like this one.

“If people are shocked or 

offended, that’s their problem. 
I kind of hope that some people 
are. I want, and the performers 
want, to jostle people out of 
their complacency,” Sparling 
said. 

Undoubtedly, 
the 

performance will be a spectacle. 
He describes several of the 
highlights to provide a sense 
of its range: Tru Yunkman 
uses dance to transform from 
woman 
to 
man, 
Michael 

Parma Lee explores sexuality 
through his dialogue with a 
bicycle and Maddy Rager and 
her 
percussionist 
partner, 

Chris Sies, will wear football 
uniforms from the high school 
her father teaches at, in a duet 
usually performed in baroque 
costume. 

Curating moving bodies is 

different than curating stationary 
objects, like paintings or photos. 

“In curating a performance, 

I think about whether there is 
a common thread throughout, 
or whether there isn’t, and how 
to maximize juxtapositions so 
that contrasts come forward and 
it doesn’t all blend together,” 
Sparling said. “So how do you 
arrange the trajectory so that you 
get the most impact out of the 
whole cumulative effect?”

Modern dance has had an 

important role in addressing social 
and political themes for decades. 
Recently, dance has partnered 
more frequently with other kinds 

of art and within performance art 
to address complicated issues, like 
gender, tying itself more closely to 
politics. 

“In more and more cultural 

theory, 
the 
moving 
dancing 

body is being considered as a 
text to be read about everything 
and anything in its culture and 
environment,” Sparling said. 

“Here at U of M and in the 

broader field of dance, we’re 
really looking at contemporary 
dance as a barometer for the way 
that people react and behave and 
how their bodies and motions 
tell everything about how they 
project their identity within a 
culture.” 

Sparling has a strong belief 

in the unique power of moving 
bodies to affect people deeply in 
a way that other forms of art, like 
text and even photographs, which 
can act as filters, cannot. 

“Dance cuts through to a 

part of the brain that reacts and 
responds 
viscerally. 
There’s 

something immediate about a live 
body in the same space you’re in. 
It’s dangerous!” he said. 

The pieces will be performed 

in the old wing of the museum, 
within the apse, without the 
familiar safety of stage. This 
proximity is a personal invitation 
to audience members to step 
outside of their comfort zones and 
engage with the questions raised 
before them. 

“Hopefully, people are at an 

age (and at a place of learning) 
where they want to learn about 
themselves. And of course, at the 
ages of 18 to 25, it’s a hot time to 
try and figure out who in the hell 
you are. So why not be engaged 
and challenge yourself to think 
about these things like gender 
identity?” Sparling said, appealing 
to students. 

“Men! Men! Men!” exemplifies 

the role of contemporary dance, 
pushing 
the 
boundaries 
of 

art, convention, space, bodies 
themselves 
and 
audience 

members. 
While 
the 
pieces 

themselves will step outside of 
the box, audience members will 
be required to do so as well.

Outside the 
Box: Men! 
Men! Men!

UMMA

Mar. 27, 
6-7:30 p.m.
Free

Pushing the 
boundaries of 
art, convention, 
space, bodies.

Penalty kill lifts 
Michigan to win

By ZACH SHAW

Daily Sports Writer

With 9:22 to go in the game 

and momentum suddenly in 
Wisconsin’s favor, the Michigan 
hockey team knew it had a job 
to do.

Junior forward Andrew Copp, 

sophomore forward JT Compher 
and senior defenseman Brennan 
Serville took the ice for 1:03 of 
5-on-3 hockey. After allowing 
a goal just moments before, the 
Badger fans in Joe Louis Arena 
rose to their feet in anticipation.

“With five minutes to go, we 

were knocking on the door with 
a power play,” said Wisconsin 
coach Mike Eaves. “Realistically 
we’re hoping that we get a second 
goal and make a go of it. They got 
two late goals, and that was the 
difference.”

Every 
time 
a 
hint 
of 

momentum swung toward the 
Badgers, the Wolverines were 
quick to earn it back. Copp 
won the faceoff in Michigan’s 
zone and delivered the puck to 
Compher, who skated the length 
of the ice, fired a shot and quieted 
the suddenly awake fans.

“I said, ‘We’re fine here. We’ve 

got 10 (minutes left), up two.’ ” 
Copp said. “We were pretty calm 
and collected on the bench; not a 
lot of freaking out there.”

Michigan was able to kill 

the 
penalty, 
drawing 
the 

largest cheers of the night. In 
the minutes that followed, the 
Wolverines played their best 
hockey of the night, securing two 
late goals in the 5-1 win.

The penalty kill in the third 

period was one of Michigan’s six 
in the game — including four in 
the tense third period — but what 
came off of each kill proved to 
be the most important. Despite 
a sluggish start and an offense 
that seemed out of sync for much 
of the game, the Wolverines 
were able to not only survive, 
but thrive off the heels of their 
penalty kill.

“We 
were 
aggressive,” 

said freshman forward Dylan 
Larkin. “Didn’t give them much 
time to set up. Travis Lynch had 
a breakaway, and there were 
some chances, and we took away 
their time and space, which was 
good.”

The penalty kill was on fire 

Thursday, but that hasn’t always 
been the case for the Wolverines. 
Even with the effort against 
Wisconsin, Michigan is just 33rd 
out of 59 teams in the penalty 
kill, and — even with the nation’s 
top-ranked offense — has shown 
a tendency to kill momentum 
with sloppy play throughout the 
unit.

“I thought our guys were 

dialed in tonight and did a 
good job,” said Michigan coach 
Red Berenson. “In fairness, 
Wisconsin hasn’t had a lot of 
momentum on their power play. 
But we still had to kill it because 
they had good puck control and 
they had some good looks. So 
that’s an important part of the 
game.”

But the opposite was the case 

in Thursday’s win. Whether it 
was killing the 5-on-3 in the 
third period to close out the 
victory, rebounding from kills 
with consecutive goals in the 
opening minutes of the second 
period, or even using an early 
power-play 
opportunity 
for 

Wisconsin as a catalyst to wake 
up the sluggish offense in the 
opening minute of the game, 
it seemed that every time the 
Wolverines had their backs 
against the wall, they turned it 
into a momentum shift.

“It’s huge, it’s a confidence 

builder,” Berenson said of the 
success. “It starts with your 
goalie, 
then 
your 
forward’s 

willingness to get in the shooting 
lane or sticks in the passing lanes, 
blocking shots, winning faceoffs, 
getting the puck out when you 
get it.

“There’s a lot more to penalty 

killing than just penalty killing. 
There’s a lot of little things that 
have to happen.”

ICE HOCKEY

Mattison enjoying new 
start with Wolverines

FOOTBALL

“I just wanted 

to stay a 

part of what 
Michigan is.”

