Classifieds

Call: #734-418-4115
Email: dailydisplay@gmail.com

ACROSS
1 Charms
6 60-Across, e.g.
10 1992 Matchbox
acquirer
14 Candy message
15 Offend, in a way
16 Old record
problem
17 BAN
20 ’70s Sonny &
Cher label
21 Dramatist with
three Pulitzers
and three Tonys
22 BEN
28 Spiral-horned
antelope
29 Skunk River 
city
30 Tornado
survivor of film
31 Shakespeare’s
“__ Andronicus”
33 Edwards, e.g.:
Abbr.
36 BIN
40 Greek org.
41 Lash LaRue
vehicle
42 Branch of Islam
43 “Deal __ Deal”
44 Very long time
45 BON
51 Eastern 
garment
52 Eastern nurse
53 BUN
60 “Terrible” ruler
61 Histamine
opener
62 Wet
63 Prized
possessions
64 “Chitty Chitty
Bang Bang” 
co-screenwriter
65 Gas brand with
a red-white-and-
blue logo

DOWN
1 Grand squared
2 Encouraging
word
3 __ wine
4 Reproductive
cells
5 Moped
6 Burial chamber

7 Youngest Marx
brother
8 __ Lingus
9 “Citizen Kane”
studio
10 Denim and chino
11 Start of a ’60s
TV toon yell
12 Old-time news
source
13 Elected
18 California
NBAers, on a
scoreboard
19 Least infirm
22 Paving stones
23 What Mexican
Olympians go
for
24 Doha is its
capital
25 Pizzeria chain,
familiarly
26 Liquid 32-Down
27 “My turn!”
31 Grand __
National Park
32 Solid 26-Down
33 “Gesundheit!”
trigger
34 Spark producer
35 Sixth-day
creation

37 Fooled 
(around)
38 Eastern royal
39 “Just __!”
43 Loads
44 One way to be
washed
45 Comparable to a
house?
46 Use a
pocketknife,
perhaps
47 Fantasize

48 Recurring Dana
Carvey “SNL”
character
49 Some spam
50 Encouraging
word
54 __ diet
55 __ diet
56 Strain
57 New Jersey fort
58 Lennon
collaborator
59 Dr. for women

By Kevin Christian
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
05/14/15

05/14/15

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, May 14, 2015

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

NEW UNIVERSITY TOWERS
Apartments‑Starting at $899/room 
www.u‑towers.com Only 3 minutes from 
Central Campus

YARD WORK FOR Retired Professor. 

$15 per hour. 734‑668‑8850

EFF, 1 & 2 Bedrooms Avail Fall 2015‑16
$800 ‑ $1420. Most include Heat and 
Water. Parking where avail: $50‑80/mo. 
Coin Laundry access on site/nearby. 
www.cappomanagement.com 
Call 734‑996‑1991 

!!LG. RMS., Hill St. off State. Prkg. For 
Male. $525/mo. 845‑399‑9904

! NORTH CAMPUS 1‑2 Bdrm. !
! Riverfront/Heat/Water/Parking. !
! www.HRPAA.com !

SUMMER PARKING BEHIND 
420 Maynard St. $100/Month 
Call 734‑418‑4115 ext.1246

2 & 3 BDRM APTS IN A HOUSE 
South Campus Fall 2015‑16 
1015 Packard ‑ $1370‑$1930 + Utilities 
Call 734‑996‑1991 to sched a viewing

THESIS EDITING. LANGUAGE,
organization, format. All Disciplines.
734/996‑0566 or writeon@iserv.net 

SUMMER SUBLET 2015 ‑ 5 Bed‑ 
room Apt or Rent By the Room Possibility
Apt: $1500/m + %age of Gas & Water; 
Electric to DTE, 3 pking spaces
Room/Month: $325 including utilities; 
parking 1st come extra monthly fee
1014 Vaughn ‑ NOW ‑ AUGUST 20TH 
2015 ONLY!!! 734‑996‑1991

4 BEDROOM HOUSE Fall 2015‑16
North Campus: Off Fuller by UM Hospital
2 Baths, Wshr./Dryer, 3 Prkg spaces, Pet 
& Smoke free. $2300 + utilities
1010 Cedar Bend Dr. 734‑996‑1991

ARBOR PROPERTIES 
Award‑Winning Rentals in Kerrytown, 
Central Campus, Old West Side, 
Burns Park. Now Renting for 2015. 
734‑649‑8637. www.arborprops.com

HELP WANTED
FOR RENT

PARKING
SERVICES

Swag, and we had great leader-

ship, and we played some great 
ball.”

Wagner started off well, effi-

ciently recording outs. She shut 
down the Nebraska side in order, 
setting the table for the Michigan 
offense.

After causing no damage in 

the first inning, the Wolverines 
got the offense going in the sec-
ond. Following junior right field-
er Kelsey Susalla’s walk, senior 
catcher Lauren Sweet laid down a 
perfect bunt down the third base 
line to not only advance Susalla 
to second, but to reach base safely 
herself.

Sophomore 
third 
baseman 

Lindsay 
Montemarano 
then 

slashed a ball off the third base-
man’s glove into left field to knock 
in Susalla to score the game’s first 
run.

Freshman 
designated 
play-

er Aidan Falk grounded out to 
advance the runners to second 
and third. The other freshman 
in the lineup, first baseman Tera 
Blanco, stepped up next and hit 

a sacrifice fly to left field, scoring 
Sweet to put the Michigan lead at 
2-0.

“We’re having a lot of fun and 

we’re coming out ready to play,” 
Wagner said. “We love to be on 
the field and we just go out there 
and attack, sticking to our one-
pitch focus.”

The third inning started off 

with a bang on the Wolverines’ 

defensive side to help Wagner’s 
cause. Nebraska’s leadoff batter in 
the third, catcher Steph Pasquale, 
hit a 1-0 pitch deep to center field. 
The hit looked like it had a shot to 
go over the wall for a home run, 
but junior centerfielder Sierra 
Lawrence made a jumping catch 
at the end of the warning track to 
record the out.

The polished defensive effort 

continued in the bottom of the 
third inning. After making an 
error in the previous inning, 
sophomore 
shortstop 
Abby 

Ramirez put out all three batters. 
The outs included two cross-dia-
mond throws to first that drew 
cheers of awe from the predomi-
nantly-Michigan crowd.

Wagner didn’t allow a hit until 

the fourth inning with one out. 
Nothing would develop beyond it 
in the fourth, though, as Wagner 
kept the Huskers from scoring 
once again.

The bottom of the fifth inning 

started with two singles by Falk 
and Blanco. Ramirez came up 
next and put down a sacrifice 
bunt to advance the runners. The 
bunt was perfectly executed, and 
the Wolverines got lucky when 
the shortstop overthrew the first 
baseman. The error allowed a 
run to score, pushing the lead to 
three.

With junior second baseman 

Sierra Romero up with two run-
ners in scoring position, Nebraska 
found themselves in a situation 
they never want to be in. The fans 
might have expected what was to 
happen next. Romero didn’t miss 
the 2-1 pitch, smashing it over the 
center-field wall for a three-run 
homer. Romero’s third home run of 
the weekend pushed the Michigan 
lead to 6-0.

Wagner allowed two more hits 

in the seventh inning. One run 
would score, but that would be 
all the Huskers could muster as 
Wagner closed out the win with a 
groundout.

“I’m proud of our team,” Rome-

ro said. “I wouldn’t expect any-
thing less … Nothing really has to 
be said to our team. We know what 
we want and we had a chip on our 
shoulder this year. We wanted to 
come win the tournament and we 
did.”

The fans turned Buckeye Field 

into a temporary Alumni Field, 
and the Wolverines played like 
they were at home. When Michi-
gan plays its first NCAA Regional 
game, they will be in Ann Arbor.

But it isn’t the stadium, it’s the 

fans that make the team play like 
there’s no place like home.

8

Thursday, May 14, 2015
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
SPORTS

TOURNAMENT
From Page 1

