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October 22, 2015 - Image 5

Resource type:
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Publication:
The Michigan Daily

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ACROSS
1 Lead-ins to some
online games
4 Magnetic
induction unit
9 Nobelist Curie
14 Petal plucker’s
word
15 Use at the table
16 Dunderhead
17 Ditty from 1970s-
’80s NFL wide
receiver Lynn?
19 Replicate
20 Fighting against
21 Rarely seen item
on casual Friday
22 Enjoy Whistler
23 Rule
25 Unwinding places
for actor Russell?
30 Sagittarius, e.g.
32 Sign of hope
33 See 8-Down
34 Mass __
37 Wander
38 Tough spot for
actor Walter?
40 Computer menu
heading
42 Hockey positions
43 Big club in
Atlantic City?
44 Neurologist’s
printout, briefly
45 Find out about
49 Easter
adornment made
by politician
Dan?
53 Gretzky, during
most of the ’80s
54 Foreign __
55 __ Cruces
57 Not
58 Emulate Whistler
61 Facial feature of
actor Ethan?
63 Bike wheel
feature
64 “Little Miss
Sunshine” Oscar
winner
65 Rebellious Turner
66 Structural
support
67 Kids around
68 Some municipal
trains

DOWN
1 “Broken Arrow”
co-star
2 Wet blanket
3 Radio problem

4 Notable Downing
Street number
5 “__ of Eden”
6 Stiff-upper-lip
type
7 Hardly a social
butterfly
8 With 33-Across,
“Life of Pi”
director
9 Pluto’s master
10 Improvise in a
sketch
11 2014 World Cup
city
12 Charged particle
13 Printemps
follower
18 Lingerie
purchase
22 Bundled up
24 Pi Day celebrant,
stereotypically
26 Circular gasket
27 Soothing
succulent
28 Accelerate, with
“up”
29 Understand
31 Common
allergen
35 Mont Blanc
covering
36 Emilio Estevez,
to Martin Sheen

37 “Goosebumps”
series author
38 Court answer
39 Twistable treat
40 Website help sect.
41 Post-op area
44 Privileged groups
46 Stand-up comic
Boosler
47 Breakfast choice
48 No-tell motel
meetings
50 Pulls hard

51 Intimidating look
52 Rubbernecks
56 Monty Python
segment
58 Vancouver
setting: Abbr.
59 30-day mo.
60 Note from one
who’s short
61 “The __”: Uris
novel
62 “No, No, Nanette”
foursome

By David Poole
©2015 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
10/22/15

10/22/15

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, October 22, 2015

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

Classifieds

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

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7 510 Catherine $4400
6 412 N. Thayer $4350
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Leasing starts Nov. 10th
Reservations Accepted till 11/7.
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MAY 2016 HOUSES
# Beds Location Rent
8 720 Arbor $6400
6 417 N. Thayer $4260
5 1119 S. Forest $4200
4 505 Sauer $2440
Tenants pay all utilities.
Showings Scheduled M‑F 10‑3
24 hour noticed required
DEINCO PROPERTIES
734‑996‑1991

ROCKSTARS WANTED
Jimmy John’s Delivery drivers/bikers,
sandwich makers (PT) & Managers (FT)


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Resumes to jfencyk@jimmyjohns.com

DEFENSE OF FACULTY
misconduct cases
Nachtlaw.com 734‑663‑7550

TEAM CLEANERS NEEDED
Ann Arbor‑Ypsilanti Area
PT Evenings, $9‑$11/hr based on exp
*Direct Hire*, immediate start, weekly pay
Call 248‑598‑5255 or apply at
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DEFENSE OF STUDENT
sexual misconduct cases
Nachtlaw.com 734‑663‑7550

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

SERVICES
FOR RENT

HELP WANTED

PARKING

Sports
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
Thursday, October 22, 2015 — 5A

Wolverines fall to
Penn State in five

By LANEY BYLER

For the Daily

The
enthusiasm
seemed

infectious Wednesday night in
Cliff Keen Arena as the Michigan
women’s
volleyball
team
took

the
lead

over No. 5 Penn State during the
second and third sets.

The 23rd-ranked Wolverines

set forward an offensive initiative
during the second set, and
the teams remained intensely
close for the majority of the
match. Smart offensive plays by
Michigan and small defensive
mistakes by the Nittany Lions
ended up swinging the set in the
Wolverines’ favor, 25-22.

Michigan took the third set

as well, but it was unable to
maintain its intensity for the rest
of the match. The Nittany Lions
ultimately rallied to pick up a
hard-fought victory, 3-2.

The Wolverines may not have

been able to hold on for the
upset, but they thrived on the
experience.

“We love those situations,”

said junior middle blocker Abby
Cole. “A five-set match against
a team like Penn State, that’s an
awesome place to be.”

Cole set the pace during the

second set and continued it
throughout the rest of the match,
ending with a total of 14 kills.

The third set favored Michigan

as well, with senior setter Carly
Warner proving to be a valuable
asset to the success of the team.
Warner had a solid 29 assists
with a single kill, helping turn out
another set for the Wolverines,
25-18, to put them in the lead, two
sets to one.

The first and fourth sets

turned out to be strikingly

similar, with Michigan initially
leading, only for Penn State to
regroup defensively and retaliate
with some hard hits of their own
by senior outside hitter Aiyana
Whitney, who led the game
offensively with 18 kills and 40
total attacks.

In the fifth and final set, both

teams were visibly geared up for
a battle. Penn State took up a solid
defensive strategy in the back
row unleashed a strong attack,
which the Wolverines couldn’t
seem to keep a hold on.

Despite Penn State’s attack,

two defensive players managed to
keep Michigan afloat during the
fifth set — sophomore defensive
specialist Caroline Knop and
senior
defensive
specialist

Lindsey
Lerg.
Despite
their

strong defense, the Wolverines
fell in the fifth set, 15-7, with the
Nittany Lions taking home the
win.

“We talk about fifth sets all

time in our locker room,” Knop
said. “We talk about winning
those. We’re going to be in dog
fights for the remaining 11 games
of our season this year, and we
talk about that all the time.”

Michigan’s next game will

be
Saturday
at
Cliff
Keen

Arena against No. 6 Ohio State.
Michigan coach Mark Rosen
praised his team’s performance
against Penn State, claiming that
the experience helped the team
mature, though it didn’t end with
a win.

“Maturity
comes
with

experience,” Rosen said. “To
gain experience, I think tonight
was a great learning opportunity
for us. We’ll be in this situation
a lot more over the next month,
and I assume we’ll continue to
get better and better in those
situations, and we’ll end up on the
other side.”

Bielfeldt settling in at Indiana

Former Michigan
forward prepares

for final year

following transfer

By LEV FACHER

Managing Editor

As he did last season, Max

Bielfeldt
will
play
Big
Ten

basketball this year. But given
his new school, new state and
new academic routine, the list
of similarities pretty much stops
there.

Bielfeldt
transferred
from

Michigan to Indiana following
his
senior
season
with
the

Wolverines in 2014-15, accepting
an offer from the Hoosiers after
considering attending Iowa State
and
Nebraska,
among
other

programs.

The lone senior on Michigan’s

roster last season, Bielfeldt joins
an Indiana squad that features
three others players in their final
year of eligibility. He’ll have a
chance to make an immediate
impact,
too,
despite
playing

sparse minutes last year for the
Wolverines.

Following the May dismissals

of two Indiana big men — Hanner
Mosquera-Perea and Devin Davis
— the Hoosiers were looking for
help in the post. Mosquera-Perea
was set to graduate anyway, and
the dismissal of Davis, then a
junior, only deepened the hole in
their roster.

“They said they are in need of a

versatile big who can score the ball
in a multitude of ways,” Bielfeldt
told the Indianapolis Star in May,
“and that I’m just the guy who
could come in and help them.”

It hasn’t taken Bielfeldt long to

notice distinct differences in the
coaching styles of Indiana coach
Tom Crean and Michigan coach
John Beilein. Crean’s offense is
less rigid in terms of cuts and the
freedom to make plays, Bielfeldt
said, and the teams’ logistical
practices
and
communication

styles vary substantially as well.

“Coach Beilein has a month’s

schedule printed out for us in
advance,” Bielfeldt said Oct. 15 at
Big Ten Media Day in Rosemont,
Illinois. “(With) Coach Crean,
you get a text three hours before
practice.”

In some respects, Bielfeldt

left Ann Arbor just in time.
This season, Beilein has taken
to scheduling occasional 6 a.m.
practices, something Michigan’s
ninth-year coach said he’s never
done in his four decades in the
business.

The new practice reached

Bielfeldt’s
radar
quickly.
Of

Michigan’s
current
players,

Bielfeldt said he speaks the most
with the two closest to him in age:
senior guards Spike Albrecht and
Caris LeVert, the latter of whom
is his former roommate.

“Spike was telling me about

that,” Bielfeldt said. “I think he
got it from (Michigan football
coach Jim) Harbaugh.”

Beyond
the
on-court

differences, Bielfeldt’s day-to-
day life outside of basketball
is drastically different, too. As
part of a 15-month master’s
degree
program
in
strategic

management, Bielfeldt is taking
classes exclusively online. The
plan is to leave Bloomington after
having earned a second degree in
only one year.

Bielfeldt’s
academic
plan

depended heavily on his school

selection. Iowa State, for instance,
tempted him with its impressive
agriculture program, especially
considering
Bielfeldt’s
father

earned a degree in agricultural
economics.

Ultimately, Indiana’s Kelley

School of Business proved tough
to turn down.

“I’m happy coming here and

doing the management degree,”
Bielfeldt said. “I think I made the
right choice.”

Throughout the process of

selecting a transfer destination,
Bielfeldt
cited
Indiana’s

proximity to his family’s home in

Peoria, Illinois, as one of the most
important factors. Bielfeldt is still
not particularly close, but the
drive from Bloomington to Peoria
is more than an hour shorter than
the drive from Ann Arbor.

All
things
considered,
it’s

not a bad deal for Bielfeldt.
He’s closer to home, and he’s
getting a master’s degree and
the opportunity to play another
season in the Big Ten.

He will, however, have to travel

to Ann Arbor on Feb. 2 to face his
alma mater.

“It’s going to be bizarre,”

Bielfeldt said.

SAM MOUSIGIAN/Daily

Max Bielfeldt will be a fifth-year graduate transfer at Indiana this season.

Rosen cites defeat
as tool for growth

By AVI SHOLKOFF

For the Daily

Michigan
volleyball
coach

Mark Rosen believes his team
will use its most recent loss as a
learning experience.

Rosen quoted a long-standing

expression when discussing the
Wolverines’ loss to Penn State on
Wednesday.

“What doesn’t kill you makes

you stronger,” Rosen said. “(The
loss is) not gonna kill us — it’s a
volleyball game.”

The

23rd-ranked
Wolverines
(5-4 Big Ten,
15-5
overall)

fell to No. 5
Penn
State

(7-2, 18-2) in
five sets at Cliff
Keen Arena on
Wednesday.
The team lost
in
the
first

set before notching victories in
the second and third sets, and
ultimately dropping the final two.

On
a
positive
note
for

Michigan,
its
core
players

returned to the court for the
first time in several games.


Sophomore defensive specialist
Caroline Knop played for the
first time since the Wolverines’
victory over Michigan State on
Oct. 3. Senior defensive specialist
Tiffany Morales also returned to
action after missing the previous
game against Maryland.

“Because of some injuries, we

haven’t had the same lineup very
much in the past few weeks,”
Rosen said. “That’s part of having
depth.”

Rosen utilized many players

throughout the match, including
Knop in her natural defensive
position despite using her as an
outside hitter for parts of the last
two seasons.

“It was fantastic to be out

there,” Knop said. “We did a great
job of mixing (the positions) up.”

Despite the loss, Knop and

junior middle blocker Abby Cole

expressed optimism regarding the
team’s performance. Michigan
played its hardest-fought match
against a ranked team this season
— they had previously fallen to
then-No. 20 Purdue and then-No.
4 Nebraska in three and four sets,
respectively.

This time, the Wolverines

faced a mature Nittany Lions
team that kept fighting, even after
losing two sets in a row. Penn
State scored the first three points
in overtime and cruised to a 15-7
victory in the fifth set.

“They

came out and
absolutely
punched us in
the face,” Knop
said.
“That’s

something we
gotta get better
at. In the locker
room, we talk
about winning
fifth sets.”

Rosen

explained that the team spent
the last few days practicing
point scoring, defensive drills
and points in transition. Much to
Rosen’s disappointment, it was
not enough time.

The loss only motivates the

team as No. 6 Ohio State visits
Cliff Keen Arena on Saturday.
The game has implications not
only because both Michigan and
the Buckeyes are ranked, but also
because of the rivalry between
the two teams. Ohio State leads
the series, 52-20.

Players like Knop eagerly await

the Buckeyes.

“We cannot wait to get them in

our house,” she said. “We have to
absolutely attack people.”

Rosen and his team will take

many lessons from Wednesday
night’s game against such a
challenging team. They will go
back to practice to fine-tune the
same aspects they have worked on
in the days since their last game.

And
after
a
little
more

improvement, they may be strong
enough to get past their tough Big
Ten competition.

VOLLEYBALL

VOLLEYBALL

MICHIGAN
PENN STATE

2
3

“They came out
and absolutely
punched us in

the face.”

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