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.

January 28, 2016 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily

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

Classifieds

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

ACROSS
1 Takes shape
6 Military
installations
11 Armonk, N.Y.-
based tech
company
14 Quarterback with
the 2011
autobiography
“Through My
Eyes”
15 Tell’s target
16 PBS funder
17 Downpour
19 40-yr.-old NBC
show
20 Mature insect
21 Singer Vannelli
22 Fairy tale word
25 Weasel relative
29 Horned Frogs’
sch.
30 Spot
31 Forward, in a
way
32 Ankle bones
34 Put up
35 1980 sci-fi thriller,
and a hint to this
puzzle’s circles
40 Sister of Clio
41 Drive
respondent
43 It’s usually taken
in twos
46 Rival
48 Reason for
adolescent
angst
49 1988 Best
Supporting
Actress Oscar
winner
51 Only
52 Mythical arrow
shooter
53 Key
55 2014 FIFA World
Cup champion:
Abbr.
56 Christmas, for
many
62 “Wheel of
Fortune” buy
63 “__ Grows in
Brooklyn”
64 Carrot family
herb
65 __ jacket
66 About 17 of
them equal a
United States
dollar
67 Toyota’s luxury
division

DOWN
1 Former Ford
model
2 Poetic preposition
3 Japanese sash
4 Tinseltown vehicle
5 Show off a
butterfly, perhaps
6 Snack sack
7 Grilling garment
8 Place to kick
back
9 Whitney, by birth
and by education
10 D.C. VIP
11 As found
12 “Pride and
Prejudice” family
name
13 NBA great Karl
18 Scruff
21 Underground
chamber
22 Polo Grounds
slugger
23 Univ. sports
organizer
24 Circular lock
26 Drops the ball
27 Track
competition
28 Penny __
30 “The Treasure of
the __ Madre”:
Bogart classic
33 Beer orders

34 Tokyo, long ago
36 Vice squad tactic
37 Peak south of
Stromboli
38 Automaker
Ferrari
39 Get dirty
42 Map abbr.
43 Generation-to-
generation span
44 Calm
45 Illinois county or
its seat
46 Drops a line

47 European capital
50 Tape, maybe
51 “Goosebumps”
series author
54 Ben Gurion
carrier
56 Drivel
57 Emptied the
feedbag
58 Govt. collection
agency
59 Twice cinq
60 Pac-12 sch.
61 “Of course”

By Robert E. Lee Morris
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
01/28/16

01/28/16

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, January 28, 2016

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

FALL 2016 HOUSES
# Beds Location Rent
6 1019 Packard $3500
6 335 Packard $3800
4 1010 Cedar Bend $2400
Tenants pay all utilities.
CAPPO/DEINCO
734‑996‑1991

ARBOR PROPERTIES

Award‑Winning Rentals in Kerrytown,

Central Campus, Old West Side,
Burns Park. Now Renting for 2016.
734‑649‑8637. www.arborprops.com

TEMPORARY RETAIL SPACE
Street level store front, on EU by SU,
UM Campus. Call 860‑355‑9665 or
campusrentalproperties@yahoo.com

NEAR CAMPUS APARTMENTS
Avail Fall 16‑17
Eff/1 Bed ‑ $750 ‑ $1400
2 Bed ‑ $1050 ‑ $1425
3 Bed ‑ $1955
Most include Heat and Water
Parking where avail is $50/m
Many are Cat Friendly
CAPPO 734‑996‑1991
www.cappomanagement.com

IDEAL SMALL OFFICES/STUDIOS
2nd Flr UM Campus‑ Short or Long
Term Leases. Call 860‑355‑9665
campusrentalproperties@yahoo.com

AAAAAVAILABLE
NOW:
4
bedroom
house, 612 Miner, near campus and main
st. $1400/month, call 313‑255‑7102

1, 2 & 3 Bedroom Apts on Arch
Avail Fall 2016‑17
$1050 ‑ $2500 + electric contribution
CALL DEINCO 734‑996‑1991

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

2, 3 & 4 Bedroom Apts @ 1015 Packard
Avail for Fall 2016‑17
$1400 ‑ $2700 + gas and water; Tenants
pay electric to DTE; Limited parking avail
for $50/mo; On‑site Laundry
CALL DEINCO 734‑996‑1991

1 & 2 Bedroom Apts on Wilmot
Avail Fall 2016‑17
$975 ‑ $1575 Plus Electric to DTE
Coin Laundry Access, Free WiFi
Parking Avail $50‑$80/m
CALL DEINCO 734‑996‑1991

2016‑17 LEASING
Apartments Going Fast!
Prime Student Housing
761‑8000
www.primesh.com
Efficiencies:
344 S. Division $835/$855
610 S. Forest $870
1 Bedrooms:
508 Division $925/$945
2 Bedroom:
1021 Vaughn (1 left) $1410

*Fully Furnished
*Parking Included
*Free Ethernet
(* Varies by locations)

6 BEDROOM House May 2016
1119 S. Forest ‑ $3900 plus utilities.
Showings Scheduled M‑F 10‑3
24 hour noticed required
DEINCO PROPERTIES
734‑996‑1991

WORK ON MACKINAC Island
This Summer – Make lifelong friends.
The Island House Hotel and Ryba’s
Fudge Shops are looking for help in all
areas beginning in early May: Front Desk,
Bell Staff, Wait Staff, Sales Clerks,
Kitchen, Baristas. Housing, bonus, and
discounted meals. (906) 847‑7196.

www.theislandhouse.com

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

DOMINICK’S HIRING FOR spring

& summer. Call 734‑834‑5021.

SUMMER EMPLOYMENT

HELP WANTED

FOR RENT

SERVICES

Sports
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
Thursday, January 28, 2016 — 5A

‘M’ looks for season sweep

By BRAD WHIPPLE

Daily Sports Editor

It is said lightning never strikes

twice in the same place, and that
could spell trouble for the Michigan
women’s basketball team.

Thursday,

the Wolverines
(3-5 Big Ten,
11-8 overall) will
face Iowa for
the second time
this
season.

Both teams left
off two weeks
ago in dramatic
fashion,
when

Michigan
completed
a
stunning

17-point
comeback
against
the

Hawkeyes in Crisler Center.

Now, the Wolverines are hoping

to earn their first season sweep of
Iowa since the 2009-10 season. But
on the road, comebacks are much
harder to muster.

“If you get in a hole that deep

on the road, it’s gonna be tough
to come back,” said Michigan
coach Kim Barnes Arico. “Playing
at Iowa, they always have great
crowds, and they’ll have a great
atmosphere, so that’ll be a little
bit challenging.”

A struggling Michigan defense

won’t make it any easier. Though
the Wolverines are scoring 81.5
points per game, good for eighth
nationally and third in the Big
Ten, offense can’t win games
alone. Michigan is 10-2 when
scoring 80 points or more, but its
two losses have come in its most
recent games.

Sunday
against
Nebraska,

Michigan gave up 93 points and

allowed the Cornhuskers to take
a 21-6 lead just five minutes into
the game.

The
game
prior,
the

Wolverines lost to No. 7 Ohio
State by just four points after
allowing four Buckeyes to reach
double digits in scoring.

“We really do have to get

better defensively,” Barnes Arico
said. “We have some really
great
offensive-minded
kids,

but none that really — maybe
Siera Thompson, maybe Danielle
Williams — that want to defend.
Other than that, they want the ball
in their hands and want to score.

“We have to get them to

believe that playing defense is
just as important to our program
as playing offense. For us to
be successful, we need some
defensive stoppers and defensive-
minded people.”

Considering
that
the

Wolverines were barely averaging
60 points in Barnes Arico’s first
year at the helm, scoring 80 points
is not necessarily a bad thing. But
Michigan will need to make a
similar improvement on defense
to make the NCAA Tournament.

According to Barnes Arico,

it’s the younger kids who “don’t
really understand defense yet” —
a sentiment she shared with men’s
basketball coach John Beilein.
Freshman center Hallie Thome,
for instance, scored a game-high
24 points against Nebraska on
Sunday, but fouled out of the
game in the fourth quarter.

Thome is a major piece of the

Wolverines’
lineup,
especially

under the glass, and without her,
senior guard Madison Ristovski
had to take on the Cornhuskers’
bigs in the paint. Considering
Ristovski is 5-foot-10, it was a
defensive mismatch.

To work out some of the

defensive kinks, Michigan has
placed a large emphasis on it at
practice throughout the week.
Heading into Thursday, the
Wolverines have the advantage
of already playing Iowa once
this season.

“It’s
nice
having
an

opportunity to go back and watch
us play against them and see
where we really need to improve
for the next game,” Barnes Arico
said. “Iowa’s a great team. They
were off to a tremendous start,
and then they hit a little bit of a
bump in the road. I think that’s
what our conference has kind of
been all year long — everybody’s
beating everybody.

“(Iowa’s) on a little bit of a skid.”
With two straight losses, the

Wolverines are in similar danger.
They’ll need to steal a win on the
road to break out of it.

ICE HOCKEY
Michigan set for
pivotal weekend

Wolverines take on
No. 15 Penn State in
State College, then
in New York City

By JASON RUBINSTEIN

Daily Sports Writer

Michigan’s top line is the best

in the country. That could seem
like a sweeping statement, but
the stats tell the
whole story.

In
the
10

games
that

juniors
Tyler

Motte and JT
Compher
and

freshman Kyle
Connor
have

skated
as
a

trio, they have
accumulated 64
points.

“You
can’t

create
those

things,”
said

Michigan coach
Red Berenson. “It’s special.”

No team has shown the ability

to stop the three forwards
together so far, but this weekend
will
be
the
toughest
test.

Thursday night, No. 6 Michigan
will travel to
No.
15
Penn

State to play
one game, and
both
teams

will
head

to
Madison

Square Garden
in New York
City
two

days
later

for a second
matchup.

In previous seasons, Penn State

has had the Wolverines’ number.
Two years ago, the Nittany Lions
ended Michigan’s season in the
Big Ten Tournament, as the
Wolverines needed to beat them
only in that game to advance to
the NCAA Tournament.

Last season, Penn State beat

Michigan three out of the four
times they played, including a
road sweep at the Pegula Ice
Arena — one of the toughest
venues in the country with its
nightly sellouts, committed fans
and vertical bleachers that seem
to be on top of the ice.

“Definitely a rink we want to

keep quiet,” said senior forward
Justin Selman.

Look
for
Michigan’s
first

line to do just that. With Motte
and Compher being two of the
Wolverines’
hardest-working

players, and Connor perhaps the
their most skilled player, no line
has found an answer for them.

“It’s
worked
well
with

Connor’s
skill,
his
ability

to
make
plays
and
finish

opportunities,”
Motte
said.

“JT’s grinding ability — he’s a
good two-way center man —
helps a lot in the D-zone and on
faceoffs. (Compher’s) ability to
make plays is unbelievable, and
I just try to give those guys the
puck, and try to put away my
opportunities when I get them.”

The trio is the biggest reason

for
Michigan’s
astounding,

nation-leading 4.86 goals per
game. However, that offense can
only take a team so far when the
same team ranks 44th in team
defense, surrendering 3.10 goals
per game.

For this reason, Berenson

has emphasized team defense
in the weeks leading up to this
weekend. The Wolverines have
prioritized clearing pucks out the
zone and limiting any rebound
chances — something Ohio State
capitalized on a couple of weeks

ago.
Selman

said the team
knows
its

goaltending
can handle the
initial shot. It’s
the team’s job
to make sure
there isn’t a
second.

Michigan

will
feature

a bit of a different lineup this
weekend — sophomore forward
Dexter
Dancs
is
suspended

for
Thursday’s
game,
while

sophomore defenseman Cutler
Martin is suspended for the
weekend.
Freshman
center

Cooper Marody will also be
out this weekend due to illness,
meaning junior forward Max
Shuart will likely slot up from his
fourth-line role to the third-line
center position.

Regardless, the Wolverines

know what’s at stake this
weekend. With their biggest
test to date and a depleted
lineup, look for the first line to
lead the charge.

Michigan
at Iowa

Matchup:
Michigan 11-8;
Iowa 13-7

When:
Thursday
8 P.M.

Where:
Carver-
Hawkeye
Arena

TV/Radio:
BTN Plus

Michigan at
Penn State

Matchup:
Michigan
14-3-4; Penn
State 16-5-3

When:
Thursday
7 P.M.

Where: Pegula
Ice Arena

TV/Radio:
BTN Plus

MATT VAILLIENCOURT/Daily

Sophomore guard Katelynn Flaherty enters Thursday’s game ranked 13th in the nation with 21.7 points per game.

were,
when
Michigan
was

playing football, we stopped
whatever we were doing, and we
were watching,” the source said.
“During some of (Connecticut’s)
football games, when he was
focused on our game, he would
have
the
Michigan
game

recorded at his home. Nobody
was allowed to tell him what the
final score was.”

Among Manuel’s more notable

achievements at Connecticut is
the men’s basketball program’s
remarkable
resurrection

following
a
postseason
ban

issued by the NCAA in 2012 for a
low academic progress rate.

“It didn’t take Warde long to

not only fix the APR but bring
it to a perfect 1,000,” the source
said. “The guy is a no-nonsense
guy. He knows what needs to be
done, and he
gets it done.”

Despite his

impressive
resume,
Manuel
still

inherits
a

high bar from
Hackett.
Since
assuming
the position,
Hackett hired
Harbaugh in December 2014,
inked a record-setting apparel
contract with Nike in July and
extended
men’s
basketball

coach John Beilein to a contract
through the 2020-21 season in
November.

Manuel’s hiring bucks a recent

trend of hiring former corporate
executives
to
run
athletic

departments. Former Michigan

athletic director Bill Martin,
who held the post from 2001 to
2010, founded First Martin Corp.
in 1968 and remains chairman of
the Bank of Ann Arbor. Brandon
was the CEO at Domino’s Pizza
before he replaced Martin.

Manuel, 47, has no corporate

experience, but he has built an
impressive resume in athletics.
He previously served as an
assistant
athletic
director
at

Michigan under Tom Goss and
then Bill Martin. He also served
as the athletic director at the
University of Buffalo from 2005
to 2012.

University
President
Mark

Schlissel
told
reporters
in
a

December
teleconference
that

corporate experience, while a
potential plus, was far from critical.

“I’m looking for the best

person for the job,” Schlissel said.
“It is a $151-million enterprise.
It’s
a
complex
enterprise

that requires somebody with

business,
accounting
and
leadership
skills
and

experience. …
The
bottom

line is we’re
going to hire
a spectacular
person.”

Many

with ties to

Connecticut’s program had long
feared that Manuel would return
to his alma mater, the source
said, but his timeline for doing so
was uncertain.

“He is an incredibly capable

administrator, but more than
that, he understands people,” the
source said, lamenting Manuel’s
departure.
“He’s
a
freakin’

incredible guy — it sucks to be us.”

MANUEL
From Page 1A

“You can’t
create those
things. It’s
special.”

“He knows

what needs to
be done, and he

gets it done.”

Back to Top

© 2024 Regents of the University of Michigan