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

ACROSS
1 The 1% in 1%
milk
4 Court activity
9 Baseball’s
“Georgia Peach”
13 Common
refreshment
15 TV comic Kovacs
16 Campers’
gathering place
17 Bill “Bojangles”
Robinson’s forte
19 Actress Lena
20 Amazon’s biz
21 Really dug
23 One may be
tipped
24 Translate, in a
way
26 Landscaper’s
contraption
28 Chef’s creation
31 Heavenly figure
33 Cadillac compact
36 Soup bean
38 Cookout spot
39 Roman landmark
graphically
portrayed by this
puzzle’s circles
43 Big fight
44 Elegant molding
45 Collecting Soc.
Sec.
46 Claim in a tissue
ad
48 Not us
51 Brand in a B-52
cocktail
53 Jerks
57 Promise
58 One rooting for
the Niners,
briefly
61 Open, in a way
62 “Iliad” warrior
64 Chaucer
narrative told by
Huberd, with
“The”
66 Trim
67 “__ Doone”
68 Museum
contents
69 Produced with
effort, with “out”
70 English
assignment
71 Transitory
passion

DOWN
1 Destined
2 Striped stone
3 Rapper __
Shakur
4 Coop occupant
5 Sea predator
6 “Will do!”
7 Cone makers
8 Smooth
transitions
9 One who might
be a CPA
10 Winter warmer
11 Holmes
accessory
12 Like a crowbar
14 “I’m outta here”
18 Six-time Emmy
winner
22 Chums, slangily
25 First name in jazz
27 “Well, shoot”
29 Chinese: Pref.
30 Buddy
32 Colbert, for one
33 Devices with
security cameras
34 TV cop with a
Tootsie Pop
35 Mindful of one’s
own needs

37 As __: grouped
together
40 MacFarlane of
“Family Guy”
41 Juicing discards
42 “If she did play
false, the fault
was __”: Shak.
47 Dust __
49 Work
50 Figure of
veneration

52 Fluffed-up dos
54 Winter
accessory
55 Island near Sicily
56 Clip
57 Enjoy an e-cig
59 Pretensions
60 Family nickname
63 Struck (out)
65 Slight
manifestation, as
of hope

By Jeffrey Wechsler
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
09/08/16

09/08/16

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, September 8, 2016

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

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Sports
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
Thursday, September 8, 2016 — 5A

Montemarano, Ramirez 
enjoy summer as interns

By ORION SANG

Daily Sports Writer

Earlier this summer, Abby 

Ramirez’s family joked with her 
that she might have been part of 
an international scandal.

Just about 12 hours before the 

incident that implicated Ryan 
Lochte in an alleged falsification 
of a police report, Ramirez had 
met the legendary swimmer.

“My family and stuff were 

like, ‘Oh, you were probably 
involved,’ joking around and 
stuff,” Ramirez said. “But it was 
still cool to meet him and other 
athletes.”

It was all part of her job this 

summer.

Life 
for 
student-athletes 

during the offseason is different 
from that of the professional 
athlete — while most pros can 
focus solely on training and 
recovering, 
student-athletes 

often take classes or look for 
summer jobs or internships, all 
while continuing to train.

And for Michigan softball 

senior third baseman Lindsay 
Montemarano 
and 
senior 

shortstop Ramirez, that held 
especially true. While they may 
have finished playing in June, that 
was just the beginning of what 
would prove to be an eventful and 
life-changing summer.

Montemarano, 
an 
English 

major, 
spent 
her 
offseason 

interning 
with 
the 
New 

York Mets, while Ramirez, a 
communications major, worked 
for NBC during the Olympics in 
Rio de Janeiro.

They 
both 
found 
their 

internships 
with 
the 
help 

of 
the 
University: 
Ramirez 

heard of the NBC internship 
through 
MPact, 
a 
program 

that helps Michigan student-
athletes 
with 
their 
resumes 

and career opportunities, while 
Montemarano was hired in part 
by Fred Wilpon — the owner of 
the Mets, a Michigan graduate 

and the namesake of the Wilpon 
Baseball and Softball Complex in 
Ann Arbor.

For Montemarano, her role 

with the Mets meant working at 
all home game days, where she 
was assigned different tasks, such 
as working at booths or helping to 
set up postgame concerts.

She also showed off her 

softball skills once in a while — 
though it was with investment 
bankers and children rather than 
Big Ten competition.

“Sometimes there were clinics, 

and we would have to work those 
with the coaches,” Montemarano 
said. “One time, I stood with one 
of the coaches and one of the kids 
was like, ‘Girls can’t play softball.’ 
The coach said, ‘Well, she plays 
for Michigan!’ and a little girl 
asked me for my autograph, 
which was cool.”

There was also one instance 

when Montemarano met both 
Jeff and Fred Wilpon — a meeting 
during which the elder Wilpon 
told Montemarano he had been 
following her and her team 
throughout the season and was 
hoping to return to Ann Arbor 
sometime for a game.

“Being able to network with so 

many people shows you how great 
this University is and how they 
really do want to help their own,” 
Montemarano said. “It’s good 
to know our alumni understand 
how great of an education we get 
and how great this University is.”

Meanwhile, a typical day for 

Ramirez began with her leading 
NBC clients on a tour, before 
spending the afternoon usually 
working on office tasks such 
as ticket coordination, guest 
communication 
or 
writing 

daily newsletters. The evening, 
however, 
was 
perhaps 
her 

favorite part of her internship. 
She was able to attend Olympic 
events as a spectator, watching 
athletes such as Michael Phelps 
compete.

Though 
she 
was 
initially 

apprehensive about going to Rio 
given the conditions, Ramirez 
found that it was nothing like her 
preconceived notions.

“Lindsay and everyone kept 

saying, ‘Don’t get Zika,’ so I 
was a little nervous about that,” 
Ramirez said. “They were also 
saying it was very dangerous 
out there, so I just made sure I 
was aware of everything. But it 
definitely exceeded expectations. 
Everyone was really friendly and 
it was a really beautiful place 
with breathtaking views.

“I was pleasantly surprised 

because I was expecting bad 
things. It was definitely better 
than the media perceived it as.”

Ramirez was grateful for 

her internship and admitted 
it was good to take a step back 
from softball, especially given 
the ending to her junior season. 
But softball wasn’t too far from 
her mind: Ramirez was quick 
to add that she spent most of 
her summer training with her 
teammates in Ann Arbor.

Both 
Ramirez 
and 

Montemarano are back in Ann 
Arbor now, continuing life as 
students 
and 
preparing 
for 

fall exhibition games like they 
usually do this time of year.

And 
though 
they 
both 

acknowledge that there’s a finality 
to it all, with their final season 
beckoning, the two seniors are 
simply looking to finish their 
Michigan careers the way they 
want to: on their own terms.

“If you think about it as, ‘This 

is my last year,’ it can get to you 
in your head, like, ‘Oh this is 
my last chance,’ ” Ramirez said. 
“So we like to think about it as 
(being leaders) of Team 40. We 
get to set the example and show 
them the ropes. We’re excited 
for that, and it’ll be a cool 
experience.”

Added Montemarano: “Our 

ultimate goal is to win a national 
championship. 
That 
doesn’t 

change.”

MARINA ROSS/Daily

Senior shortstop Abby Ramirez interned for NBC at the Olympics in Rio de Janeiro this summer.

MARINA ROSS/Daily

Lindsay Montemarano spent her summer as an intern for Major League Baseball’s New York Mets.

Quartet to be inducted to 
Michigan’s Hall of Honor

By JAKE LOURIM

Managing Sports Editor

In a few weeks, Mark Dona-

hue, Lorne Howes, Kate John-
son and Jon Urbanchek will 
join the likes of Gerald Ford, 
Bob Ufer, Bo Schembechler and 
more than 200 others who have 
changed the Michigan Athletic 
Department over the years.

Michigan 
announced 

Wednesday that it will induct 
the quartet into its Hall of 
Honor on Sept. 30. The Hall of 
Honor, established in 1978, rec-
ognizes figures who have made 
significant contributions to the 
Athletic Department in the 
form of national or conference 
championships, team captaincy 
or All-American or All-Confer-
ence honors.

Donahue, 
Howes, 
John-

son and Urbanchek will bring 
the total in the Hall to 217. 
Last 
year’s 
inductees 
were 

Lloyd Carr, Brent Lang, John 
Matchefts and Elise Ray.

Donahue 
played 
offensive 

guard for the Michigan football 
team from 1974 to 1977, winning 
three Big Ten championships 
under Bo Schembechler. He 
also earned All-America honors 
twice and started 35 games — 
which was, at that time, second 
in school history — as the Wol-
verines went 38-7 and reached 
two Rose Bowls.

Howes 

played hockey 
in the 1950s. 
As 
Michi-

gan’s 
goalie, 

he 
led 
the 

Wolverines 
to 
national 

champion-
ships in 1955 
and 
1956. 

Those 
two 

were the last 
of Michigan’s five titles in six 
years under coach Vic Heyliger. 
In 1956, in his last career game, 
Howes played “most of the third 
period in severe pain resulting 
from a collision in the opening 
minute of the third stanza,” the 

Daily reported. He also played 
with bone chips in his elbow.

Johnson, a rower for Michi-

gan, graduated in 2001. She 
won All-America honors three 
times and the Big Ten Rower of 

the Year award 
twice. Compet-
ing in the early 
years of Michi-
gan 
rowing, 

Johnson 
was 

instrumental 
in the growth 
of the program. 
At 
the 
2001 

NCAA Cham-
pionships, the 
Wolverines, in 

their fifth season as a varsity 
program, finished third.

“We had a national champi-

onship race in us,” she told the 
Daily at the time, but added, 
“My goal coming to Michigan 
was to set a tradition. I feel com-

fortable leaving now because 
I feel we have arrived.” Since 
then, the Wolverines have won 
three more Big Ten champion-
ships.

Urbanchek 
coached 
the 

Michigan men’s swimming and 
diving team to more than two 
decades of success from 1982 
to 2004. He won 13 Big Ten 
titles — 10 straight from 1986 
to 1995 — plus the 1995 national 
championship. He is already in 
the 
international 
swimming 

and state of Michigan sports 
Halls of Fame. And yet, in 2006, 
Urbanchek told the Daily, “The 
awards will all tarnish with age. 
But the memories will remain 
vivid throughout the years.”

All four inductees will bring 

back those memories when the 
University honors them during 
the Oct. 1 football game against 
Wisconsin, after a private cer-
emony Sept. 30.

GRANT HARDY/Daily

The 2016 Hall of Honor class will be Warde Manuel’s first as athletic director.

“My goal coming 

to Michigan 
was to set a 
tradition.”

