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November 17, 2016 - Image 5

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily

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Classifieds

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

ACROSS
1 Touch off
6 Electrical unit
9 What wind
ensembles
usually tune to
14 Actress Anouk
whose last name
means “beloved”
15 Place for grazing
16 Appreciative cry
17 Travelocity ad
figure
18 “Hotel du __”:
Anita Brookner
novel
19 Still
20 Fabulous writer?
21 Roth __
22 Washer function
23 Production
capacity review
26 Refused
29 Very deep places
33 Shore soarer
34 Bellyachers
38 Excessively
39 Work (on), as
9-Down
41 “__ Romance”:
Jerome Kern song
42 TV princess
43 Radamès’ love
44 Cover letter
letters
45 Far from bold
46 Pentax
competitor
48 Cholesterol
initials
49 Hides
50 “U slay me!”
51 Chorus syllable
52 Travelers’ bus.
53 Teddy’s Mount
Rushmore
neighbor
55 Kitchen
appliance
58 Inflation fig.
61 Office fasteners
64 Like battleships
65 Get by the sentry
66 Looked inside, in
a way
67 Show the ropes

DOWN
1 It’s a long story
2 Flooring wood
3 “The Cookie
Never Crumbles”
co-author Wally
4 Alter the shape of
5 Custody

6 Kukla cohort
7 With 36-Down,
what you can’t do
regarding this
puzzle’s circled
letters
8 Portuguese
territory until
1999
9 Pitmaster’s
offering
10 Like dessert
wines
11 “... this skull
has __ in the
earth ... ”: Hamlet
12 Urban rtes.
13 Membership
drive gift
24 “The Thin Man”
role
25 Have what it
takes
26 “The Goldbergs”
actor George
27 Links legend,
familiarly
28 Conflicted
30 Classic golf shoe
feature
31 “Haystacks”
series painter
32 Overcharges
35 “That really
depressed me”

36 See 7-Down ...
or, with “a,” what
you can see in
this puzzle’s
circled letters
37 Isolated
communities
40 City south of Fort
Worth
42 Magneto’s
enemies
47 Sharer of the 2007
Nobel Peace Prize

49 One of a gripping
tool pair
53 Trojan War
hero
54 “Hamilton” role
56 Mocked
57 Puzzlemaker
Rubik
59 Go around
60 Hall & Oates’
“Say It __ So”
62 Son
63 My __, Vietnam

By Jeffrey Wechsler
©2016 Tribune Content Agency, LLC
11/17/16

11/17/16

ANSWER TO PREVIOUS PUZZLE:

RELEASE DATE– Thursday, November 17, 2016

Los Angeles Times Daily Crossword Puzzle

Edited by Rich Norris and Joyce Nichols Lewis

xwordeditor@aol.com

THESIS EDITING
joanhutchinson@att.net
www.writeonA2.com

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Sports
The Michigan Daily — michigandaily.com
Thursday, November 17, 2016 — 5A

Michigan signs pair
of top-level recruits

The
Michigan
women’s

basketball team came into the
2016-17 season expecting big
things from freshman guard
Kysre Gondrezick, who scored
72 points in a playoff game for
Benton Harbor High School and
was named Miss Basketball in the
State of Michigan.

While the Wolverines have

played just two games so far,
Gondrezick
has
showcased

her basketball prowess in both
contests. In Michigan’s victories
over Oakland and Niagara, she
scored a total of 31 points, totaling
nine assists and three steals in a
combined 35 minutes of play.

Gondrezick’s
performances

were enough to win her the honor
of Big Ten Freshman of the Week,
an award now-sophomore center
Hallie Thome won last year.

“(Gondrezick) does have the

chance to be a really special
player,” said Michigan coach
Kim Barnes Arico. “She comes
from two parents who played
basketball at the highest level. She
has grown up in the gym. She has
a great feel for the game.”

This week, the Wolverines

signed two new recruits that
will likely have similarly lofty
expectations next season.

One of them is guard Deja

Church of Southfield, Mich. She is
the No. 67 prospect in the nation
according to Prospects Nation
and was named Michigan Class
A Player of the Year in 2015-16
while leading Southfield Lathrup
to a 21-5 season. Like Gondrezick
last year, Church is a candidate
for Miss Basketball this year.

Church’s
transition
to

Michigan next season will be
easier than it is for most, as she

played AAU Basketball with
Gondrezick
and
freshman

forward KeAsja Peace on the
Michigan Crossover.

“(Church) is a tough-nosed

guard,” Barnes Arico said. “An
important thing for us, really
what we’ve tried to do the last
few years is to try to get the best
player in the state to stay at home.
She had initially decided to go
elsewhere and before signing day,
she changed her mind and said, ‘I
can’t let this opportunity at the
University of Michigan pass me
by.’ ”

Barnes Arico traveled a little

further to find her other big-name
recruit.

Forward Hailey Brown, the

No. 38 prospect according to
HoopGurlz,
will
move
from

Hamilton, Ontario, to play for the
Wolverines. Brown has played
for the Canadian National Team
since 2013 and averaged 10.0
points and 8.8 rebounds in five
games at the 2016 U18 FIBA
Americas competition.

“Brown is an outstanding ‘4’

player,” Barnes Arico said. “With
Jillian Dunston being a senior
next year, that’s an area where we
wanted to add a player for sure.
She is a 6-foot-2 kid who can play
with her back to the basket. She
has international experience and
has traveled the world playing
basketball since the age of 14.”

Church and Brown will be

essential additions to Michigan
in 2017-18, as the Wolverines
will lose senior guards Siera
Thompson and Danielle Williams
to graduation after this year.

While next season is still a long

way away, Church and Brown
should give Michigan two new
faces to get excited about, just like
Gondrezick and Thome did the
last two years.

WOMEN’S BASKETBALL

SAM MOUSIGIAN/Daily

The Michigan men’s basketball team will face its first true test of the season Thursday when it takes on Marquette.

‘M’ to open 2K Classic with Marquette

Once again, the Big Apple

is beckoning for the Michigan
men’s basketball team.

Last season, the Wolverines

traveled
to
Madison
Square

Garden to take part in the
Big
Ten’s
inaugural
“Super

Saturday” event on Jan. 30,
which featured a basketball and
hockey
doubleheader
against

Penn State. Michigan won that
contest, 79-72, and now, it is
returning to The World’s Most
Famous Arena on Thursday to tip
off against Marquette in the 2K
Classic Championship Round.

“I can’t wait,” said senior

guard Zak Irvin. “(We are) 1-0
since I’ve been in the Garden. (It
was) nice to play there last year
against Penn State. It’s always
nice going to New York because
it feels like a home game, just
from the alums and fans we have
across the country.”

The
Wolverines
notched

two wins against Howard and
IUPUI in the tournament’s
Ann Arbor regional, but those
programs are a far cry from the
competition they will be facing
as the season rolls onward.

The matchup with the Golden

Eagles, on the other hand, could
provide the first true barometer
of where Michigan stands.

Outside
of
losing
Henry

Ellenson, who led the team in
both points and rebounds per
game his freshman year before
being drafted 18th overall by
the Detroit Pistons, the Golden
Eagles are returning most of
their major contributors.

Center Luke Fischer and

guards Haanif Cheanham and
Traci Carter figure to be the
most notable of that mix.

Fischer
and
Cheanham

finished
second
and
third,

respectively, behind Ellenson
in both scoring and rebounding
last
year,
while
Carter
is

entering his second year as
Marquette’s point guard after
averaging 4.6 assists through
33 games during his freshman
campaign.

Though it’s a limited sample

size, the Golden Eagles have
elected to start four guards
alongside Fischer through the

first two games this season.

With ample scorers on the

perimeter, Marquette is poised
to be Michigan’s first real
opportunity to see how far
it has come defensively after
hiring assistant coach Billy
Donlon. It’s not often that the
Wolverines are the bigger team
on the floor, but the Golden
Eagles’ personnel could prove
beneficial for Michigan.

“I think all of our guys have

done a great job just holding
each other accountable and just
knowing that defense does win
championships,”
Irvin
said.

“That’s one of the huge things
that we want to have a point of
emphasis on this year, is be able
to defend people, and I think
this is going to be a good test
for us, going against Marquette
tomorrow.”

Added Michigan coach John

Beilein: “They’ve only got the
two big guys that are playing,
Fischer and Heldt — he’s 6-foot-

10. We’ve got five of those guys
on our roster. They’ve really got
more depth on the perimeter.
Hopefully, our size at some of
those positions may affect some
things, especially DJ (Wilson)
and
Duncan
(Robinson)
at

6-foot-8, 6-foot-10.”

While
it
may
have
an

advantage
on
the
boards,

especially
with
Wilson

averaging 11 rebounds per game,
there are still some aspects that
could spell doom for Michigan.

The
Wolverines
have

been plagued by slow starts
so far this season. Against
Howard,
Michigan
couldn’t

get on the board until junior
guard Muhammad-Ali Abdur-
Rahkman sank a 3-pointer over
five minutes into the first half.
In their matchup with IUPUI,
it was more of the same, as the
Wolverines traded baskets with
the Jaguars until shots started
to fall in the final four minutes.

That
issue
could
be

compounded by Marquette’s
aggressive defense, which is
tied for 23rd nationally with
10.5 steals per game.

“For some reason, we’ve come

out and haven’t got off to a type
of start we want to get to, but we
can have those good runs at the
end of the half,” Beilein said. “I
know Marquette, their steals
are really high. They’re going
to come out and try to impose
their will. If we do not take care
of the ball and make the shots
we’ll get behind early. We’ve
got to really take care of the ball
from the very beginning.”

If the Wolverines come out

sleepwalking Thursday, they
could be staring at their first
loss of the season.

***

Depending on its outcome

against Marquette, Michigan will
face either Southern Methodist
or Pittsburgh on Friday.
Big Ten roundup

Just two weeks remain before

the No. 16 Michigan hockey team
kicks off Big Ten conference play
in December against Penn State.
At this point in the season, each
of the teams in the conference
have had a chance to establish
a résumé. Here, we break down
their
preseason
results
in

preparation for the upcoming
Big Ten season.

No. 7 Minnesota

The Golden Gophers have

played just eight games so far
this season and have skated to
a 4-2-2 record, with both losses
at the hands of No. 12 St. Cloud
State.

However, one of Minnesota’s

most redeeming qualities that
has been evident so far this year
is the depth on its roster. Four
different players have scored
four goals each over the course
of eight games, with 13 of the 21
players on the roster recording
at least one goal.

No. 10 Penn State

Not only have the Nittany

Lions made program history
with their highest-ever ranking
in the USCHO poll this week, but
senior captain David Goodwin
also became the first Penn State
player to reach 100 career goals.
The Nittany Lions are currently
holding on to a seven-game
win streak and have an overall
record of 9-1-1.

Penn State boasts an .864 win

percentage for the season, the
best in the Big Ten. The Nittany
Lions will host Michigan in the
teams’ first pair of conference
games in two weeks.

No. 14 Ohio State

Like Penn State, Ohio State

has only recorded one loss this
season, a 6-2 game agaist Robert
Morris. Also like Penn State, the
Buckeyes have played 11 games
so far, racking up a 6-1-4 record.

Their penchant for ties isn’t
exactly helping them move up in
the polls, but it hasn’t hurt them
either. They were ranked at the
same spot last week.

The Buckeyes have plenty

of seniority on their team,
and they recently had two
senior
forwards
receive

weekly honors stemming from
their
performances
against

Connecticut last week. Nick
Schilkey is currently tied for
second in the NCAA in goals and
recently tallied the 100th of his
career, while David Gust scored
four goals in a single game. Their
contributions have helped Ohio
State’s offense establish itself as
one of the best in the country.

Wisconsin

The Badgers have only played

eight games so far this season,
like Minnesota, but they’ve
tacked on an additional win and
loss for a mark of 5-3-0.

Despite the fact that the

Gophers
are
tied
for
10th

nationally
in
offense,
their

struggling defense — which
is ranked 48th and let up a
combined eight goals in two
losses to Northern Michigan —
has held them back.

Michigan State

Michigan State rounds out

the bottom of the Big Ten, with
twice as many losses as wins
(3-6-0). It suffered a pair of one-
sided losses (6-1 and 7-3) against
Lake Superior State, whom the
Wolverines will face after their
next exhibition against the U.S.
National
Team
Development

Program. The Spartans have
also lost two games to No. 1
Denver and one game each to
Michigan Tech and Ferris State.

However, both of Michigan

State’s losses to Denver (7-2-1)
were particularly low-scoring.
The first game ended with the
then-No. 6 Pioneers scraping
out a 2-1 victory, where all three
goals were scored in the third
period. The second game settled
at 3-1.

NATHANIEL CLARK

Daily Sports Writer

KEVIN SANTO
Daily Sports Editor

ICE HOCKEY

LANEY BYLER
Daily Sports Writer

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