ONE HUNDRED AND TWENTY-FIVE YEARS OF EDITORIAL FREEDOM Monday, November 2, 2015
Ann Arbor, Michigan
michigandaily.com
ALLISON FARRAND/Daily
Redshirt freshman quarterback Wilton Speight entered Saturday’s game when fifth-year senior starting quaterback Jake Rudock was injured. Michigan trailed at the time, but Speight eventually led the Wolverines to victory on Saturday at TCF Bank Stadium in Minneapolis.
Goal-line stand helps ‘M’ hold off Gophers
GRANT HARDY/Daily
Jeffrey Dennis, a player on the Navy team, reaches for the ball in the 10th annual Army vs. Navy Wheelchair Basketball Game in the Crisler Center on Sunday.
Wheelchair ball raises disability awareness Crisler Center hosts 10th annual Army vs. Navy matchup to kick off Veteran’s Week By EMILY ROBERTS For the Daily
The Crisler Center played host to a different kind of basketball game on Sunday. Instead of the Michigan men’s basketball team, wheelchairs glided up and down the court during the 10th annual Army v. Navy Wheelchair Basketball Game. The teams are co-ed and made up of experienced wheelchair basketball players, as well as University student veterans, ROTC students, and occasionally, local law enforcement. Sunday’s game ended with a 45-40 Army victory. Gerald Hoff, the event’s founder and an insurance representative at the University Health System, said the game aims to raise awareness about living with a disability. “The Wheelchair Basketball game is the only University-sponsored disability related sporting event,” he said. “This event showcases the skills of people with disabilities; it showcases the ability within disability.” Run entirely by volunteers, the event also featured performances by several student groups along with the game, including the Men’s Glee Club, the Michigan Dance team and the Michigan Cheer Team.
The game is also part of Veterans Week at the University, which includes several panels covering the experiences of veteran as well as appreciation events. Jerry Sarasin, a long-time wheelchair basketball player and instructor who played for the Army team, said the win had been a long time coming for his team, which had lost in the past few years. Sarasin added that many characteristics of the game, like pacing, are very similar to a game played by able-bodied teams. He noted that part of the value of hosting this event is also demonstrating that similarity to the University community. “If more people came out to the games, wheelchair basketball would really grow as a sport, we know this because the sport is huge in places such as Europe,” he said. “There are other colleges that have wheelchair teams, and it’s sad that athletes have to go out of state to play at the collegiate level.” Kinesiology senior Jon Mendicelli, president of the University’s Student Veterans Association, said he always enjoys playing in the games. “The real wheelchair basketball players do a great job of getting all of us to play as a team, and making us look good on the court,” he said. Mendicelli, a Marine Corps veteran, played for the Navy team. He said the game was important for student veterans, especially those with disabilities. “Disabilities often come with a stigma, but at this game we can See WHEELCHAIR, Page 3A
Michigan stops Minnesota at halfyard line on final play to win, 29-26 By MAX BULTMAN Daily Sports Editor
MINNEAPOLIS — It came down to one play, a few inches and a lesson Jim Harbaugh
hopes his players carry with them for the rest of their lives. After a goal-line stand on the game’s final play, the No. 15 Michigan football team escaped TCF Bank Stadium with a win over Minnesota, 29-26. “It feels tremendous for the way the players played, and a phenomenal learning experience for our men to be able to win a tough one,” Harbaugh said. “It’s a great learning experience because it reinforces
everything you tell them about never giving up and fighting ‘til the end.” With 19 seconds remaining, Golden Gophers’ quarterback Mitch Leidner connected with Drew Wolitarsky for 22 yards and what looked like a go-ahead touchdown. But a booth review showed that Wolitarsky’s knee touched at the half-yard line, forcing Minnesota to hurry back to the line and try to punch it in. The clock began running
as the Golden Gophers made a formation shift, splitting a receiver out wide to pass after initially lining up in a running formation. Leidner’s throw was incomplete, though, and by the time the ball hit the ground, 17 seconds had run off the clock. Just two remained. Trailing by three, conventional wisdom would have told Minnesota to kick a field goal. But in an emotional contest See MICHIGAN, Page 3B
CAMPUS LIFE
Big House blood drive starts 34th Blood Battle Organizers aim to bolster donations as part of competition against OSU EMILIE FARRUGIA/Daily
Ballet Folklorico de los Renacidos, a Mexican folkloric dance group based in Detroit, performs at the fourth Annual Dia de los Muertos Ball sponsored by the Lambda Theta Alpha Latin Sorority at the Alumni Center on Friday.
LatinX month concludes with ‘Dia de los Muertos’ Fourth annual ‘Day of the Dead’ ball celebrates tradition, culture By JACKIE CHARNIGA Daily Staff Reporter
The University’s chapter of the Lambda Theta Alpha Latin Sorority, Inc. concluded
annual celebrations for LatinX Heritage month Friday night with its fourth annual Dia de los Muertos Ball. In partnership with the office of Multi-Ethnic Student Affairs and the Michigan Latin@ Assembly, the Founders Room of the Alumni Center hosted face-painting, traditional food and a performance by the Detroit-based ballet troupe Folklorico de los Renacidos.
The aim of the ball is to educate students about the history and cultural traditions of Dia de los Muertos and celebrate the work of the LatinX Heritage planning committee. Dia de los Muertos, which translates in English as “Day of the Dead,” is a Latin holiday celebrated every Nov. 1 to honor the dead with food and festivities. Traditional ceremonies commonly honor the See LATINX, Page 3A
By MEGAN DOYLE For the Daily
Hundreds of people streamed in and out of the Michigan Stadium on Sunday as part of the fifth annual “Be a Hero at the Big House” blood drive, an event that kicked off the 34th annual Wolverine vs. Buckeye Challenge for Life. The blood drive competition will run until Thanksgiving and encourages people to donate blood and register as organ donors in competition with Ohio State University. Last year, the University beat OSU in registered organ donors by 43,857 people, but collected only 2,298 pints of blood to Ohio State’s 2,414. Sunday’s event was co-sponSee BLOOD, Page 3A
» INSIDE
Little Brown Jug Michigan brings the trophy back to Ann Arbor with win
WEATHER TOMORROW
HI: 70 LO: 43
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INDEX
Vol. CXXV No. 23 ©2015 The Michigan Daily michigandaily.com
NEWS......................... 2A OPINION.....................4A ARTS......................5A
SUDOKU.....................2A CL ASSIFIEDS............... 5A S P O R T S M O N D AY. . . . . . . 1 B