8-Sunday, February 24, 1980-The Michigan Daily ICERS DROP SERIES :.: abortion?. Free Pregnancy Testing Immediate Results Confidential Counseling ' yComplete Birth Control Clinic S Medicaid " Blue Cross 1l.11 Ann Arbor and 3 )4Downriver area ",(313) 559-0590 Southfield area Northland Family Planning Clinic, Inc. W p.. ,r v'.''Ga 6GtA' Y G.y;. ".: By MARK BOROWSKI Special to the Daily GRAND FORKS-Before the hockey season began, Michigan coach Dan Farrell said it was hard to play on the road and that if a team wins all its home games and splits all its road series, it will be in pretty good shape. His team has come close to winning all its home games, displaying a 16-1-2 home record. But the road has proved disastrous for the Wolverines, and last night was no exception as they dropped a 4-3 decision to the Fighting Sioux at the North Dakota Winter Sports Center. Michigan held a 3-0 lead after one period but Dakota kept battling back and Mark Taylor tied the game with only 19 seconds left in regulation play. Phil Sykes then scored the winner for the Sioux 47 seconds into the overtime. f . The Fighting Sioux celebrated Parent's Night and provided the 5,650 fans with plenty of activity, including an introduction of eight North Dakota seniors and their parents. This was the last regular season home game for the seniors. BOTH TEAMS were short one player on the bench as Michigan's John Blum and North Dakota's Cary Eades served a game misconduct for fighting in Friday night's game. North Dakota coach Gino Gasparini decided to give his fourth string goalie Pierre Lamoureux a chance to play af- ter-clinching the WCHA championship Friday night. This is the second con- secutive league title for Gasparini in as many years as coach for the Fighting - Sioux. And when the game finally got un- derway, Michigan took full advantage of the rookie netminder, scoring three times in the first period. SENIOR DAN Lerg scored the first goal while North Dakota's Glen White was off for tripping. Bruno Baseotto slid a perfect pass in front of the net that Lerg just touched and it dribbled between Lamoureux's legs. , A little over a minute later the two changed positions on the scoring sheet. Lerg laid a perfect pass on the stick of Baseotto and he skated around the Sioux defense. When he got to the top of the circle he let a slap shot whistle low to the ice that beat Lamoureux cleanly between the legs. Defenseman Steve Richmond tallied FIRST PERIOD Scoring-1. M-Lerg (Richmond, Baseotto) 8:16; 2. M-Baseotto (Lerg) 9:53; 3. M-Richmond (Lerg, Baseotto) 15:48. Penalties-ND-White (highsticking) 7:32: ND-Martens (hooking) 12:09; ND-Walker (trip- ping) 15:12. SECOND PERIOD Scoring-1. ND-White (Ludwig, Sykes) 7:i3. Penalties-M-Baseotto (too many men on ice) 4:19; M-Tippett (charging) 10:22; NI.-Burgraff (holding) 13:35; ND-Small (tripping) 19:39. the third goal of the period when Michigan had a man advantage. Lerg and Baseotto weaved the puck back and forth and then dropped it back to Rich- mond, who fired it past a screened Lamoureux. BASEOTTO'S three points in the first period increased his total to 72 on the season, only four points behind team- mate Murray Eaves, who leads the nation in scoring. Michigan was again without the ser- vices of Eaves who is back in Ann Arbor nursing a shoulder injury he suffered against Notre Dame. North Dakota got on the scoreboard at 7:13 in the second period when Glen White snuck a wrist, shot past goalie Paul Fricker. THIRD PERIOD Scoring-2.ND-Zaparnulk (Meyers, Smail) 15:44;'S. ND-Taylor (Smail, Bolcan) 19:41. Penalties-M-Hampson (interference) 14:15. OVERTIME PERIOD Scoring-4. ND-Sykes (Dunn, Zaparniuk) 0:47. Penalties-none SAVES North Dakota dumps Blue, 4-3 0 '/l V, Illy FAI Ad#JVPIJkVi' 'Ro A IhL f 'k .. + .: <...a::.. .... . ..r r. ox. . Heide {gold, LAKE PLACID Heiden rewrote the C book yesterday, cap ible one-man speed mance with his fifth the 10,000 meter rac the biggest accompli XIII Winter Gam American hockey ti over the Soviet Union N i}fi ':;{}'; O:{.:: ..yy i {, r }';::. <'" ": ".. 1:: : i' i: ::.7}}:i:SG : Y{:::::ti ................:.........1X:...... . :: :r....; r...... ... .A.. r. .l?. :i:{ ". Uv :s }. j:::k:: i i:9 Z>L"v . 4.. },.,Yv...:k +F.:x...v::{{ ::{+F ii:f}: 1.v4: i.:"Y:.t". ....T4 ". .: ..:.{ :i ""{.: n\... f. : :.{:.\....:n...$} ...:..,..t.h .i.4n..... :v.:{.,:A":"";"'ryi: ".v'iO:i:: X"::K : ": X"ii: iiiiii:"iiiii:":":i{::{:,::: iiii} reyl': yv:::":":: ryx:.?;.y' /.CAC . , :: n captures fifth I a . .. ...... .. . .. ... .... , /. opt ~ ' [rM M- -, t , - { 1 U 4+x t:}; : Y;}. r ; : t :v'1.+,. ". i{: :i.;~. };C}{ F{t aii:ii% X{f :::\. f is }. .1' ryk; " -k;i: ily":. 'S; ?:,ti? , F{aY' Today's battle for between the United hockey team and F telecast live by AB( at 11 a.m. The 21-year-old # Wis., became the fir athlete to win five Olympics. He ignore his coach to slow do to a world record ti clipping 6.2 seconds c of 14:34.33 set in 1977 skated against yes Loshkin of the Soviet It capped an unpre of the five men's races for Heiden, w records in the earlie 1,000, 1,500 and 5,0 admitted afterward in record time (AP)-Eric expected to do it. Olympic record "I did well but people had planned ping an incred- on me doing well, on winning a skating perfor- couple of gold medals,"- he said. igold medal in "But five I thought was out of the :e. But he said question." ishment of the.a.s res was the Fratianne nabs siler eam's victory Friday night. Annett Potzsch won East Ger- many's first figure skating gold -the gold medal medal ever, edging world champion States Olympic Linda Fratianne of the United States Finland will be last night. C-TV beginning Fratianne, 19, of Northridge, Calif., defeated her East German rival in both the short program and from Madison, Saturday night's long program, st winter sports which is worth a total of 70 per cent. golds in one But the four-time American cham- d the signals of pion was not able to overcome Pot- wn and flashed zsch's early lead after the com- me of 14:28.13, pulsory figures, which are worth 30 off the old mark per cent. 7y the man Potzsch, 1978 world champion, terday, Viktor received seven first-place votes for Union. 11 ordinals and 189,000 points. cedented sweep Fratianne, world champion in 1977 speed skating and 1979, got first-place votes from ho set Olympic the Japanese and American judges, r events at 500, finishing with 16 ordinals and 188.30, 00 meters. He points. fir: L ti '. <:;:.: j 4}}"$'' .hv: i . : :. .: L"i\ t :ti? : i4\ ,:fi}:, vt {:$h5 :,.,{: Jti fl.: +}tr} i -;;. . ',ASS: 4i:': ?S::ti v~ j'ti. : : .. ti }v',:; , >: : M1v i'? : ik ?: S:a }'i : z< 3 : :': ay;: r " . h'3S ti > : ' sfi z' < : :>. y .} :;:;i. Fricker (M).............12 Lamoroeux (ND)......... 5 By JON MORELAND and SCOTT MCNEIL Special to The Daily PONTIAC - The Pistons extended their longest losing streak ever, 12 games, against the Portland Trailblazers, losing 130-107 last night at the Silverdome. Leading only 25-21 after the first quarter, Portland, propelled by Jim Paxson's outside shooting, took a 60-42 halftime lead. DETROIT THREATENED to make a game of it in the third quarter when they cut the Trailblazers' lead to nine, 84-75, with 1:30 left in the period. But Portland fought off the rally and took a 91-77 lead into the fourth quarter. Despite the outstanding fourth-quar- ter effort of Terry Duerod, the Pistons never got closer than that 14-point margin. Duerod had ten points in the last quarter and finished with a career- high 22 points. John Long was high man for the Detroiters with 26, while Calvin Natt led all scorers with39. Piston coach Richie Adubato was ob- viously displeased with his team's per- formance. "This is our worst game of the year ... we couldn't catch the ball, pass the ball, shoot the ball, or defend. We had one guy who played well; that was Duerod." PORTLAND HEAD coach Jack Ramsey, meanwhile, was obviously pleased with his team's performance. "Our bench gave a superb effort, and Natt had his best game as a Trailblazer. It's been a long time since we beat anybody on the road by twenty points ... I can't even remember when. In the midst of their current losing streak, Duerod summed up the Piston's current situation. "We're in a rebuilding stage. We just have to hang in there. We have a lot of first, second, and third-year players, but in the long run, we hope to improve as a team." $ 16 2-36 2 6 0-13 12IN A ROW: Pistons lose by.23 0 0 that he never - -....n - - -.: - -::!::::;:i:.:.; - - :::i: i) ::... :".:vi....:th4}v ..".:}" :.:".....v ...:: ...:.:....:.::t .... ................. ......: ....:: ": ry "":: :::x:. "i'viY . ": : {: .}:: r::::.yq:::. ":+s'^'Sv'": iii:^?}".v . .r., .:" :":. ""s :. , . 3-. SPOR TS OF THE DAILY b1IA1I I 1, dLlI Lr H Swimmers crush MSU 76-37 *1p4 i] j b S, A , F Student Newspaper at The University of Michigan 4! r---------- WRITE YOUR AD HERE! ------------ 1 1 1 2345 d. sn i -.7eis 2221. 68192 16 400 20 o et 1- 1I L -----=.-.CLIP AND MAIL TODAY! rninrninl Ii USE THIS HANDY CHART TO QUICKLY ARRIVE AT AD COST Words 1 2 3 4 5 add. 0-14 1.70 3.40 4.60 5.80 7.00. 1.00I Please indicate 15-21 2.55 5.10 6.90 8.70 10.50 1.50 where this ad is to run:: 22-28 3.40 6.80 9.20 11.60 14.00 2.00 for rent 29-35 4.25 8.50 11.50 14.50 17.50 2.50 helpwanted 36-42 5.10 10.20. 13.80 17.40 21.00 3.00 rommates 43-49 6.80 11.90 16.10 20.30 24.50 3.50 etc. 7 words per line (Each line of space used counts as 7 words). Hyphenated words over 5 characters count as two words-This includes telephone numbers. By JON MORELAND In what turned out to be nothing more than a glorified practice session, Michigan's men swimmers completely outmanned the Michigan State swim- mers 76-37, yesterday afternoon. The meet, held at Michigan's Matt Mann Pool, differed from a regular workout only because of the presence of the green-and-white-clad visitors and of a few paying spectators. Michigan will be doing some serious Feb. 20-24 PowerCenter U-M Dept. of Theatre & Drama MEL WINKLER Directs a Play by STEVE CARTE Wed.-Sat. at 8 Sunday at 2 Tickets at PTP ticket office Michigan League L M-F 10-1 & 2-5 Master Charge & VISA on phone & mail only. PHONE: (313) Y 764-0450 practicing these next two weeks. They'll be practicing for the Big Ten meet, which also happens to be at Matt Mann, March 6, 7, and 8th. "It'll be nice to have that meet here," said first-year coach Bill Farley. "We should have a good shot in that one." Taking a close look at the facts, it's easy to see that Michigan does have "a good shot". Michigan's only loss of the dual meet season came to Indiana, which as Farley put it, "hasn't swum real well since they beat us (January 25 at Indiana). Since then they've been getting knocked around a little bit. "I'm a little disappointed in our per- formance today," the coach continued. "The regulars who have been swim- ming well all year came through. Our' depth is nowhere near what it should be though." Some of the "regulars" who recorded first place finishes were junior All American Fernando Canales in the 200 free style at 1:37.9 and senior captain Paul Griffith in the 100-yard freestyle at 45.94. Pool records were set in the 50-yard freestyle by Bob Murray (20.56) and the 200-yard breaststroke by Tom Ernsting (2:06.51) "Our freestylists and divers were just super," reported Farley. (Kevin Machemer led the divers in winning both the- one- and three-meter events.) "But our depth especially in the backstroke races has to come around." In. order to have a good shot at that Big Ten Meet, the swimmers are going to have to close up some of those weak sOots. Tracksters triumph Michigan's men's tracksters took seven ,first place finishes as they narrowly edged Michigan State 67-64 in a dual meet at the Track and Tennis Building yesterday. However, it was not the first place finishes that won the meet for the Wolverines; it was the second, third, and fourth places that enabled Michigan to win the meet. Mike Lattany of Michigan showed his versatility by winning the high jump (7'0"); placing second in the triple jump (48'4%") and third in the long jump (22'1/2"). However, it was Dan Heikkinen that stole the show. Heikkinen won the mile run with a time of 4:02.28, finishing just ahead of Michigan State's Keith Moore by one hundredth of a second. Heikkinen's time is a new Michigan varsity record. Michigan did extremely well in the two mile run, as Dave Lewis, Brian Diemer, and Bill O'Reilly finished first, second, and third, respectively. The Wolverines got fine performan- ces from Ron Affoon in the 440 (48.91), Phil Wells in the shot, put (54'2"), An- drew Bruce in the 300 (30.35), Mike Finn in the pole vault (15'0"), and Darold Gholston in the 60 and 300 (6.43, 30.78). Michigan State took the first three places in the 880 run and the 60-yard high hurdles, although the rest of the events were split evenly between the two teams. -ERIC LUTTINEN SUMMER JOBS CAMP TAMARACK Interviewing February 26 Summer Placement CALL 764-7456 THANO S CO. 514 E. W -shington welcomes you to Women 5th at Big Ten's The women's indoor track team tied with Indiana for fifth place at the Big Ten Indoor Track Championships yesterday in West Lafayette. Outstan- ding performances for Michigan came from Brenda Kazinec, Susan Frederick, and Melaine Weaver. In the 800-meter run, Frederick finished second. Weaver also pulled out a second place in the 5000-meter run. And in the 4x220 relay, the Wolverines (Renee Turner, Cathy Sharpe, Lori Thornton. Kozinec) came in third. sunrnaveQOUr.NFC..., . r