Women's Gymnastics vs. Ohio State and LSU Saturday, 7 p.m. Crisler ArenaI SPORTS Innertube Water Polo Sign up deadline Tuesday, 4:30 p.m. IM Sports Building The Michigan Daily Sunday, January 20, 1985 Page 7 Blue icers dumped again by RPI, 5-1 By ADAM MARTIN Special to the Daily TROY, N.Y. - They may be rankedl number five in the country, but ac- cording to Michigan head coach Red' Berenson, RPI's Engineers in no way outplayed the Wolverines, despite com-' pleting a weekend sweep last night with a 5-1 victory. "We certainly played with them," Berenson sighed after the game. "I wsas happy with our effort, but we just weren't putting the puck in the net." PENALTIES were greatly respon- sible for the lacking Wolverine offense, which suffered through at least 20 minutes shorthanded. Berenson was quick to mention slop- py officiating in analyzing his club's woes. "I've seen it all year, and I don't like it at all," said an angry Berenson. "There's been no control at all by the officials." And last night was no exception. The first period was marred by numerous penalties on both sides, including game misconducts to Michigan's Bill Brauer and Renssselaer's Kraign Nienhuis af- ter the two were whistled for fighting. RPI COACH Mike Addesa was equally disappointed with the refereeing. "I don't know why it's allowed to be this way," said Addesa. "It looked like a roller derby." Referee Pierre Belanger called the Wolverines for seven infractions in the period and the Engineers for four, prompting the RPI faithful to gallantly cheer, "the ref beats his wife," despite the home team's advantage. The Engineers jumped to an early lead at 1:08, before both teams engaged in the not-so-clean, illegal extravagan- za. Junior George SErvinis flew down the left side on RPI's first two-on-one of the evening, took a pass right over the blue line from defenseman Tim Friday, and flicked a little wrist shot in the top right corner. WOLVERINE freshman goaltender Tim Makris was obviously surprised by the puck, but went on to make some brilliant saves when Michigan was shorthanded. Still, the Wolverines were unable to skate off behind by only one. With 40 seconds left in the frame and a 5-3 RPI advantage (Ray Dries was out for trip- ping, Jeff Norton for slashing), junior Mike Dark drilled the puck past Makris from 40 feet out at the right point. The penalty barrage continued through three minutes of the second period when RPI again gained a man advantage after Michigan's Todd Carlile went out for holding. "OUR defensemen were not used to being run and stabbed," complained Addesa. Assaulted or not, Makris appeared sharper and more confident than he's looked in previous games, as he fr- ustrated the Engineers on several great scoring opportunities. But Makris' ice mates failed to capitalize on their own chances while playing much of the period in RPI's zone. Midwsay thurough the stanza, the tandem dem that burned Michigan Friday night for six points gave the Engineers a 3-0 lead on a tow-on-one break. ADAM OATES, RPI's point getter, rode in on the right wing, slipping a let- ter perfect cross-pass to All-American John Carter, the club's leading goal scorer. Carter easily punched in his 26th goal of the season behind Makris, who had little chance against one of college hockey's premier com- binations. Desperately needing a goal, the Wolverines applied solid pressure in the third period and came up all but empty. Norton ruined Engineer netminder Brian Jopling's shutout attempt at 14:14, but Michigan didn't have enough fuel left to taint the Engineers any fur- ther. And RPI had advanced to a four goal lead at 6:12 on Servinis' 11th of the year. The Willowdale, Ontario native added another with two minutes left to suf- ficiently finish the Wolverines. I # 1 FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. RPI-Servinis (Tiano, Friday) 1:08; 2. RPI-Dark (Carter, Oates) 19:21. Penalties: RPI-Carter (tripping) 6:01; RPI-Carter (double minor, highstick) 10:27; M-Neff (double minor, highstick) 10:27; M-Brauer (fighting, match misconduct) 12:17; M-Downing (interference) 12:17; M-Rossi (roughing) 12:17; RPI-Nienhuis (fighting, match misconduct) 12:17; RPI-Tosto (roughing) 12:17; M-P. Goff (hooking) 13:19; M-Norton (double minor, slashing) 15:06; RPI-Jooris (roughing) 15:06; M-Dries (tripping) 19:06. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 3. RPI--Carter (Oates, Friday) 10:38. Penalties: M--Carlile (holding) 2:56; M-Seychel (highsticking) 2:56;RPI-Tiano(highsticking) 2:56; M-Lorden (roughing) 13:02; RPI-Carter (roughing) 13:02. THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 4. RPI-Serinis (Carter, Oates) 6:12; 1. M- Norton (Seychel, Rossi) 14:14; 5. RPI-Serinis (Tosto, Hernberg) 17:45. Penalties: M-Norton (holding) :46; M-Bjorkman (highsticking) 4:40; M-Jones (tripping) 5:58; RPI- Sadeghpour (hooking) 12:06; M-Carlile (hooking) 17:06; RPI-Whiteside (crosschecking) 19:07. Saves: M-Makris42; RPI-Jopling29 SCORING BY PERIODS 1 2 MICHIGAN ...........................0 0 RPI ............................21 3-T 1 - 1 2 - 5 Norton ... notches lone 'M' goal Brauer ... booted Blue Lines rVolNk Tankers sink Oakland; Hoosiers lay ahead Minicourse with 1980 Nobel Laureate CZESLAW MILOSZ Univ. course 411 1 credit hour Div. 495 POLISH POETRY IN ITS EUROPEAN CONTEXT lectures and readings IN ENGLISH MTTh 34:30 p.m. January 28- February 12 Audtiorium B Angell Hall Available at Crisp. DON'T BE LEFT OUT! Info. Call Slavic Dept. 764-5355 No Trojans in in Troy... e..just a lot of hockey TROY, N.Y. By TOM KEANEY and ADAM MARTIN W HEN you're stuck up here in the boonies of New York you get to thinking... *Oh the lovely city of Troy, home of uncountable diners and overall ugliness. Where else would the front page headline read "Female wrestling referee fulfills her brother's dream"? eSpeaking of newspapers, the journalists around here are going nuts over head coach Red Berenson. In the coverage of Friday's game in Albany's Knickerbocker News, Berenson was mentioned or quoted in 13 of the stories 20 paragraphs. "RPI coach Mike Addesa was both surprised and impressed by a Wolverine offensive approach that departs from the usual eastern offense. "They at- tack with three across, whereas most teams use two and a trailer. It made it somewhat difficult for us," said the 1966 Holy Cross graduate. eAddesa's picture in the media guide looks like Clarence "Lumpy" Ruthreford's 1956 high school yearbook photo. In person, however, the 41-year-old Addesa looks like a commercial for Hair Club for Men. *Addesa oversees a program at RPI called Provost Scholars, under which exceptional students receive a cash award and ad- ' > ditional computer time. Those lucky kids. elf you think the San Diego chicken is an f' inane attempt at generating fan support, beware of RPI's representative of the Red Swarm. Picture a college version of Satur- day Night Live's human hornets, only in white with red stripes and identical anten- nae, and you've got...well you've got the Addesa idea. *Much has been made of the antagonism between the Western Collegiate Hockey Association and the CCHA, but the East has its own version. When asked about the recent splitting of the East Coast Athletic Conference into the ECAC and the newly formed Hockey East, one RPI writer quipped, "It's like the CCHA and the WCHA, the two hate each other." *Engineering schools may have a reputation for illiterates, but the gearheads who attend RPI hockey games can't be faulted for a lack of clarity or bluntness. When the Engineers are whistled for questionable penalties, the eloquent chant rising from Houston Ice Arena is, "Hey, Ref, you suck." eHockey teams are always a great source of unique names. The Engineers are no exception with such labels as Trini Iturralde, David Sette-Ducati, Kraig Nienhuis, and Mike Sadeghpour. Incidentally, only one of those four is Canadian. *Houston Arena is a fantastic facility. The recent 2.5 million-dollar renovations-a sunken-in ice level, hydraulic Zamboni lift, and fantastic seating arrangements-all demonstrate the engineering genius the school is famous for. eRed Berenson and assistant coach Mark Miller have been spending a good deal of time recruiting in the East-with good reason. Eastern Massachuset- ts has become a gold mine for college talent. The Wolverines have already captured the solid Jeff Norton from Acton and up-and-coming, 1983-84 Mass. goalie-of-the-year Tim Makris from Marlboro. Those players give Michigan a full dose of Bay State hockey prowess after just two trips east. In two losses at the University of New Hampshire, the Wolverines were greeted aggressively by Lexington, Mass. native Steve Leach (a Washington Capital's draft pick), not to mention getting burned Friday night by RPI's Carter, who hails from of Woburn, Mass.-one town over from Lexington. *Word has it that the combined "K" of RPI's faithful exceeds that of all computers on the east coast. So just what do they do at a Polytechnic in- stitute? "RPI graduates are responsible for major railroads, bridges, dams and highways across the country, as well as the railroad systems of Japan and Latin America," lauds the RPI hockey yearbook. What would we do with out Troy's four-eyed, tooth-picked physiqued college brethren? By STEVE HERZ The Pioneers of Oakland University were capsized by the Wolverines Satur- day afternoon at Matt Mann Pool, 77-36, but nobody involved was the least bit excited by the outcome. It wasn't as if Michigan had perfor- med poorly. The Maize and Blue con- vincingly captured every event in which they entered competitors-that's all but one. The reason for the apathetic demeanor is the excitement brewing over next Friday night's home meet with the defending conference cham- pion Indiana Hoosiers. THE HOOSIERS HAVE captured the Big Ten title eighteen of the past twenty years, and Michigan coach Jon Urban- chek's team is poised to end that domination. Freshman Jon-Erick Olson, a mem- ber of the Norweigan Olympic team, downplayed his victory in the 200-yard Individual Medley, saying, "They (Oakland)aren't the best team around, but it was a good exhibition. "We're just looking to get ready for Friday night." URBANCHEK WOULDN'T even call the meet an exhibition. He referred to it as "a rehearsal" and only wished to talk about his team's big Friday evening encounter. He said, "There's nothing else going on in town and for one dollar it's the cheapest excitement in town." Even Oakland seemed to get caught up in the newfound Indiana craze. In the traditional meet closing cheer where each team congratulates the other the Pioneers added "Beat In- diana." Junior Dave Parrish explained the reason for the team's sentiment, "They (Indiana) have dominated the con- ference for so long that there is a mystique surrounding them." BUT FRESHMAN DAVE GOCH discounted any mystique. "They're not unbeatable," he said. "We'll be really psyched and we'll be rocking." Among those doing the rocking will be Saturday's big winners: Kent Ferguson, who swept the diving com- petition; Benoit Clement, a winner in three separate events; and Jeff Gor- don, who captured the 1000-meter Freestyle race. Perhaps the most encouraging results form the meet were the perfor- mances of the freshmen. In addition to Olson, walk-on Jeff Kuvin was ex- tremely impressive in the 500-meter and 1000-meter Freestyles where he nearly edged Gordon. s- Ii ,aY.. M DIS OUMUN FFLERS AMERICAN AND FOREIGN CAR SPECIALIST F ROM AS * FITS MANY Installed by LOW AS...SMALL CARS S 93 ** TPARTICIPATING Specialists DEALERS Installed Featuring... 'One of the finest names YPSILANTIin automotive parts" 2606 Washtenaw Avenue (11/2 Mi. E. of US 23)......................572-9177 TAYLOR 14250 S. Telegraph Rd. (1 Bik. N. of Eureka Rd.)....................946-8470 Individually Owned & Operated - IN AND OUT IN 30 MINUTES IN MOST CASES OPEN DAILY AND SAT.8-6 PM Copyright @ 1985 Meineke Coaches, players ready for Super Bowl showdown SAN FRANCISCO (AP) - As the preparations ended and all but one player was pronounced fit, Miami Coach Don Shula and San Francisco Coach Bill Walsh predicted Friday their showdown today in Super Bowl XIX should be just what the fans have been waiting for - a wide-open, high- scoring game. Both Shula, in his record sixth Super Bowl, and Walsh, in his second, shied away from predicting who would win. But both said it will be exciting, an old- fashioned shootout between the Dolphin's Dan Marino and the 49ers' Joe Montana. " I DON'T spend a lot of time trying to predict games," Shula said. "Both offenses are so excellent you've got to think that a lot of points are going to be scored." Walsh agreed, primarily because Marino, who shattered NFL records with 5,084 passing yards and 48 touch- down passes, can produce points so quickly. "That one element is so dynamic, you're just obsessed with trying to stop it," Walsh said of Marino's long-range passing to the twin Marks, Duper and Clayton. We keep looking for a bad game somewhere in the films and we can't find it. We're looking for an off day and it isn't there. You hope maybe Sunday will be it." Shula discounted any concern about Marino's dizzy spell before Thursday's practice and said his second-year quar- terback was ready to try and pass the 49ers dizzy today. Before practice he complained of some light-headedness and some diz- ziness," Shula said. "It boiled down to the fact he had taken an anti-inflam- matory pill early in the morning and didn't have any breakfast or lunch." Photography Classes Rental Darkroom F-STOP 663-7867 WORLD PROBLEMS AND U.S. FOREIGN POLICY lunch discussions 12 noon at INTERNATIONAL CENTER 603 E. Madison Street Tuesday, January 22 "U.S. and Southeast Asia, Phillipines and Indochina" Speaker: DR. GARY HAWLES Tuesday, January 29 "Palestinians and a Middle East Settlement" Speaker: STEPHEN FRANKLIN U. of M. Journalist in Residence; Reporter, Detroit Free Press co-sponsored by lunch prepared by ECUMENICAL CHURCH WOMEN UNITED CAMPUS CENTER IN ANN ARBOR International Center Lunch $1.00 SCORES Ohio State 86, Indiana 84 Illinois 55, Northwestern 43 Purdue 72, Wisconsin 68 Minnesota 81, Michigan State 75 Georgetown 65, Pittsburgh 53 St. John's 66, Boston College 59 Memphis State 69, Louisville 66 Oklahoma 87, Kansas 76 SMU 74, Texas Christian 70 vilanova 86, Seton Hall 74 Duke 93, North Carolina 77 Florida 67, Kentucky 55 MICHIGAN STUDENT ASSEMBLY NEEDS YOU! Positions are now available on the following Regental and University Committees: University Budget Priorities Committee Research Policies Committee (1 grad student) ww.rw ww ' . _ _ mw 1I