4 Page 8 - The Michigan Daily - Saturday, January 19, 1985 Icers no problem for Engineers, 5-2 By TOM KEANEY Special to the Daily TROY, N.Y. - Rah, rah calculators, let's extrapolate! Despite a tremendous outing by senior goaltender Mark Chiamp, 5,177 of the brightest hockey fans you'll ever meet went home happy, as the Ren- sselaer Polytechnic Institute (RPI) Engineers came away with a 5-2 victory last night. ALL-AMERICAN left wing John Car- ter scored a hat trick and linemate Adam Oates had three assists in leading the 47-shot Engineer attack. "He (Oates) does most of the work," said Chiamp. "The other guys hang out and cherry-pick at the blue line." As effective as that line was, however, it was Michigan that set the pace for most of the first period, with a clear edge in checking and puck con- trol. "WE HAD great scoring chances," said head coach Red lerenson. "We could have had four more goals in the first period." Brad Jones opened the scoring for Michigan at 12:42. Paul Kobylarz provided a slick feed to Jones waiting at the right post. The sophomore brought it out front, and pushed it through the short side, leaving goalie Darren Puppa wearing the clown suit. "I thought we were tentative early," said RPI head coach Mike Addesa. "They pinned us under early, but we got off the floor and came back." THE ENGINEERS came back with a power play goal just 2:57 later. Defen- seman Tim Friday blasted a slapshot past Mark Chiamp's glove hand. RPI took control in the second period as Wolverine penalties stifled any momentum built up in the first stanza. "They seemed to take the play away from us," said Chiamp. THE ENGINEERS hit paydirt at 10:14 on Carter's first goal, a picture perfect breakaway shot past Chiamp's right side. Just 57 seconds later left wing Craig Nienhuis provided an instant replay for ecstatic Engineer crowd, with an iden- tical breakaway goal. Despite those scores however, it was Chiamp who kept the second period from getting out of hand. TIME after time, the senior came up with get-for-real saves on sure goals. Chiamp continued his stellar play throughout the first half of the third period, but RPI finally found a hole at 13:37. Carter blasted a slapshot through Chiamp's legs for his second goal of the night. The Engineers capped their scoring at 16:07 on still another breakaway by Carter,completing the hat trick. It was Carter's twenty-fifth goal of the season. LEFT WING Bruce Macnab notched Michigan's second goal at 18:33. Mac- nab waited on a Paul Rossi pass at the right post and blew it by Puppa. But just as the crowd's chant, "It just doesn't matter!" indicated, the game was already well in hand. "Overall, I think we played better than the score indicated," said Beren- son. "That Puppa is a great goalie." Despite the loss, the Wolverines showed many positive signs last night. Chiamp's play was the most obvious, but the line of Jones, Kobylarz, and Tom Stiles was a force all night for Michigan, displaying exceptional passing and aggressive play. "That line was very good offen- sively," said Berenson, "but we had trouble finishing the plays." "The kids really underestimated this team," said Addesa. "I give them (Michigan) a lot of credit. Berenson is hoping for a full team ef- fort tonight. "All four lines have to con- tribute," said Chiamp. "We've got to hit them more (tonight)." Revenge of t FIRST PERIOD Scoring: 1. M-Jones (Kobylarz, Stiles) 12:41; 1. RPI-Friday (ates, Dipronio) 15:39. Penalties: M-Spring (interference) :34; RPI- Dipronio (tripping) 11:54; M-Downing (boarding) 14:01. SECOND PERIOD Scoring: 2. RPI-Carter (Oates, Friday) 10:14; 3. RPI-Nienhuis (Jaoris, Langevin) 11:11. Penalities: M-Kobylarz (roughing) 5:38; M-Stiies (roughing) 5:38; RPI-Servinis (roughing) 5:38; RPI- Hammond (roughing) 5:38; M-Spring (slashing) 9:12; RPI-Hernberg (high sticking) 9:12; RPI- Hammond (tripping) 12:38; M-Seychel (hitting after whistle) 12:38; RPI-Langevin (high sticking) 13:27; RPI-Hammond (slashing, unsportsmanlike conduct) 18:00. nerds THIRD PERIOD Scoring: 4. RPI-Carter (unassisted) 13:37; 5. RPI- Carter (Sadeghpouri, Oates) 16:07; 2. Macnab (Norton, Rossi) 18:33. Penalties: M-Kobylarz (hooking) 7:07; M-Jones (slashing) 17:05; RPI-Dark (slashing) 17:05; RPI- Friday (hitting after whistle) 17:24. Saves: M-Chiamp 42; RPI-Puppa 35. Attendance: 5177. I SCORING BY PERIODS 1 2 MICHIGAN ......................1 0 RPI .................................1 2 3 1 2 T 2 5 Jones ...continues hot streak Women tracksters impressive in Relays The annual Michigan Relays started the Wolverine women's indoor track team season last night at the Track and Ten- nis Building. Michigan performed well without captain Joyce Wilson who was sidelined with tendonitis. THE WOLVERINES finished first in the 4 X 800 relay with a time of 8:57.93, in the middle distance relay (4:22.7), in the distance medley relay (11:48.58), and first in the second mile relay (4:02.55). Michigan's Angie Hafner and Dawn McGinnis finished first and second respectively, in the high jump with leaps of 5'9" and 5'7". Sue Frederick-Foster, who used to run for Michigan, won the three-mile run with a time of 16:02.72. Foster represented the Nike Track Club in last night's relays. Eastern Michigan, Hillsdale College, Kent State, Macomb Community College, Toledo, Siena Heights, and Western Michigan participated in the relays. The Woverines next meet is the Can Am Classic, January 26 at Windsor, On- tario. Pacers run past Celts INDIANAPOLIS (AP) - Indiana's Herb Williams scored 27 points last night and teammate Jerry Sichting hit three key free throws in the final half- minute of play, sealing the Pacers' 91- 86 victory over the Boston Celtics. There were eight ties in the final period, the last at 86-86 when Sichting's first basket of the game started a seven-point streak that carried the Pacers to the victory, ending Boston's seven-game winning string. TWO FREE throws by Williams put Indiana on top to stay, then Sichting hit one of two free throws after Dennis Johnson fouled out. Larry Bird, who led Boston with 25 points, was called for traveling with 24 seconds to go, and Sichting hit two more free throws four seconds later. Bird got 15 of his 25 in the second quarter as the Celtics rallied from nine points down. The Pacers, who also blew a 14-point second-quarter lead against the Celtics the last time they played, at Boston, took a 25-21 lead after the first period as Bird was held scoreless. 4 4 4 Daily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH Michigan high jumper Angie Hafner clears 5'9" to win the event in last night's Michigan Relays. Daily Photo by STU WEIDENBACH A Michigan distance runner pulls ahead last night at the Michigan Relays. SPOR TS OF THE DAILY: Small doses won't jail Moses LOS ANGELES (AP) - Edwin Moses was charged yesterday with soliciting a female police officer for prostitution, but his agent said the two- time Olympic gold medalist was con- fident he'd-be cleared at trial. Deputy City Attorney Mike Wilkinson made the announcement, saying that Moses would be arraigned Jan. 29 on the misdemeanor charge, which carries a maximum penalty of six mon- ths in jail or a $1,000 fine or both. "IT'S FAIR to say first-time offen- ders are rarely given jail time," Wilkinson said. He said it was decided that Moses wouldn't be charged with possessing marijuana because the amount that was recovered in the glove compar- tment of his car was very small. "It was slighty less than the amount to make one joint or marijuana cigarette," Wilkinson said. Moses is anxious to proceed to trial, and is confident he will be cleared, said his agent, Gordon Baskin. "His lawyers will be in court Tuesday morning to try and secure the earlies date possible... Edwin had done nothing wrong and the quicker that people see a jury decide this, the quicker he'll be able to get back to training," Baskin said. "Edwin took a series of lie-detector tests the past few days and they con- firm what he's been saying all along. Edwin's character has been evident to everybody the last few years, and it's not changed in the past week." Sundberg, Slaught swappe MILWAUKEE (AP) - The Milwaukee Brewers sent catcher Jim Sundberg to the Kansas City Royals yesterday and acquired two pitchers in a six-player trade that involved four clubs. As part of the deal, the Royals sent catcher Don Slaught to the Texas Rangers. MILWAUKEE general manager Harry Dalton said the Brewers will get pitchers Danny Darwin and Tim Leary and a minor leauge player to be named later from the Rangers. With Sundberg going to Kansas City and the Royals sending Slaught, who hit .264 last year, to Texas, the Rangers sent Darwin and the minor league player to be named later to Milwaukee. The Rangers also sent pitcher Frank Wills to Tidewater, the New York Mets' Triple A club in the International League, and the Mets in turn sent Leary to Milwaukee's Triple A club at t Vancouver in Pacific Coast League. LEARY will be invited to the Milwaukee spring training camp as a non-roster player, Dalton said. Dar- win, 29, was 8-12 and had a 3.94 ERA in 35 games with Texas last year. He has a career record of 53-50 and a 3.57 ERA in 217 games. His best year was 1980 when he went 13-4 with a 2.62 ERA and eight saves. Leary, 26, was 3-3 last year with a 4.02 era in 20 games with the Mets. He also d pitched in 10 games at Tidewater, going 4-4 with a 4.05 ERA. BC kicks off with BYU BOSTON (AP) - Although the of- ficial announcement won't be made un- til Feb. 5, Cotton Bowl winner Boston College is set to play national champion Brigham Young in the Kickoff Classic, according to a report yesterday. Boston College Coach Jack Bicknell, while saying he couldn't say anything about the WCVB-TV, Boston, report, allowed that: "I'm really looking for- ward to it...I'm planning on teeing up." THE GAME will be at the Meadowlands in East Rutherford, N.J., Thursday Aug. 29. The game could spotlight a candidate for next year's Heisman honors, BYU quarterback Robbie Bosco. j 'I 4d 9. OXFORD HOUSING - OPEN HOUSE SATURDAY, JANUARY 19th 2 P.M. Consider renting for Fall '85 CO-OP's Apartments and Suites, Language Houses Convenience of a University lease ko 4 Steve Stoy IM SCORES Tigers sign Willie Corner of South U. and Oxford Rd. 763-3480 I I RESIDENCE HALL 'A' Abens Players 58, Frost Running Ardvarks 46 Goebtrotters 38, MMAC 27 Gomberg Red A 67, Rumsey Running Rebels 56 Wenley Warriors 32, Ghostbusters 29 Theos Huber won-forfeit by Fletcher Pine Brothers 47, P/F Flyers 28 FRATERNITY 'B' Beta Theta Pi25, Sigma Phi 24 sigma Alpha Mu 38, Phi Gamma Delta 'C' 32 DETROIT(AP)-Ace relief pitcher Willie Hernandez, the American League's Most Valuable Player and Cy Young Award winner in 1984. has extension worth $4.65 million. Hernandez, 30, as was his right under the Basic Players Agreement, asked the Tigers soon after their World Series