I I Ulbe A~idtiguu 1dlg Watch the Wolverines, dress like them The Michigan hockey team will hold its annual equipment sale tomorrow morning at 10 o'clock at Cliff Keen Arena. Everything from practice jerseys, pads and travel gear will be available at reduced prices to the public. All of the equipment was used by the players and coaches during the Wolverines' 1996 national championship season. The sale will run until 1 p.m. Friday April 12, 1996 9 4 ! - F--; .. u,: Slid ng sa ,- 4 4~ y A.tay K"d o Rd k t ca ce'.i V a g s n s o d ov r i t t e ~r so b e ga e9irt butgm-rmth akn o . "' Mihia'sSraGifieuesTleocace ere rgo an adds aoter unto te olvterines t TDa gelytSdpowrtsh fWriterh enfohulpies aiting forat toku rIh jut aoftern, o Mn ics hign shortsop Kathryn Gasndefenstraedw ceimeterWe ainthpinkg.heblbeasw ee the ofield all to peraelysittemoetmo argeson tt fu.Anhni iw picked it up.adGesnwssadn o softball gaeafrt Th N. 0 oveins 8- igTe, 110ovral) Tleo oah hry Sraglbeiein hebal a swet Tleo, ining7- an 1-0 t Aumi Fel. rlld ful thoouhl dicsedh atrihhm bt gam from th paknglt A but? We ererigh inthegam untl w go th ba The~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ gaewste5ttw:ntefut.wt.e mt mpr'al n ta oku ih out of it Srange on frstwhe Glaso blope a unt fe fet dwn aid "W din't ickup he all beaus wewer the~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ firs baelnN iealwiigfri og ol n hni iw ikdi p Mic hig women's trck splits its quad to compete in 2 events Wolverines running in the Dogwood Relays and the Miami Invitational By Kim Hart tance and distance runners," Michi- focus more and it will make us have a Daily Sports Writer gan coach James Henry said before really great race. This should be a One could say watching a track Tuesday's practice. really good competition for all of us, meet is like poetry in motion, but who Michigan senior distance runner and personally I am trying to get a °wuld have thought the words of Courtney Babcock said she was very qualifying time." Shakespeare would apply? optimistic going into Thursday's race. The seven participants ran last night * "Parting is such sweet sorrow," but "There are only about seven of us in the second day of events. In the r the Michigan women's track and going to Tennessee, and people are 3,000-meter race, Michigan's field team, it could bring sweet re- geared to run really well," Babcock Courtney Babcock won with a time of wards. said. "With a small group like this, we See TRACK, Page 11 The Wolverines split up to partici- pate in two different competitions be- T ing held this weekend. 'M' baseball hasno mercy on Detroit Hot Wolverine hitters vanquish Titans, 22-12 By Jim Rose Daily Sports Writer It's not often that you score 12 runs in a baseball game. It's even less often that you score 12 runs in a baseball game - and lose by double-digits. That's what happened to Detroit, though, in yesterday's nonconference game with Michigan. Michigan made a mockery ofthe Titans, cruising to a 22-12 win at the Campbell Complex in Detroit. The game, originally scheduled for nine innings, was called when the Wolverines held a 10-run lead after the seventh. Michigan coach Geoff Zahn probably would've played a lot of people regardless. Even if his Wolverines hadn't scored 11 runs in the first inning. Yes, 11. Michigan (9-3 Big Ten, 14-16 overall) has won 13 of its last 16 games. Detroit fell to 14-10. The Wolverines were able to use the blowout to play 16 Next different players, including four pitchers. In the last 16 game innings Michigan has played, Who: Michigan 13 pitchers have seen action. vs. Northwestern Senior pitcher Bryan Gorak Where: Evanston started on the mound for De- When: Saturday troit, but he was sent to the and Sunday showers after retiring just one What: Four-game batter. He got the Wolver- series ines' leadoff man, Mike Records: Cervenak, to ground to short Michigan is 9-3 to start the game. But that in the Big Ten. was the extent of his success. Northwestern is The Wolverines loaded the 5- bases on a pair of singles and a pair of walks, and then Gorak completely folded. The senior forced in three runs by hitting two batters and walking another. The final book on Gorak: one-third of an inning pitched, three walks, two hit-batsmen, seven earned runs and a sigh of relief when he finally got taken out of the game. His replacement, Dean Rovinelli, didn't fare any better. An error scored a run but kept the bases full, until Cervenak cleared them with a three-run double. Three batters later, Michigan's Kelly Dransfeldt collected his second hit of the inning, blasting a three-run homer - his sixth - off the scoreboard in centerfield. In the first inning, Dransfeldt was 2-for-2 with a homer, a single, two runs and three RBI. To their credit, the Titans didn't exactly lie down and quit. They roughed up Michigan starter Luke Bonner for four first-inning runs. The freshman had control trouble, walking four and hitting two in three innings. He did manage to pick up his first collegiate win, however. Mike Hribernik, Chris Hesse and Mario Garza Jr. also saw action on the mound for the Wolverines. When it was all said and done, Michigan's of- fense reigned supreme. Dransfeldt and Kirk Beerman had three hits apiece, and the Besco twins combined to go 3-for-7 with five runs and six RBI. Bobby Scales and Jason Alcaraz each reached base five times, and neither one would make the press release. TheWolverines travel to Evanston this weekend for a four-game series with Northwestern. The Wildcats are 5-3 in the Big Ten and are led by junior leftfielder Mike Stritch, who is hittinge380 with eight round-trippers. Stritch isjust one member of a potent Northwest- ern offense, though. Eleven Wildcats are above .300 for the season - six of them .345 or better. Michigan will need a strong weekend to stay ahead of the rest ofthe league. Illinois is just a half- game back at 8-3, and Penn State is 7-4. WARREN ZINN/Daily otal in yesterday's romps of the Rockets. doubleheader That turned the game." Two outs later, a wild pitch by Rockets pitcher Desiree Abrego (8-10) moved the runners to second and third. Traci Conrad singled Smith home and advanced to sec- ond on the cut-off throw. With first-base open, two runners on and two out, some managers would have elected to give one of the Wolver- ines' best hitters, Sara Griffin, a free pass to first to set up a force play at any base. But Toledo elected to pitch to Griffin, who proceeded to rip a double to center field, driving in two runs. The Wolverines notched two more runs in the fifth when Conrad grounded to second with the bases loaded See TOLEDO, Page 11 'Tau 3&ta JA1 A4 ~iiarr(1Snut Tau Beta Pi, the National Engineering Honor Society, was founded to mark in a fitting manner those who have conferred honor upon their Alma Mater by distinguished scholar- ship and exemplary character as students in engineering, or by their attainments as alumni in the field of engineering, and to foster a spirit of liberal culture in engineering colleges. We, the officers and faculty advisors of the Michigan Gamma Chapter of Tau Beta Pi, wish to congratulate the following people who have achieved our high standards and have success- fully completed the initiation rituals, thereby becoming active members of Tau Beta Pi: Keith Acker Greg Benz John Cacace Daniel Cheong Mohammed Hasanuzzaman Dana Heuschele Lawrence Hollier John McLaren Parthiv Mehta Christine Miller Nicolas Minbiole Marcus Sprow David Stockoski Rahul Tendulkar Randall Urbance i 11