10 - The Michigan Daily - Wednesday, October 22, 1997 Marlins top Indians 14-11, take 2-1 lead CLEVELAND (AP) - Frozen fish? Hah! The Florida Marlins came alive when the Cleveland Indians lost their cool, breaking a tie by scoring seven runs on a World Series record-tying three errors in the ninth inning to win 14-1l last night for a 2-1 edge. Gary Sheffield hit one of Florida's three homers and drove in five runs in the second highest-scoring game in Series history, behind the 1993 epic in which Toronto outlasted Philadelphia 15-14. The Indians, meanwhile, played like fish out of water in blowing a 7- 3 lead they took into the sixth inning. They rallied to make it close with four runs in the bottom of the ninth of Robb Nen. Whether the weather - a blustery 49 degrees at gametime and a wind chill factor of 29 -- was the only rea- son the score looked like an NFL final was uncertain. Certainly, it con- tributed to 17 walks and six errors as pitchers and fielders struggled to get a grip. But it was unlucky throw by center fielder Marquis Grissom that enabled the Marlins to break a 7-all tie in the ninth. Game 4 will be Wednesday night with Tony Saunders of Florida facing Jaret Wright in a matchup of rookies. Bobby Bonilla, whose two errors gave Cleveland its lead, drew a lead- off walk from Eric Plunk to start the ninth. Darren Daulton followed with a single and Bonilla, hustling on his injured left hamstring, headed to third. Grissom made an accurate throw, but it nicked Bonilla in the right shoulder and deflected into a third-base camera bay, allowing a run to score. With one out, pinch-hitter Cliff Floyd was intentionally walked. Plunk made a pickoff throw that first baseman Jim Thome mishandled for an error that made it 9-7, and second baseman Tony Fernandez misplayed Craig Counsell's grounder to enable another run to score. Sheffield and Bonilla capped the burst with two-run singles. The Indians tied the Series record of three errors set by Los Angeles in 1966, while the Marlins matched the mark of the 1936 New York Yankees for the biggest ninth inning in Series play. Dennis Cook was the winning pitcher. Plunk took the loss, though relievers Alvin Morman and Jose Mesa also did not far& well in the ninth. The Indians scored four runs in the ninth on a bases loaded sacrifice tly by Fernandez, an RBI-single by Grissom and a two-run double by Bip Roberts. The weather may be much worse for Game 4 with the forecast calling for temperatures in the mid-30s but no snow. No matter, it should easily be the coldest Series game in more than 20 years. AP PHOTO Florida's Darren Daulton hit a homer that helped the Marlins top Cleveland, 1411, in game three of the World Series last night. The win gives the Marlins a 2-1 lead. Loft Title IX reaches key 0 GRADUATION -itw w w Sunf ire $400 Bucks of Incentive* -P- Hot Looks Great Performance Land Big Job Raises Summer Home Some Other Car Zero Incentive Drives Like a Shoebox Looks Like a Shoebox Interview After Interview I r moment 0 Minnesota Daily (U-WIRE) MINNEAPOLIS - As Title IX nears the end of its silver anniversary celebration of 1997, advo- cate Donna Lopiano sees women's ath- letics at a pivotal point in history. "Finally, we have reached a critical mass of female athletes" Lopiano said. "We have enough women out there wh have received the benefits of Title IX t produce a pool of professional athletes." Monday night at the Cowles Auditorium in the Hubert H. Humphrey Institute, Lopiano, executive director of the Women's Sports Foundation, spoke about Title IX -- the federal law man- dating equality for men's and women's sports programs. She noted what she sees as a 180- degree cultural turnaround in America society brought about by the passage o Title IX in 1972. "The nature of the American woman has changed from sex object, twiggy, decorative object, to an individual who has learned to use her body as a power- ful tool to conduct meaningful activity," Lopiano said. Several changes have occurred as a result of this single federal law. In 1970 only one out of 27 girls participated in athletics. Today that number hae increased to one out of every three. Increased participation by women has led to rapid economic growth in the sports industry. The men's athletic mar- ket has always topped industry sales in the past, but the gap is decreasing. Recently, the women's sporting goods market has taken off. "Women, as consumers, are becom- ing a huge powerhouse," Lopiano said "It's because women are geneticall# superior to men when it comes to shop- ping," she added jokingly. Recognizing the sexist tone of her statement, Lopiano went on to prove it. "Eighty percent of all consumer pur- chases are decided on by females," Lopiano said. "The female market has reached this number within the past three years." The growth of all aspects of women's athletics have been monument throughout the last 25 years. When Titl IX was passed in 1972, only 31,000 women participated in college sports. Today, that number has risen to more than 100,000. The trend of women com- peting in athletics is growing. "We're going to see continued pres- sure on schools to meet their obligations under Title IX," Lopiano said. "This means more gender equity lawsuits by women in colleges and high schools" Lopiano said she believes equal opportunity to be more feasible and more important than complete finan- cial equality in men's and women's ath- letics. "I don't think that the measure needs to be equal financially, it needs to be equal from an opportunity standpoint," Lopiano said. "Different schools are always going to have different sports that generate revenue." At Division I colleges and universi- ties, football usually claims the highest budget and also usually collects the greatest revenue. Lopiano said she hopes football continues its progress but added that all sports would benefit from efficien- cy. "Football needs to take a hard look at efficiency," Lopiano said. "It needs to get lean and mean -- right now it's juj fat and squat." Even with the gains brought about in women's athletics by Title IX, inequali- ties remain. In the last five years, Lopiano said, women's athletic budgets have increased by 89 percent, while men's budgets have increased by 139 Working Two Jobs Living Back With Parents rV Nobel Prizes Join Bowling Team a