18A - The Michigan Daily - Thursday, October 23, 1997 Cleveland truimphs to lock series at two CLEVELAND (AP) - This World Series game had all the elements: snow, wind, record cold and another big night by Sandy Alomar. On an evening when flurries fell at Jacobs Field, the only thing that accumulated were runs by the Indians. Manny Ramirez and Matt Williams homered as Cleveland beat the Florida Marlins 10-3, evening the Series at two wins each. Alomar had three of the Indians' 15 hits and drove in three runs, ensuring the Series will return to Miami this weekend. It will surely be warmer at Pro Player Stadium than in Cleveland. The 38 degrees at the start made it the coldest since World Series tempera- tures have been recorded since 1975, and snow fell for the first time in the Fall Classic since Game I in 1979 at Baltimore. The weather, though, had little impact on this game. Instead, the Indians took a 6-0 lead after three innings and were never threatened. Jaret Wright outpitched Tony Saunders in a matchup of rookie starters as the Indians won before a crowd of 44,877. Game 5 will be tonight. Orel Hershiser will start for the Indians against rookie Livan Hernandez in a rematch of Game 1, won by Florida. Despite all the Indians' hits, Marquis Grissom had none. He went 0-for-4 and ended his 15-game hitting streak, two short of the Series record held by Flank Bauer. Wright, 21, improved to 3-0 in the postseason. He gave up three runs and five hits in six innings and is now 9-0 when pitching after an Indians' loss - not bad for someone who started the year in Double-A.f The unusual weather was the focus before the game. The Indians took batting practice in snow showers as the stadium sound system played "Winter Wonderland" and "Jingle Bell Rock" among others. The snow did not seem to affect play, howev- er. It was nothing like Game 3, when the blustery conditions contributed to 17 walks and six errors in Florida's wacky 14-11 victory. The Indians scored in the first inning for the fourth straight game. Saunders struck out leadoff batter Bip Roberts, but it was all downhill for the young lefty after that. Omar Vizquel singled and Ramirez followed by going the opposite way for his fourth home run of the postseason, a drive into the right-field stands. The crowd got another chance to let loose moments later when Matt Williams singled with two outs and scored on Alomar's double, making a neat hook slide to avoid catcher Charles Johnson's swipe tag. Florida, which committed half of the six errors in Tuesday night's game, made two wild throws in a three-run third that finished Saunders. Ramirez drew a leadoff wxalk and moxed up on Saunders' poor pickoff attempt. David Justice got an infield single that shortstop Edgar Renteria threw away when his back foot slipped on the dirt, and Alomar added an R1I single. Rookie Antonio Alfonseca relieved with the bases loaded and no outs. Tony Fernandez hit an RBI single that made it 6-0, but Alfonseca retired the next three batters without any more damage. Alfonseca, who replaced injured Alex Fernandez on Florida's roster for the Series, pitched three scoreless innings. Jim Eisenreich, whose home run began Florida's rally from a 7-3 deficit in Game 3, hit an RBI single in the fourth that made it 6-1. Only a nice stop in the hole by Vizquel, who won his fifth Gold Glove at shortstop earlier in the day, prevented the Marlins from getting more. Moises Alou showed no ill effects from a flu bug when he hit a two-run homer in the sixth as Florida closed to 6-3. It was his second home run of the Series. Eisenreich followed with a single and, as the fans began to grow anxious, the Indians caught a break when Johnson hit a line drive that first baseman Jim Thome caught. Eisenreich was trapped off the bag, and he and Thome did a lit- tle dance before the tag was applied to complete an inning-ending double play. The Indians added a run in the sixth on a bases- loaded grounder by Alomar off Ed Vosberg. S io AP PHOTO? Cleveland evened the World Series at two games apiece last night in the first Series game in the snow since 1979. COTSONIKA Continued from Page 14A talk to their employees and servants about the Michigan State experience. The results have since been passed on to welfare officials, but some have been made public. Michigan alum: "What did you learn in East Lansing?" Spartan One: "Uhhhh. Where?" Michigan alum: "The place with the jungle gym. Michigan State." Spartan Two: "Oh, yeah. It was pretty cool. There was, like, a lot of root beer and chicks and stuff." Spartan One: "We, like, learned that Michigan sucks, and Michigan State rocks. And, uhhhh, like, the Wolver- weiners are impressing us and stuff." Spartan Two: "Hey, Butt-head. You mean oppressing us." Spartan One: "Whoa, yeah. You're, like, pretty smart." Spartan Two: "Yeah, I know. THE BIG GAmE(s) Who: Michigan vs. Michigan State What: Michigan's seventh game of the Gimme some nachos." Interviewers also inquired about two odd occurrences on the Michigan State campus. The first was the guarding of Sparty, the statue many in Fast Lansing feel is ready to take off for Ann Arbor at any moment. Spartan One: "We're, like, gonna sit here all night and stuff. We can't let it get away, go to Ann Arbor, and be cool. It might score or something." The second issue raised was of the bonfires that tend to follow important victories by the Spartans. Would a vic- tory over Michigan ignite the state? Spartan Two: "Yeeeeah! Fire! Fire! Fire! I am the Great Spart-holio! Are you Wolverines? Fire! Fire! Fire!" Ahhh. It's nice to see some Spartans will be prepared for the working world. Burger King flamebroils its burgers. - Nicholas J. Cosonika canr reached via e-mail at cotsonik@umich.ed. season; Michigan State's only game of the season. Where: Spartan Stadium, East Lansing. When: 12:30 p.m. Saturday Notable: ESPN's GameDay will broadcast live from just outside the'stadium starting at 11:30 a.m. on the morning of the game. Of other Interest: Rumor from East Lansing has it that GameDay's morning coverage may air footage from Friday night's annual touch football game between The Michigan Daily and The State News. Tickets: For Friday's game: free. For Saturday's game: Good luck. STATE NEWS Continued from Page 14A it. Here's a clue Brian - though your head may be cloudy from lingering smoke of the Hash Bash - use a ham- mer the next time, it hurts less. But that's enough tarnishing of the grand University of Michigan, lest we forget to mention that little Ford Explorer incident on M-14. All of this is water under the bridge, say Michigan fans, it's in the past. They say there is a new man in charge of things - athletic director Tom Goss. Then just for the new man is a list of things to do around that "campus" you call home. Of course, you can't tell -the difference between the school and Ann Arbor. 1. Improve that pile of cockroach- infested bricks you call Yost Ice Arena. The 1800s motif went out a long time ago. 2. Put a little life in the football sta- dium maybe, and while you're at it make a little room for some people. Most people aren't two inches wide. 3. Improve the football team. ForO school that prides itself on being the best nationally, this is just a reminder that the Wolverine gridders haven't won a national title since 1948. One final joke before I leave to go paint myself Green and White. A doctor somewhere in a large city invents a machine that can raise peo- ples' IQ's. Yet, there is this one fellow with an IQ of 220 who comes into his office one day and asks if the machin will lower IQ's. The doctor isn't sure, but he will try. The doc then hooks up the man and his IQ starts going down. A moment later, the doctor receives a phone call. He leaves to answer it and forgets about the man on the machine. He comes back later and the machine reads the man's IQ as 20. The doctor quickly stops the machine and asks the man if he can say anything. The man looks up with a blank star and says, "Go Blue." - Marc Vieau is sports editor of The State News. e 0s n m a n I U U U -i~ - - -