10- The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, April 6, 1999 N.H. senator must sing Maine song in D.C.. PORTLAND, Maine (AP) - A cross-country trip was well worth- while for the Maine Black Bears. The pep band played and about 100 fans cheered and tossed confetti Sunday night as the Maine hockey team returned from winning its sec- ond NCAA Championship this decade. Gov. Angus King embraced Coach Shawn Walsh as the weary team dis- embarked from a plane at the Portland International Jetport after traveling back from Anaheim, Calif. "It was an unbelievable weekend," said goalie Alfie Michaud, who turned away 46 shots during the Black Bears' 3-2 overtime victory over New Hampshire in the champi- onship game. The game carried ramifications beyond the realm of sports and into the arena of politics. Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire was on the losing side of a bet with Maine Sen. Susan Collins. Because the Wildcats lost, he must sing the Maine fight song for the Maine State Society in Washington. Fans were still basking after the win over the archrival Wildcats on Saturday night, secured on Marcus Gustafsson's rebound goal. "You couldn't ask for a better game. You couldn't write a better story. It was the perfect ending," said Terry Tucker, who traveled from Dayton, Ohio to greet the team. Mathy Matturro, a Maine student, said she was in tears when the Black Bears won. "When the puck went through the goal, I was bawling. "Can you say, 'hyperventilating?'" said Matturro, who is a volunteer statistician for the team. The Black Bears' triumphant return followed postgame celebra- tions that were marred by rowdiness on the Maine campus. Students knocked down the goal- posts at the football field and lit a bonfire on the mall in the center of campus. They tossed in several park bench- es, door frames and screens. About 100 students were involved - a far cry from the chaos in East Lansing after the Spartans lost to Duke in the NCAA men's basketball Final Four. "It's unclear to me how, but some- how a snowmobile got put into (the fire), too," said Maine spokesman Joe Carr. There were no arrests on campus. Carr said that most of the 9,500 stu- dents celebrated in an orderly fash- ion. Students and fans were glued to their television sets across the state Saturday evening as Maine and New Hampshire went into overtime. "I was hoping it would be a blowout, and we wouldn't have to put up with the tension," senior Ryan Eslinger said Saturday night. "You could just feel the tension in the room." The last time Maine won the NCAA Championship was in 1993. The Bears lost to Boston University in the final in 1995 and were then barred from tournament play for two years for NCAA viola- tions that resulted in Walsh being suspended. The Bears were sixth in Hockey East last season before returning to championship form. "This one shows we're back," said Chris White, director of the 24-mem- ber pep band. New Hampshire coach Dick Umile* had no complaint with his players' effort. "It was a great college hockey game," he said. "These were two teams that deserved to be here. Unfortunately, they just got one more goal than we did." Maine goalie Alfie Michaud, hon- ored as the outstanding player of the Final Four, stopped 46 shots, and New Hampshire's Ty Conklin stopped 36, with each goalie coming up with spectacular saves. "There was great goaltending on both sides," Umile said. Added Walsh: "Both of them are terrific goalies. I told Ty after the game that he'd be back in a game like this." Thanks to Steve Karlya and the rest of the Maine hockey team, Sen. Judd Gregg of New Hampshire will be singing the Maine fight song in Washington, D.C. Boys of summer are back; Tigers win opener, 11-5 Former Northwestern QB put on probation ARLINGTON, Texas (AP) - Brian Moehler and the Detroit Tigers looked like defending divi- sion champions, not the de facto Texas Rangers. Juan Encarnacion homered on the game's first pitch and Moehler took a no-hit bid into the seventh inning yesterday as the Tigers beat Texas 11-5. Moehler, trying to join Bob Feller as the only pitchers to throw no-hitters on opening day, had his try broken up when Juan Gonzalez singled with one out in the seventh. By then, the Tigers already led the AL West champions 11-0. Bobby Higginson and Damion Easley both hit three-run homers in the third inning. Moehler (1-0) shut out Texas until Gonzalez lined a single to center and Rangers newcomer Rafael Palmeiro followed with an RBI double. It was a miserable day all around for the Rangers and their ace, Rick Helling (0-1). Their offense stalled until the last few innings, after bad pitching and bad defense put them in a big hole. Every Detroit hitter had a hit and an RBI by the sixth inning. Moehler, who didn't win on the road until June 30 last year, appeared to have no-hit stuff as he retired the side in order in the first, third, fourth and fifth innings. His only other jam was the second, when he walked Gonzalez and Palmeiro to open the inning but got out of it by getting Ivan Rodriguez to ground into a double play and Lee Stevens to pop out. Moehler, bidding for the earliest-ever no-hitter on the calendar and just the second on opening day, gave up just two hits and one run in seven innings. He walked two and struck out six. Helling, trying to prove his 20-7 record last year was no fluke, allowed four of the first five Tigers to reach base - and it got worse from there. He was shelled for seven runs, five earned in just three innings. Mike Morgan, competing with Esteban Loiaza for the fifth starter's job, made pro sports history when he took the mound in relief for Texas. The Rangers are his 11th team, breaking the major league record held by Bob L, Miller, Tommy Davis and Ken Brett. The NFL and NHL records are 10 and the NBA mark is nine. Masao Kida relieved Moehler to open the eighth and he, too, made a bit of history. Kida, who played 10 years in Japan, is the eighth Japanese player to play in the majors and the first born in Tokyo. His debut was unimpressive, though, as he allowed an RBI groundout by Rusty Greer and a two-run sin- gle by Gonzalez. The Tigers are on the road until April 12, when they will return home for the final opening day in historic Tiger Stadium. The team is scheduled to move into a newly-constructed ballpark in Detroit next spring. CHICAGO (AP) - Former Northwestern quarterback Brian Ballarini was placed on probation for three years yesterday for his role as a bookie in a sports gambling scandal that swept the campus. "It hurts me, but it's dragging my parents' good name through the mud," he told the court, stopping twice to compose himself. He pleaded guilty in August to trans- mitting gambling information over the telephone in the mid-1990s. Prosecutors said that once he was caught, Ballarini cooperated with their gambling investigation. They nevertheless recommended one month behind bars plus probation for the 25-year-old former player, saying examples were needed to deter others. Defense attorney Dan Webb told U.S. District Judge Ann Williams that other students had played more serious roles in the scandal, which reached into the school's football and basketball pro- grams. He said Ballarini had never gambled in his life until he got to Northwestern. Webb blamed the school for letting a serious campus gambling problem fester unchecked. Webb also noted that Ballarini wore a wire to help prosecutors crack down on Northwestern gambling and had twice appeared before a grand jury. "He made a serious mistake in judg ment, but he deserves one more chance in life," Webb said, in urging Williams not to jail Ballarini. Webb said Ballarini is "financially very astute and would like to get involved in the securities industry or something like that." But he said his client is broke- and having trouble getting a job. He said Ballarini still owes $15,000 from his, gambling days. Williams ordered Ballarini to submit to three months of electronic monitor- ing and get mental health counseling as part of his probation term. She also ordered him to continue with his NCAA program to discourage campus gambling and perform 200 hours of community service. Ballarini has lectured on campuses about the dangers of gambling and had made a videotape for the NCAA anti- gambling program. AP PHOTO Detroit pitcher Brian Moehier came eight outs away from the second-ever opening day no-hitter. While Patti Koperski had been accepted to almost every law school she applied to, she ultimately decided to attend the law school that offered her an Honors Scholarship for 50 percent of her tuition. FALCONS Continued from Page 9 header. Scales has also reached base safely in every game this season, posting a .450 on-base percentage. "He's always a threat to get on base," Hyde said. The Wolverines are a third of the way through perhaps their most important three-week stretch this season with top conference opponents three weekends in a row. "We have three big series right in a row with (Illinois), Ohio State and then Minnesota," Michigan coach Geoff Zahn said. "It's there for us. We just have to beat those teams." With the Ohio State series looming, Michigan knows that it can't look past Bowling Green, the winner of six of its last seven games. The Falcons are led by Bob Niemet, who leads the team in 10 hitting categories, including batting average (.390), extra-base hits (12), on-base percentage (.478), and RBI (22). "They are a pretty good club. They were down at Homestead when we were down there," Zahn said. "They are always a good, solid ball club, and that will be a good ball game." TENNIS TOGRN6P SPONSORED BY UM TENNIS CL Sat. 5 Sun. 10-11 POLMER FIELD MED SY Ind AL G Deserves a Reward The Thomas M. Cooley Law School has one of the most generous scholarship programs among law schools, offering awards ranging from 10 to 100 percent of tuition. Cooley is the fourth largest law school in the nation, and ranks well among Michigan's law schools for Michigan bar passage. Find out if you qualify for an Honors Scholar- ship by completing the following formula: I ; DANA LINNANE/Daily The Michigan baseball team hopes to bring its hot bats into its game with Bowling Green this afternoon. ENT HITTERS IE N T Continued from Page9 LUB After watching the hitting tape and noticing errors, Hutchins brought the team back to fundamentals at practice. Each player worked on the problems she had with her specific swing, preparing for any type of team the Wolverines may face. "I don't want the kids to get too high on the winning," Hutchins said. "Hitting can come and it can go." Now that the Big Ten season has starti M R-- ed, the Wolverines have an uphill path ahead of them. The Big Ten is composed of many dominant pitching staffs, and if the Wolverines get too confident, one of those pitchers could come along and - 16 cure them of their disease. x15+ Your undergraduate grade point average as evaluated by Law School Data Assembly Services (LSDAS) Your highest LSAT score within the last five years Your Admission Index l.m ..j..mmm am.. &. I . J . The Professional If your admission index is 195 or above you will receive an Honors Scholarship.* Make the e kg- I - - ~I1II 11 1 I