THE MICHIGAN DAILY . WED SDAY3.....# incinnati Again Tops Basketball Poll Annual Michigan Swim Gala Features Trampoline, Diving 4 1 By The Associated Press he unbeaten Cincinnati Bear- are getting their second d in their bid for a third ight national college basket- championship. 'amed No. 1 in the Associated ss poll for the tenth straight k Tuesday, Coach Ed Juckers msive specialists shattered idea that they might be grow- stale by trouncing Drake 71- he victory Monday night over ;eam that had carried the mps into overtime five days ier was the 18th in a row for Bearcats this season and the i straight without defeat over wo-year span. Ithough holding a strong edge second place Loyola of Chi- cago, also undefeated in 20 games Cinncinnati's Coach Jucker was keeping his fingers crossed.- "We've still got games left with Bradley, Witchita, North Texas State, Tulsa and St. Louis," Juck- er said. "In this Missouri Valley Conference anybody can beat you." The Bearcats have six games left on the regular schedule. After playing host to Bradley Saturday, they take on Wichita, North Texas State, Tulsa, Xavier of Ohio and St. Louis in that order.' Then they plunge into the NCAA tournament, where they may clash with high-scoring Loy- ola. The Chicago team also has six games left, with Wichita March 2 apparently the toughest. Cincinnati received 42 of the 44 first place votes from a special panel of sports writers and broad- casters in The Associated Press poll and amassed 430 points on 'M' Club There will be a meeting of the undergraduate 'M' Club to- night at 9:00 in room 3G of the Michigan Union. Guest speak- ers will be Roger Zatkoff and a member of the Detroit Lions. the basis of ten for a first place vote, nine for second, etc. Loyola continued to hold off Duke with 378 points compared with 303 for the Blue Devils from Durham, N.C., while Illinois, Ari- zona State, and Georgia Tech each preserved their excellent records and managed to maintain their fourth-fifth-sixth positions. This means that all of the top six from last week remain unchanged. Stanford, however, dropped three positions down to tenth from sev- enth after absorbing a 49-48 loss at the hands of Washington. Colorado climbed 'up on notch into the spot vacated by Stanford. Both the Wichita and Mississippi State teams moved up also. They now occupy the number eight and number nine spots, respectively. The top ten with first place votes in parentheses (records bas- ed on games through Saturday, Feb. 2): W L Pts. 17 0 438 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. Cincinnati (42) Loyola of Chicago (1) Duke (1) Illinois Arizona State Georgia Tech Colorado Mississippi State Wichita Stanford 20 15 12 16 16 12 14 14 12 0 2 2 2 1 3 4 5 4 378 393 291 204 203 125 98 66 46 By BILL BULLARD The 28th annual Michigan Swim Gala, an event billed as a show as well as a meet, gets underway at 8 p.m. Friday night. There will be two main features of the Gala. One consists of tram- polining, tower diving and comedy diving. The other is a dual meet between the freshmen and the varsity. Stars of the trampoline act are diving coach Dick Kimball and Ed Cole, former NCAA trampoline champion. This was the same pair that was such a success giving a halftime show at a recent basket- ball game. Divers Assist Kimball and Cole will be assist- ed on the trampoline and in the diving acts by the Wolverine div- ers. Freshmen Bruce Brown, John White, and Greg Smith will par- ticipate as well as veteran divers Others receiving votes, alpha- betically: Auburn, Bradley, Drake, Holy Cross, Iowa State, Kentucky, LaSalle, Miami, Fla., Niagara, North Carolina, Notre Dame, NYU, Ohio State, Oregon State, Provi- dence, Seattle, St. Joseph's, Pa., Texas, UCLA, Utah State, Wake Forest, West Virginia. SHOWDOWN COMING: Dual Sanction Renews Track and Field Uproar U AUTOMATIC SALE STARTS THURS. Here's How Our Sale Works Each and every day of the sale, it's choice of the house. On the first day of the sale over 300 sweaters will all bear the same price tag. Each day the sale continues the price of each sweater will drop $1 until all sweaters are off the shelves. SWEATER By The Associated Press A showdown may be developing between rival forces in U.S. track and field over the current hot spot in their prolonged dispute --dual sanctioning. At issue is official sanctions given by both the Amateur Ath- letic Union and the college-backed U.S. Track and Field Federation to the Los Angeles Times indoor meet Saturday night. USTFF sanction was sent to the meet director Tuesday in the wake of the Big Six Conference's refusal to allow its athletes to compete in the games unless it was sanctioned by the federation. Aftermath As an aftermath, Col. Don Hull, executive director of the AAU, said in Washington that the AAU would have to withdraw its sanc- tion of the Times meet if USTFF sanction was accepted. Hull's ex- planation was that under interna- tional rules which govern the AAU, there can be only one sanc- tioning body for open meets - those involving both student and non-student athletes. William Russell, president of the USTFF, said in 'Inglewood, Calif., that his group's sanctioning of the forthcoming meet was under the provisions ofthe MacArthur Plan agreed upon in New York Jan. 18-19. Two Agencies "Under the MacArthur Plan," said Russell, "two agencies were recognized to administer track and field-the USTFF for student athletes and the AAU for non- students. "The area of dispute now is in open meets . . . Our view is that both agencies should sanction these meets, theirs is that only they should sanction. "We feel it is our prerogative to sanction meets for student ath- letes-not stifling competion." Pete Cox, Paul Attar, Ed Booth- man, and John Candler. Also scheduled to demonstrate their diving abilities are two of Coach Rose Marie Dawson's divers from her national women's col- legiate swimming championship team. Micki King from Pontiac, Michigan is the women's national collegiate diving champion. June Mori from Toyko, Japan is a jun- ior NAAU Tower diving champion champion. Man-Sized Job The freshman swimmers have already beaten a combined junior- senior team and a promising soph- omore group. But it is question- able whether the freshmen can defeat all three classes combined as the varsity. Bob Farley is the leading fresh- man swimmer. He has been an NAAU finalist in two distance events. In the meet between the freshmen and the junior-seni-r team, he won the 200-yd. freestyle over varsity swimmers Frank Berry and John Dumont. Freshman teammate Richard Walls was sec- ond. Farley's time of 1:49.9 is under the current varsity record, Another First Farley also took a first in the 500-yd. freestyle. His time of 5:15.0 is within two seconds of the var- sity record. Walls won the 100-yd. freestyle in 49.2, the fastest time for that distance in an individual event recorded by a Michigan swimmer this season. He also anchored the freshman 400-yd. freestyle relay and was clocked at' 48.9 for his 4100 yards. The other members of the team were Bob Bond, Dave Roadhouse; and Bob Hoag. They defeated the team of Warren Uhler, John Du- mont, Frank Berry and Steve Thrasher by .5 of a second. Hoag was victorious in the 50- yd. freestyle with Thrasher second. and Roadhouse third. Geoff D'Atri won the 200-yd. individual medley but will have to swim about three seconds faster than he did then to beat varsity and pool record- holder Lanny Reppert. He and R. Orland will also have a rough time in the 200-yd. backstroke against Ed Bartsch and Mike Reis- sing. Tough Competition Roadhouse will have tough com- petition in the 200-yd. butterfly against veterans Jeff Moore and Jeff Longstreth. In the junior- senior meet, Roadhouse was third. The 400-yd. medley relay team of Reissing, Dick Nelson, Moore, and Uhler should be able to beat the freshman team of Lynn Ver- meulen, Spann, Heusen, and'Rich- ard Abineri again even without sophomore replacements. THURSDAY 0.00 all sweaters FRIDAY all sweaters 9.00 SATURDAY all sweaters8.0 MONDAY7 all sweaters TUESDAY. all sweaters 6. WEDNESDAY 5.00, all sweaters " THURSDAY 40 all sweaters4. FRIDAY all sweaters 30 SATURDAY. ALL SWEATERS 2.00 MONDAY nf0 all sweaters 1 Choose from over 300 sweaters, Italian im- ports, Imported Alpacas, Bold Blazers, Tryol Zip Cardigans ... yes, every color, every style, every pattern and all sizes. Shop now for the savings of a lifetime. Todd's OPEN MONDAYS 9:00-8:30 MOTHER SHERMAN PRESENTS allan sherman IN PERSON With Orchestra, Chorus, and Surprise Guests??? Saturday, Feb. 16-8:15 P.M. FORD AUDITORIUM Music World, 5017 Woodward, $2.50, $3.50, $4.50 Tickets at Grinnell's (Downtown), Morwill's Northland, IN ANN ARBOR: Sound Center, 309 S. State St. ~..........................~ .. ~ *~..****~.4~ - ..4...S..~ ~ ~. j.*****.j.**.~t. . .%t.W<.V.A~fl ~ . ~wnnn..'.sv.w.~w.w.wwtna4w.w.v * vncnaI:av ............._._... x .4. WELCOME TO THE COPPER KETTLE CAFETERIA >'; :;% : '' .. STATE & LIBERTY SPECIALIZING IN WESTERN STYLE CHOICE ROUNDS of BEEF and HOME-BAKED PASTRIES 4 I also CATERIN G for - PRIVAT F PARTIFS I _1 x 11