I HE MIC.HIUAN'UAILY Page I:i~Vefl P l THEW 1 CH t GAN Y- Page E:Iev'en W - 'SUBPAR PERFORMANCE ! Thinelad fal Ito Special ToThe Daily The big match-up between Mich- fastest time in the Midwest so farI EAST LANSING - Except for a igan's Dave Williams and the this year. couple of strong individual per- Farmer's Bob Cassleman proved ROWE LATER reversed last formances, Michigan's track team to be a disappointment as Cassle- week's setback to the MSU milej hit the low point of the young sea- man burned out a 1:10.5 to Wil- relay team by helping his team-? sue: last night in East Lansing. liams' 1:11. Williams made several mates to a 3:15.7 first place finish. Michigan State, supposedly a team challenges to the defending Big Jim Howe, Jeff McLeod, and WA1- with superstars' bit no depth, over- Ten champion, but never overtook liams ran the other legs. came.the -thinclads in a tight him. In the field events, Steve Adams battle, 70-61, in the first dual meet Michigan's "Mr. Dependable" did not get much competition and of the indoor season. Kim Rowe was-perhaps the bright- his 58'41/4" throw proved good The meet was nip and tuck most est spot for the Wolverines. Rowe enough in the shot put. Jesse of the way. The two-mile turned ran a 48.0 in the 440-yard dash Myers soared 6'4" in the high out to be the crucial event of the which was a meet record and the jump for a first place, an encour- evening. Michigan needed a first and third in that event to win the 61-21 LAUGHER: meet. With 300 yards to go Keith Brown and Greg Meyer held the "a ur I MSUr aging performance for the Bulok Creek sophomore. MICHIGAN mentor Dixon ^arm- er was later upset about what he called a "sub-par" performance by the Maize and Blue. It appears the thinclads are still struggling with the lack of practice facilities, as they find themselves constantly shuttling back and forth from Aan Arbor to Ypsilanti to use the in- door facilities there. CONCERT TON ITE ANN ARBOR DANCE THEATRE presents a special DANCE CONCERT in honor of their 10th Anniversary FEB. 15, 16-8:30 FEB. 17-2:30 RESIDENTIAL COLLEGE AUDITORIUM Adults $2.50 Students $1.50 Tickets available at the door p\ -N Scou -ANl- le V For more Daily Sports, includ- ing a preview of tonight's wrest- ifng match, turn to page nine. first two positions, but were pass- ed on the final lap and finished third and fourth. THE OTHER distance eventss looked better. Bill Bolster won thei mile in 4:10.7, which is the best the lanky Irishman has run this years:encouraging sign since Bol- sternusually runs better in the late season. In the half-mile Bob Mills raced home with a 1:56 to top1 the field. Women defeat JUG,'( Special To The Daily JACKSON-Michigan's women cagers breezed through a laugh- er last night as they blew Jack- son Community College out of the gym, 61-21. The Wolverines led from the opening tip. Lydia Sims scored 10 of her 32 points in the first six minutes and Michigan out- scored the Jets 21-2 in the first quarter. Michigan's tough d e f e n s e .. ... --, IMformation L X Basketball finals near; table tennis tomorrow, By LESLIE RIESTER TRUCKIN' on down to the rodeo . . . you say you play in a gymnasium? Well, in that case . . Sigma Alpha Epsilon tightened the Fraternity all-year race by .defeating Beta Theta Pi in the dual swim meet finals this week. SAE is currently third behind Beta Theta Pi and Phi Delta Theta. SAE battles Theta Xi for the "A" basketball Class A championship, and a.victory would give them a big point boost. Kappa Alpha Psi battles Evans Scholars in the Class B basketball final, Phi Gamma Delta meets Psi Upsilon in Class C -and Lambda Chi Alpha. plays Alpha Sigma Phi in Class D "A" basketball. Class A basketball championships in all divisions will be played February 28 during the IM Open House. The Class B, C and D finals take place next week. Next Wednesday the Independent, Residence Hall and Fra- ternity divisions will compete in the championship swim meet. From that meet, the top six times in each event, regardless of , division, will be selected for the All Campus meet. The All Campus diving championships will be held Tuesday, February 19 at 7 p.m..at Matt Mann Pool.. In the All Campus Class A paddleball singles, Pat Hindert up- set Greg Grambeau to move into the semi-finals. Rod Grambeau, advanced and will play Dick Schmidt in his semi-final round. To no one's surprise, Law Gold gained the basketball Class A finals again in, the Graduate division. Law :Vermillion will be looking for an upset when the two meet February 28. In Faculty- action, Dick Pitcher defeated Dick Lampman to capture the racquetball singles title. The Faculty Class A basket- ball round starts Monday when Physical Education meets Pisces. Political Science will play the victor. Huber (S. Quad) and Allen Rumsey (W. Quad) are at it again in Residence Hall "A" basketball. The two teams meet for the Class A championship February 28. Allen Rum- sey's "B" squad made the "B" cage finals and will battle Couzens. Couzens is making a strong surge this term and besides gaining the basketball finals, they have also made the table tennis semi-finals. Couzens plays Wenley (W. Quad) while Pilot program meets Adams (W.. Quad) in the other semi-final round. In a repeat performance of last semester, Hacker's Row will splash against the No Names for the co-rec intertube waterpolo championship. Carol Stewart captured her second racquet sport title this year when she upset Gail Ureel in the racquetball singles final match. Women's racquetball doubles entries are due Monday, February 18. 'M' Gals bowling entries are due February 18. Women can compete as individuals or on a minimum five-member team. The women's basketball playoffs begin next week in all divisions. The Bombers play Amnizin Blue for the Indepen- dent chmmnionshio. Delta Sigma Theta will battle the survivor of the Delta Gamma-Delta Delta Delta game for the Sorority title. In the Residence Hall division Stockwell will meet the winner of the Couzens-W. Quad clash. The U-M Table Tennis Club is sponsoring a tournament this Saturday starting at 10 a.m. downstairs in Waterman Gym. There are seven events-novice, intermediate, champion- ship, U-M students only, under 17, women's, and open doubles- and you can enter by signing up between 9:30 and 10:30 Saturday morning. First and second place trophies will be awarded in all events. The entry fee is 75 cents for all events except U-M students only event, which is 50 cents, championship which is $1.50 and open doubles which is $2.00 per team. You can contact John Treva- than, 764-8683, for more information. NIGHT EDITOR: ROGER ROSSITER strangled the tnept Jackson ca- 34-7. Offensively, te Wolverines hit a blistering 59 per cent from the field in the first half. Wolverine coach Vic Katch termed the game "a mismatch,"' and statistics back the Michigan mentor. The Maize and Blue hauled down 4-4 rebounds, which enabled