sports of the DAILY Thinclads run fat It was a dreary weekend for Michigan's track teams. The men were up- set in a dual meet with Indiana, 74-70, and the women were crushed in the Big Tens, coming away with only ten points. The men were competing without the services of long distance specialist Bill Donakowski, long jumper James Henry and 880 champ Tim Thomas, but even so they had plenty of what coach JackHarvey calls "quality perfor- mances." Among those was Randy Foss' shot put of 52'84", the 400 meter relay time of :40.05 and Steve Elliott's time of 3:46.8 in the 1500 meter run Greg Thomas took the 800 meter run with a time of 1:49.61, while James Grace won the 200 meter dash in :21.1 and the 1600 meter relay squad came through with a time of 3:08.24. Michigan's Gary Hicks won the 110 hurdles in :14.36, and also won the 400 meter hurdles in.51.64 while Mike Lattany won the high jump with a height of 7'1". "We should have won that meet," commented Harvey. "We just had a few let-downs in some performances." Although the women placed in only three events, shining star Pam Moore came through with :24.1 in the 200 meters, a time that gave her second place and qualified her for the nationals. In addition, Abby Currier placed fifth in the discus and Darlynda Key got seventh in the long jump. The problem, according to coach Red Simmons, was this: "One key girl (Roberta Brown) in the sprints and relay pulled a muscle and we had to put in an inexperienced girl." The problem, according to coach Red Simmons, was this: "One key girl (Roberta Brown) in the sprints and relay pulled a muscle and we had to put in an inexperienced girl." Brown pulled the muscle last Wednesday, but didn't think the injury would prevent her from participating in the meet. Both teams are nowpreparing for the first home meets of the season, the Wolverine Invitational, a meet that will feature local teams, to be held May 13. -ELISA FRYE Netters sweep The Michigan men's tennis team took sole possession of second place in the Big Ten this weekend, as it defeated Ohio State, 6-3 on Friday and con- tinued its hot playing Saturday, when it trounced Indiana, 8-1. Leading the assault was Michigan's number one singles player, Jeff Et- terbeek. Etterbeek was paired up against Indiana's Bill Rennie and beat the Hoosier, 6-2, 6-0. Etterbeek and Rennie were the finalists at the number one spot in last year's Big Ten championships. "This was a great st p for Jeff," said Michigan coach Brian Eisner. "He has really established himself now going into the Big Ten meet. He has by far the best record of any player in this section of the country." The Wolverines are now scheduled to play four matches over the next eight days in Texas, where they will meet nationally-ranked teams. -Daily Sports Women get revenge The Michigan women's tennis team went to College Station, Pennsyl- vania this weekend to get in some practice for their upcoming SMAIAW tournament this week in Ann Arbor. Although the women were soundly defeated by highly ranked Princeton (7-2), they beat a good Penn State team (6-3) and got revenge for previous losses to the Ohio State squad that won the Big Ten championships two weeks ago, defeating the Buckeyes decisively, 8-1. "We played well this weekend and I think Bill (coach Flood) was proud of us for the way we beat Ohio State," commented freshperson Kathy Krickstein. Krickstein herself had a very good tournament as she won all of her singles matches, including a tough win over Princeton's number two singles player Linda Rice, 6-3, 3-6, 7-6.'Kathy Karzen and Ann Kercher were also victorious in all three of their doubles matches. "Most of the girls beat people at Ohio State that had beaten Michigan players at earlier meets this season," Krickstein said. "The win should give us better draws against Ohio State in the regional and prepare us better for the qualifier next week." "The team was real psyched up for this match," said Flood. "we showed our real capability. We've now beaten all the top teams in the Big Ten in dual meets (i.e. Ohio State, Northwestern and Wisconsin). "It was an important win because a lot of the girls were doubting their abilities after the Big Ten loss," Flood continued. "And even though Karzen lost two of her three matches at first singles, she played very well as did the rest of the team." Karzen was the only member of the team to lose against OSU, as her long-ime nemisis Maria Olazagasti beat her, 6-3, 6-3. Michigan finished the tournament in second place, behind Princeton. Big Ten champion Ohio State did not wina match. "I loved beating Ohio State," Flood said. "It's great to kill them." -BOB WARREN The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, May 9, 1978--Page 15' hours are as follows: 9:00 a.m.-6:30 Rec spots p.m. on Mondays through Fridays. For a weekly update on activities and information, call the following hotlines: The Ann Arbor Recreation Depar- 764-8247 (CCRB); 763-0050 (IMSB); 764- tment will be open during spring- 6429 (NCRB). summer term and will be featuring several special interest programs, such as Family Hours, Disabled Partner Program, Adolescent Program and Camp Adventure. For more infor- mation on any of these activities, call Ellen Gold at 763-4560. The deadline for women's and men's basketball is May 12. For more infor- mation on IM Sports, call 763-3562. LOCKERS WILL go on sale at the CINCINNATI (AP)-Bruce Bois- CCRB and the NCRB, May 13 at 9:00 clair's 10th-inning 8 pinch single off the a.m. There are 375 lockers for women glove of shortstop Dave Concepcion and 475 lockers for men at CCRB. At scored second baseman Lenny Randle NCRB there are 60 lockers for women from second, leading the New York and 80 for men. Lockers at the IM Mets to a 3-2 victory over the Cincinnati building are available right now. Reds last night. These lockers are non-renewable. After the Mets had rallied with a run They are only available for the spring- in the ninth to tie it at 2, Randle drew a summer term(s). leadoff walk in the 10th from reliever In order to use the facilities at any of Pedro Borbon and went to second on lee the rec buildings around town, you Mazzilli's sacrifice bunt, setting the must have one of the following: a stage for Boisclair. validated spring-summer student ID; a Mike Bruhert, Skip Lockwood, 1-1, continuing student users pass; a users and Mardie Cornejo limited the Reds to pass; a guest pass ($1.00/day/person). four hits. Trailing 2-1 in the ninth, the Mets tied THE CCRB summer hours will be it on John Stearns' RBI single after Monday-Friday 7:45 a.m.-9:00 p.m., Elliott Maddox and Steve Henderson Saturday 9:00 a.m.-5:00 p.m. The North opened the inning with singles off Nor- Campus building is open from 7:00 man. a.m.-9:00 p.m. during the week, from 9- Left fielder Henderson's over the 9 on Saturdays and from noon-9:00 p.m. shoulder catch in the bottom of the nin- on Sundays. th with Joe Morgan at second base sent The IM Sports building is open from the game into extra innings. 11:30 a.m.-6:30 p.m. on Mondays and Fridays, and 11:30 a.m.-9:00 p.m. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Thursdays, ANTIOCH until June 25. From June 26 on, the INTERNATIONAL WRITING PROGRAMS * Master of Arts in Creative :: :: ::: :-: : - *Writing BILLBOARD : * "Writing Year Abroad/London * Summer Seminars in Oxford, England Are you interested in becoming an IM CONTACT: Antioch International sports official? If you are, you should C Antioch Interat call Sandy Sanders at 763-1313. There Antioch University are positions available in baseball, sof- Yellow Springs, Ohio 45387 tball, volleyball and water-polo. Friday- 154 Hot Dogs 2-5 p.m.-(while they last)