The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, June 6, 1978-Page 15 RELAY TRIUMPH AVERTS WHITEWASH Thinclads come up flat in NCAA's By DAVE RENBARGER The way Michigan track-coach Jack Harvey had it figured, the Wolverines would need a liberal dose of good for- tune as well as some top notch perfor- mances on the track in order to finish among the top ten at last weekend's NCAA Outdoor Championships. THE WAY things turned out at the three-day extravaganza in Eugene, Ore., the Wolverines' luck was all bad, and their performances weren't much better. With a disappointing total of four points, Harvey's 11-man contingent left the meet in a tie for 31st, deadlocked with the likes of Manhattan, Richmond and New Mexico. "We sure expected to do a lot better than we did," said Harvey, whose team placed sixth in the nation indoors last March. "In retrospect, I think that making the top ten was a lofty goal, but it was definitely a disappointing meet." THE 400 METER relay team of Doug BLUE BOWS OUT It was the bottom of the eighth, Michigan had a two run lead, the Wolverines' ace pitcher made a relief appearance to quell the enemy rally, but, to no avail. Michgan, Big Ten and Mideast Regional baseball championssended its season with a sudden 7-6 loss to North Carolina in the College World'Series in Omaha, Nebraska. The Wolverines owned a 6-4 lead going ino the bottom of the eighth, but disaster struck and Michigan could not recover in time to avert elimination in the tournament. Daily sportswriter Jamie Turner went to Omaha to cover the Wolverines' action from opening pitch to final-out pop up. His report of the game as well as a special column appear on page 16. 4: 1f:Y: ;::>'. 'v r r:^i' M : Hennigar, Charles Crouther, Arnett Chisholm and James Grace provided the lone bright spot for the Wolverines, as they took fourth place with record- breaking timd of :39.92. The swift clocking is the fastest relay ever registered by any Big Ten team. Even- tual NCAA champion USC won the event in :39.31. "They ran a super race," said Har- vey of the quartet which has won the Big Ten 400 meter relay three years in a row. "We don't have the sheer sprint speed that some of the other teams have. We just polished everything down to the fine wire in terms of making our (baton) passes." But the rest of the team looked anything but polished, as the usually fearsome foursome of Grace, Bill Donakowski, Mike Lattany and Jim Stokes all failed to score in their in- dividual specialties. GRACE, IN THE 400 meter dash, and Donakowski, in the 10,000 meters, both came up flat in the final races as Wolverines, finishing well out of the money. But, with a tiny bit of luck, high jum-, per Lattany and pole vaulter Stokes could have managed a few points that would have pushed Michigan's team .score much closer to respectability. Both finished seventh, one place away from scoring. Lattany cleared the bar at 7-1, but only on his second attempt. Had he gone over on attempt number one, he would have finished third and picked up six points. Stokes, who cleared 17 feet in the qualifying phase of the vaulting, bowed out after making 16-6 in the finals, to tie for seventh. UCLA's Mike Tully set a meet record with a leap of 18-1%14, helping the Bruins tie Texas-El Paso for second place in the standings. Rec Spots Here it is-released for the first time this week! The All-New annual posting of the hours of campus IM buildings. CCRB-Monday through Friday, 7:45 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Saturday, 9:00 a.m. to 5:00 p.m. Sunday, CLOSED NCRB-Monday through Friday, 7:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Saturday, 9:00 a.m. to 9:00 p.m. Sunday, Noon to 9:00 p.m. OLD IM-(through June 25) Monday and Friday, 11:30 a.m. to 6:30 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, 11:30 a.m. to6:30 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday, 11:30 a. m. to 9:00 p.m. Saturday and Sunday, CLOSED MARC HAS MOVED (Medieval and Renaissance Collegium) ttol 206 Tyler East Quad Phone: 763-2066. AP Photo WASHINGTON STATE'S sensational runner Henry Rono leads the field over the water jump enroute to an NCAA record time of 8:12.39 in the 3,000 meter steeplechase, Rono's victory thwarted a bid by Texas-El Paso's James Munyala to become the first four-time winner of the steeple. Munyala finished a distant second in 8:24. 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