SPORTS Saturday, March 13, 1982 :f Page 7 The Michigan Daily i -'- i THREE INDIVIDUALS, RELA Y TEAM AD VANCE ' M'tracksters qualify Runners praise 'Dome track " 4 '4+ '4 By JIM DWORMAN special to the Daily PONTIAC- Three Michigan individuals and one relay team successfully passed their trials yesterday and advan- ced to today's finals of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) indoor track championships at the Silverdome. Shelby Johnson, Vince Bean, and Derek Harper were the individual qualifiers, 'while the distance medley team also ssurvived the cut. JOHNSON, THE Wolverine Senior co-captain, completed his trial run of the 60-yard high hurdles in 7.47 seconds to move into the semi-finals of the event. Johnson will have to finish in the top four of his eight-man heat today in order to reach the final. The top trial time in the high hurdles was 723 seconds by Tony Campbell of Southern California. Harper and Bean, a pair of sophomores, moved into the finals of the long jump with leaps of 23'10" and 23'8%", respectively. Bean barely survived the cut, claiming the last of twelve positions in the finals. Harper was ninth, but he was 13" behind the top qualifier, Andre Kirnes of Middle Ten- nessee. "It's still wide open," said Harper. "They're (track officials) going to move the runway back because some people were almost jumping out of the pit. It will shorten the runway and that will hurt the people with long ap- proaches. Me and Vince both have short runs so it won't hurt us." The distance medley team advanced straight to the final by registering the y fifth best time of the event. Craig Camp, Bob Boynton, Mike Shea, and Brian Diemer combined to finish in 9:47.89. Michigan is one of three in-state. schools to reach the final, as Eastern Michigan and Michigan State also passed yesterday's test. Michigan assistant coach Ron Warhurst was optimistic about the medley team's chances in today's final. 'If we keep Diemer close, anything can happen," said Warhurst. '-He can run with any anchor man in this group. In the last two years we ran our fastest time in the finals. I hope that's the case again. I think the winning time will be 9:42-9:45 and we're very capable of doing that." Three Wolverine entrants who did not make it to the finals were Andrew Bruce, Don Chevillet, and the mile relay team. Bruce finished his heat of the 60-yard dash in 6.37 seconds, one-twentieth of a secondrbehind the slowest qualifier and even further behind world indoor record-holder Stanley Floyd of Houston, who had a time of 6.13. CHEVILLET COULD not clear the starting height of 16'6" in the pole vault and the mile relay team was eliminated when Bruce fell off the track in the final turn of the opening leg and dropped from a close second to a distant fifth place. Rob Grainger, Johnson, and Shea made up some ground in the remaining three legs, but the Wolverines were still well off the pace. "I was bumped slightly and had nowhere to go but the in- side of the track," said Bruce. "I fell off and tried to slip back on before I was disqualified. I'm disappointed." Wolverine coach Jack Harvey was satisfied with the way the day went for his team. "We figure our distance-medley had the best shot to score, and if our long jumpers placed that would be a bonus," said Harvey. "To qualify our mile relay we'd have to have a lot of luck. We would've needed our fastest time of the year." By JIM DWORMAN Special to the Daily PONTIAC - It was a sight to make one's eyes sore. Colors. Some bright, some dull, but colors everywhere. THE SILVERDOME was aglow yesterday as the National Collegiate Athletic Association invaded the north end of the stadium for its annual indoor track championship. The hues and tones were predominantly emanating from the uniforms of the competitors. From the violet and white of Texas Christian, to the spring green of Manhattan, from the orange and royal blue of Virginia State, to the sky blue and pale yellow of Southwest Missouri, the colors came from near and far. Kansas provided the interesting" combination of magenta and powder blue, while C.W. Post proudly displayed its colors, forest green and gold. But these colors are nothing new to the NCAA track championships. They vary only slightly from year to year. THE ROOKIE shades of the meet were those of the backdrop, the Mediterranean blue seats of the Silver- dome and the flourescent yellow and orange of the track. The Pontiac location and the track surface are both new to track com- petition. For the first 14 years of NCAA indoor track championships, the meet was held on Detroit's riverfront, at Cobo Arena. With the construction of Joe. Louis Arena in 1979, the meet moved next door and took the old wooden track with it. This year, however, the meet moved GEORGIA SPRINTER Herschel Walker (above) qualified for today's 60-yard dash finals with a time of 6.18, while Michigan trackster Andrew Bruce's (left) 6.37 timing failed to qualify him for the same event. north to the Silverdome, and a new track was constructed specifically fei the event. Built by Tracks West, of Albequerque, New Mexico, the track drew favorable responses from nearly everyone connected with the meet. "IT'S THE BEST track and probably the fastest in the world," said meet director Don Canham, who moonlights as Michigan's athletic director. "It's obviously pretty fast. A new recoii was set in the first final." In the cham- pionship heat of the three-mile run, one of two finals held yesterday, Texas-U Paso's Gabriel Kamau set a new mgt record with a time of 13:07. , breaking the old standard by nearly to and one-half seconds. Michigan assistant coach Roh Warhurst indicated that the runnersa well as the officials, were satisfied with the running surface. "I've been talking to a few of the kids from out East and they run on the boards a lot out ther. They say it's the fastest track they've ru on.eof those "kids," Georgia's He schel Walker, concurred. "I think it'sa good track. It's real fast. I'll know more about how fast it is tomorrow. The football All-American qualified far today's semi-finals in the 60-yard dash with a time of 6.18 seconds. Twelve thousand advanced tickets have been sold for today's competition, according to Canham, who hopes to continue housing the meet in the Silver- dome. "There's not a bad seat in here," said Michigan's former track coach. "It's probably the best arena for track. We'll stay here forever if we can draw some people and we're doing that." DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR 665-3231 A NEW SERVICE FROM BIMBO'S FREE Et FAST ,ELVERY*, w " PIZZA* BURGERS), SANDWNICHIEBt *DINNERS *SUBS. * BEER #t WINE (with food purchase only) ---- -- - m BIMBO'S COUJJ 4N SAVE ONANY I FOOD $I PURCHASE $ OFF ' Only one coupon per order. Minimum $6.00 purchase. Take Iout or delivery only. Expires IBIMIIO'S C01I'ON ' 6PACK SAVINGS STROH'SOR $250 MILLER LITE plusdeposit ' OLD $185 1 MILWAUKEEpi Limit two 6-pocks for eachpl6.8 of food purchase. Take out or delivery only. Only one coupon per order. Expires LMarch 21, 19824 'Free delvery with $50food purchase. e reserve the right to limit our delivery aro. 114 E. Washington 665-3231 SPORTS OF THE DAILY: M'nine takes air Special to the Daily from CMU HOUSTON, Tex.- The Michigan baseball squad didn't just beat Central Michigan in its first games of the season here yesterday. The Wolverines pasted the Chippewas on their way to sweeping a doubleheader between the two squads. They posted 20 runs and 22 hits in the two games and won, 13-0, and 7-2. Entering the game, the Wolverines were ranked 7th in the country by the New Collegiate Baseball magazine, while Central Michigan was ranked 25th. However, the Michigan trio of Jim Paciorek, Chris Sabo, and Tony Evans combined for 12 hits and 13 RBIs, in- cluding three homers (one .a grand slam), which was too much for the Chippewas. THE SCORING in the first game started with two out in in the first in- ning. Following Michigan third baseman Sabo's single on an infield hit, and a double by Paciorek, Rich Bair sent them both across the plate with a double off the left-field wall. The third inning meant more scoring for the Wolverines while the Chippewas still couldn't get anyone safely around . the diamond. Michigan's onslaught started as a single by Paciorek with the bases loaded and no outs scored Greg Schulte. With the bases still loaded, the Chips almost got out of the jam as they managed to get two outs. Enter Evans. The All-Big Ten shortstop sent it over the wall for the grand slam, making the score 7-0. That was all for the Wolverines, until the next inning. Michigan kept piling it on in the four- th as Sabo sent a two-run homer over 'the left field fence with Schulte on second. A double by John Young sent Paciorek and Bair home after they had gotten on with a single and a walk. Young came home on a double by Evans, raising the score to 12-0. Michigan finished off the scoring with a SCORES College Basketball NCAA Playoffs Northeastern 63, St. Joseph 62 Tenn. Chattanooga 58, N.C. State 51 Kansas State 77, Northern Illinois 68 NIT Playoffs Tulane 83, LSU 72 Maryland 66, Richmond 50 Syracuse 84, St. Peter's 75 Virginia Tech 69, Fordham 58 Mississippi 53, Clemson 49 NBA double by Jeff Jacobsen. Keeping the basepaths relatively clear for the Wolverines was winning pitcher Rich Stoll, who only allowed three hits in the contest. THINGS WENT better for the Chip- pewas in the bottom end of the twinbill, but it didn't look promising at the start. Paciorek ... hits 400-foot blast Schulte led off the game with a homer for Michigan, and the Blue scoring machine was rolling again. A three-run homer by Bair sent the score to 4-0, and Evans added another on a round-trip shot over the fence in left. Michigan's Paciorek, though, still didn't have all the scoring out of his system. After the Chips had made it 5-2 with a pair of runs in the second inning, Paciorek put one over the wall in the third, and added a 400-foot home run blast in the fourth to round out the scoring. Hurler Tim Karazim was the winning pitcher for Michigan, coming in the game in the second inning for starter Dave Kopf and giving up only one hit. The Wolverines will be in action again today when they meet Houston in a single game., -theChips are downed FIRSTGAME R H E CMU ..................000 000 0- 0 3 0 MICHIGAN ..............205 600 x - 13 13 0 Morse, Mulzer (4), Wilson (5), Epple (6), and Kawaski, Ma. Ward (5); Stoll and Young WP- Stoll (1-0) LP- Morris (0-1) HR-Evans (1), Sabo(1) SECOND GAME R H E MICHIGAN...............501 010 0 - 7 9 2 CMU .. .................020 000 0 - 2 2 1 Kopf, Karazim (2) and Bair; Phillion, Schooltz (7) and Kruse. WP- Karazim (1-0) VP-Phillion (0-1) HR-Schulte (1), Bair (1), Evans (2), Paciorek 2 (2) Terps advance in NIT RICHMOND, Va. (AP)- Freshman Adrian Branch scored a game-high 21 points as Maryland opened its bid for the National Invitation Tournament basketball championship by defeating Richmond 66-50 last night. A capacity crowd of 9,373 at Rich- mond's Robins Center turned out to see Richmond make its first-ever post- season tournament appearance. THE TRIUMPH sent Maryland, 16- 12, into a second-round game Monday night. Pete Holbert came off the bench to score four straight jumpers over Rich- mond's zone defense and to assist on two other baskets to spark the Terps to a 31-24 halftime lead. Branch had six points in the drive. Bill Flye's short jumper cut Rich- mond's deficit to five just eight seconds into the second half. But the Spiders collected only two more field goals and a single free throw over the next 10 minutes to fall behind at 44-31. VERO BEACH, Fla. (AP)- The Los Angeles Dodgers erupted for six runs in the seventh inning to overcome Detroit 10-8 yesterday in a spring training exhibition game. Steve Yeager's second double of the game knocked in Jorge Orta with the Dodgers 10, Tigers 8 PLAY UNIVERSITY PASSWORD Look for clues hidden in the Daily Classifieds page Tuesday through Friday. tying run in the seventh and shortstop Bill Russell, who committed five of the Dodgers' six errors, squeezed home Jay Johnstone with the go-ahead run. KEN LANDREAUX, Ron Cey and Mike Marshall hit home runs for the Dodgers, who evened their exhibition record at 2-2. Terry Forster, the fourth of five Dodger pitchers, earned the win. Count Bill of Rights' BilArticle IX: The Gold Standard Act The Gold Rush. Solid Gold IThe Count Spinning Out EveRv Friday and Saturday Nights the (.,-Lw'tLct't I'impz of fall 'lim HOUSING DIVISION MARKLEY HALL RESIDENT STAFF APPLICATIONS FOR SPRING/SUMMER 1982 Available Starting March 10, 1982 In 1500 S.A.B. POSITIONS INCLUDE: Resident Director and Resident Advisor Advisory positions require the completion of a minimum of 55 undergraduate credit hours toward program for Resident Advisory positions; Graduate status for Resident Director positions. Qualified undergraduate applicants may be considered for the Resident Director positions. QUALIFICATIONS: (1) Must be a registered U of M student on the Ann Arbor Campus during the period of employment. (2) Must have completed a minimum of 55 undergraduate credit hours toward program by the end of the 1981 Fall Term. (3) Preference will be given to applicants who have lived in residence halls at the University level for at least one year. (4) Undergraduate applicants must have a minimum of a 2.50 cumulative grade point average in the school or college in which they ore enrolled. Graduate' applicants must be in good academic standing in the school or college in which they are enrolled. (5) Preference is given to applicants who do not intend to carry heavy academic schedules and who do not have rigorous outside commitments. (6) Preference will be given to qualified applicants who will be available and apply for both the Spring and Summer Terms. (7) Proof of,these qualificationspwill be required.