Thinclads tread into championship meet By DEBRA deFRANCES Although the men have some Amidst the freezing temperatures strength among distance runners of Ann Arbor, the men's track team Chris Brewster, Omar Davidson and will attempt to ignite a flame of Todd Steverson, Harvey concedes speed and talent inside the' Track that the team, on a whole, is not as and Tennis Building tonight in the good as last year's Wolverines. Central Collegiate Conference "WE'RE COMING on slow but Championships. we're getting better each week," 5 Chapionsips.said Harvey. "Right now, we're Clearly one of the largest meets of probably in the top five of the Big the season for the Wolverines, the Ten." championships will also include This year's team; suffering from . some of the toughest competition. the loss of five All-Big Ten seniors in Among today's preliminaries and field events, lacks depth and ex- tomorrow's finals, the field will in- perience in that department. "Our clude eight representatives from the weakness right now is in the field, Big Ten and five from the Mid- but (sophomore) Scott Crawford is rAmerican Conference, as well as bu(spo reSctCawrdi Notre Dame and Marquette. back from injuries and will be com- peting for us in the high jump but not COACH JACK HARVEY admits the long jump," said Harvey. the opposition will be strong and With the NCAA Championships thinks the battle for first place in less than one month away, none of team competition will be between the Wolverines have yet to qualify. Illinois and Eastern Michigan. "It takes quality. points," said "We'll be running well," said Har- Harvey. "This is the meet that we'll kvey. "But probably for second be trying to qualify our distance against strong teams from Wiscon- medley team and Chris Brewster in sin and Illinois State." the two mile run for the NCAA's." IM SCORES The Michigan Daily - Friday, February 15, 1985 -Page 9 '85 FRESHMAN CLASS TOPS IN THE LEAGUE Bo sna By MIKE REDSTONE While Michigan State head coach1 George Perles was attracting most of the state's top football recruits this past winter, Bo Schembechler and the; Michigan recruiting staff were scouring the rest of the Eastern half of the United States in search of their 1985 freshman class. In fact, after the dust cleared from Wednesday's national letter-of-intent day, many experts cited Michigan's recruiting class as one of the ten best in1 the nation. WITH SIGNINGS or verbal commit- ments from 27 top prep players, the1 keys to the Wolverines' recruiting suc- cess appear to be the charisma of Schembechler and the rest of the coaching staff, and the academic reputation of the Michigan urn- dergraduate program. The Wolverines' only recruited run- ning back-John Kolesar-is one of 131 Ohio products heading to Ann Arbor next fall. Kolesar, a 6-0, 190-pound tailback out es champions of Westlake, gained nearly 2500 yards in not pressured to his high school career. brother. "I just di( "He's a gamebreaker," said Vern more impressive Long, head coach for Westlake High academically or at. School. "I think he's been a very good ONE OF HERE running back for us. He's an all-around tributes, according athlete-football, baseball and track." Tom Taraska, is KOLESAR CITED Michigan's out- desire. That kid lov standing overall reputation as the key Thek Michiganr to his decision to become a Wolverine. south to pick uprthe "The academic reputation, the athletic incoming fresh reputation, and my dad were the Olszewski, a 6-8, biggest factors," said Kolesar, whose tackle chose Mic father played for Michigan between Tech, North Caroli 1953-55. "I have the utmost respect for him (Schembechler). He cares about the person." Schembechler also managed to snag the best prospect in Wisconsin with John Herrmann. The 6-5, 254-pound defensive tackle selected Michigan over Notre Dame and Brigham Young, where his brother Jim just completed his college career as a defensive tackle. "I really liked Bo. I could just sit down and talk to him about anything," said Herrmann, who said that he was j o attend BYU by his dn't see any schools e than Michigan, hhletically." RMANN'S best at- to Arrowhead coach "his tremendous es football." recruiters travelled largest player of the iman class. Pat 275-pound offensive higan over Georgia na, Duke, and Notre East Dame "because it had the best academic/athletic balance. That's what I was looking for. "The atmosphere with the players and coaches was great," said Olszewski, who is a great pass blocker in addition to being a straight-A student according to his high school coach. "I have family up in Michigan. That helped my decision too." Daily sportswriter Phil Nussel filed a report far this story. Arthur Miller's The Power Center COACH IND FOUR, TYLING ocation and Hours The Crucible February 20-23, 8:00 pm February 24, 2:00 pm Womens A Bush Busters 38, Chargers 30 High Tops 37, Hazardous Wastes 29 Bush Busters 37, Automatic 2 28 SRif-Raf 37, Hamiltons 36 F Co-Rec B Morti over Shark Enterprises (forfeit) Slammers 96, Guts 47 Co-Rec A Spam 134, Arby's 54 Nltwits 119, Evans Scholars 64 Bombers 84, Talen Aliens 62 Residents Hall BB little Rascals 67, WQ Chicago B 30 Taylor Squam 58, Williams B 40 Van Tyne B 26, Rumsey R-Menians 24 Resident Hall AA Kelsey Roots 67, Rumsey Runnin Rebels 52 Black Flag 79, WQ Chicago A 50 Gon berg Red A 37, C 53's 24 Bursley Mice 51, Reeves A 34 Theos Huber 43, Michigan House -236 Independent A-A The Judges 55. Gunnin 8 Rebels 31 Cherry Busters 70, Smith's Stealers 30 WW 55, The Crunch 43 The Upers over the The Victors (forfeit) Those Big Dudes 51, Virtuous Ones 61 Midder T's Boys 48, The Fish 49 Independent B-B Hummers 47, Vacancies 38 Burt Forest 41, Mad Dogs 36 The Bumbles 24, Jabberslammers 38 AAA Clippers 37, MMB 39 2001 Dead Babies 35. The Flyers 70 Moe's Death Squad 34, Fuzzbusters 52 Ice Hockey Hockey Does 9, Mohawks 2 Real Toronto Maple Leafs 13, Kelsey I William Whalers 4, Yostbusters 3 SAT.PSAT W NUMBER ATACT-GMAT GRE-LSAT-MAT GRE BIO-TOEFL ZN OAECATV"PAT IN TEST OCWB PREPARATION FMEWS-CGFNS ESL REVIEW-FLEX ,-2-3 CASSFRIGNWA INTRO TO LAW SCHOOL CASSFRIGNWA 662-3149 = " 203 E. 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