The Michigan Daily-Saturday, July 12, 1980-Page 15 { .Sports WIN INTERNA TIONAL MEET U.S. track team awesome Bythe Associated Press STUTTGART, West Germany- Jimmy Carnes, coach of the U.S. Olympic track and field team, certainly liked what he saw in his first glimpse of his squad in action. "I'm very satisfied," Carnes said Friday night after the Americans had won nine of 15 events in an international meet in mostly empty 80,000-seat Neckar Stadium in the Stuttgart suburb of Bad Cannstatt. Rain and cold weather held the crowd to an estimated ,5,00-6,000 in the first day of the event. "THE PERFORMANCES were good for this weather," continued Carnes. "This is the first time they (the athletes) have been together. "This would have been a tremendous warmup meet for the Olympics." That was the original intent of the meet, which was scheduled several months ago, long before the United States decided to boycott the Summer Olympic Games in Moscow because of the Soviet Union's military intervention in Afghanistan. Instead of going to the Games, the Americans are participating in seven international meets. The Stuttgart meet is kicking off the schedule. The team later will perform in London on Classifieds (Continuedfrom Page 14) MISCELLANEOUS WOULD THE VICTIM of a hit and run accident, Sunday night, July 6, 10:06 p.m., at the southbound exit ramp of U.S. No. 23 and Geddes please call 764-1534. dM716 BUSINESS SE RV ICES WRITING.SERVICES. Creative, Technical, Editing. .Renearch. Enperienced. Professional. 996-566. cJtc ONE BEDROOM FURNISHED APARTMENT, quiet, clean, campus. References. 994-1632, 994- 4911. B1U712 SUBLET-OWN ROOM in beautiful 6-bedroom house. Falloption. Washer/dryer. 994-0993. 76U715 ROOM AVAILABLE-July-August, $65/month. TriangleFraternity. Call995-5374or995-4258. 12U716 ROOMMA TES WOMEN WANTED-Independent individuals to live cooperatively in fabulous house. Interested? Call Polly, 663-0134. 93Y712 RIDE NEEDED to Mexico or Texas July 24. Debbie, 995-4469. 07P716 RE AL ESTA TE NEW FACULTY AND STAFF!!! Freshly painted tri-level, 3 bedrooms, 1% baths, family room, fire- place. Incredible study/studio ideal for you. Beau- tifully landscaped. Haisley School. $71,900. 63-7779. 86R712 SUPER CONDO for sale by owner. New drapes and carpeting. Popular area for graduate and post graduate students. $53,800. Call 668-4053 mornings or after 5p.m. - 87719 Sunday; Oslo Norway, on Tuesday; Philadephia next Wednesday and Thur- sday; Rome on Aug. 5; Berlin on Aug. 8, and Zurich, Switzerland, on Aug. 13. If the ensuing meets are anything like the first night's performance, the tour will be a four-star success. Of course, international meets do not carry the same impact as the Olympics. "NOTING CAN TAKE the place of the Olympics," said Karin Smith, run- nerup in the women's javelin with a toss of 193 feet, 8 inches, behind teammate Kate Schmidt, 197-1. "They're special and nothing can replace them." Some obviously American fans in the sparse cr wd, however, were doing their best'a make the Americans forget the Olympics and feel at home. A handful of fans raised a banner reading "Who needs Moscow? USA no." The first time they held it aloft was in celebration win Moses's runaway vic- tory in the men's 480-meter inter- mediate hurdles, a race in which the Americans swept the first four places. Moses's triumph in a relatively slow 46.62 seconds, but good considering the track conditions, had more than the usual significance. IT WAS HIS 41st in a row in his specialty and made him the all-time leder in the intermediate hurdles. He previously had shared the record of 40 with Gert Potgeter of South Africa. James Walker followed Moses across the finish line in 49.15. Then came David Lee in 49.68, and Bart Williams in 49.77. While the Americans overwhelmed the rest of the competition in the inter- mediate hurdles, awesome Mac Wilkins of the United States dominated the men's discus. The American record holder, with a toss of 232 feet, 10 inches earlier this week in Helsinki, Finland, won at 224-6 and all six of his throws sailed over 213-feet. Other American winners included Larry Myricks in the men's long jump at 26-10% and men's co-captain Harvey Glance in the 100-meter dash in 10.24. The Americans also swept all four relays-both the men's and women's 400- and 1,600-meter events. SPORTS OF THE DAILY: Baltimore 's infield vandalized BALTIMORE (AP)-Security is being beefed up at Memorial Stadium in the wake of vandalism that left an obscene phrase burned into the infield grass. The city's Department of Parks and Recreation, which runs the stadium, has announced that uniformed police have started guarding the arena at night. InI addition, all but one gate at the stadium where the baseball Baltimore Orioles and football Baltimore Colts play will be locked when events are not being held there, the agency said Thur- sday. Those entering through the single unlocked gatt will be required to sign in and out, said Steve Crosby, assistait superintendent of parks. In the past, as many as four unguarded gates were left open during the daylight and evening hours. Vandals defaced the field during the night of July 2. The Boston Red Sox and the Orioles opened a four- game stand the following night, but the slur could not be disguised prior to the first game that was televised in Boston. Additional meetings were held Friday with officials to discuss other security measures such as increasing the height of the center field fence or wiring it with a burglar alarm to warn guards that intruders have climbed the barrier, Crosby said. Someone has even recommended guard dogs, but Crosby said the police "don't have enough guard dogs to send a detail over, and the dogs can't work overtime. They get tired and ineffec- tive." No Giant firstbaseman SAN FRANCISCO (AP)-Rookie Rich Murray, the only first baseman on the San Francisco Giants' roster after the recent retirements of Willie Mc- Covey and Mike Ivie, will probably miss the rest of the season because of a finger injury, the National League team said Friday. Murray, whosuffered ligament damage to the ring finger of his right hand during the Giants' 9-2 victory over the San Diego Padres Thursday, was plced on the 60-day disabled list and "is probably through for the season," said Giants spokesman Stu Smith. Murray is scheduled for surgery on the finger, Smith said. Regular third baseman Darrell Evans will temporarily take over at fir- st, Smith said. To fill the roster vacancy, the Giants recalled catcher Dennis Littlejohn from Phoenix of the Pacific Coast League. In 52 games, this season, Littlejohn has batted .321. Grimslgey to Cleveland MONTREAL (AP)-Montreal Expos pitcher Ross Grimsley has been sold to the Cleveland Indiansof the American League, the National League baseball team announced Friday. The Expos, currently in first place in the NL East Division, will receive an undisclosed amount of cash and the contract of infielder Dave Oliver, assigned from Tacoma of the Triple-A Pacific Coast League to Memphis of the Class AA Southern League. Grimsley, a left-hander, had a 2-4 won-lost record and a 6.37 earned run average in 411/ innings this season. Signed by the club as a free agent on Dec. 5, 1977, Grimsley became the first Expos pitcher in their 11-year historyto record 20 victories, posting a 20-11 record in 1978. Last season, however, he slipped to a 10-9 mark with a 5.36 ERA. Grimsley has complained frequently this year about not being used often enough and had asked to be traded'if not reinserted into the team's starting rotation. His last appearance with the Ex- pos-one inning-was last Saturday in New York against the Mets. NBC gets out of Moscow Olympic leaders Friday stepped up a bid to get an outstanding $15 million out of NBC, which is not now covering the Olympic Games in Moscow. Monique BerIloux, director of the In- ternational Olympic Committee, said $10 million of this is due to the Moscow Organizing Committee and $5 million to the IOC itself. NBC bought the television rights to the Moscow Olympics for $35 million, plus another $50 million for satellite equipment. But it pulled out of televising the games when the United States decided not to compete in protest over the Soviet military action in Afghanistan. SCORES NATIONAL LEAGUE CincinnatiS, Atlanta 3 Los Angeles 3, Houston 2 _ PiIadeKp+ia2,Chicag2.. BILLBOARD Eleven former coaches and athletes will be inducted into the University of Michigan Hall of Honor next Wednesday at Crisler Arena. Inductees include: Benny Friedman, one of the top quarterbacks in Wolverine history; Vic Heylinger, who holds the best winning percentage (.789) of any Michigan hockey coach; John Fischer, NCAA golf champ; Dick Degener, 1936 Gold Medalist in the Springboard Diving Championships; Buck Giles, great second baseman of the 1920's; Cliff Keen, 42-year Wolverine wrestling coach; Barry MacKay, NCAA tennis champ in 1957; and John Townsend, Basketball All- American of the 30's. Named to the Hall posthumously will be Bill Buntin, Matt Mann, and Eddie Tolan. A celebrity Golf Tournament at the University Course precedes the third an- nual Hall event. Tickets for the golf and dinner are 150 per person (wife included for dinner), while dinner and induction ceremony tickets are $30 per couple. .: t~r"" " X ti .. r::s:";a::a :":":"