gag~e Si THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, March 28, 1972 I I I U of M PHOTO SERVICES * PHOTOGRAPHY-PRI NTS * OZALI DS-PHOTOSTATS * PHOTO SUPPLIES Rm. 540 L.S.A. Bldg. 764-9216 - - - - - - --- We have the BEST REPAIRS and SERVICE around-TRY US SPORTS -CAR SERVICE OF ANN ARBOR, Inc.I 4705 Washtenaw (next to Ypsi-Ann drive in) 434-0110 T-W-F--8-6; M and Th 8-9 Hoosi By CHUCK BLOOM Miracles weren't e x p e c t e d from the Michigan swim team in the NCAA Swimming and Diving Championships h e 1 d over the weekend in West Point, N.Y. The Wolverines did swim their best races of the season', however, but because they lack the talent of an Indiana, Southern California, or UCLA they cannot be expected to do that well. Their tenth place finish was 'earned and well de- served. The biggest surprises for Michigan were the relay squads. The 400-yard medley relay team came in sixth with a varsity re- cord time of 3:25.36. ,The quar- tet of Chris Hansen, Stu Isaac, Byron MacDonald, and Jose Aranha beat out such teams as Tennessee, Yale, and Florida. JSF1 The 800-yard freestyle relay team qualified twelfth and fin- ished tenth. Their time of 6:56.- 99 was four seconds better than the qualifying time and seven seconds better than the old var- sity record. Stu Isaac. finished fifth in the 100-yard breaststroke and ninth in the 200-yard. In both races. Isaac set new varsity records with clockings of :57.85 and 2:07.74, respectively. Ray McCullought also etched his name in the Michigan re- cord books by going :46.76 in the 100-yard freestyle. However, MacDonald received the biggest shaft in the meet. He qualified seventh in the 100- yard butterfly missing the finals by .02 of a second. But had Tennessee coach Ray Bussard withdrawn one or both of his swimmers from the finals, Mac- ash tit Donald would have finished third. Instead, Bussard had Dave Edgar and John Trembley, who qualified second and third, bag the 'race, not only hurting MacDonald but Southern Cal who was in a battle for first. Diving saw Joe Crawford fin- ish seventh on the three-meter board. Crawford's finish is de- ceiving as he was battling for third throughout the competi- tion. Overall, the meet saw 13 American records broken and in this Olympic year, the finest swimming of the season. Indi- ana won their fifth consecutive championship tying the mark held by Michigan, but the crowd heart was with second- place challengers Southern Cali- fornia. Tennessee became the villains of the meet with Edgar the big- gest disappointment and Jerry Heidenreich of Southern Meth- odist receiving the longest ova- tion, two minutes, over the three-day meet in setting a re- cord in the 200-yard freestayle. The AAU championship will be held in two weeks down in Dallas. Michigan will send Crawford and MacDonaldto Texas for a meet in which more records should be broken. es tankers' record EOLLETT'S MICHIGAN BOOKSTORE WILL BE CLOSED FOR ANNUAL INVENTORY THURSDAY, MARCH 30TH FR IDAY, MARCH 31ST -_- Serving Over 20,000 Satisfied Clients for over 10 Years TAILORS IN ANN ARBOR Custom Designer Mr. Ray Nankani of Hong Kong will be in Ann Arbor for 2 days, Apr. 1 & 2 SATISFACTION GUARANTEED SlECT FROM OVER PACKAGE DEAL 7,000 IMPORTED MEN'S PACAG DA SAMPLES ... KNIT Suit Get custom measured r1 Sport Coat for your tailored Men's SUITS 1 Pair Slacks Suits, Sport Coats, $60.00 1 Shirt Shirts-Ladies Suits, $110 Dresses, Formalw~ar, $110 Coats. Ladies Silk Suits ......$.15.00 Men's Silk-Wool Suits .$46.50 _ILadies (~a!liniere T1opcoat .$58.50 Cashmere Sport Coats .535.00 Bvaded Sweaters........$10.00 Cashmere Overcoats ...$58.50 Beaded Gloves ...........S 1.50 Shirts (mfnogrammed) .$ 3.50 NEW FASHIONS \iluding Duty and Mailing) H. K. TAILORS FOR APPOINTMENT:, CALL MR. U. S. ADDRESS P. O. BOX 6006 Ray Nankoni at Weber's Inn RICHMOND, VA. Tel: 769-2500 23222 : TELEPHONE ANYI ME: WF NOT W. LEAVE YOUR NAME i PHONE NUMBER. Braves dismiss McCarthy; Kapp files suit against NFL By The .Associated Press 3 BUFFALO - John McCarthy was fired yesterday from his post as coach of the Buffalo Braves, the National Basketball club an- nounced. A terse statement released by Braves' owner Paul Snyder and general manager Edward Donovan said they had "elected not to extend the contract" of McCarthy for the 1972-73 season. His responsibilities as head coach were ended as of yesterday, the statement added. McCarthy has guided the Braves since last fall when he replaced Dolph Schayes. The Braves finished in last place in the NBA's At- lantic Division, winning only 22 of their 82 games. No successor to McCarthy was announced. " SAN FRANCISCO - Joe Kapp, who quarterbacked the Min- nesota Vikings to the 1969 Super Bowl, filed an anti-trust conspiracy suit yesterday against the National football League and its 26 teams. The suit in U.S. District Court said Kapp will ask damages in the millions of dollars but the amount has not yet been determined. Under antitrust law, any damage award determined by a court or jury is tripled. The suit charged that Kapp, now 33, has been barred from playing professional football since his 1970 season with the New Eng- land Patriots because he refused to sign the NFL's standard player contract. ! NEW YORK - The Portland Trail Blazers won a coin flip with the Buffalo Braves yesterday and will get the first pick in the National Basketball Association's college draft April 10. The Trail Blazers finished last in the Pacific Division with the worst record in the NBA, 18-64. Buffalo, a member of the Atlantic Division, had the poorest mark in the Eastern Conference, 22-60. i TRINITY TENACIOUS -Associated Press The slide, the tag, he's . .. safe!!! Surprise, surprise, surprise," said Kansas City Royals' secondbaseman Jose Martinez as he prepared to put the tag on the Pittsburgh Pirates' Dave Cash. Martinez got the reaj surprise, however, when he looked in his empty glove and found the ball lying harmlessly by his foot after the play. - ,r Netters stroked in Southern meet By JIM ECKER Four members of the Michi- gan tennis team returned to Ann Arbor y ,sterday after com- peting in The Rice Invitational Tournament. The Blue netters were thoroughly squashed by their Southern cousins from Trinity. Rice, S.M.U., Corpus Christi and Pan American. Joel Ross, acting as spokes- man for the quartet, stated "We didn't do as well as we ex- pected. None of us were used to playing conditions." Thursday's opening day ac- tion was played under humid, 90 degree weather. Steve Mont- rox s. Jerry Karzen, and Dick Ravreby all lost their opening inatches, with only Ross advan- cing as tar as the second round However, Ross' grueling three hour opener admittedly sapped his strength. "I developed sto- mach and muscle, cramps be- tween matches. Then I spent all my energy in taking the first game of my second match and was too tired to win." Karzen played well in the consolatidn tournament. He de- feated the tournament's number six seed before being eliminated in the quarterfinals. Ross term- ed it "a good win for Jerry." The doubles events were also staged on Thursday. The fa- tigued Ross teamed with Ravre- by in losing to the third seed, while Montross and Karzen were turned back by a strong pair from Rice. Montross and Karzen were making their first appearance In fact, Michigan was not at full strength overall. Tim Ott, Kevin Senige, and Jeff Miller all remained on campus. This trio was saved the ignominy of a thirty-three hour van ride to Texas and the prospects of foot- ing much of their own bill. "We were very tired when we goth there," understated Ross. "The tennis budget just couldn't afford to fly us down." Ross felt that their competi- tion's advantage of practicing outdoors since February, coup- led with Michigan's tiring trek, was too great an obstacle to overcome. The strong Trinity team cop- ped the tournament, followed by the hosting Owls from Rice. Trinity presents an awesome array of netters, with several of their racketmen ranked among the top twenty in the United States. Although the boys were dis- appointed, they are. still opti- mistic about their future fate. "Everything 1 e a d s to the NCAA's" observed Ross. "We'll be/ ready then." Unfortunately, so will Trinity. NHL Stend ings NHL East Division W L T Pts GF GA 4 Subscribe to The Michigan Daily as a doubles duo and suffered from an uncoordinated effort. S CO R ES K I U.IEXHIBITION BASEBALL Billboard > Detroit 1, St. Louis 0B The Michigan rugby club will Pittsburgh 8, Kansas City 7 play its first home games of the New York (N) 4, Boston 0 spring season this Saturday at Minnesota 7, Philadelphia 4 1:00 on Palmer field against New York (A) 1, Atlanta 0 Cleveland 3, Oakland 2 the Toronto Barbarians. A s5- Milwaukee 7, California 5 cial get-together is planned. for Chicago (N) 12, San Diego 11 the fans-and players afterwards. Houston 4, Cincinnati 0 -I c-Boston 53 10 1 U New York 48 15 12 1l1 Montreal 44 16 15 IN Toronto 31 30 14 7 Detroit 32 34 9 'V Buffalo 15 42 19 4 Vancouver 19 48 7 4 West Division c-Chicago 44 17 14 I, Minnesota 36 28 11 K St. Louis 27 37 11 6 Philadelphia 25 37 12 $ Pittsblirtgh 24 38 13 C California 21 36 18 6 Los Angeles 18 49 8 C c-clinched divisionhtitle Tonight's Games Boston at Detroit Vancouver at St. Louis Philadelphia at Minnesota Only games scheduled 17 03 6 73 49 45 02 83 65 42 60 44 318 209 290 199 252 199 193 243 207 204 189 205 207 189 184 182 193 200 251 244 286 160 184 238 226 248 272 295 I PREPARATION FOR BOARD EXAMS MCAT DAT GRE ATGSB LSAT ' Preparation for tests required for admission to graduate schools. Six session courses. i Local Classes, small groups. . a Pocket Billiards "a great game" FREE INSTRUCTION THURS., APRIL 6 Michigan Union STANLEY H. KAPLAN EDUCATIONAL CENTER Call (313) 354-0085 I Wolverine singles nite " every Wednesday Post 8:30 p.m. FRE chmpinshi DRC { championship harness racing FREE admission to grandstand every Wed 6to7p.m. FREE entertainment in the New Paddock Club at grandstand entrance ...You must be 18 or over 10 RACES MIGUTIV six nights EU NIUN ELI weekly -a I - MIKE MORRIS on Ann Arbor GARBAGE COLLECTION: Garbage collection from apartment buildings is intolerably poor. Overflowing dumpsters can be found behind nearly every apartment building in the Second Ward on any day of the week. Apartment dwellers need twice-weekly pick-ups at the minimum. Renters have the same right to the clean environment provided to the people living in single-family houses. The city administra- tion is now using renters to subsidize garbage collection for home- owners. Currently these areas are not required to take their gar- bage out to the curb for collection. If each homeowner made this slight effort, money could be found for extra pick-ups. The City Public Works Department must take a serious look at the recycling of newspapers, cans, and bottles. Ecological issues cannot be treated as a passing fad. Experimental programs in selected neighborhoods have already been tried and have prov- en successful. A full recycling program can and must be imple- mented in the near future. I elect MIKE MORRIS DEMOCRAT 2nd Ward /1"U I.I f4 AV ADD11 Q I ;. I: