Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 31, 1971 PaeEgtTH.IHGN AL enedy ach3,17 SWIMMING CHAMPIONSHIPS MICHIGAN UNION BILLIARDS TABLE TENNIS BOWLING REDUCED RATES 9 a.m.-Noon MON.-SAT. lich igan M-PIN BOWLING SUN., 1 P.M.-MID. IT' SO NICE TO HAVE. .* JACOBSON'S YOUNG ADULT CHARGE ACCOUNT is cued to your campus needs and we will be pleased to accept your aplication for a Ip}l~lC Jacobsor Card. Yo will spee greater s Apply fo n Charge Account Identification ur personal account number d your purchases and give you+ hopping convenience.; r yours soon. Jacob oi By RANDY PHILLIPS Michigan's tankers swam their best times of the season and divers, Dick Rydze and Joe Crawford placed in both diving events, but the Wolverines could still not finish better than tenth in the NCAA Swimming and Div- ing Championships concluded Saturday. In no surprise, Indiana domi- nated the championship meet to run away from second place Southern California by almost 100 points. The Hoosiers wrap- ped up their fourth straight na- tional crown with 351 points to USC's 260. Michigan Coach Gus Stager was somewhat pleased with his swimmers' *'performances b u t was also disappointed that Big Ten rival Ohio State managed to SALE ON SCOTT PRODUCTS AT HI F1 STUDIO 121 W. WASHINGTON nip the Wolverines for ninth place 70-69. Stager remarked, "We made mistakes in the finals; we weren't tough enough." The outstanding performance for the Wolverines came on the low board where Dick Rydze turned in a fine set of dives to place third. Joe Crawford mnan- aged a ninth place showing to help catapult the Wolverines into seventh place after the first day of action. Both divers also placed on the high board. Also in the first session, Michi- Stickmen clash The Michigan Lacrosse Club swings back into action today against a rugged squad from Bowling Green. Ranked fourth in the country last year, Bowl- ing Green should provide stiff competition for the Michigan lacrossemen who a r e seeking their second straight win. Admission is free for the game which will start at 3:30 on the Tartan Turf at Ferry Field. gan's Medley Relay team broke the school record with a 3:27.6 clocking in the qualifying trials and then went on to capture the sixth slot in the finals in only a slightly slower time. The Wolverine breaststrokers came through with outstanding times as Stu Isaac blistered throughthe 100 yard event in 58.24 for fifth place behind Stan- ford's Brian Job. Isaac later placed twelfth in the consolation run in the 200 yard event as he knocked off three seconds from his previous best. But Bill Ma- hony, one of the few graduating members of the squad, stole the show from Isaac as he clipped five seconds off his previous best to rank ninth. In the butterfly, Larry Day placed twelfth while teammate Byron McDonald captured ninth in the 200 yard race. McDonald also placed sixth in the 100 yard fly in a fast 50.63. Stager added that "All of them (Wolverine tankers) swam better times, but it was not enough." He continued, "What hurt us most was our lack of freestyle strength." In fact, Michigan took only one freestyler, and he was unable to place. Also, fizzles; the Wolverine's 800 yard freestyle relay team was unable to quali- fy. Stager remarked that the championships "don't reflect the team's dual meet strength. Michigan convincingly trounced OSU during the season but were tripped by the Buckeyes in the NCAA's. One reason given by Stager was that in the champion- ships there are three relays which count more than the two relays in dual meets. In Stager's eyes, "The great- est performance (of the meet) was by Frank Heckl. He was really, really tough." Heck! of USC managed to give Indiana's Gary Hall a close call in the 200 .; Individual Medley and thin edged out the Hoosier's John Kinsella for second in the 200 yard free- style. Stager called USC's per- formance "the most outstanding part of the meet. It was a real team effort." Another job that stood out in the meet was that of Tennessee: s Dave Edgar. Edgar helped keep his Volunteer squad members to- gether and dazzled the onlookers by breaking the American record in the 100 yard freestyle event three times. In the afternoon trials on Friday Edgar set the record with a 44.7 clocking. But he then went out and broke that record in the finals with a time of 44.6. To top that off, he later reset the mark in the 800 yard freestyle relay. But despite these heroic per- formances, the Hoosiers still took the lion's share of records. Gary c Hall claimed two records--in the t 200 IM and 400 IM events, while t freshman John Kinsella ran p away with the 1650 yard freestyle race cutting off over 10 seconds from the pending national mark. f Kinsella then swamped the field b in the 500 yard freestyle race in t 4:27.39 to win going away.a In diana s izzles -Associated Press Sacrifice Aborted Milwaukee's Tommy Harper makes the play on Oakland's Dick Green in the Brewer's 6-5 victory over the Athletics. Green tried to advance on a bunt by pitcher Diego Segui. EWCOMB CONFIDENT: Linksm-en place third at Miami p i I r HI-Fl BUYS HAS A SYSTEM ON SALE THAT SUMS UP EVERYTHING YOU COULD WISH FOR IN A STEREO 3i Your Safe, Legal New York ABORTION Can Be Done Tomorrow! (212) 222-6023 or 222-6025 Mon.-Fri., 9-5 (213) PL 7-3170 24 hrs., 7 days A registered nurse sched- ules you at lowest avail- able cost. Save ad for future reference For the student body: LEVI'S CORDUROY Slim Fits ......$6.98 (All Colors) Bells .........$8.50 DENIM t f t t F r f Billboard There are still some tickets available for the NCAA Gym- nastics Championship to be held at Crisler Arena on April 1, 2 and 3. All five sessions: Stu- dents, $3; Adults, $5. Individual tickets range from $1 to $2. .I 0 N a F t i; t t r e n 7 By JOEL GREER Suntanned a n d deservedly onfident, the Michigan golf eam returned from Florida yes- erday after rallying for a third lace finish last weekend at the Miami Invitational. Michigan's 1205 total for the our rounds was bettered only y Florida, which won the ournament with 1132, and Mi- mi (Fla.) which grabbed sec- nd with a 1165 count. Wolverine head coach Bill Newcomb cited the outcome as an obvious confidence builder. Finishing ahead of both South Florida and Jacksonville gave he players a lot of confidence,"a Newcomb mentioned. "Beating warm-weather schools this early s always a boost." Michigan was he only school in the top five hat doesn't compete on a year- ound basis. Newcomb was especially pleas- d with the balance the links- men displayed all week as they onsistently shot in the middle 70's. Senior Rocky Pozza led the Michigan contingent with a 296 total on rounds of 72, 73, 74, and 77. Newcomb mentioned that the middle two rounds w e r e the most representative. They were played on the tougher LaJeune layout while thefirst and final rounds took place at the less exacting Biltmore Country Club. Junior Dan Hunter finished at 303 while Captain John Roska and sophomore Neil Spitalny each recorded 305 totals. Senior Jim Robson came in at 310 while freshman John Dale struggled in at 319. New- comb was pleased with Dale's performance however, as the tourney was his first collegiate competition.1 Newcomb has his line-up set for the Kepler Invitational which will be played at Colum- bus April 9-10. Roska, Pozza, Hunter and Spitalny will com- pete "unless something drastic happens between now and the tournament," Newcomb added. Newcomb h a s been disap- pointed with the play of two of last years lettermen, however. Juniors Gary Balliet and Pete Clark both did not play well in Florida and will have trouble making the squad unless they begin to get their games back into shape. so 4 II |' Bush Jeans Bells ..... Pre-Shrunk Super Slims. $10.00 $8.00 ... $7.50 $7.00 A component system that sums it up-combining quality with economy and it adds up insyour favor. Built around the Kenwood KR3130 AM/FM receiver which pushes out 64 watts of IHF power and includes features like a noise filter and loudness control plus two mike and phono inputs and remember that strong but sensitive AM/FM reception that is Kenwood's trademark?-It's inherent in the 3130. Being matched with two KLH Model 17's loudspeakers (which are universally acknowledged as the best sounding speakers cost- ing under $100 each), and the Garrard 55-B turntable (with its constants speed, high torgue Synchro-Lab motor), this combination gives the essentials and reliability necessary for a top quality system. We also include the high performance Shure M44-7 cartridge. So each part of this system has been chosen not only on the basis of sound quality and reliability but also economy- usually a system composed of these components would cost $440, but at HiFi Buys you can take it home for only $399. So summing up-we have a great sounding system at a great, low price-take a listen.' Residential College Players present CHECKMATE1 State Street at Liberty tGne 'oas GuVoaeita ' Ge"' the d 0 pce ' oa* Cec t fI! ENDGAME and BEDT-IME STORY by Samuel Beckett by Sean O'Casey A rril 1,2, 3-8 P.M. EAST QUAD AUD. -ADMISSION 50c- re-elect SCOTT-P res. elect VASOU EL-V. P. endorsed by BSU and CHICANOS i?; ,^'"'i:"Y:'r"":S"7^^.:": ''. 'gge;: : DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN MARCH 31, 1971 Day Calendar Anatomy Seminar: J. Harris, Mummies. of the New Kingdom Pharoahs," 4804 Med. Sc. II, 1:10 p.m. Population Planning & Sociology Toronto, Colloquium: Dr. J. Salaff, U. of Toronto, "Chinas Institutional Changes in the wake of the Cultural Revolu- tion and Motivations to Reduce Fer- tility," 4051 LSA, 3:30 p.m. Urban PlannLng Lecture: M. Ravitz, Detroit Common Council, "The Future of Urban America," Rackham Amph., 4 p.m. Botany Seminar: G. Bahnweg, "Distri- bution of Marine Fungi in the Ant- artic," 1139 Nat. Sci. Bldg., 4 p.m. Statistics Seminar: L. Jensen, Iowa State U., "A New Model for Describ- ing the Growth of a Bisexual Popula- tion," 2443 Mason Hall, 4 p.m. Graduate Coffee Hour: 4th f l o or, Rackham, 4 p.m. Speech Dept. Performance: "A Tragi- comedy in One Act," Arena Theatre, Frieze Bldg., 4:10 p.m. U-M Sierra Club: R. Eber, Nat'l Dir., and others, "Ecotacties-Plans for Ac- tion," 2024 Sch of Nat. Resources, 8 p.m. International Students Assoc., f o1 Ik singer M. Franklin, Rive Gauche, 9 p.m. Dept. of Geology and Mineralogy Lec- ture: Prof. F. Sawkins, U. of Minn., "Space, time and Systematics of Sul- fide Ore Deposits in relation to Plate Tectonics," 4:00 p.m., C. C. Little Bldg., Room 1518. General Notices Executive Board of Graduate School: announces that ballots" for Executive Bd. and Divisional Bd. elections should reach professorially ranked faculty by today, Mar. 31; should any faculty mem- ber not receive a ballot, he may come to Rackham Bldg., Rm 1014, to secure one from Mrs. Roos. Placement 3200 S.A.B. Announcement: Peace Corps reps. will be in 3529, Fri., April 2. Drop in for a chat; no appts. necessary. SUMMER PLACEMENT 212 S.A.B. Interview: call 764-7460 and ask for Summer Placement. Classic Crafts, Berrien Springs, will interview today from 10-5; applies. be- ing accepted for summer college pro- gram; reps needed; challenging opport. for ambitious person who enjoys trav- el; must have car; salary $2000 for summer, all expenses paid. Announcements, for more infor. call SPS. Fed. Correction Inst., Milan, under- grad and grad students who will be re- turning to school in fall; must be in social science field. Capitol Consultants, Lansing, engr. aide; field qf study, civil or arch. engr. - I I SOPHOMORE WOMEN: WYVERNS, the junior women's honorary society, is accepting applications for. 1971-72 membership until April 5. Interested women who are active in campus activities and hold at least a 3.0 grade point should send a resume to: JAN BREEDON, 914 Hill St. 1I-FI BUYS Ain Arbor-East Lansing 618 S. MAIN 769-4700 "Quality Sound Through Quality Equipment" ;I i I I -' i a i I [l Order Your Daily Now- Phone 764-0558 1245 Rosewood in Ann Arbor AUSTIN DIAMOND I In response to strong student interest, the Department of Slavic Languages and Literatures will offer Intensive First-Year Russian in 111B (June 30 to August 19). Other language courses to be offered will be Intensive Second, Third and Fourth Year Russian. Literature courses 'IN ENGLISH will include: Russian 467-Solzhenitsyn-MTWTh 9-Professor Brown (A study of the Nobel Prize winner's major works) Russian 473-The Modern Short Story-MTWTh 11-Professor Kramer (A study of epiphanic short story, emphasizing Joyce, Chekhov, and Mansfield) Slavic 474-Myth and Symbol-TTh 7-9 p.m.-Professor Welsh (Authors discussed will include Keats, Coleridge, Joyce, Elliot, Melville, Dostoevsky, Mann) Seminars on Russian Neo-Classicism (Professor Titunik) and on Slavic Linguistics (Professor Stolz) will also be offered, time to be arranged. OPEN MEETING RADIC(AL INDEPENDENT PARTY " 7:30 p.m. Tonight 2nd floor SAB r II 1209 S. University 663-7151 1 ... ....,i.?:'::: .... .......... :::::.-::::::'ii_____?ii _:________?}}::i______'Iii~r:i APPLICATIONS NOW BEING ACCEPTED FOR ORGANIZATIONS EDITOR and< Associate Organizations EditorE I SONY MODEL 70 AC/DC PORTABLE CASSETTE-CORDER THE SIERRA CLUB presents EARTH ETHICS WEDNESDAY, MARCH 31: BACKPACKING DEMONSTRATION 1 :30-3 P.M., Room 1040, School of Natural Resources, Jane Bishop For the student body: FLARES by r Levi Farah Wright " Tads *, PERFECT FOR TAPING DICTATION (like I I