1973 Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Sunday, March 25, ANN ARBOR CIVIC THEATRE presents PRIME OF MISS JEAN BRODY MARCH 28-31 CURTAIN 8:00 p.m. Lydia Mendelssohn Theatre Box office opens at 10 a.m. daily MASSAGE WORKSHOP FOR THE GOLDENAGE LEARNED IN INDIA FREE Tuesday, March 27 7:30 p.m., FACULTY CLUB LOUNGE Michigan Union BLUE SWIMS SIXTH Indiana cops crown Irish, Gobblers make NIT final I By CHUCK BLOOM Special To The Daily KNOXVILLE-The same state- ment echoed in every press inter- view that an Indiana winner con- ducted: "I wanted to win it for 'Doc'." And that is exactly what the Hoosiers did, capturing an un- precedented sixth NCAA swim championship last night at the Uni- versity of Tennessee Aquatic Cen- ter. Indiana finished the meet with 358 points, far outdistancing the rest of the competition. Host school Tennessee put on a strong finish to place*second ahead of Southern California. Michigan slipped to seventh place as Stanford, utilizing its breaststroke strength, rushed into sixth. Still the Wolverines fin- ish was very respectable, garner- ing twice as many points as they did in the 1972 meet. The final day of competition saw many records fall and the occur- rence of a major upset. Scottish breaststroker David Wilkie, swim- ming for the University of Miami, upset the entire field in the 200- yard breaststroke to capture the title. Wilkie touched out defending champion Brian Job of Stanford and 100-yard champion John Hen- ckun, also of Stanford. Michigan's Stu Isaac finished fifth in the race and his qualifying time 2:06.00 was the best time ever posted by a Big Ten breaststroker. The other points garnered for Michigan came in the three-meter diving, as Joe Crawford placed fifth. Ohio State's Tim Moore won the event, giving him a clean sweep of both diving titles. The home town Volunteer fans hadha lot to cheer about as Ten- nessee looked impressive in the final day. John Tremblay be- came the meet's only triple win- ner, capturing the 100-yard free- style title. Teammate Ken Knox placed second as thetVolssthor- oughly dominated the sprint events. Mike Stamm of Indiana set his second consecutive NCAA and American record in the backstroke by winning the 200-yard event. His qualifying time of 1:50.2 eclipsed the old mark set by Charlie Camp- bell of Princeton, set last year at West Point. Kendall Prigg camex home second and Michigan State's' Allen Dillev finished third. Indana's John Kinsella continued his domination of the 1650-yard freestyle, winning the event handi- ly with a time of 15:29.20. Southern Cal's Steven Furness, winner of both individual medley events, placed . second and fellow Trojan Jack Kingsley finished third. Perhaps the sweetest victory of all came in the 200-yard butterfly as Indiana's Gary Hall, probably swimming in his last competitive meet, won the title with a time of 1:48.48, the second fastest time ever. Hall, who is considered by most to be this country's outstand- ing swimmer, had had a disap- pointing Olympic meet and, prior to last night, a disappointing NCAA meet. But the sellout crowd, realizing that it was Hall's last race, gave him a rousing ovation. The last event went to Tennessee in record fashion. Its 400-yard freestyle relay quartet eclipsed' broke the NCAA and American re- cord that the Vols set last year with a time of 3:00.36. Prior to the start of the race, Tennessee and Southern California were locked in a tight duel for second place. But the Trojans, in their attempt to beat Tennessee, became overanx- iois and their relay team, which had placed second, was subse- quently disqualified. By The Associated Press NEW YORK - Dwight C1a y triggered an eight-point spree at the start of the second half and Notre. Dame held off a furious North Carolina charge near the end in upsetting the 11th-ranked Tar Heels 78-71 yesterday. The victory advanced Notre Dame's Cinderella team into to- day's championship game against Virginia Tech, the winner of yes- terday's other semifinal. John Shumate, who hit on 11 off for North Carolina, which finishes its season at 24-8. Tide turned NEW YORK - Billy Stevens provided the winning points with two foul shots with 14 seconds jpft in the game as Virginia Tech up- set Alabama 74-73 yesterday and advanced into the final of the Na-, tional Invitational Tournament against Notre Dame. i 1 R. C. PLAYERS present THE THREE SISTERS by ANTON CHEKHOV Directed by DOUG SPRIGG APRIL 4 - 7 at 8:00 MATINEE: SATURDAY, APRIL 7 at 2:00 EAST QUAD AUDITORIUM ADMISSION $1.25 Tickets on sale Tuesday, April 3 from 3:00-5 :00 p.m. and one hour before each performance. 12 field goal attempts, single-hand- Although the game was tied edly kept Notre Dame in conten- at 39-39 at the half, all the tion with 15 points in the first half drama was packed into the con-. which ended with North Carolina test's final three minutes. ahead 43-41. With the favored Crimson Tide The nationally televised game in front 71-66 and only 3:05 re- at Madison Square Garden before maining, it looked like the more a highly partisan Notre Dame talented team from the South, audience quickly turned the way of eastern Conference was in the Fighting Irish as ,Clay hit a charge. pair of long jump shots, Willie Then, Charlie Thomas put in a Townsend sank a field goal andj pair of lightning field goals for Clay connected again, giving Notre the underrated Gobblers and Ed Dame a 49-43 lead. Frazer threw in a jumper at the, Notre Dame was in charge of 1:10 mark for a 72-71 Virginia the game until North Carolina Tech lead, their first since the made things interesting in the last early moment ofthe, second half. three minutes.1 But Frazier missed a one-on-one; With George Karl scoring four foul situation with 58 seconds re- WtheorgtsteKarHeerlsou-mainingand Alabama missed two of the points, the Tar Heels out- s from in close, and Virginia. scored the Fighting Irish 12-5Sat Teeh regained possession. one stage and came within two Stevens then sank his points at 73-71 with 1:48 left. win sh th e f oe- winning shots from the f o u l Then Notre Dame put ,it away line, before Ray Odums con- with five straight foul shots nected for Alabama's last field in the last 50 seconds, three by goal with seven seconds left. Pete Crotty and two by Gary The Crimson Tide had one more Brokow. Shumate scored 24 shot at the basket, but Cleve- points leading Notre Dame (18- land's desperation attempt at the 11), while Bobby Jones had 22 end fell short. _, AP Photo BESEACHING DIVINE favor in behalf of their approaching trial by combat on the maplewood floor are high priests John Shu- mate (34) of Notre Dame and Ed Stahl (43) of North Carolina. God smiled on the Irish; they triumphed 78-71 in an NIT game yesterday. THE BIG the starter FF Is IL For the new comer to stereo components Tech Hifi has put together a little system that will get him started, and get him started right. The Cambridge Audio 1000 AM/FM receiver will pull in all your favorite broadcasts and push them out through the TDC Ila loudspeakers with 12 rms watts of real power. The music will have no distortion, it'll be clear, and all the notes will sound as they should. For a turntable, we recommend the BSR 310X with Shure cartridge. It's simplicity of design combined with smoothness and reliability make the 310X a real value. List: $300. dg Pistons bounce by lowly Kings; Boston blows past Rangers, 3-0 By The Associated Press I The Pistons had six players in a record of five wins and only one DETROIT-The Detroit Pistons double figures with Ford and Curis loss since coming to the Bruins. jumped ahead early on the sharp Rowe each having 20. from Toronto earlier this month. shooting of rookie Chris Ford and * * * The game pushed Boston's point. went on to defeat the Kansas City- total to 103, two ahead of third Omaha Kings 110-98 last night to Bruins blitz place New York. clinch third place in the National BOSTON - Rookie Gregg Shep- Basketball Association's Midwest pard, Derek Sanderson and league Sabres knot Division. scoring leader Phil Esposito each PITTSBURGH - Larry. Mickey's It marked the first time since scored as the Boston Bruins de- slap shot goal with eight seconds 1967-68 the Pistons have escaped feated the New York Rangers 3-0 remaining in the game lifted the finishing in last place. yesterday and took over sole pos- Buffalo Sabres to a 4-4 tie with they With Ford making his first six session of second place in the Pittsburgh Penguins in a National shots, Detroit took a 36-25 lead at National Hockey League's East Hockey League game last night. the end of the first period and never Division. was caught. Goalie Jacques Plante got his But the Kings, playing minus second shutout since coming to star guard Nate Archibald, pulled Boston. Plante, who made a num- S within five points in the second ber of remarkable saves against a period before Detroit drew away. hard-shooting New York team, has HIGH SCHOOL Class A C . .! } .. fA11Re! s i r ----"'" i '_"--------- S ,,._._' -I, DII ~ McDONALD I Al Henry Kloss, a forefather of modern speaker design, d Advent acoustic suspension speaker to reproduce the f with a clarity and realism found only in much more e) The Nikko 5010 AM/FM receiver will supply your Adv watts of real power. The tuner has FET's in the FM part a with distant. broadcasts. With the Miracord 620 an automa Efac 244 cartridge you'll have no noise, only clean disto List $542. IteMusics esigned the large ull audible range xpensive systems. ents with 52 rms nd has no trouble tic turntable and rtion free music. Q3 NOW OPEN Harry's Army Surplus 1166 BROADWAY, ANN ARBOR (near Plymouth Rd.) . , _- - ADVE\T JUST RELEASED... NEW and USED MILITARY SURPLUS Rainwear 4.25 & up $L 9 j CASE HARDENED Cycle Chain Saginaw 58, Det. Northwestern 55 Det. Southwestern 75, Pontiac Central 68 Class B Hudsonville Unity Christian 76, Albilon 74 Divine Child 68, Bay City All Saints 53 Class C Saginaw St. Stephen 89, St. Ignace 73 Detroit East Catholic 66, Battle Creek St. Philip 55 Class D Flint Holy Rosary 48, Ann Arbor St. Thomas 45 Grand Rapids Convent Christian 70, white Pine 56 BULLETIN The University of Florida won the Miami Invitational golf j tournament yesterday w i t h a combined score of 1,144 for the four-round event. Michigan fin- ished 10th with a total of 1239. The individual winner was Andy Bean of Florida who fired a 69 yesterday to give him a tournament total of 283. The Wol- verines' tourney low was scored by Neil Spitalny with a four- day total of 305. S Other tourney scores for Michi- gan had Brent Bailey and Pete Spitalny with 315, John Dale with 316 including yesterday's low round of 76, Chuck Burnham with 317 and Craig Ghio with 322. 7.98 Vietnam Hats . 3.25 G.I. Knapsacks 5.49 769-9247 OPEN 9-6 AUMP Q7 ° More Than Enough The Microstatic loudspeaker is a full range device employing four tweeters and one woofer. The five drivers are forward of the cabinet in an effort to get-the -music-out. And that's just what they do. Music is dispersed throughout the room much more so than with conventional speakers. With the Sansui 1000X AM/FM receiver, the speakers can be driven to maximum loudness, with its 70rms watts. The Miracord 750 turntable, respected among knowledgeable-lis- teners as a very good, dependable and extremely quiet turntable and it's rec- ommended with the ADC 900 as its cartridge. List: $775. MOODircr Mr/ $+6, MiaCOrd Mc Amida ANOTHER LOCATION AT: 2050 N. TELEGRAPH at FORD RD. in Dearborn aANKAMERICARU. master charge fM INrtEANAHK CARD A 11 w 1' I A nwi N hnE Km