Friday, March 25, 1983/The Battalion/Page 15 nzo Charfe lie No. shot 79 i the sea eredthe ifst record >! T he I’teui ?r \ Pace M; which i] . closed eliminated P>te Ralpk e bench ft hall becai ginia out I during ii in the >68-57 lead lisle sanksii s in the d scored II VVilson •’irginia, No. 13 with 25 J had 23.^ • the , he Year, iJrl »nly 4 in t Robinson irovideds he 7-4 ce Montreal defeats Minnesota, 5-3 re T swim team sets record in NCAA’s id Rudd i f ) United Press International INDIANAPOLIS— He’d just ocketed an American record, arned his sixth and seventh areet NCAA titles and pushed is Southern Methodist team- tates into first place, but Steve e Forest TUmdquist still wasn’t quite satis- the nit cd. all inside Jli; Lundquist’s swif t breast- rrcenlor roke leg powered SMU’s 400- uthCantata medley relay to an Amer- mdingedjoan record-setting win in a the Do hursday’s opening session of t from the ie i NCAA men’s swimming at from hampionships. ■The relay swim came just . Deacom iree events after the SMU n them® “pot’s easy victory in the 200 it fronto - i|jyidual medley. But Lund- scoringait np| had badly wanted to crack v foster American record in that iradjertf vent held by his friend, UCLA [raduate Bill Barrett, cons, m Lundquist’s gold medals, the ison Squat > xl h and seventh of his NCAA uilean areet, powered SMU to an be namtdljht-point first-day lead over His Ore. "e-meet favorite I'exas, 69-61. (ored2h[ lorida was third with 54 points ,n added:. ieac l‘ n g into today’s second ses- fhe Bul‘ on ' an d Arizona State stood with2:28l»th with 49. rson the, Texas was stung by the Thompst eventh-place finish of its med- ,nr free t ie y relay — winner of that event !(!n he [last three years — but kept , lose to Southwest Conference ival SMU, thanks to a 1-5-7 flu sh In the one-meter diving. irove 1 Dave Bottom led off Stan- irqTs second-place medley re- ty with an American-record ,00 backstroke leg of 48.30. Ari- hona’s George DiCarlo took the 100 freestyle and Houston’s ■ .Ang Siong Ang sprinted to a flOUv v m in the meet’s shortest event, he 50 freestyle. Lundquist, the favorite in to- jffany lay’s 100-yard breaststroke and he 200 breast on Saturday, ould become the 16th man to vin three individual events in the 60-year history of the NCAA meet. The 6-foot-2 Jonesboro, Ga., resident wouldn’t mind that a bit — but only if it helps SMU’s chances of spiriting its first-ever team title back to Dallas. “1 just need to get my job done,” said Lundquist. “If it takes three golds, that’s what it takes. “I want to be a team player, to get the most points possible so our team can win the NCAA championship. That’s what it’s all about.” In the 500, DiCarlo fought off challenges from last year’s champion, Andy Astbury of Ari zona State, and from UCLA’s Bruce Hayes. DiCarlo touched in 4:16.93, a half-second off the American record. Hayes was second in 4:17.29 and Astbury finished third in 4:18.40. “I was a little bit ahead of them at the 200. That probably helped more than anything,” said DiCarlo. “I knew I had some speed and I knew they would be tired if they tried to stay with me.” Ang, a Singapore native, nosed out a strong field in the 50 with a 19.70 clocking, but felt he could have gone even faster in a less turbulent pool. “I’m happy that I won, but the time wasn’t very staunch,” said Ang, who placed fourth in the 50 a year ago. “I really felt a wave after the turn, but I just plowed through it.” Matt Scoggin led the domi nating Texas contingent in the diving, piling up 557.25 points, nearly 40 more than second- place Ronnie Meyer of Arkan sas. Longhorn freshman Mike Wantuck was fifth and another Texas diver, Dave Lindsey, was seventh. “I wanted to get the team going again,” said Scoggin, re ferring to the Longhorns’ dis appointing showing in the relay. “Last year, we had a bad start and it stayed that way.” United Press International The Montreal Canadiens are trying to nail down second place in the Adams division and Mark Napier is chasing a 40-goal season. Both moved closer to their objectives Thursday night. Napier fired in his 38th goal to help the Canadiens to a 5-3 triumph over the Minnesota North Stars at Montreal. The victory moved the Canadiens seven points ahead of third- place Buffalo with each team having four games left. Napier’s goal at the midway point of the second period, after Mats Naslund and Steve Shutt had scored, gave the Canadiens a 3-0 lead. Minnesota closed the gap on goals by Neil Broten and Brad Maxwell but two third-period goals by rookie Guy Carbon- neau, the second into an empty net, put the game out of reach. Broten scored again with eight seconds remaining to bring the score to 5-3. The North Stars, who still have a chance to finish first in the Norris Division, dropped their second game in a row. “After we beat Chicago ear lier this week, my players thought they won the Stanley Cup,” said Minnesota coach Murray Oliver. “But then what happens, we go to Toronto and come here to Montreal and get beat both times.” In other games, Washington dumped New Jersey 5-3, Boston nipped St. Louis 7-6, Philadel phia clipped Toronto 7-4, Quebec dubbed Los Angeles 7-3 and Calgary edged Chicago 6-5. Capitals 5, Devils 3 At handover, Md., Bob (Car penter scored two goals and Scott Stevens and Bob Gould added third-period scores to en able Washington to. extend its unbeaten streak to six games and move the Capitals three points ahead of the New York Islanders in the race for second place in the Patrick Division. New Jersey had taken a 2-1 lead on second-period goals by Don Lever and Steve Tambellini. At Boston, Rick Middleton collected his second hat trick ol the season and seventh of his career to lift Boston. Middleton gave the Bruins a 6-5 lead with his 46th goal and Barry Peder son added his 42nd at 1 1:27 ol the final period to make it 7-5. Bernie Federko scored twice for St. Louis. At Philadelphia, Ron Flock- hart, Paul Evans and Darryl Sit ter scored goals within a span of 2:06 to break open a 3-3 dead lock and lift Philadelphia. Rick Vaive’s 49th goal for Toronto had tied the game 3-3 at 15:57 of the second period. At Quebec, Peter Stastny scored his 45th and 46th goals of the season and added a pair of assists to power the Nordiques, who snapped a fourgame wwnless streak. The loss was Los Angeles’ eighth straight on the road and dimmed their playof f hopes. At Calgary, Alberta, Lanny McDonald scored a pair of third-period goals, giving him 62 for the season to lift Calgary. The win moved the Flames two points ahead of the Vancouver Canucks in the battle for second place in the Smythe Division. I : I 1 M Short Classics You'll like the high quality that sets our shorts apart from the rest. Freedom of movement, smooth clean lines,?durable construction give our shorts a superb fit, with good looks that last-5 last. You’ll Go FHppin’ For Tasty Dippin’l What’s a new, healthy taste treat with half the calories of ice cream? Fro zen yogurt from The Yogurt Pump! It’s not too sweet, not too tart and full of the whole some goodness of yogurt. Choose from 25 delight ful flavors. 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As always Mastercard - Visa-American Express are welcome. 34 iamond Room 3731 E 29th St 846-4708 — Bryan 707 Shopping Village 693-7444 College Station BOW WOW WOW WHEN THE GOING GETS TOUGH THE TOUGH GET GOING On Sale Through March 31 Stop m soon and pick your favorites from the original designs that many have tried to copy. Men’s 4 women’s sizes in a wide range of styles ? beautiful colors. WHOLE EARTH PROVISION COMPANY. 105 Boyett 846-8794 J