PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY F'RWAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1967 RAGE SIX TIlE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY. SEPTEMBER S. 1967 GOOD SHEPARD UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST 2145 Independence Series of Forums "Man in a Revolutionary World" Sunday, Sept. 10, 8 P.M. (7:30 Coffee) "Revolution in Family Life" FRED GIBILISCO, Ann Arbor Family Service Social Worker .me 1 I In Rugby, Kicks Are for Kegs LOOK Picks Wolverines For Nation's Top Twenty By TOM RABOINE done Tuesdays at 9:00 p.m. atI with teams of fifteen men andI putting the ball into play is by a Rugby football, the fastest grow- college sport in the United States,' finally has caught on at Michigan. A sport which is big on both the east and west coasts has been kept alive here by a handful of British Commonwealth players and a few American converts. This year, the Michigan Rugby Football Club has seen its rank swell to nearly one hundred play- ers. Most of the recruits are new to the game, but after two weeks of practice they appear well-drill- ed. And well-drilled they will have to be. This season the MRFC has scheduled two games on most weekends, playing a schedule of Big Ten schools (yes, Michigan State is on the list) ,and Canadian clubs. This will insure everyone willing to play a chance to see action. Recruiting is still being Wines Field. substitutions are not allowed. A Rugby football, an English regulation game isdivided into game, was derived from soccer and two twenty-minute halves of con- is the forerunner of present-day tinuous play. American football. It is played The most common means of "seum.n~" which crrespnds ~to the RONALD PUDDUCK, Teacher, member education Ann Arbor Public 'School of staff committee on sex "line of scrimmage" and looks Michigan will finish nineteenth; like a huddle trying to tear itself in the country and third in the apat. aclin isth rue, utBig Ten according to the 1967 Bi e codn ote16apart. Tackling is the rule, but "College Football Forecast" in the without the protective equipment September 19th edition of Look of American football.azine. Rugby football has a tradition The national weekly, which al- of comradeship among the players so calls Wolverine quarterback of opposing teams, as well as Dick Vidmer "best in the Big among teammates. This is evi- Ten," ranks Notre Dame, Texas' denced by the practice of clapping and Michigan State 1-2-3 in its the opponents off the field and poll. by the keg after the game. The article predicts not only The Name of the Game... the top 20 teams in the nation At the keg, the contestants chat but the winner of each game the about the. game with each other top 20 plays, and, in an interest- and with the spectators who drop ing innovation, the participants by for beer and the camaraderie winning in the major bowls. associated with the sport. ' The result is a prediction that The Michigan Rugby Football Southern California will beat' Club plays its first game of the Michigan State during the regular season this Saturday at 3 p.m. on season but lose to the Spartans Wines Field. The Detroit Border- in the Rose Bowl. ers will provide the opposition. A second game could not be scheduled this weekend. There- fore a full-scale, 'intra-squad CLA scrimmage will take place Satur- Michigan will lose to Michigan State and Minnesota (who they beat 49-0 last year) in compiling an 8-2 record. Purdue, ranked 17th, two places ahead of Michi- gan, will have a 7-3 record los- ing to Notre Dame, Michigan State and Indiana, a team Michigan is expected to defeat. In addi- tion to the regular season loss to Southern California, Michigan State should lose to Notre Dame, according to the Look rating. Results of the other bowl con- frontations according to Look are: Texas beating Nebraska in the Cotton Bowl, Alabama defeating Georgia Tech in the Sugar Bowl, Miami of Florida stopping Ten- nessee in the Orange Bowl, Hous- ton topping Arkansas in the Ga- tor Bowl. K NORTON tfikn Ot I Future Dates: Sept. 24, Oct. 8, Oct. 22 Transportation: 665-8167, 665-2831 I / / OVER 5000 PAIR OF LEVI'S IN STOCK ALL WOOL COTTON 79TURTLENECK 95 TURTLENECK SWEATERS $7 T-SHIRTS UASSORTED COLORS 122 E. Washington St. Open Monday and Friday Nights '. . :.: : .. . .r.. . ... .:s : : :: : : - . .:. . . . . .. :. . . . ... .. . . .. . . .: . . .:i. .: ."4.v ::.: :: : v:: . v lL . . .. . . .. . .v{ . . .. . . ... . .. . ... . . \.. .. . . . . .. . ..: : ::v : .: . . ' . ..... ....... .. ..n ... .. . .::..... ...n .. n ... ....::::v:. }: :i:!}.: }^ :^}: v}} . ::::: :. .:::.:::..::.....5..r 4 THE MICHIGAN RUGGERS engage a squad from Michigan State in a game held two weeks ago at Tiger Stadium. The Wol- verine squad emerged from this game with an exhibition victory. DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR Lions Deal Brown For Draft Picks DETROIT (R') - The Detroit Lions traded defensive tackle Roger Brown to the Los Angeles Rams yesterday for three high draft choices, including the Rams' No. 1 pick next year. Brown, 6-foot-5, 300 pounds, a seven-year National F o o t b a 11 League veteran, has seen little ac- tion in the Lion's preseason games. He underwent surgery on his left knee in February. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: BOB LEES 'U pphff/41S~/(I. Sales -Service -Parts-Accessories WENK Sales and Service Inc. PERSHING RIFLES " ESPRIT " LEADERSHIP ' " COMPETITION " TRAVEL 310 EAST WASHINGTON ST. ANN ARBOR NO .5-8637 -F -I state st. z z > y0 PQ ____ division st. -a. r ser ce___ main st. I MEETINGS: SEPTEMBER 7, 11 212 North H ill All ROTC Cadets Invited Ode to a Rose Garden Thoughts. If Life is a magazine, and Time is a magazine, does that make Time a bowl of cherries. Happiness would have been Lieutenant Girard trying to hand- cuff the one-armed man. Silence is but the sound of those who speak with their hearts; words but the manifestations of misunderstanding. Just think, Benjamin Franklin must have looked at this very star and said "Just think. William Shakespeare must have looked at this very star." War is merely bureaucratized murder. Did you ever stop to think that the world may actually be an atom-sized particle located on the point of a gigantic needle which exists in another universe, and that any moment now some enormous housewife is going to start sewing and smash us all to smithereens? Anyone who doesn't like Audrey Hepburn probably thinks General De Gaulle is sexy. Lieutenant Staudenmeier is a myth. The District Attorney on Perry Mason is named Hamilton Bur- ger. A common nickname for Hamilton is "Ham." That should make him Ham Burger. Hot Dog. For man to die he must live. Death can drive a hard bargain. The Air Force probably isn't half so worried about "Unidenti- fied Flying Objects" as about the ones that they've identified. Pitchers who intentionally throw at hitters should be arrested for "assault of battery." Someone should remind Barry Goldwater, Gerald Ford, Everett Dirksen and other self-styled demagogues that Stokely Carmichael can not possibly be found guilty of treason, because we are not at war. Officially. Whatever happened to Madelyn Murray? Happiness is reading Marshall McLuhan at, more than ten words a minute and understanding at least one of them. I wish I could remember who said, "I've only met one man I didn't like - Will Rogers." The only thing that worries most radicals more than selling out to the Establishment is getting sold out by it first. Does the University issue an ID card to a student if he's never worked and doesn't have a social security number? Or is that an entrance requirement? I suppose it depends upon how big_ your teeth are as to whether you should buy a regular or giant economy size tube of toothpaste. A stranger passed me on the street the other day and asked "Why?" Somewhere, perhaps, is the Answer, neatly snuggled between the second raindrop to the left of oblivion and the third blossom in a rose garden which I was never promised. ATTENTION MUSICIANS: Help the Interfraternity Council help you. Register your band for fraternity listing. Send name of Band, manager and telephone number to Social Chair- man, 1510 S.A.B. or call 662-3162. I1 I U I C; xSW G[N OF w!.tE :i lS'A, te Need Information About I I STUDENT HEALTH INSURANCE? Contact Campus Representative Miss Sue Ormandy 1548 S.A.B. 663-0661 i \j 4 .w: : .:: "}." r vn";::"ii~ii :.sa ;y'}:*v.-vrd$;...'d..S {.Y Y;f ;"S?: D IAM ON D R I N G S It does all the work, but on Saturday night which one goes to the party? -fA J4' {JA Iv j I A1 Once upon a time there was an ugly little bug. It could go about 27 miles on just one gallon of gas. It could go about 40,000 miles on just one set of tires. And it could park in tiny little crevices no big- ger than a bug. It was just right for taking father to the train or the children to school. Or for taking mother to the grocery store, drug- store, dime store and all the enchanting places mothers go when everyone else is working. The ugly little bug was just like one of the family. But alas, it wasn't beautiful. poor ugly little bug would be replaced. By a big beautiful chariot, drawn by 300 horses! Then, after a time, a curious thing hap- pened. The ugly little bug (which was made very sturdily) never got uglier. But the big beautiful chariot didn't exactly get more beautiful. In fact, in a few years its beauty began to fade. Until, lo and behold, the ugly little bug didn't look as ugly as the big beautiful chariot!The moral being: if you want to show you've gotten somewhere, get a big beautiful chariot. But if you simplv want to aet somewhere. LYRIC. . . . . FROM $100