PAGE SIX THE MICHIGAN DAILY FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1967 11 SX1EMIHGNDIY RDY ETEBR2,16 ii I CAMPUS DISCOUNT STORES 213 S. STATE ST. 665-0725 COSMETIC SALE HURRY! Good only, until Oct. 6 CAMPUS COUPON AMBUSH COLOGNE Reg. $2.50 X1.99 LIMIT ONE CAMPUS COUPON ARPEGE SPRAY Reg. $3.50 X2.79 LIMIT ONE CAMPUS COUPON FABERGE WOODHUE Reg. $3.00 X2.49 LIMIT ONE 1 Y 1 "H . i4"::x 2. MICHIFISH: Billboard 4 Than Just Show I, -' The Michigan rugby club will play the Chicago Lions tomor- row at 3 p.m. on Wines Field. The ruggers will then host the University of Toronto A and B teams Sunday, with the games beginning at 1:30 and 3 p.m. respectively. By DIANA ROMANCHUK There is a movement afloat on this campus dedicated to the ad- vancement of synchronized swim- ming. The name of this unique organ- ization is Michifish, and, though little publicized, it has become a tradition on campus. Its most C college and high school girls. Thea notable project is the annual first such clinic will be held Nov. Spring Swim Show, this year 18, and features the Petersburg scheduled for March 29-31. Ornamental Swim Club, under the Last y e a r 's program. "On direction of Pansy Forbes. Stage," included water adaptations The two other major activities of "Sound of Music" and "Sweet Charity" as well as Macbehth's on the Michifish agenda for this T IE VANDALS AND THE ]BOKENR E AD *iHowardeohn ..i aie 4 0 I! I Don't Be Uninformed Get. the. three witches and a Keystone Cops number. That was the last Michifish show for sponsor Patricia Dau- gert, a position filled this year by Miss Joyce Lindeman, whom Michifish president Cindy Kin- caid calls an "excellent, well- known AAU coach." Miss Linde- man returns to a teaching posi- tion at the University after spend- ing last year at Western Mich- igan University. While in Kala- mazoo she co-coached the West- ern Water Sprites, the synchron- ized swim club there. In keeping with their policy of better synchronized swimming, the club each year offers clinics for year, besides the swim show, are the Intercollegiate Meet and the International Academy of Aquatic art. a Competitionbat the Intercollegi- ate Meet, to be held in April at the University of Indiana, is in two categories: stunts and rou-1 tines. Stunts are judged on ex- cellence of performance; routines are done in solo, duets, trios and teams. The International Academy of Aquatic Arts, located in DeKalb, Ill., was begun in 1954 by Henry Gundling and his wife Buela to further synchronized swimming as an art form. Ratings are given to participating clubs and criticism for improvement is offered. I '.e .o xl xn e M' Cage Hopefuls: A Sneak Preview and living in Tuscaloosa Delivered -.------------ --------------1 I I 1 I INAMF _____ II ADDRESS- __ - .-----.____ ---...-I I Weekday -i Sunday Both [-] I I Send to. Box 241, Ann Arbor, Michigan or callI 761-9859I ..--.....-.- .----------- By DAN STEINHARDT The guards are sharpshooters, the forwards are quick and agile, but for the fourth straight year the Michigan freshman basketball squad falls into a centerless pit. "Led by three all-state players, the team has fine talent, but we will be unable to fill the void created by the graduation of Craig Dill and the lack of any center material on the varsity," explain- ed freshman coach George Pom- mey. Top Three Heading this year's squad will be Rodney Ford, Dan Fife and Tom Lundstedt. Ford, a highly sought forward from Hammond, Indiana, averaged 20 points a game as a senior and had offers from Purdue, Indiana, and Minnesota. At 6'4" and 185 lbs. Ford is extremely agile, hooks with either hand, and is an excel- lent jumper. * Fife, from Clarkston, Michigan, is a 6'2", 180 lb. guard, who aver- aged 32 points 14 rebounds, and 8 assists per game as a senior. Fife Delivery ONLY to dorms and faculty offices on weekdays. Home delivery on Sundays. had offers from Michigan State, Wisconsin, and Kentucky.- The third all-stater, Lundstedt is from Mt. Prospect, Illinois, the same area as George Romney. A 6'4", 190 lb. forward, Lundstedt is one of the most accurate shoot-, ers on the freshmen squad and was all-state for two years, Other Notables Also of note for the freshman is Mike Rafferty, a 6'3" guard-for- ward who led his Birmingham Groves team to a; high ranking in Class A Michigan high school bas- ketball last year. Tim Nicksic, a 6'6", 210-pounder from E. Chicago, Indiana, who will probably play center, is a pro- duct of the teachings of Bobby Cantrell. Nicksic has the same fiery playing style as his ex-coach, who sparked Michigan to the NCAA semi-finals during Cazzie Russell's sophomore year. The remaining basketball tend- ers were given to Bob Bruns, a 6'3", 185 lb. player from Elgin, Illinois; Mark Berg, a 6' guard from Dal- ton, Ohio; and John Mayberry, a superb forward from Detroit whose tender was voided when he signed to play baseball with the Houston Astros. Practice will open for these and other freshmen hopefuls on Octo- ber 15. On the basis of previous experience, other good prospects should appear to join the "tender- ed." And with the small number of scholarships given, many a hopeful will be given a chance. The noble art of losing face May one day save the human race And turn into eternal merit What weaker minds would call disgrace. -Piet Hein Duffy Daugherty, despite his notice that Michigan State isn't pointing toward Notre Dame and isn't going to overlook any team on the schedule, is having trouble convincing people that he ever saw a schedule. George Romney, despite his "brain-washing" ploy, is having trouble convincing people that he ever had a brain. No one seems sacred anymore. No one except Herr Bryant, coach of Alabama's crimson Tide. Herr has always stood for truth, justice and the American Way. Herr has never settled for anything less than total victory. He figures he shouldn't have to. Last winter he bought a meat packinghouse in a Catholic Alabama community. Within a week, the Pope decreed that tuna fish casserole on Friday's was no longer the Catholic way. Devotees keep plugging Herr for President. But he's never settled for secondbest. "If you hear of me running for office, you'll know something's gone wrong," he says. It will mean that divine law is really dead. In a meeting of Southern gov- ernors a few years back, George Wallace was bragging about Ala- bama to Orval Faubus of Ar- kansas. Replied Faubus, "There are two reasons why Alabama is doing so well. First, you've got a port, Mo- bile. And second you have an Ar- kansas man, Paul Bryant." Alabama is more than proud of Herr. When Lurleen and George spoke at an Crimson Tide pep rally last week, nearly 10,000 of the flower of Alabama youth gathered. .HERR There wasn't a beard or a hippie mop in the entire crowd. There wasn't a Negro either. As the band played "On Alabama," the kids stomped and yelled. Several rolls of white toilet paper unraveled in the air. "We're not recruiting Negro athletes. That's a policy decision for others to make," Herr says. Football is a tradition with Herr. An American tradition. "It's not just a game. It's a life. It teaches discipline, sacrifice and hard work," preaches Herr. Marine boot camp sergeants say much the same thing. Herr admits that football has been profitable for him. However, he's returned kindness for kindness at Alabama. His game supports the school's athletic program, pumps $50,000 a year into the university, budget, is paying for an indoor swimming pool and a new fieldhouse and had a half million left over two years ago to donate to the engineering school. Herr knows what it takes to stay alive in modern football. When quarterback Kenny Stabler became involved in academic and legal difficulties last spring and this summer, Herr judiciously placed him on probation. But halfway through last Saturday's game, as Herr watched his Tide slowly being beached, he quickly reinstated Stabler. Stabler was, though, only human and managed but a 37-37 tie with Florida State. It was the first time in his last 18 games that Herr hadn't won. After the game, he put the blame right where it belonged-on the players. Said Herr, "This is the worst defensive team I've ever had." Then he pointed to a sign he keeps in his office: "Winning isn't everything, but it sure beats anything that comes in second." Heil! I 4 U I. CAMPUS COUPON REVLON FABULASH Reg. $2.00 1.69 LIMIT ONE I I "MIN* Th~E~Rr\D~n TV RENTALS $10 PER MONTH FREE service and delivery N EJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 CAMPUS COUPON REVLON EYELINER Reg. $1.75 $1.50 LIMIT ONE CAMPUS COUPON REVLON Frosted NAZI POLISH Reg. $1.10 89c LIMIT ONE CAMPUS COUPON (OTY IMPREVU Reg. $5.00 $*99 LIMIT ONE CAMPUS COUPON RAYETTE STRAIGHT SET Reg. $2.00 $1.49 CAMPUS COUPON rumD EDEE 9 TONI P A Return by popular demand, *MACBIRD by Barbara Garson Read by Donald Hall Players NION BALLROOM 8:30 P.N Saturday, September 30 Tickets $1.50 U A. I At 9:45 P.M. EST on February 27, a Pan-American Boeing 727 jetliner with 98 passengers on board made a fully automatic landing at John F. Kennedy Airport in New York - the first operational automatic landing in the history of aviation in the United States. Sperry Flight Systems Division participated as a member of the Boeing-Sperry engineering team which made this event possible. Our SP-50 Automatic Flight Control System played a key role. It put the Boeing 727 down "smooth as a feather," less than four feet to the right of the runway's center line under conditions of snow and fog - with a crosswind of twelve knots. This is just another reason why Sperry Flight Systems Division is recognized as the leader in the development of Flight Control Sys- tems and Flight Instruments and Displays. Our engineering team is second to none. Join Sperry Flight Systems Division upon receiving your degree in Engineering and take that big first step toward fulfilling your pro- fessional and academic goals. We are looking for engineers with B.S., M.S. or Ph.D. degrees in E.E. or M.E., to work in the areas listed below. Sperry Flight Systems Division., located in Phoenix. Arizona, leads in flight systems for airline and business aviation, and also pro- vides such systems for vital military aviation and space programs. 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