THE MICHIGAN DAILY Yednesday, March 18, 1970 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, March 18, 1970 Ruggers By BILL ALTERMAN and JONATHAN MILLER If mother had w o n back in 1776, there would be no need tq explain how rugby is played. Un- fortunately the forces of g o o d triumphed and therefore, unless you are a tory or an Oxford sch- olar, it becomes necesary for a brief, if somewhat inaccurate, ac- count of how things are back in the old country. To take the anguished English mind off of their political plight: dissolution of the Empire, deval- uation of the pound, splitting up of Blind Faith; the English play- ed t hi s ridiculous game which looks a little like football, but only a little. RUGGER (as they affectionate- ly called it) is a very violent game Now, we Yanks think that rush.. ing around in suits of armour it cool, but that's our thing. Rugger. in fact has the highest mortality rate of any sport known to man including billiards. There is nothing better to do on a Saturday, however, than watch thirty maniacs attempting to kill each other for an hour and a half and then getting drunk on warm Whitbread Ale in the clubhouse. Rugby is only an excuse to drink after all. Rugby is a very high-class game in Britain; some schools ev- en refuse to permit their charges to play anything so low and un- becoming as soccer. In fact, the idea of g o o d redfaced English boys playing- s u c h a repugnant lower class sport would lead to a loss at the next battle of Water- continue old English traditions Agains The k/l sport, it is a religion. Rugby is worshiped at the University al- most as much as it is at Twickers (which is the world "mecca" of the sport). Here in Michigan rugby a 1 s o has its fanatical followers. Though no one has ever accused them of being effete snobs, the rugby club has one of the finest teams in the nation. Later this spring they will Journey to Virginia to represent the Mideast in the national In- vitational. The club is not merely a bunch of Jocks however. Though they would prefer a rugger to be good, being merely human will suffice. At current they have two teams but would more than welcome any newcomers who would like to practice, even if only on an oc- casional basis. THIS WEEKEND the ruggers begin their spring schedule against Windsor on Saturday, with Mich- igan's Gold team in action. The following day the Blue team op- ens up the home season on Ferry Field against Penn State. Saturday's game begins at 1:30 p.m. "It takes leather balls to, play rugby" Other related titles: THE POPULATION B0MB by Or. Paul R. Ehrlich (95) THE FRAIL OCEAN by Wesley Marx (95c) MOMENT IN THE SUN by Leona & Robert Rienow (95) S/S/T and Sonic Boom Handbook by William R. Shurclif f (5e) PERILS OF THE PEACEFUL ATOM: The Myth of Safe Nuclear Power Plants by Richard Curtis Elizabeth Hogan ($1.259 O Available wherever 'BALLANTINE' BOOKS are sold ing fields of Eton." RUGBY is ;more than a play- mire err "I Miami regains Super Bowl; Reed tabbed as NBA MVP By The Associated Press HONOLULU - Pro football's Super Bowl returns to the Florida sunshine next season with the game moved back a week to give the National and American Conference champions a longer breather. Commissioner Pete Rozelle said yesterday that Miami had been picked for the third time to host the game by the National Football League's 26 club owners. Rozelle said the 1971 Super Bowl would be played on Sunday, Jan. 17. This will give the teams a two-week break between the con- ference championships and the Super Bowl. Meanwhile uniform rules adopted by the newly merged National Football League kicked the two-point conversion attempt out of thej game. Commissioner Pete Rozelle said Monday night the executives of the 26 NFL clubs approved adoption of the old NFL practice of allowing only a one point kick after touchdown. The old AFL had the option of one point by kick or two points by pass or run. m * * *0NEW YORK - Center Willis Reed, the anchor of New York's attack and the muscle in its tough defense, was named Tuesday as the National ,Basketball Association's Most Valuable Player. Reed, the leader on the Knicks' Eastern Division-winning team, their first division title since 1954, received, 61 first-place votes and 498 points in balloting by the NBA players. The six-year veteran from Grambling edged out Jerry West of the Los Angeles Lakers, who got 51 first-place votes and 457 points. Rookie Lew Alcindor of Milwaukee finished third with 335 points. EASTERN MICHIGAN UNIVERSITY presents "THREE DOG NIGHT" SUN DAY, MARCH 22, 1970, 8:30 P.M. Bowen Fieldhouse, E.M.U., Ypsilanti, Mich. Tickets: $3.50, $4.50, $5.50 Advance Tickets Available: E.M.U. McKenny Union, M.S.U. University Center, J.L. Hudson Co. ' I TO ILLINOIS STATE.: Mermaids go national By BETSY MAHON Take a new coach, add some eager girls and little bit of plan- ning and what do you have? The answer is Sandi Hittelman, and her seven top swimmers on their way to the first really national meet ever held for women. The meet, sponsored by the Di- vision of Girls' and Women's Sports of the American Associ- ition of Health, Physical Educa- tion and Recreation, will be held at Illinois State in Normal on March 19, 20 and 21. The meet is equivalent to and has many of the same rules as the men's NCAA meets. There are standard quali- fying times for each event and any girl who is under these marks is eligible to compete. Included in the meet will be 50 and 100 yard races for each stroke and 100 and 200 yard individual medleys. These will be followed by 200 and 400 yard free style med- leys and 200 and 400 yard relay medleys. The diving event will feature jumps from the one meter and three meter boards. Each en- trant must be able to do one re- quired dive and one optional dive in each category. 5% of films, maybe less, are made because a man has an idea, an idea which he must express. SAMUEL FULLER In "Dolls" we have murder and violence and adultery and per- version, love and marriage, incest-no, we don't have incest, suicide, you name it, the whole whiz. RUSS MEYER I wonder if this business will ever turn honest. HAL WALLIS She's the world's eighth won- der... why, why, Shirley Tem- ple is endless. DARRYL ZANUCK Sometimes you wonder what it's all about. ON FILM For a free pre-publication issue write to ON FILM Subscription Service P.O. Box 10044 CNI Kansas City, Mo. 64111 THE MEET will be divided into three sections: open competition, consolation finals and finals. The twelve top qualifiers in each event will swim at.night in hopes of making eitheruthe consolation finals or the actual finals. Miss Hittelman "wouldn't be surprised if all the girls swam at least in the evening events." She feels that her girls' strongest events are the 20 yard medley re- lay and the free style medley. However, since the team has seen few of its competitors "Anything can happen." Miss Hittelman considers her three top competitors to be Lani Loken in diving, Johanna Cooke in the breaststroke and Barb Pat- terson doing the fly. Other mem- bers of the squad who broke the qualifying marks are Mary Ben- nett, a sprinter, Jan Pfleegor who excels in the fly and Cathy Man- cino and Tanja Lahti, the team's "long distance" swimmers. THE GIRLS tuned up for this championship by competing in two duel meets and three collegiate meets during their season. They won the duel meet with Waterloo but lost one with Michigan State. In each of the collegiate meets for the State Championship, Mid- Western Championship and an International Championship, they took second place behind Michigan State. This meet is a culmination of a season of preparation by ,the girls. Jan Pfleegor, a member of the squad, summed up her reaction by saying "This is a great accom- plishment for the entire team. We're organized, more of a team now. We're not just swimming in- dividually." U Ke .Disputing the Eastern mth By AL SHACKELFORD SINCE THE University of Michigan is polluted with a great many people from the east, I hear a lot about the outstand- ing high school basketball which is played in New York and Washington, D.C. Supposedly New York, the "baddest" town around, turns out more hardcourts stars than anywhere else. Lou Alcinder, Connie Hawkins, Charlie Scott, Michigan's Henry Wilmore, and a thousand more are cited by Easterners as evidence that Gotham is the mecca of high school bas- ketball; Washington, with Austin Carr, Elgin Baylor, Dave Bing, and Ed Hummer, is supposedly right behind. "You should see the goddamn blacktop games they have in New York during the summer," pants one of my eastern friends frequently. But there are other places where great basketball is played. As a native Michigander (Saginaw, to be exact), raised on tales of Dave DeBusschere and Mel Daniels and an avid fan of Spencer Haywood and Ernie Thompson (a former Bradley great), I take exception to this blatant Eastern chauvinism and offer this startling statement: Michigan' high school bas- ketball, centered in Detroit, is fast reaching the level of that played in New York, Washington, or any other town in Wood- stock Nation. Michigan high school basketball history is rich with the exploits of such talents as the aforementioned four plus others like Ralph Simpson, former Michigan ace Craig Dill, Ohio University's John Canine, and many of the stars on this year's Wolverine frosh, including Ernie Johnson and John Lockard. Who can forget the great tournament matchup of Benton Harbor, with current pro great Chet Walker, and Detroit Austin, with DeBusschere? How about the Michigan schoolboy champs of three years ago, Detroit Pershing, boasting an incredible array of talent with Haywood, Simp- son, Lockard and Bowling Green's Jim Connally? Another great prep team, Benton Harbon, state titlists with stars like Ellis Hull, Al McNutt and L. C. Bowen? River Rouge, perennial class B state champs and owners of possibly the best prep record in the country, with Willie Betts, Bill Kilgore and a hundred others? Some universities have made up teams entirely of former Michigan prep stars: this year's 22-7 Eastern Michigan team with Earle Higgins, Kennedy McIntosh, Harvey Marlatt, and Lindell Reason is a good example. Bradley University has drawn much of its talent from Michigan, as have many of the teams in the Mid-American Conference. Of course, Michigan and Mich- igan State hardly need to recruit outstate, with such homegrown stars as Rudy Tomjanovich of Hamtramck, Dan Fife of Clark- ston, Leo Lafayette from Grand Rapids and countless others. Those who doubt that Michigan schoolboy basketball is closing in on the eastern powers of New York and Wash- ington should journey to Crisler Arena at 8 p.m. tonight for the class A quarterfinal tilt between Pontiac Central and Detroit Kettering. Pontiac Central is rated first in the state by both AP and UPI, Kettering Is the Detroit city champ, and each has a 6-7 All-State performer: Central with Campy Russell and Kettering Lindsey Hairston. Michi- gan assistant Coach Fred Snowden has called them "two of the three best Juniors in the country." Both teams Lave fine supporting casts (Kettering has Spencer Haywood's younger brother Floyd) and the winner is favored to take the Michigan high school'"A" championship. Preceding the Pontiac Central-Kettering contest at 4:30 p.m. will be another "A" quarterfinal game between per nnial De- troit PSL power Pershing and Fordson. The Doughboys took Ferndale, rated number one in the Detroit News and Detroit Free Press polls, out of the tournament last Saturday by 90-88 score, led by a big 39-point effort from sophomore Bob Hawkins. Hawkins is destined for future stardom in college and pro ball, and is another tribute to Coach Will Robinson's coaching tal- ent. This is Robinson's last year; he has accepted a coaching post at Illinois State. 4, IEL Daily Official Bulletin WEDNESDAY, MARCH 18 Day Calendar Natural Resources Honors Convocation: Dr. David Gates, Director, Missouri Bot- anical Gardens, "The Responsibility of DARING to be different. THE POISON APPLE in the Newport Hotel 13100 East Jefferson WOMEN'S LIBERATION Orientation Meeting WEDS., MARCH 18TH 8:00 P.M. St. Andrew's Church the Ecologist to Society" Rackhar Amph., 10:30 a.m. Journalism Lect.: J. Anthony Lukas, Pulitzer Prize-winner, The New York Times, "Reporting the 'Truth' of the Chicago Conspiracy Trial" Rackham Lect. Hall, 4:00 p.m. Physics Colloq.: W. A. Fowler, Cal. Tech., "Nuclear Astrophysics", P&A Colloq Rm., 4:00 p.m. Speech Student Lab Theatre: "T hw Critic" and "Love's the Best Doctor", Arena Theater, Friese Bldg., 4:10 p.m. 'Botany Seminar: Dr. Robert H o g g, Case Western Reserve, "The L-Arabi- nose Binding Protein - What and Why?" 1139 Nat. Sci. Bldg., 4:15 p.m. Voice Det. Student Recital: School of Music Recital Hall, 5:00 p.m. Degree Recital: Marilyn Masson, vio- lin, School of Music Recital Hall, 8:00 p.m. Recital: Louis Nagel, piano, Rackham Lect. Hall, 8:00 p.m. Professional Theatre Program "Your Own Thing,'"Hill Aud., 8:30 p.m. General Notices Undergraduate Honors Convocation: (Continued on Page 8) I t_ DETROIT I I APPEARING SOON Sing-along, clap-along folk quartette The Joe Moran VILLAGERS Open Wed. through Sat. from 8:00 P.M. SUMMER EMPLOYMENT Classic Crafts Corp. is now accepting applications for. its summer college program. Positions available 'as company representative. Challenging opportunity for ambitious individual who enjoys travel. Must have use of car. Salary: $2000 for summer with all expenses paid. Mr. Eshleman will be interviewing at the Summer Placement Office, 212 SAB, on Thursday, March 19th-10 A.M. to 5 P.M. PHONE OR STOP BY FOR APPOINTMENT I 6 I i FRI, MARCH 20-8:30 p.m. Trueblood Auditorium SAT, MARCH 21-3:00 p.m. 8:30 p.m. Premiere Showing of SHOPPIN' An Original Rock Musical 4 I Id~i6IJt E'%I6%O1E l m a F16fflNP. WltWIu uo.W UEUW.~oE I I i