THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Nine Sunday, September 1$ 1968 E I 'SPORTULGI-T One of the most encouraging features of the new Athletic Direc- torship is Don C6nham's attitude toward non-varsity athletics. Taking up the AD reins last July, he fell heir to one of the t biggest problems plaguing the department-a shortage of facili-d ties for the Intramurals and club sports programs. it In the short space of two months, while still new to the office, he has become intimately acquainted with the situation, mainly as o the result of almost daily conferences with one or another of the n concerned parties.n But besides being a willing listener, he is a doer. The renovationg of Wines Field was the first concrete step taken to alleviate matters.h The initial move a month ago to pave the northwest corner of Wines brought a protest from the Michigan Sport Clubs Associationt (MSCA) who felt this was being done for "Revelli, Inc." and went f against the 'policy of keeping Wines Field strictly for recreation a purposes.y Further communication since, and a proposed field layout which f includes two regulation rugby-soccer fields, have somewhat relieved t the dissatisfaction for the moment.c Many of them now seem willing to adopt a "wait and see" policy.s "I'm willing to give him (Canham') a chance," agrees Bob Gillon, president of the LacrosseClub and pro-tem chairman of the MSCAr board. "Many of us, however, are still a little skeptical. It's partly the conditioning of past experiences."Y It was this experience which led to the formation of theE association last summer. For years the individual clubs had been1 carrying their cause to the administration without results. Band-I lng together has unified their efforts. e Part of j the problem is that club sports falls between chairs. Though technicallyrunder the control of theIntramural department, they participate in intercollegiate sports, but not on the varsity level. With neither side willing to accept the responsibility, the club sports were left to fend for themselves. According to Bob Gillpn, the IM department has "dropped the ball." Canham considers them a separate responsibility. "They're sup- posed to be under IMs," he explains, "but it doesn't work out that way. Instead, they come to me; the buck ends at my desk. "Their particclar problems are not those of the usual IM athlete," he continues. "Granted there are more students involved in the IM program-that's the state of the union-but nobody has to be shut out. The clubs are expanding and they're important too because they reach a different group of students altogether." The major complaint of the club sports in past years has been inadequate practice and game space. The refurbishing and seeding of Wines Field over the summer will greatly restrict the number of available fields for the next three weeks until it is ready for play. In the meantime, Canham is allowing the rugby and lacrosse clubs to use those fields inside the wall at Ferry Field. Arrangements are still being worked out for the two games the ruggers play before the scheduled opening of Wines Field. As Canham defines his duties, "I provide the facilities, IM does the scheduling, and then I settle all the disputes." Last year, no one was willing to iron out such scheduling conflicts; and that, more than anything, pointed pp the unresolved position of the sports clubs. But Canham is not neglecting IMs either. The Regents have appropriated $150 million to improve the intramural facilities. Some of that has already been spent on Wines Field (the $14,000 used to blacktop the one field did not come out of his money). Even little things like reversing the direction of the baseball diamonds on Wines have increased the number of available fields. By placing the backstops in the corners rather than in the middle of Wines Field, four diamonds can be provided. Although outdoor facilities are the crucial problem now, Canham is also thinking ahead to roofed structures. "Building fields don't really solve the whole problem," Canham remarks, "because the those fields are not usable.' Already on the drawing boards is a $400,000 plan for a multi- purpose building to include five tennis courts, easily be adapted to majority of the school year is made up of the winter months when volleyball, etc. Canham feels the students on campus are increasingly inte- rested in finding leisure timie activities. If he keeps up his present pace, they'll soon have the necessary facilities. -DIANA ROMANCHUK TVH lRENTALS Localy Owned and Operated Expert Service and Student Rates I Fl STUDIO 121 West Washington DOWNTOWN ANN ARBOR-NO 8-7942 acro om Germn Restaurant Johnson By FRED LaBOUR there had be hurt in ragged scrimmage en some doubt about * * * The 1968 edition of the Michi- wnter e woul ply yesteruuy. gan football team got its first He was removed from the field taste of game-like action yester- on a stretcher. The precise nature day afternoon in sweltering Mich- of his injury was riot immediately gan Stadium. known. The scrimmage, coming after Head coach Bump Elliott said only nine days of practice, and after the scrimmage that he was most of those without full equip- not exactly pleased about t he ment, featured injuries to two team's performance. prominent Wolverine players and "We were ragged; just off the generally ragged play by the team edge of doing things right," El- n general. liott said. "Frankly, I'm not to- Senior halfback and team cap- __ tain Ron Johnson displayed his familiar slashing running attack and scored a touchdown on a nine y yard sweep in the first quarter be- fore being sent to the hospital for treatment of',a compound dislo- cation of his right thumb. John- sot son suffered the injury when he slammed into the wall surround- ing the playing area after run- NIGHT EDITOR: ning out of the end zone. ROBIN WRIGHT Another casualty of the hard- hitting scrimmage was Kirby Sams, a promising sophomore halfback from Corpus Christi. tally disappointed in the team's Earlier in the week Sams suffer- performance, but we had hoped ed a concussion in practice a n d they would have been sharper." Elliott said that this first scrim- mage had been scheduled early in the season because "we wanted the team to get the feeling of a game situation, especially in the stadium, as quickly as possible." The oldest Michigan bugaboo ofe all showed that it was still cap- t able of giving the coaches head-I aches. Field goals. Four field goals were missed. Two were attempt-t ed by Mike Hankwitz, two by Tim Killian, and all were from around ., ' the 20 yard line.t "This is an area which, we have to and willimprove on,'' stated Elliott. Elliott commented generally byt saying that "the timing of the tackling and the blocking was off, making it look a little ragged. Besides Johnson's TD, the team scored two other times, once on a 40 yard pass interception by Tom Curtis, and once when David Farabee crossed the line after tak- ing a lateral from Hankwitz, who had just snared a pass from :; second team quarterback Don, Moorhead. Starting quarterback D e n nis KRY A Brown scrambled and ran well, KIRBY SAMS although his passing game seem- Scholla-der breaks record for 200-meter freestyle. A By The Associated Press LONG BEACH, Calif. 0P) - Don Schollander smashed his world record for the 200-meter freestyle Frida' with a time of 1 minute, 54.8 seconds in preliminaries of the U.S. men's Olympic Swimming Trials. Schollander's mark was one of three world records smashed in the opening program of a five- day meet at the Belmont Plaza pool. Other world marks on the first program of the five-nigh' "meet were broken by Mark 'Spitz of Santa Clara, Calif., with 55.6 in the 100-meter butterfly and Char- les Hickox of Indiana University with 4:39.0 in the 400-meter indi- vidual medley. "I'm very definitely stronger," said Schollander in comparing this campaign with 1964. "I hope I'm a little smarter and a better swimmer all the way around. If I'm not, there's something wrong." Schollander will swim the 100- meter freestyle tomorrow and also probably will win spots on both the 400 and 800-meter relay teams, so he could have a chance for another four gold medals in the Olympics at Mexico City this October. DON SCHOLLANDER. SECOND STRING QUARTERBACK Don Moorhead, a 197-pound sophomore, throws a pass during spring practice last March. Moorhead quarterbacked the Wolverines' "Gold" team yesterday in a scrimmage termed "ragged" by Coach Bump Elliott. ed off. He appeared to have trouble finding his receivers. Brown fumbled three times. Cornerback George Hoey made two brilliant kick returns of over 30 yards, carefully threading his way through hordes of would-bek tacklers. "We made several good plays: and then a bad one, "Elliott add- ed. "We couldn't come up with the key play of the series." With the team's opening game just three weeks away, it appears sBillboard Officials are needed for In- tramural softball. A meeting for interested persons will be held Tuesday, Sept. 3, at 7 p.m. at the IM building. that the team will have a good deal to accomplish to be ready. "We'll start pointing for Cali- fornia in about another week or so," concluded Elliott. Join The Daily "Sports Staff MISTER$ FAMILY RESTAURANT " HAMBURGERS EASURE CHES *CHICKEN CU1CMN * CONEY ISLANDS " JUMBOYS SMILING SPEEDY SERVICE CARRY.OUT SPECIALISTS NO WAITING - PLENTY of PARKING INSIDE SEATING OR FAT IN YOUR CAR OPEN 11 AM DAILY 662-0022 3325 WASHTENAW RD. ANN ARBOR 2 BLKS. W, of ARBORLAND discuntrecords, inC. LABOR DAY SPECIAL MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2-11 A.M. to 5 P.M. at both of our locations 300 S. State-1235 S. University NAME YOUR DISCOUNT! ' -_-___,___-_-_-_ i IF- 1 1 , ATTENTION, STUDENT WIVES: THE UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN offers a wide selection of excellent opportunities for full-time, permanent employment. Choose from a variety of interesting and rewarding positions including: 0 OFFICE (Secretarial-Clerical) LIBRARY ASSISTANTS DATA PROCESSING (Tab, Key- punching, Programming Systems) ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANTS NURSES ((R.N. & L.P.N.) X-RAY TECHNICIAN MEDICAL TECHNOLOGISTS {Clinical & Research) " OCCUPATIONAL THERAPISTS 0 LABORATORY TECHNOLOGISTS These positions are in a variety of academic, re- search, patient care, and administrative units, o- cated on the Central Campus, North Campus. Med- ical Center and Willow RAn. Salaries commensurate with education and exper- ience. Full fringebenefit program with wide op- portunity for promotion. Those interested in Full-time, permanent positions contact Central Personnel, 1020 L.S.&A. Bldg., Phone 764-7280 or Medical Center Personnel A6001, University Hospital, Phone 764-2172. Part-time or temporary applicants apply, Part-time Placement Office, 2200 Student -Activities Bldg. BUY 1-5 L.P.'s, pay only BUY 6-10 LP.'s, pay only BUY 11 or more LP's, pay only catalog price-4.79 3.59 3.19 2.89 pmmwm catalog price-5.79 4.35, 3.86 3.49 ONE DAY ONLY-DON'T MISS IT! iscount rs ic. I I UNIVERSITY OF MICHIGAN -An Equal Opportunity Employer--- I ,: 2,. w , Your Best Buy in BICYC LES Everything in Bicycles! " Big stock of SCHWINN and RALEIGH ENGLISH BICYCLES * Complete Facilities for REPAIRING BICYCLES " Big selection of BIKE ACCESSORIES 1 t i COMMENTARY, '68 LEROI JONES and The Black Arts Theater September 8th 8:00 P.M. MUHAMMED ALI September 15th 8:00 P.M. DR. TIMOTHY LEARY debates DR. SIDNEY COHEN October 6th 8:00 P.M. BILL BAIRD "The Fight for Birth Control" October 13th 2:00 P.M. k f i i i 4 t " i i 1 jU -/ LT UNION-LEAGUE LABOR DAY WEEKEND presents Last Summer Days Continuing Through SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 1 2:00 P.M.-THE KING AND HIS COURT Advance ticket prices are $1.25 for adults and $.75 for students and are available at the LSD Depot. At the U MBaseball Stadium. Adults, $1.50; students, $1 .00; children 8 and under, free. 8:00 P.M.-HOOT! Sing on the grass until your mind's content. Hootenany on Palmer Field. Bring your guitars. MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 2 1:00 P.M.-LAY-IN ON PALMER FIELD Catch the sun's rays, live band for your listening and dancing enjoy- ment. 9:00 P.M.-OUTDOOR MOVIE nA I SSU-r s V& A I 1 - n C .:a E..I . I I 1..wr .... ..A [C..JX. * Locks * Saddles * Lites Headquarters for 11 11 .'"