I W'AGE EIGHTT THE MICHIGAN DAILY THURSDAYJANUARY 6,1966 kmI E G E N ERAL STOCR E j . I The Way of All Sports: Basketball Goes Mechanized By GIL SAMBERG Well, it's finally here. And about time, I suppose. The "Remember the Maine, Wizard of Menlo Park Contributor to Amateur Athletics, Boeing Aircraft (College Division), and Country Award" for 1965-66 must be presented without further hesitation to Fred Lewis, currently head basketball coach at Syracuse University (but whose future in the organization of Charles 0. Finley now seems assured). Lewis-praise Cyrus McCormack-has created basketball's first scientifically designed and utilized, though Top-Secret, DIABOLICAL MACHINE. In' the years to come there may be other, possibly more sophisticated, mechanisms appearing, but let it be duly noted that, this was the first. The others can only be pale imitations of this trail-blazer. Contrary to some absurd speculations, this machine cannot do everything. It can't even play basketball .yet. But since Lewis plans to write his doctoral thesis on the merits of his wired wonder, it must have something on the ball. What his gadget can do so far is: help. you gain stamina, help1 you jump higher (". . . it's helped boys jump three and four inches higher since they started using it."), comb your hair, brush your teeth, button your buttons, tie your ties, burn your Athletics coupon, ace your Econ final, help you lose weight.... Well, you have to understand. This is only the first try. For those technological reactionaries among you who scoff too quickly, Lewis not only in part attributes Syracuse's best start in basketball since the Stone Age to the machine, but also credits it wth helping him drop 30 pounds in a year without dieting. If the 30 pounds doesn't particularly lure any hordes of college basketball professors, maybe a fast 9-2 record will. Skydiving: Like Nothing Else on, Earth By GRETCHEN TWIETMEYER son. Granted, it gets a little chilly in winter, but you'll find addicts Its better tnan arinxzng aria t even better than sex. {It's the nearest thing to flying without wings." These statements, made by Alan Beach and Ray Krause, re- spectively, describeatheir feelings toward the newest and one of the most exciting sports there is- skydiving. Says Alan Beach, veteran of over 800 jumps, "I don't consider a person a jumper until he has made at least a hundred jumps. By then he shouldbe qualified enough to teach it himself." Hot or Cold The sport is never out of sea- ! out on Gregory field on any clear Saturday or Sunday. All it takes is a little bit of bravado and a lot of guts, and you too can be a skydiver. In one short morning you learn how to land correctly (by jumping into sand), how to pack a parachute, when to pull the ripcord, and what happens if you don't. And you take your first jump, Visualize, if your stomach will let you, clinging to a plane door 3,000 feet above Mother Earth, waiting for the signal. "Jump." Perfect Landing If you do it right, you're in spread-eagle position during the free fall, or period before the parachute opens. Then you simu- late pulling the ripcord, drift down to the drop zone, make your landing, and offer gratitude to theI deities for bringing you downl alive. But it's not only the sense of conquering the skies that makes skydiving addicts, though the ad- venture and challenge are cer- tainly part of it. More important are sensations which everyone in- terprets differently, but everyone feels. "Imagine a person floating in water in pitch blackness, blind folded, earplugged, and with gloves on so he can't f thing. Then imagine the That's skydiving," subm Beach. Sensational "One of the greatest se is to fly through a sunse you see the sun go dow you make your jump. through a rainstorm or clouds. The images you freedom you feel are pleasure." Beach's 12-jump roomii Kraus, agrees with him, "The closest feeling I can is like the apex of a tr jump, only there the fe only momentary becausey to concentrate onthe right away. In skydiving,1 sation is prolonged." A Shaky Cushion Ned Dybvig, a veterar jumps, says it's like "a cu air, though I always get sation of speed. Other say they don't-maybei that I haven't made jumps." Skydiving itself means of maneuvering during f as opposed to parachutej where the persons just ju and pulls the ripcord.7 eel any- opposite. its Alan to the inveterate skydiving addict, who knows that he makes it safe by what he does. This sense of responsibility makes the sport more exhilerating. ensations The newest local thing in sky- et where diving is the No-G Exit, which vn while Russ DeBeauclair calls the "great- Or fly est thing invented since the par- through achute." The secret to performing see and it is in the pilot, who has to be acts of highly skilled. He has to make the plane simulate the ballistic path late, Ray of an object thrown into the air. adding, The air-to-ground segment lasts think of only seven or eight seconds. ampoline In No-G, the diver gets out of eeling is the plane and just stays right with you have it. DeBeauclair, a 230 jump vet- impact eran, has held onto the wheels of the sen- the plane and swung himself to the other side of the plane. Alan Beach, innovator of No-G at n of 18 Gregory Field, has even gotten ishion of back inside the plane after per- the sen- forming the No-G exit. jumpers Skydiving Grows it's just Skydiving is only about ten enough years old in the United States and only in the last few years has the art America become prominent in in- ree fall, ternational competition. Judging jumping, is limited because it is difficult to amps out see from the ground. However, it For the is one of the fastest-growing 'Russell Dominates M' Scoring Despite b e i n g doubleteamed most of the time and suffering a bump on his head, All-America guard Cazzie Russell still leads the Michigan basketball team in scoring for the first ten games of the season. Opponents have tried every- thing short of a distracting femme fatale to discourage Caz from hit- ting the net-all to little avail, Russell continues his three-year domination of the team offensive column with 189 field goals and 64 free throws for an average of At Syracuse, remember, the Orange varsity has often been called '2.2 points5per game. "Bing & Co.," and the game dubbed "Bing-ball." Dave Bing was Clawson Second' impressive in the Madison Square Garden Holiday Festival last year Next in line is senior forward as a junior. He is unforgettable as a senior. John Clawson, in his first year Lewis, happy inventor and Bing's coach on the side, figures he'd as a starter, with 15.1 ppg. Claw- take his Davey even over the likes of B.C.'s John Austin or Michigan's son has been supplying much of Cazzie Russell if he had the choice. I_ _ Still, college basketball can be a one man showcase, but not a one man show. Teams can't face good competition and win coh- sistenly with a cast of one. Pretty big things were expected of Syracuse in the East last year and they flopped. The squad's overall quality hasn't changed terrifically since then. The coach is the same. Sort of makes you wonder. And there's still one little thing. Nobody, but NOBODY, knows what the heck the doggone miracle-maker is. And when this thing-whatever it is-gets somehow hauled into the U.S. Patent Office . . . well, that I'd like to see. Anyhow, the world now has its first basketball thingamabob . in college, that is. Lewis hasn't gotten around to naming OL' DIA- BOLICAL yet, but he'll probably take care of that detail by the time it comes out on the market next season (unless spies planted on his squad by the NBA or the SEC steal the plans first-probably along with Bing). "See me after the season and I'll tell you all about it," he says. We can hardly wait. And, depending on how Syracuse does this year in the remainder of its games,- Lewis' colleagues may have the same problem. And it sure is nice to see that good ol' American know-how- the stuff that's maintaining the United States' controversial Olympic basketball gap-goes beyond ordinary things like the jump shot, the zone, goal-tending, and the rest. In a swiftly cbanging world like the one we live in, technology can give you a real feeling of security. Thank you Fred Lewis. Get Well CHUCK the scoring punch in the void left by the graduation of Larry Tre- goning. Jim Myers. also a senior, who has been alternating at center and forward, is the only other' Wolverine in double figuies with his 11.3 ppg average. Oliver Dar- den, John Thompson and Craig Dill are shooting just under 10' points per contest. Defensively, forward Darden is riding herd on the rebounding category with 87 grabs in nine games. Russell has contributed 81 rebounds in-ten games as a roving guard for second place. Aside from the rebounding ag- gressiveness of these two veterans, Michigan'"has had trouble finding a cure-all substitute for Bill Buntin. SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: BOB McFARLAND first few jumps, the diver pi'ac- sports in the country. tices maintaining stabilityby - If you've always had a passion assuming the classic arched-back, for airplane-less flying, don't let spread-eagle position. Once he fear of heights or the fact that can d6 this he attempts turns, you're a member of the weaker sex spins, and rolls, and when he l scare you. In the first place, it masters these he can do relative doesn't feel anything like a roller: work with other divers. coaster, and in the second place, 1 quite a few girls have already doneI Landing on a Dimeit an enodi.AdRy Another aspect of parachuting Krause even suggests that skydiv-, is accuracy of landing, practiced ing become a requirement for all zone with a 15 cm. middle. Hid- physics majors, "because it really ting that middle roughly e . gives you a good idea of relativity." appoxi- Patience and Preparation mates a hole-in-one or a 300 About the only thing you really game in bowilihlg. need for this sport is patience. As Fear is an occupational hazard Alan Beach says, "You really have - you just have to expect it. to like it to keep on doing it, be Some people, like Ned Dubvig, cause you spend so little time haven't lost it yet. "And I know a actually jumping compared to the guy," he says, "who hasn't lost time you spend getting ready. his fear after 150 jumps." But "For a few minutes' enjoyment Alan Beach estimates that 95 per you have to spend a half hour cent of the people with over 100 packing a parachute, wait for jumps are not afraid.. "By that I' goodng weathrandufindwailot. mean that their pulse rate doesn't good weather, and find a pilot. even pick up when they're about maug is abo utato the sky- to jump." However, lack of fear s t i t tV ~~. t wrhUt NEWEST IN WEDDING RINGS A Aynt Carve Rd EXCLUSIVES "TEXTURED GOLD" A. CENTURY SET Groom's Ring $35.00 Bride's Ring $32.50 B. PREVIEW SET Groom sRiE $42.50 Bride 'sRang $37.50 C. DAWN SET Groom's Ring $35.00 Bride's Ring $32.50 CHOOSE FROM OVER 60 STYLES Shop Mondays j and Fridays 'til 8:30 CONVENIENT TERMS FOR FIN C MAIN AT WASHINGTON Read Daily. Classifieds a -Daily-Frank wing MICHIGAN'S OLIVER DARDEN FIRES a shot past 'Tennessee's Howard Bayne in the season's first encounter. Pulling off 87 rebounds in nine games, the team lead in that department. Wolverine forward has earned the i Russell 10, Clawson 10 Myers 10 Darden - .9 Thompson 10 Dill 10 Bankey 10 Pitts Brown 7 Tillotson 3 Michigan Totals 10 Opponents' Totals 10 FG 109 65 49 36 41 35 17 3 a 3 365 305 FTA 77 34 21 26 20 28+ 9 8 14 1 238 262 FT 64 21 15 11 16 22 a 10 0 166 194 RB 81 67 64 87 16 51 15 8 15 8 473 413 PF 20 37 18 33 30 25 16 9 4 199 189 Pts. 282 151 113 83 98 92 39 8 20 6 896 804 Ave. 28.2 15.1 11.3 9.2 9.8 9.2 3.9 1.6 2.9 2.0 89.6 80.4 doesn't mean taking it easy, which would be just about suicidal. Safety First Cautions Beach, "One of the worst things a guy can do is take his first jump with the idea that 'they've told me everything and now it's up to fate' because how safe you are depends on what you do. An attitude like that makes you ten times as susceptible to injury." And there is no doubt that sky- diving claims quite a few casual- ties. But that is of little concern SCORES NBA Cincinnati 117, Detroit 103 San Francisco 118, New York 117 Baltimore 114, St. Louis 101 NHL Chicago 4, Montreal 2 COLLEGE BASKETBALL Evansville 104, Butler 68 Toledo 85, Bowling Green 66 Bail State 89, DePauw 77 Temple 57, Villanova 56 Tennessee 82, Furman 63 North Carolina 99. Wake Forest 83 No. Carolina St. 55, So. Carolina 54 Holy Cross 73, Connecticut 72 Boston College 99, Rhode Island 91 , ~." 4 ~lLl l . 4 G s i , W, __ 'il "Gonna Ring A Few Bells In Your Ears!" ANN ARBOR'S TWO MOST EXCITING GROUPS ROCK BLUES R & B SOUL for T.G.'s, Parties, Dances, Grassers, You Name It!! A"' . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3 Guitars, Harmonica, Organ, Drums BOOK NOW! CALL ..JIEEP 4 Guitars, Harmonica, Drums All 79