THE MICHIGAN DAILY higan Students Organize Sky Diving Club TIGHT FIGHT] TITL PETER C. Mc LEAN Daily Guest Writer OR'S NOTE: Peter Mc.Lean, ate student in Chemistry, ky diving this summer. He umps to his credit.) topgap attempt to over-' ing branded crack-pots, shers or loons (all un- ampus sky divers have to organize a University mubryonic group aims to pore students to the sport. ,ribe sky diving to non- nts. In its ultimate form, e two distinct parts of rig: free-fall before the e its openeand the ride er it has opened. Fall Guys ee-fall portion can be of ed duration, and depends the altitude of the air- on exit. The chutist falls; to 2500 feet, where the parachute is deployed. Thus, a person can exit at 3500 feet, and fall for 10 seconds, or from 13,000 feet and fall 60 seconds. The upper limit is set by char- acteristics of the airplane or by the problem of oxygen starvation above 16,000 feet. It also gets quite chilly up there. In more advanced jumps, several jumpers can fall together and perform relative work, either by passing batons or just horsing around. In one rather unique in- cident, a couple became engaged in the air by passing a ring, and another couple was married in a plane and jumped to the reception. End of Free Fall At the end of the free fall (at 2500 feet) the parachute is de- ployed. The second phase now be- gins-attempting to land on a target on the ground. The para- chutes used' in sport jumping have been modified to provide a lateral velocity through the air of up to 15 mph, and can be turned to carry a chutist in any direction desired. Thus, the velocity of the chute, in conjunction with, or to correct for, the prevailing wind is used to land on the target. It is not unknown for a jumper to land square on the five inch circle that is the target. With practice, a jumper can not only change the direction of lateral movement over the ground, but the rate of both forward motion and descent can be varied. International Competition' Free fall maneuvers and tar- get work require considerable skill, coordination, practice, and enthusiasm, and form the basis of the well-organized international competition. It is fairly certain that this sport will be included in the Olympics within twelve years. Of course, the student jumper does not start off with a sixty second delay. Rather, this is a goal toward which the new jumper must work. Before even seeing an airplane he must go through a thorough training program. He learns to pack a parachute, exit from the aircraft, maintain stability in free fall, emergency procedures, control of the can- opy to approach the target, and safe landing techniques. This re- quires several hours of instruction before making the first jump. More advanced instruction is nec- essary before he starts in free falling. Certified Instructors There are several in the new University group of jumpers who are certified by the Parachute Club of America to train new jumpers and have up to 500 jumps and several hours of time ac- cumulated in freefall. The group will hold a meeting on Wednesday, September 2, in the KLM, rooms of the Michigan Union with movies, discussion of aspects of the sport, and answers to any questions. Feel free to at- tend even if you do not intend to participate. One of the aims of the club is to acquaint the cam- pus with this safe, challenging,' and exhilirating sport. SEC Race o Be Close As Five Teams Favored ATLANTA (I)-The Southeast- offensive leader until he was in- ern Conference football race is jured in the fourth game last sea- shaping up as one of the toughest son. The Tigers also have a good ever with at least five teams -- headed by Mississippi and Auburn All the experts are picking Mis- --capable of winning the cham- sissippi and Auburn in that or- pionship. der, but it would be less than a mild surprise if any of the 'other Only a half step behind 'Ole top five teams slipped in and won Miss and Auburn are Alabama., the championship. Louisiana State and Mississippi State. Kentucky and Florida are Kentucky has had its problem, rated the darkhorses, with Ten- the past two seasons, but now has nessee, Georgia, Vanderbilt and tested depth at every position. The Tulane rounding out the rest of Wildcats will build their attack the field. Georgia Tech now is an ! around Rick Norton, a strong- independent, arimed junior quarterback and al- so unveils its most heralded line- I _} - G RECEIVING A DEGREE? A MEMBER OF Michigan's newly formed Skydiving Club pre- pares for the freefall portion of his dive. Behind the formation of the new club lay a desire to organize students already inter- ested in jumping, and to attract new members to a relatively unknown sport. IN DECEMBER? IN MAY? CHAMP TO IMPORT SPECTATORS: Clay Fears Trieks in Return Match r cr Yearbook BUT IT WILL GET THERE ONLY IF YOU MAKE A SITTING APPOINTMENT NOW! SYour picture must be taken by our photographers to appear in the MICHIGANENSIAN. ' Our photographers will take pictures only during September. MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (P) - Cassius Clay started light work- outs Tuesday for his return match with Sonny'Liston, and said he was only kidding about going to 'Egypt to train. "It's too hot over there," the heavyweight champion said. Clay tipped the scales at 225, about 15 pounds over his fighting weight, before the first workout since his marriage almost two weeks ago. "I'll lose it with no trouble," he said. "I'm eatin' one-fourth what I Iusually eat. But I could go in at 230 and beat Liston or any other heavyweight around because they are so slow.", This was the old Cassius Clay, r NOW the Louisville Lip, and not the soft-spoken Mohammed Ali. Will Bring Guests "I'm going to bring 10 or 15 people here from foreign countries at my own expense and get 'them ringside seats so they can see that the fight, is fair," Clay said. "I'm going to fly them here from Africa and the Middle East and pay all their expenses. Then if I lose because of some sneaky deal, they can rush to the United Nations and tell the world I was robbed. "They might try to rob me of my title with some trick like that hot stuff they go in my eyes the first fight. { "Or maybe the judges would take it away from me even if I won. This is what I don't want to happen, and I'm bringing in my own people to see for themselves so they can tell the world." fi Wins by TKO In the first Clay-Liston fight here last Feb. 25, Clay wanted to quit before the fifth round be- cause his eyes were burning and blurred. But his trainer, Angelo Dundee, shoved him into the ring and he won a technical knockout in the seventh. Clay said he was disappointed over his treatment as champion in this country. "People stop me on the street and ask me why I'm not on the Ed Sullivan show or the Jack Paar show," he said, "and why most of the things printed about me are not true.. " They evens tried, to make my wedding look bad, said something about p h o t o g r a p h e r s getting punched. No one was punched." Plans to Retire Clay said he probably would re- tire after two more fights. "I've just bought two apart- ment buildings in Chicago," he said, "and I want to get a farm in Illinois where I can take it' easy and look at my scrapbooks. "I'll have a lot of things going when I retire. I'm going to have a book written that everybody in the world will want to read. And I'm going to have a movie made about my life." Auburn returns 27 lettermen, in- cluding All-America quarterback Jimmy Sidle, from a team that finiished last year's.. regular sea- son with a 9-1 record., Coach Ralph Jordan says his team will be even better this year. Mississippi Favored Mississippi, always ranked high. lost seven starters off a team that was 7-1-2 last year, but still figures to be much stronger. Th( Rebels will have two fine line- men in guard Stan' Hindmnan, e 6-foot-3, 230-pound junior and Al- len Brown, a 6-4, 225-pound sen- ior end. Mississippi State has rolledj along year after year as the SEC's 'forgotten team, butthose days rnay be gone now. Twenty-three 'lettermen return from a team that compiled a 7-2-2 record last sea- son, including a victory over North Carolina State in the Liberty Bowl. Alabama and LSU will both be' stronger; than last year, according to their respective coaches, Pau? Bryant and Charlie McClendon and will be in the title' fight all the way. Bryant already is hailing quar- terback Joe Namath as the best! all-around athlete he's ever coach- ed and flatly states he's the best back in America. LSU- Iard to Beat Last year yas a rebuilding sea,- son at LSU and the Bayou Ben- gals have apparently put togeth- er a team that will be hard to beat. LSU is counting heavily or quarterback Pat Screen, the team's man since Lou Mlchaels inKMau- Freshman Football ,An organizational mieeting for freshmen football candi- da'.es will be held Tuesday, September 1, at 3:30 p.m., in the basement of the Athletic Office Building; 1,000 South State Street. All freshman in- terest,'d in football are urged to attend. rice Moorman, a 6-4, 250-pounC sophomore tackle. Dupree Leads Florida Florida will build its hopes around Larry Dupree, a fine run- ning back. If Florida cart fill the gaps in the center of its line, it could be a contender. Tennessee will be a real ques- tion mark. The Volunteers have P new head coach, Doug Dickey, and will be operating from something other than the single wing - the traditional offense at Knoxville. Vanderbilt and Tulane both fig- ure to be better but will still find the going rough. Vanderbilt should improve on its 1-7-2 record, but ' it looks like another long season for Tulane, which plays a murder- ous schedule. Georgia also has a new coach in Vince Dooley, a former Auburn as- sistant. Dooley is quick to admit that the Bulldogs have three good linemen in tackles Ray Rissmiller and Jim Wilson and end Pat ,Hodgeson, but after that the tal- ent runs pretty thin. I Make your Appointm-ent NOW at any MICHIGANENSIAN Sales Booth or at the Cashier's Window in the Student Publications Building. $2.00 Sitting Fee Payable as You Make Your Appointment. While You're There, Order Your 'ENS IAN! $5.00 NOW-But the Price Will Be Going Up. SAILING CLUB OPEN MEETING THURS., SEPT. 3 7:45 P.M. UNION BALLROOM DND-AT.a& SUN., SEPT. 5 & 6 E SILVER-CHINA---CRYSTAL Boutique Gifts and a Jewelry 220 South Main Downtown .4 MAST'S SHOE welcomes you N to the U. of M. Campus Open House,, d s - from 4-8 P.M. SWCB N- LIVE students, interested in a dynamic student activity, to fill openings for- FREE COKES ,I ,. .: ; / DISC JOCKEYS ENGINEERS SALESMEN YOU can be part of Ann Arbor's Progressive, Student-owned and operated Corme in and Get Acquainted NEWS CASTERS Radio Station GENUINE HAND SEWN VAMPS Loafers for Guys and Gals IF Tassel Mc 1nSttI&flIK I PUBLICITY II t,11