Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, November 11, 1971 Page Six THE MICHIGAN QAILY Thursday1 November 11, 1971 What's Wpe and IWhre ,7 Campy and gang power Baby Blue. A ,_ _ , s "' . .7 ... F H' v 4 g - a a Y{carc...cM'n Fr te stud n body: Genuine >& Authentic r Navy $25 Sizes 34 to 50Q eStreet at Liberty If you have an item of interest, place it in THE DAILY CALENDAR folder 48 hours in advance. 420 MAYNARD Bu ltin Boa rd By JIM EPSTEIN When conversation turns to basketball this winter the center of attention may not be the ex- ploits of the varsity cagers against their rivals, Marquette, Notre Dame, et al. The object of all the talk may well turn out to be the freshman basketball team and their anni- hilations of such harmless op- ponents as Flint Junior College and Auburn Hills Community I College. This year's freshman crop boasts six highly regarded pros- pects, who are well balanced by position, a rarity on most first year squads. The most highly touted of the tendered sextet is 6-7 Campy Russell, a high school All-American from Pontiac Central. Russell, sought by numerous colleges from all over the coun- try; has already begun to live up to his advance notices in practice sessions and in a scrim- mage against the varsity. Freshman coach Dick Honig appeared quite satisfied with Russell's showing in early prac- tice. "He is every bit as good as his rating," said Honig. "He is a very good defensive player, a very good passer and an excel- lent shooter." TV & Stereo Rentals $10.00 per month NO DEPOSIT FREE DELIVERY, PICK UP AND SERVICE CALL: NEJAC TV RENTALS 662-5671 Honig compared the 6-7 for- ward to the last Russell to play at Michigan, Cazzie, presently of the Golden State Warriors. "He is as good as Cazzie was. He has better speed and better size." Doug Ashworth, a 6-6 forward from Xenia, Ohio, will also start up front. Ashworth was named to the all-state team last year and over his three seasons of high school competition av- eraged 18 points and 14 re- bounds per game. In addition to his boarding prowess Ashworth is an accom- plished defensive player, accord- ing to Honig one of the best he has seen at Michigan. Joe Johnson, a 5-11 guard from Kettering High School in -Detroit, is Honig's choice for field general and will act as trigger man on the Wolverine Stack offense. The stack, is designed to get the ball to Russell at least 40 per cent of the time, and most of the time the pass should be from Johnson. "If Campy is going to score, Joe is going to be responsible for it," asserted Honig. John Kantner will start at the other guard position and should become the big outside shooter in of the backcourt tandem. Averaging over 36 points per game asa senior last year, the 6-2 deadeye led all Ohio cagers in scoring. Bill Ayler, a 6-4 Detroiter, will swing between forward and guard for the Baby Blue this year with his great jumping ability more htan compensating for his lack of height. A late arrival to basketball workouts is 6-8 C.J. Kupec, the Most Valuable Player in the Illinois state tourney last season. Kupec is due to report for prac- tice Monday after finishing the season with the freshman foot- ball team. The team as a whole rivals any group the Wolverines have had in many years. Honig sees the squad as better than the one which produced Henry Wilmore, John Lockard, Ernie Johnson and others two years ago. A In fact, the fre'shman mentor is holding out hope for the Baby Blue to knock off the big boys in the annual freshman-varsity game. Honig also sees a good shot at an undefeated season, some- thing which Wilmore and com- pany fell just short of two years ago, However, standing in the way of a perfect record are three perennial powers, Notre Dame, Ohio State and Michigan State. The remainder of the sched- ule has the usual amount of fluff to serve as scrimmage partners as a result of the re- strictions placed on freshman basketball competition by the Big Ten. The preview of the freshman season, and Michigan basketball hopes for the next three years for that matter should be the freshman-varsity encounter at Crisler Arena November 23 and maybe it will mark the begin- ning of a second Russell dynas- ty in Ann Arbor. I 4. 35 t but don'It t o close, uob Player primes Gary, Player grimaces as he blasts his way out of a sand trap yesterday during a practice round for the World Cup Interna- tional Golf Tourney. Player and Harold Henning are teamed to represent South Africa. Lee Trevino and Jack Nicklaus will represent the United States in the tournament which begins to- day. -MAW s;s T HE CLA N DEST IN E C VENTION For the past few weeks, a Clandestine Convention hs een secretly working to impose a non-elec- tive "representative" organization on all graduate and professional students. This non-elective body is to become the sole spokesman and appointment-making body for 13,773 students, and will have money-collecting and money-spending power. The 13,773 students being "represented" by this orgnization will never be allowed to vote on whether to create this body; to vote on particular features of the constitution; or to elect their "representatives" to this body. The 13,773 constituents will never be allowed o vote on dues or spending, to elect the officers, to recall the officers or appointees, to forc2 a vote on the body's actions or inactions (refer- endum and initiative), or to vote or force a vote On amending this body's constitution. Not only is the work of the Clandestine Convention secret and undemocratic, but the Clandestine Con- vention attempted to get their first Graduate Federaion (GF- 1) "ratified" in the name of students on October 25-precisely five hours after it was released. On October 25, the supporters of GF-1 orgued vigorouy that 15 students in one college should get the same representation as 1554 in another, and thot 1 8 ;n a third school should have one quarter the representation of 7880 in another. They argued for the, representation of "interest groups," and that the precious voice of the small schools must be overrepresented. The malapportionment was so grotesque, however, that the GF-1 people graciously decided to redraft the constitution---yielding THE 654 UN-PERSONS IN THE 4 UN-SCHOOLS After shedding their crocodile tears elver the small schools, and trying to allure them with 100-to-1 overrepresentation, the Clandestine Convention produced the final solution to the small school problem, Rather than simply switch to a properly-apportiones eective system, they deleted 4 schools with 654 students! Although GF-2 will still claim to represent all greduate and professional students, the 654 graduate students in the 4 inconvenient schools (Music, A&D, Pharmacy, Natural Resources) will simply be given no voice at all. Two other schools, each 25, ,undergraduate (but with more muscle) will be allowed to stay. Perhaps the villain here is not really the Clandestine Convention for, as John Ken- nedy said in his lnaugural, "those who foolishly sought power by riding the back of the tiger ended up inside." All the other defec of GF-1, including double voresnttio, were retained in CF- 2 Th BL AN K CHEC Senate A ssembly On October 18 (ntoe the date , Senate Assembly voted to seat the appointees of this as-yet-uncreated organization, with its as-of then unwritten casuio, and w ith its still-undetermined constituency! This amazing conferral of power can only be explainedb y Senate Assembly's extraordinary personal trust in the Universitv Public Relations employee who was sperhending GF. Bluntly, Senate Assembly decided to have a company union created for it. Indeed. th philosophy that the authority to choose student representatives emanates from the Univerty is the basis for GF. It is orecisely what allowed the late Graduate Assembly (GA to, feel it was "above the law"- not even subject to its own con- stitution's quorum and annual elections provisions. Why follow a constitution, or hold elections, or listen to ,tudents, or a judiciary when your authority comes from Senate Assembly? WHAT CAN YO Not much. The people pushing GF do not need student .upor, and they couldn't care less what you think. Upon atoending his school government meeting, one student was told that he "was merely one student, not representing anybody," and "No," he could not speak to the Convention because he was "unofficial'' As long as the GF people are armed with their blank check from Senate Assembly, they will not need to solicit student consent for their constitution. And, of necessity, their Convention must remain closed because their potron did not confer the eovernment-creating power on just anyone-but PRO WRESTLING: Bruiser batters Buckeye Bill 4, CITY-WIDE MEETING HUMAN RIGHTS-RADICAL INDEPENDENT PARTY TONIGHT-7:30 P.M. Ann Arbor Public Library (5th Ave. & William) ON THE AGENDA: 1 ) Platform committee formation 2) Rebecca Vanderhorst on black politics 3) City income tax position 4) HR-RIP and Robert Williams Defense Committee 5 Election of female steering committee members -TON ITE- Charles Gabriel featuring Pinkie Smith Fine Food, Cocktails, Dinner Open Seven Days Monday-FridayA 11 a.m. to 2 a.m. Saturday and Sunday 319 S. FOURTH AVE. S5 1.m. to 2 a.m. 761-3548 By CHUCK BLOOM wrestling. The ring used was sit- an excellent name for himself. Fifteen thousand empty seats uated on the Olympia ice. Fans He's held championships from jammed Detroit's Olympia as expected the matches to glide coast to coast. Not bad for some- about 1,000 true red-blooded fans along but instead were left cold. one who was kicked off the Pur- I showed up last Saturday. They The main attraction was, of due football team for hitting an came to see "America's fastest course, the presence of Dick the assistant coach in the head. growing sport" - professional Bruiser. The Bruiser has made an All good wrestlers are former football players for some reason. . 1 ~Probably the smell of the locker GrLddeSPick gs His opponent was Buckeye Dr. Big Bill Miller, former great (?) Last week's winner was Lawrence Jay Newman of 326 E. Madison. defeated Miler cpBruiser easily He will win, in addition to a succulent Cottage Inn Pizza, one free for Buckeye fans. pass to the upcoming Daily Wrestling card to be held on November Miller, sore from having his rear 20. The main event will match the Ann Arbor tag champs, the Flying reamed by the Bruiser, did talk Wolverines, Gorilla Greer and Bubba Constrictor, against the team after the match. His press release of Chip Papanek and Eggsucker Shackelford. The latter team, fresh built him up as an All-American from victory in the Frieze "500", will try their luck in a new arena. The Wolverines won the titles on a decision by the DWA (Daily Wrestling Association). This occurred when the Buckeye Bums, Bill and Dan Miller, failed to meet the Ann Arbor ringmen last Saturday in Detroit. As for the insuing match, the Constrictor was quoted as saying, "I'll moider that sucking eggsucker." Greer chimed the same thing. "No way are they going to beat us." Tickets are $100, $75, $50, and $1.50, plus your picks if they ar- rive by midnight Friday. 1. MICHIGAN at Purdue 2. Indiana at Iowa 3. Minnesota at Mich. State, 4. Northwestern at Ohio State 5. Illinois at Wisconsin 6. Pitt at Army 7. Auburn at Georgia 8. West Texas State at Colorado State The Visual Arts: a Film SurveyU 0ARCHITECTURE 0 00 lonight, 7 P.M. f R.C. Aud. FREE --yo<--oe< «c--o-or 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. Pennsylvania at Columbia Cornell at Dartmouth Duke at Wake Forest Kentucky at Florida Missouri at Iowa State UTEP at New Mexico Texas at Texas Christian Air Force at Tulsa Southern Illinois at Louisville The Bruiser tackle, which was false. W h e n questioned Miller said, "All-Amer- icans sit on the bench." Miller and his brother, Dandy Dan, were challenged by the Ann Arbor tag team champs, the Fly- ing Wolverines, Gorilla Greer anco Bubba Constrictor. But the pro- moter, fearing for Millers' lives and Olympia's reputation, held the popular grapplers away from the Buckeyes. 18. Texas Agriculture and Mining at Rice 19. University of Southern California at Washington 20. Slippery Rock at Clarion State "Poetic presentation of capitalistic exploita- tion, love, and high rents." V r CORRECTION REGISTERED STUDENT ORGANIZATIONS LISTING Insert '71-'72 Student Directory: The Anthroposophical Student Association is a cultural organ iza- tion. It is not a political organization, as incorrectly listed. EDITOR, '71-'72 STUDENT DIRECTORY V ON ACCOUNT OF SID SHRYCOCK ONE NIGHT ONLY Saturday, Nov. 13 Union Ballroom 7&10 U.M. FRESHMEN, SOPHOMORES & JUNIORS SOUTHERNERS ONLY If you were born and lived all of your life before coming, to Michigan in the Interior South (Tenn. Georgia, Arkansas, Mis- sissippi, Louisana, Oklahoma, Alabama) and would like to be a paid participant in a U of M dialect survey and were a freshman here last year, please call 764-0349 between 8 and 4 for further information and/or appointment. I ANNOUNCES AN Gualleries SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14th AT 2 P.M. " EXHIBIT STARTING AT 1 P.M. 0 A . AIr r i c'4 ULU I HERTZ IS SELLING NOT-SO-USED CARS Priced to save you money WE HAVE A WIDE SELECTION OF 1971 I I i I