Page Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, January 29,1971- U Sc FIS B .FW TE RAUE INTRODUCTORY COUPON eSHRIMP onl DINNER ! ! S--8 PIECES, CHIPS, ROLL, Offer good a & COLE SLAW Jan. 29-Feb. 1 ! (Fri.-Mon.) -- ----i----in--.mmexpires Feb. 2 i n---- ------ ---- COUPON GOOD AT BOTH LOCATIONS 2 LOCATIONS A CRICS effec Btye, n eeds money *i By BILL ALTERMAN Three years ago the Regents formed the Advisory Committee for Recreational, Intramural and Club Sports, or ACRICS as it is more commonly known. In those three years the committee has had its proponents and de- tractors, but most committee members agree that ACRICS has, in the words of athletic director - Don Canham, been "quite effective.' Canham cites the board's di- versity as one of its major as- sets. "This gives us some re- commendations from areas you normally wouldn't get," adding, "It's their function to recom- mend things that are needed" for IM facilities. In addition to its advisory ca- pacity, ACRICS has had, for each of the last three years, $200,000 to allocate as it sees fit. Most of this has gone for capital improvements such as improving the playing fields and providing sports equipment for the dorms. Likewise ACRIS has kept watch on possible encroachment of intramural facilities by other institutions. Still, according to Rodney Grambeau. director of Intra- murals, ACRICS for two years has been concentrating on "the small things instead of the big things. "The administration needs to be made aware of these prob- lems. (Recreational) facilities have fallen behind at Michigan and we should be developing actions to try and catch up. As an advisory commitee, ACRIC has not actually functioned." Grambeau considers ACRICS actions of the past "necessary, but only stopgap types of im- provement. "We have not had the op- portunity to develop lo n g range programs. Current faci- lities were set up for a time when the University had 9,000 students. Today there are 35- 40,000. The intramural phys ed picture has been on the down- grade for 20 years." The villain is the same one inhabiting every other branch of the University-funding. * SERVING ANN ARBOR 1315 S. University 769-8240 Sun.-Thurs. 10 a.m.-10 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 10 a.m.-1 a.m. * SERVING YPSILANTI (1 blk west of K-mart) 4910 5Wshtenow 434-1545 Sun.-Thurs. 11 a.m.-10 p.m. Fri.-Sat. 11 a.m.-12 p.m. 7 Because of the current money squeeze and cutbacks at the University, no one is optimistic about the chances of any major funding in their near future. Nevertheless, ACRICS has set up a subcommitee to delve, once again, into the issue of a new intramural building. Last year's proposal went up in smoke when some students complained about being assessed yearly fees for a building they had no say over. James White, professor of law, is head of the subcommitee, which is examining how other Big Ten intramural programs have been funded and how best to fund a new one at Michigan. It expects to report to the full committee within a month and White expressed his hope that the commission "will m a k e proposals for a new IM struc- ture. "If we don't, nobody will," he added. Bill Steude, committee mem- ber and director of office of stu- dent-community relations, ad- mits the "committee is d i s- couraged over the IM building program." Steude does feel, however, ACRIC provides a "formal me- chanism" for making future plans. Jackie Boney, vice president of the Sports Club Federation and a frequent observer of AC- RIC meetings agrees that t h e committee "does a lot of good things. They spent their money well." She echoed Grambeau's feel- ings though when she added. "It hasn't exercised its advisory capacity. The committee could have a future without money if it exercised this capacity. This has never been explored." One gripe most members of ACRIS have is their lack of Billboard The lacrosse team starts practice 4:30 p.m. Monday, February 1 at Wines Field. No experience is ne- cessary; anyone may join. Contact Bob Kaman, 662-3313 evenings. communication with the Board in Control of Intercollegiate Ath- letics. Boney feels "The Board and the Committee should work to- gether to establish guidelines on facilities." Adds Steude, "the Board and ACRICS are working in the same area, using much the same if not THE same facilities. What is needed is more cooperation, more coordination and not in- dependence by ACRICS." Yesterday, members of the Board and the Committee did get together at a regularly sched- uled ACRIC meeting. Steude termed it a "fruitful begin- ning" and said the two sides agreed to a regular exchange of information and documenta- tion. EX-MERMEN HEAD IVY FOE: Tankers face Tigers, Toronto Canham, while expressing his desire that "this will not be the last meeting" between the two groups, did admit it "was a problem getting people togeth- er. It's tough to find the time and the place." ACRICS itself has 14 mem- bers including six students, (two ex-officio), four faculty and four administration members. Although some people have ex- pressed reservations as to the makeup of the board, most feel as White does, that it "doesn't make any difference. Some peo- ple are interested, some are not." White did say the board needs somebody like Grambeau "who knows what is happening day to day." Grambeau, for one, expressed concern over the committee's leadership. "It has not be e n possible for certain key people to spend time with committee," he complained. Canham, who up until recent- ly was committee chairman, feels the committee has "work- ed pretty well, particularly last year. It should stay in its cur- rent form . . . It is effective." Grambeau's vision of the ACRICS of the future is of a somewhat different organization, "ACRICS should be on an equal level with the athletic board, with interconnections be- tween the two." The recreational and IM fa- cilities and activities, he added, should be "brought up to a kind of program you would expect at Michigan." i By RANDY PHILLIPS Princeton's swimming coach' Robert Farley h o p e s his Tiger squad can put on a particularly good performance tomorrow when It takes on Michigan's undefeated tankers. T h e Wolverines also splash in against Toronto tonight at home. Farley and Bob Webster, Tiger diving mentor, are b o t h Michigan swimming products, and they would I i k e nothing better than tos hawup their former coach, Gus Stager. But despite their wishes it looks as though Michigan has too much depth. However, Stager is not pre- dicting an easy victory by any means. "We could run into diffi- culty if we 1 o s e the diving; it should be the same type of match as the MSU meet." The Wolver- ines beat the Spartans last week, mainly on the strength of some sweeps in key events and an over- all depth advantage. Farley and Stager both agree that the diving events will be the most competitive. Farley remark- ed, "It should be an extremely close a n d excellent diving con- test." Co-captain John Huffstutler will be springing off both boards while Collins Landstereet will add a further threat to Michigan's diving duo of Dick Rydze and Joe Crawford. Wolverine diving coach D i c k Kimball plans to take along a third diver, probably either Steve Schenthal or Jim Creede. Princeton has not fared as well as expected this year and coach Farley is not at all happy with its 4-2 record or its times. But the Tigers are usually one of the top teams in the East, and Farley still hopes to be a potent force in his league. Charlie Campbell, a sophomore, is "a very good all-around swim- mer and is the only one really performing on the team," accord- ing to Farley. Campbell's top event is the 200 yard backstroke, and he has recorded a 1:58.1 so far this year. Stager feels that the backstroke should be the m o s t interesting race of the meet, and he plans to "throw the best at them" w i t h Don Peterson, Chris Hansen, and Steve McCarthy. Farley considers Michigan "su- per strong" in the butterfly and the breaststroke, and these are the two events that Stager is expect- ing sure points. The Wolverines have three flyers down under two minutes, while the Tigers' b e s t clocking is by Rex Boder at 2:02.0. d Nevertheless, Farley thinks that Boder and Vaughan Howard could still make a good race out of it. Farley hopes to also get a good showing out of freestyle specialist Jack Garretson in both the 100 yard event and the 400 yard free- style relay. Princeton has record- ed a 3:17.5 in t hae relay event which is just a shade slower than Michigan's top mark. In tonight's meet against a rel- atively weak Toronto squad the Wolverines will be trying to give some lesser-used people a little bit of competitive work. Toronto's best performer is backstroker Jim Shaw who is probably among the top two or three backstrokers in Canada. The meet will be free to the public and will start at 7:30 p.m. in Matt Mann Pool. 4 A,# Paddlelball champ puts state singles title on line FLARE SALE reg. to $15.00 Paul Lawrence of Ann Arbor, State Paddleball Champion since 1967, will put his singles title on the line again this weekend as the sixth Annual State of Michigan Paddleball Open gets underway at the University courts. Among t h e challengers for Lawrence's title will be Craig Fin- ger, also of Ann Arbor, and last year's runner-up in a close three- game final match. Also expected to make a good showing are Don Stanton of Grand Rapids, Charles Berry of Battle Creek, Steve Keely of East Lansing, and Ann Arbor players Bob Westfall, Bill Barss, and Dan McLaughlin. Finger and Lawrence are team- ed up and favored to win the dou- bles title. Highly regarded Dave Johnsen a n d Lynn Beekman of Flint lead the list of challengers which also includes Steve Keeley and Andy Homa of East Lansing, and University of Michigan Dou- bles Champs, Rod Grambeau and Dick Lampman. Grambeau and Steve Galetti have drawn top seeding in the Master's Doubles event. Play begins tonight at 6:00 p.m., with the finals scheduled for Sun- day afternoon at the Intramural Building. ANi m U SALE ENDS FEBRUARY 6, 1971 I q I I VER 25,000 LP'S, OVER 300 LABELS IN STOCK 'WATCH FOR SPECIAL SALE ITEMS CHANGING WEEKLY 1235 S. UNIVERSITY " 300 S. STATE 0 ANN ARBOR, 668-9866 665-3679 MICH. + STORE HOURS: Both Stores Mon.-Fri.-9:30-9 Saturday-9:30-6 Sunday-Noon-5 SEA TRAIN appearing live at Hill Auditorium Friday Night January 29, 1971 eK Tr E y THEY Koming Soon * (The Easy-Does-It Band) I COME TO TOWN and COUNTRY RESTAURANT Fine Food Chops, Steaks, & Shrimp Soul Food Home Cooked Open Pit Barbeque --Open- 6 a.m. till 9 p.m.-Mon.-Thurs. 6 a.m. till 3 a.m.--Fri.-Sat. 8 a.m. till 7:30 p.m.-Sunday 730 NORTH MAIN Delivery and Catering 769-2330 t ; I I and their brand new CAPITOL ALBUM NOW ON SALE ATTENTION University of Michigan Freshmen and Sophomores the DEARBORN CAMPUS will continue its Thursday a.m. meetings 10--12 noon-Room 1213 Angell Hall Each Thursday from January 28-March 25, 1971 -SIGN UP FOR APPOINTMENTS- :1 ONLY 1. 59 Flits tax --I discount records THESE SPECIAL LOW PRICED TOP HIT L.P.'s PEACE IS COMING * * NATIONAL STUDENT-YOUTH CONFERENCE ON A PEOPLE'S PEACE The people of Vietnam have stated clearly and repeatedly that they are not at war with the PEOPLE of the United States. We can respond concretely by asking the American people to ratify a People's Peace Treaty with the people of Vietnam. The Ann Arbor conference will be a beginning of such a national organizing effort to be initiated by the delegates in their own communities. -4w LIST 11.98 5.98 11.98 SALE 7,18 3.59 7.18 LIST SALE 2.99 Elton John-Tumbleweed Connection 4.98 C J. Taylor-Baby James............... 4.98 2.99 8.97 Woodstock.......................14.98 m I I 0