Wednesday, January 15,1975 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page Seven v M cDAILYSPECIAL REPORT Shint By MARCIA MERKER The land that brought you golf and soccer has yet another sport tucked away in its lochs and moors. The game is shinty and it's only played in the Highlands and Islands of Scot- land. Shinty may never reach the outside world, however, because the British government will not invest in the Highland economy. The sport is as old as the tartan. The Stewart clan trained for battle by swinging wooden sticks at balls simulating clay- mores and heads, respectively. Shinty originated from, these drills demanding courage, en- durance and strength to win a match. According to a British journ- alist, "It makes hockey strict- ly for sissies-almost every- thing short of manslaughter is legal, but rarely have I seen more lavish sportsmanship." Shinty parallels Irish hurling except hands and feet aren't used to move the ball. A Scottish journalist comment- ed, "What you . see makes hockey bland and two dimen- sional and what you don't ex- pect isthe complex of skills which seems to involve the abilities of half-a-dozen sports." After the players master the use of the caman, the shinty stick, the game becomes purely mechanical. Seasoned players fly the ball at 60 mph with the flick of a wrist. One supporter calls it "kamikazi hockey." Despite its character, shinty is losing popularity, not because Y e Dying Scottish sport + :.mimAsn sistence living for the majIr ty of workers: crofters. D a i The Scotch industry, whose demand has doubled in recent years, relies upon maintaining S 1't ; Scottish tradition for its busi- ness. Shinty, therefore, is a NIGHT EDITORS: target for its efforts. JEFF SCHILLER Among some of the Highland LEBA HERTZ customs is the annual Dewar's Whisky Shinty Tournament at the Scots are any less daring the Kingussie Summer Festival. nor that the sport is increasing- Another tradition happens in the ly bland, but that the economic aftermath of the Cammanachd outlook for the Highlands is Cup celebration where the tro- poor. phy is filled with seven quarts A few attempts to help shin. of Scotch and passed round the ty are in the making, many room until empty. involving tourism. The High- Although the distillers may lands and Islands Develop- be doing what they can to pro- ment Board and the Scottish mote shinty, the economic gap Tourist Board advertise shinty between the Highlanders and in their propaganda. They the Lowlanders is too wide to plug "the day of the amateur" keep shinty growing in popu- as the finals of the national larity and participation. shinty cup, the Cammanachd In 1973 -the Sports Council of Cup. Great Britain established a pro- Education committees are gram to increase the use of its trying to introduce shinty to sports facilities. Grants were other sections of Scotland. awarded to all national and Nevertheless, the basic prob- regional organizations budgeting lem is that the Highlands have over $125,000 annually so that little industry. Although some these groups could open their enterprises are expanding, the facilities to the public. barren terrain of the moors Despite its 37 teams, shinty and the heather covered hills does not qualify under this spe- offer little more than a sub- cification, and consequently got no money. As a self-supporting organiza- tion, shinty's growth is limited. The Kyles Athletic players, winners of the 1974 Cam- manachd Cup, contribute $1.20 dues yearly. They hold dances and ceilidhs to draw additional funds, and collect donations at all matches. Private cars provide trans- portation to away contests. Worse still, the Highlands of-! fer little future for young men. Celly Paterson, President of K y l e s Athletic, commented, "Unfortunately, in my opinion, shinty is not increasing in popu- larity because the young players have to leave the Highlands to seek work in the towns of the Central Lowlands." As in the US, the government determines the state of the economy. Since parliament is heavily English-dominated, the Scots are as bitterly opposed to England as ever. Parliament is considering giving Scotland a self-govern- ment, allowing it to deal di- rectly with the Common Mar- ket. The Scottish Nationalist Party is supporting the legis- lation, and the Labour and Tory parties are leaning that way in a bid for the Scottish vote. During the fall election the SNP received one third of the country's vote on slogans of "national liberation" and "bring the Scottish oil home." Evident- ly, the Scots worry about the decay of their culture and econ- omy. They are tiring of English domination that threatens to ruin traditions like shinty and now they have North Sea oil with which to fight. Meanwhile, the youth are moving southward, and Scottish unity is growing. Shinty, caught in the middle, could go either direction depending on the po- litical developments. S h o u1 d shinty die it will be a loss to the sports world, but a unifying step toward Scottish indepen- dence. $2.50 Daily Photo by MARCIA MERKER SHINTY, a sport of the Scottish Highlands, has been called a game for men of "ability, stami- na and courage." At the Kingussie Shinty Tour nament, Kyles Athletic team member Peter Turner attempts a caman block on his oppon ent from Kingussie. Kyles defeated Kingussie for the second time in a row, the first being th e national shinty finals. WEST CENTERS FIZZLE: Frazier paces East win Foe I I By The Associated Press PHOENIX-Walt Frazier, the silky-smooth New York Knick guard, popped in 30 points and a d. °rnined East virtually, negated the opposing team's giants en route to a 108-102 vic- tory over the favored West in the National Basketball Associa- tion All-Star Game last night. Frazier, starting in his sixth consecutive All-Star Game, drill- ed in 10 points in the first per- iod and 12 in the third quarter when the East appeared to pull comfortably ahead 83-73 before having to withstand a belated West rally in the closing min- .utes of the game. His 30 points were the most in an All-Star game since Barry's 38 in the 1967 contest. For his performance, Frazier won the game's Most Valuable Player award. WHILE THE Knicks' cavtain: was killing the West with his bullseye shooting, the underdog East's dogged defense held the West's three towering centers-; 7-foot-3% Kareem Abdul-Jabbar, 6-11 Bob Lanier and 6-10 Sam Lacey-to a total of 15 points. And the smaller East team often denied the West a second shot, utilizing its guile and ciln- ping to box ont smartly 'under the dpfensve boards. Archibald of Kansas City- Omaha and Barrv, of Golden Stat?. ld the W-zt s'or"a. Archibald, the scintillating b- handling wizard, finished with 25 noints and Barrv, a fra-ron of a nrrcentace point aed of BRffalo's Bob McAdoo 'n the NBA scoring race, collected 22. JOHN 4TITCRK of Boston added 16 points for the East and McAdoo collected 11. After the East's third-period blitz, the winners widened their margin to 12 points midway through the final period and still were ahead by 10 at 101-91 with four minutes remaining. THEN THE West began its cherge and cut the deficit to' four points in the closing sec- onds before Frazier completed' the s:oring by sinking two freeE throws with eight seconds to go. The victory in the leagie's s i l v er anniversary All-Star Game gave the East a 16-9 lead in the series. But the triumph was only the second for the{ East in five years. Last year, the West won 134-123 at Seattle, where Lanier scored 24 points and was the game's MVP. This time, the Pistons' big man Fad only two points. EAST 108 Havijeek 7 2-2 16, Hayes 2 0-0 4, McAdoo 4 3-3 11, Frazier 10 10-11 30, Monroe 3 3-5 9, Tomjanovich 0 0-0 0, Unseld 2 2-2 6, Chenler 4 1-2 9,j Cowens 3 0-0 6, Mix 2 0-0 4, White 1 5-6 7, Silas 2 2-2 6. Totals 40 28-33. WEST 102 Barry 11 0-0 22, Haywood 1 0-0 2, Abdul-Jabbar 3 1-2 7, Archibald 10 7-8 27, Goodrich 2 0-0 4, Wicks 7 2-3 16, Lanier 1 0-0 2, Scott 1 0-0 2, Bing 0 2-2 2, Dandridge 2 0-0 4, Lacey 2 2-2 6, Price 3 2-2 8. Totals: 43 16-19. East 29 22 32 25--108 West 29 17 27 29-102 Fouled Out: None. Total Fouls: East 25, West 26. A: 12,885. MiCHIGAN SLIPS: Indiana's topI By TOM CAMERON six minutes against a bunch Indiana rules the Big Ten. of freshmen and sophomores, After Saturday's 102-49 rout I think that shows what they of Iowa and Monday's 79-59 think of our club." trouncing of Minnesota. the Minnesota, who was upset by Hoosiers, are on top of both the Ohio State over the weekend, national rankings and the con- now holds third place in the Big ference standings. Ten Standings with a 3-2 record. The Hoosiers played most of The Purdue Boilermakers held the Iowa game with their re- on to the second spot with a 4-1 serves, but ran into a little record as they nipped North- t r o u b 1 e against Minnesota's western, 73-72, in overtime Mon- zone defense in maintaining day. their nerfect record. Leading by a 43-37 margin e hboinning the second half, In-' d;ana came ouit and froze the:s ketball hall for six minutes: forcing Minnpsota o-t of its zone and i"to a man-to-man defense. The Purdue struggled against a Hoosiers went on to outscore zone defense as the Wildcats th, Gophers 21-4. kept the game close. When the Minnesota's Bill M'issleman Boilermakers seemed to have jdsid not approve of the tacticsBolraes emdtohv the Ho oerured to. Howi the game put away at 64-60, two the Hoosiers turned to. How- i turnovers turned into baskets ever, he /did accept the com- for Northwestern's Bob Svete. nmliment. Purdue's Walter Johnson put "The stall was good Ctra- the game away for Purdue as tegy," Musselman admitted, he scored five of the last six "But when the No. 1 team in points. the country holds the ball for banana Michigan State's upset of Michigan leveled both teams' records at 2-2 and placed them in a three way tie for fourth place with Ohio State. In addition to surprising Mm- nesota, the Buckeyes downed Iowa, 94-77 Monday. Ohio State shot a torrid 55 per cent from the floor to out- pace the Gophers and pulled away from the Hawkeyes late in a ragged game which fea- tured 55 personal fouls. Iowa is presently tied for seventh with Illinois at a 2-3 mark. The Hawkeyes have dropped their last two games while the Illini have won their last two, topping Northwestern 64-60 and Wisconsin 72-56. The Badgers remain in the cellar with their unblemished 0-4 record. Big Ten Conference play con- tinues this weekend as Indiana invades Northwestern, Michigan travels to Iowa, Micaigan State faces Minnesota, Illinois enter- tains Purdue and Wisconsin hosts Ohio State. Wes Wolverine can play pool, ping pong, do his laundry, watch color TV, and practice the piano at University Towers Apartments. 4 month winter terma leases now available 536 S. Forest Avenue, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48104 Phone (313) 761-2680 L Sports of The Daily women cagers lose to E. Michigan Al outpoints Aaron NEW YORK (1) - Heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali won the Hickok Award today as the Professional Athlete of the Year for 1974, with home run king Hank Aaron finishing second. Ali received 49 first-place votes and 249 points in nationwide balloting by sports writers and sportscasters for the 25th annual award. Aaron, who broke Babe Ruth's all-time home run record last year, got 47 first-place votes and 2241/2 points. Golfer Johnny Miller was third with 21 first-place votes and 160% points, followed by baseball's Lou Brock, 25 and 156, and basketball star John Havlicek, 5 and 45. This was the first time Ali had won the Hickok and came after his greatest accomplishment, the October title fight victory in Zaire over then-champion George Foreman. And so Ali joined Floyd Patterson as the only men to regain boxing's most coveted crown. But he was taking back a title he had never lost in the ring, and one which he had first won a decade before, in 1964. e NBA spurns Toronto PHOENIX (P) -- The Toronto franchise was tabled tempor- By MARCIA KATZ Special To The Daily YPSILANTI - A flat tire al- most detoured Michigan's wom- en's varsity basketball team on its way here last night, but after a change of vans the team finally made it. Although it dropped a 56-37 decision to East- ern Michigan, the Maize and Blue played a spirited game. Opening the season at Bowen Field House, the Wolverine wo- men came out fast, scoring the first four points of the game. The contest turned into a de- fensive struggles for the re- mainder of the half, with East- ern holding the edge, 25-22. The Hurons capitalized on longjumpers, and their corner shots were very effective. Mich- igan worked on getting the ball inside and this worked well in the first half. Free throw shooting helped ing 6 for 6. Michigan began the scoring in the second half, while its strong defensive play held EMU scoreless for the first three minutes. The game remained a close see-saw battle until EMU op- ened up a 42-30 lead with eight minutes left in the game. East- ern outscored Michigan twelve to two in an outburst of fast breaking and layups. Coach Carmen Borders said, "Their fast break beat us, but it didn't work until the last six minutes of the game."I She also pointed out thaty Michigan tired near the end of the game.The Wolverines had only eight players suited up. ARTHUR FROMMER, EUROPE ON $5 AND $10 A DAY, P.601- The life of Europe is mIrrored In its trains "You haven't really savored the essence of the Continent until you've chugged along in a second-class. compartment and shared the sausage-and-Chianti of an Italian family, or carried on a bouncing conversation in broken French, or simply leaned back and observed the European in his holiday-traveling mood. "On most other occasions in Europe, the tourist is likely to be a frenzied animal, divorced from a truly human contact with the population. In a train, this remoteness falls away. "A moment occurs when the sights and sounds of Europe become intimate and related to people-and that, to me, is a thrill which no monument or museum can ever provide." If you're going to Europe, consider our trains. Our Student Railpass gives you two months of unlimited Second Class travel for $180. In Britain, a variety of BritRail Youth Passes from $35 to $94 is available. NOTE: These'passes are not available in Europe. You must buy them here before you go. See your Travel Agent or mail the coupon below. Prices subject to change. ----------- - --------------- Am I Rnuilinn IN 11