Page Eight' fHE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 2,1973 Pa~e Eight ~HE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, October 2, 1913 LAST CHANCIE ~Ends Tuesday NIEP THROAT GALS SPORTS HEAD Hartwig appointed m ar b.j ( /;\ Itjl CINE M A DELIGHT, FllM SBUFS By LESLIE RIESTER "We're number two, but we try harder!" Michigan number two in anything? On Monday, Michi- gan became the second state uni- versity to appoint a women's ath- letic director. This revolutionary idea, bor- rowed from Michigan State, came from a recommendation, by the Committee to Study Intercolleg- iate Athletics for Women (CSI- AW). This committee, formed by President Fleming last spring, recommended that Professor Marie Hartwig of the Physical Education department be given administrative authority to run an intercollegiate program while the CSIAW finishes its study. The CSIAW is chaired by Eu- nice Burns, Executive Assistant to the Dean of the School of Edu- cation. The committee's goal is the Burns Report, containing recommendations for the creation r or - nnrii n.,.winunn& r.nwiyny.'ritKIII&wau ui~1.Ch. int.r linUTV",U I i OPEN DAILY 12 NUON-482 .33UU- 31 N.WASNINGION; YP II.A ti WEFVETFEM0 9 Canon * Texas Instrument of an operational women's inter- collegiate program. Until the CSIAW submits its re- port to President Fleming some- time in October, several interim recommendations were made to Fleming. Hartwig's appointment and permission to operate as in- tercollegiate teams are two of the suggestions. Burns expects Fleming will act as fully as possible on the com- mittee's final report. Official recognition of women's sports culminates a three-year struggle by women athletes on this campus. Four years ago wo- men's sports were cut adrift when the Women's Athletic Association disbanded and the P. E. depart- ment refused responsibility for the program. Sports clubs were formed and women continued to compete against other universities. Fund- ing was erratic and administra- tive details were handled entire- ly by student managers. Last spring, the Michigan As- sociation for Intercollegiate Ath- letics for Women (MAIAW) threatened to stop its members from competing with Michigan. Fleming formed the Burns com- HARRY'S AR1MY SURPLUS 1166 Broadway (north of Broadway bridge) 769-9247 open: mon-fri: 10-7 sat: 9-6 FIELD JACKETS ... $10.98 UP FIELD JACKET LINERS....... 4.50 UP DOWN FILLED STUFF JACKETS 19.98 LEATHER FLIGHT JACKETS ....... 67.98 AIR FORCE SNORKEL PARKAS . . . .... 49.98 DOWN INSULATED PARKAS .... 37.98 UP INSULATED SWEATSHIRTS ... 6.98 Another location at 2050 N. Telegraph Rd. at Ford Rd., Dearborn-ph. 565-6605 mittee to formulate a program that would met MAIAW stand- ards. At present, there are five sports - field hockey, tennis, volleyball, basketball and swim- ming - which qualify for inter- collegiate status. Sheryl Szady, field hockey manager and committee mem- ber, says she is operating the team on the assumption of in- tercollegiate status. Szady contends the CSIAW's report will come too late to have a telling effect on fall sports. The problems of funding, fa- cilities and coaching have not been resolved by the CSIAW. Allen Smith, vice-president for academic affairs has assured the committee women's intercolleg- iates will be funded. Mrs. Burns acknowledged that a figure of $3,000 had been mentioned, but she hastened to add that nothing was definite at this time. Use of facilities such as Cris- ler Arena and Matt Mann Pool has always plagued women ath- letes. Mrs. Burns said action on the CSIAW's report would elimi- nate that problem. "We (the committee) expect full cooperation from the Atheltic Department," said Burns, but she acknowledged the need for an impartial coordinator to assure equitable assignment of facility use. Michigan's women athletes re- acted to the news of their new status as something that was long overdue. "We've always played on the intercollegiate 4 4 AP Photo PADRE DWAIN ANDERSON met the outstretched glove of the Pirate's Rich Heber in a first inning steal attempt in yesterday's futile contest. Pittsburgh suffered the last loss of *the season by a score of 3 to 4, already knowing their efforts were for naught. . For them both, there will always be next year. "0 Olmpia " Commodore " Sperry-Remington * IDM ELECTRONIC CALCULATORS! Come in and choose from this great selection-from super-mini to [' R " super-sophisticated! Priced for the Student Budget! THE OFFICE SUPPLY HOUSE level, they just finally decided to support us," said a basketball player. The final format for a women's intercollegiate program is yet to come, but it looks like team members may no longer have to pay their own way to the game. Gridde Pickings ?: : Big Ten Standings Illinois MICHIGAN Northwestern Ohio State Purdue Indiana Iowa Michigan State Minnesota Wisconsin Conference W L T Pts OP 1 0 0 28 14 1 0 0 31 7 1 0 0 14 10 1 0 0 56 7 1 0 0 14 13 0 1 0 14 28 0 1 0 7 31 o 1 0 10 14 0 1 0 7 56 0 1 0 13 14 W 2 3 1 2 1 1 0 1 1 0 LT 1 0 0 0 2 0 00 2 0 2 0 3 0 20 2 0 3 0 Pts OP 65 38 92 17 28 75 93 10 40 57 41 57 33 113 45 56 67 104 54 62 All Games Two successful point after touchdown attempts- by soccer style placekicker Garo Greer sparked the Daily Libels to their third con- secutive shutout victory Sunday, as the Libels defensed their way to a 14-0 whitewash of the Daily Alumni at Ferry Field. Libel defenders picked off seven errant Alumni aerials, led by Pilfer Pyden with two. Happy Hastings and 'Shucker Stuck also chalked up interceptions in the first half for the Libels, who were held to a 0-0 tie by the former Libel players. Three plays into the second half, however, cornerback Lem Longo stepped in front of an intended Olin-to-Phillipspassand raced 46 yards for the game's initial score. Greer booted the extra point and the Libels led 7-0. Lizard Lisull tossed a 14-yarder to Marc "The Stork" Feldman for the Libels' other touchdown. Greer's PAT cleared the crossbar by inches and the rout was on. Lisull and the inimitable TOR were the other interceptors for the Libels, who advanced to 17th in the national poll. Chip Papanek was mildly perturbed. "We didn't block, we didn't tackle, we didn't do anything right," conplained the former Daily sports editor and Alumni captain. "I guess all my guys were thinking about getting their picks in to -The Daily at 420 Maynard by inidnight Friday to win that free Mr. Pizza pizza (which, incidentally, was won last week by Dave Crichton of 2068 Pauline)." The Libels sorely missed the services of guard Rajah Rossiter, sidelined with a foot injury, but hope for his speedy recovery in time for the Libels' next scheduled challenge by the Technics from the "Holocaust" Program at HILLEL OCTOBER 2-8:00 P.M. 613 E. WILLIAM 665-3763 -BankAmericard- t i I a lecture by PROFESSOR BERG-author of "The of the European Jews" RAUL HIL- Destruction engineering newspaper Datum. 1. Oregon at MICHIGAN (pick score) 2. Michigan State at Notre Dame 3. Washington State at Ohio State 4. Nebraska at Minnesota 5. Stanford at Illinois 6. Indiana at West Virginia 7. Arizona at Iowa 8. Ohio U. of Northwestern 9. Duke.at Purdue 10. Wyoming at Wisconsin 11. 12. 13. 14. 15. 16. 17. 18. 19. 20. Penn State at Air Force Holy Cross at Dartmouth North Carolina at N.C. State Colorado at Iowa State Missouri at Southern Methodist Utah at UCLA Georgia at Alabama Texas Christian at Arkansas Kent State at Western Michigan Edit staff at DAILY LIBELS I 1. 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West Virginia W-L-T Pts. 2-0-0 1,11s \3-0-0 897 3-0-0 837 2-0-1 8331/2 3-0-0 741 1-0-1 720% 3-0-0 658 9-0-0 512 3-0-0 475 3-0-0 328 3-0-0 299 3-0-0 163 1-1-0 135 3-0-0 134 3-0-0 101 2-1-0 71 2-0-0 52 3-0-0 52 2-1-0 32 3-0-0 302 3-0-0 30 Advertising interest Career you. offers you the chance to: * Work with customers and assisting them in their advertisements. * Experience in ad layout and proof reading. * Work with full classified ad department: con- tracts and short term insertions. * Deal with .national advertisers, advertising agencies and national representatives. Whatever interests you, PETER REVS UP RODONDO BEACH, Fla. (UPI) - Peter Revson commutes be- twween the United States and Europe on the international auto racing circuit. His victory in the British Grand Prix earlier this year was only the fifth triumph by an American in GP racing. Revson drives for Team Gulf- McLaren in both the United States and abroad. 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