Swm aY, Se Ptermber 19, 19-75 0 THE MICHIGAN DAILY Page .Fiore SUNDAY MAGAZINE LOOKING BA( 1< THE WEEK IN REVIEW dent interviewers to be pleas- ant but essentially evasive. After breaking bread with CITY WAS wrested from members of the football team, Tits lat -summer calm for Ford returned to an emotion- a few hours on Wednesday, ally charged capacity crowd of whOi President Ford and his nearly 14,000 for the first major Otional campaign roadshow address of his campaign. Out-; blew into Crisler Arena for a side, about 200 impassioned rlly that left in its wake, ser-i demonstrators toted a laundry oils questions about the role of list of causes, but many were3 in aeaemic institution in elec- unable to get inside of the torel politics area. Bungled ticket operations turned away at least 2,000 peo- - oMyou this issue was ple, including University Vice the .mysterious emergence ofPesdnfrAadmcAfrs University of Michigan Students President for Academic Affairs f~ r'rsident Ford, the student Frank .Rhodes. The rally itself became a less coup <, ostensibly sponsoring than artful fusion of football Frd's vsit. It was learned this and politics, more reminiscent wek that the group was form- of a high school pep rally than kd 6y days after pions' for the inauguration of a national, the trip were finalized, appar- campaign. ently at the request of The Thca p idg y White ouse. C.C. Leslie, pres- The President was generally ~4#t,*f hegrupan wh o-1received warmly. A steady ident4Of the group, and who op-chorus of boos, catcalls, and vates it from her room at Mar- anglo-saxon expletives to his than Cook, worked at the White address gave the event an aura Wouse this summer. of rowdiness that White House Fbrd began the meticulously planners must certainly have stated return to his alma ma- expected, and undoubtedly ter with a 45-minute question counted on. The only unrehears- and answer session with 20 stu- ed occurance of the evening 4int leaders at Crisler. Grilled was the explosion of a cherry- on questions ranging from am- bomb that startled the President nesty to abortion to Title IX, momentarily. Ford was found by some stu- The address itself was ;the usual vapid campaign fare, versity, and that the marching with promises of more jobs, re- band would be there playing for duced downpayments on lower him, there were rumblings that and middle-price housing, and band director George Cavender the obligatory potshot at Jim- initially balked, owing to the my Carter, saying that voters politically loaded nature of the demand "specifics, not smiles; event. Cavender said he want- performances, not promises." ed the opinion of "my kids." But the central question sur- At least one band member said rounding the visit is the visit that nobody wanted to do it, itself, and to what degree any but that Cavender implied he academic institution can allow had been given his marching itself to be used as a pawn orders by the Regents. in national politics. University So the President got his mu- President Robben Fleming ad- s s' mitted that the partisan flavorsic and the entire affair wasj mte t theeheg phadr.tis Univer- ready to be put to rest, when of the evening had .the, nvr the Young Workers Liberation! sity "in a bind," but pledged league slapped the University the same treatment for Carter, with a suit demanding that at and said that the Ford cam- least part of the band play for paign would be sent a bill for Communist Party Presidential services rendered. But in the candidate Gus Hall, who will eyes of many on campus, such visit the campus Saturday. services may ultimately prove a considerable disservice. President Fleming said it would be up to the band. "It y occurs to me that it would be Bandp O iCS a very interesting thing to have IJUSIC MAY I'E the food of a band perform that didn't want love, but this week it fed to." It would indeed. Particular- a dispute involving the unlikli- . if the last time it performed est of partners: the University unwillingly was just a few days' administration the marching ago. Intercollegiate Athletics for Wo- men (AIAW) in which the wo- men's team competes, prohibitsi men from participating. The two students, Eric Stan- nard, a freshman from Flint, and Rick Chad, a senior from Huntington Woods, point to a clause in Title IX stipulating! that in sports where opportun- ties for one sex are limited, the excluded sex must be allowed to try out for the team of the other sex, unless it is a contactE sport. Stannard and Chad are report- edly contemplating some sort of action against the Univer- sity, either a grievance to be filed with the Department of Health, Education, and Wel- fare, or maybe a lawsuit. * * 4' Money vs status A UNIVERSITY FACULTY' group wants to put more money in the pockets of pro-' fessors next year - and took; its case directly to the Regents last Thursday. The group, the Committee on the Economic Status of the Fac- ulty (CESF), concluded in a re- cently released report that beef- ing up professorial paychecks is good way to keep the facul- ty from fleeing to higher paying positions elsewhere, and thus maintain the level of academic excellence administrators love to gloat about. Specifically, CESF is request- ing an average 11.5 per cent pay raise to all full-time faculty members for the 1977-78 aca- demic year. The proposed raise is design- ed to keep the University's sal- aries on a competitive level with comparable institutions. In dollars and cents, the pro- posed raise translates to the tune of well over $5 million. However, the level of state arnropriations channeled to the University will determine just how much money the faculty will get, and two professors as- sociated with CESF appeared before the Regents earlier this week with bright tales of an im- proeing state economy, aimed to convince the Board that an 11.5 ner cent raise is not as unrea- son able as it sounds. Regnet Gerald Dunn (D- Lan- sina) "didn't buy" some parts of th economic forecast, noting that the state still faces an im- nosing deficit. The Regents will consider the renort again at next month's meeting, Cavender munist suit "deficient in someI of the language," meaning that the suit may have to be refiled. / * Volleyball anyone? IN WHAT PROMISES to be only the opening round of a long, bitter bout, two Univer- sity students accused the Ath-; letic Deoartment of reverse sex discrimination after being bar- red from trying out for the Wo- men's Volleyball team. Title IX of the education Amendments of 1972 prohibits sex discrimination in any area of higher education. Men's vol- leyball receives no funds from tht Athletic Department, while women are given several par-I tial grant - in - aid sch-larships per year, and expenses for road games. But the Association of band, and a campus affiliate. of the Communist party. When word broke that the President would visit the Uni-. It was reported on Friday, however, that the state Court of A'ppeals has termed the Com- This was Turque and compiled by Bill Jay Levin. r -. _ -_. _ ____. - -- . _ Bobbing like a (Continued frorh Page 3) boats look like giant needles. a etoe for nearly all beginners. The paddler controls the boat ti No matter how carefully I sat with thighs pressed against the tc or paddled, the prow would be- hull one-sixteenth of an inch n gin to turn slowly but relent- thick and extended legs braced I6ssly to the left. As it turned, against foot pegs, as well as is it somehow picked up speed, with the paddle blades. Water o g8ing faster and faster, till I is kept out with a spray-skirt w felt like I was spinning on a that, fastens around the cockpit A NlWu1 compass needle. rim and is tied around the e I had to suffer the snickering paddler's waist. Besides the ka- w g, e$ of a picnicking family yak, the paddler wears a life- d *ho ell paused to watch me jacket and a light helmet. a atingglo, the -kayak, wobbling, For their slalom practice theting to dump me each runs on the Huron, the RS&C tinftt a paddle blade touched kayakers all went through a* water. And people like Lang set routine. They glided back- y mAtuv4r these devils down wards through the first gate. I s6Me of the whitest water in then turned to scoot forward e the country? through the second, about 20 t For weekday practice ses- feet ({,-river. Dodging a sub- v $i04s, llwever, these slalom mner- )ck, they took the third tE faaatIes have only the placid I gate forward and turned sharp- y J rolt Itrer. In winter months I ly upriver to weave through a b tkby are reduced to using the ; fourth gate hung only three or a 4ilversity of Michigan pool.' four feet from protruding rocks. ; Te pol is a far cry from the I With light paddle thrusts they ij$*h stretches of the Youg- then shot backwards downriver y' hiehenly, and the Savage River I through the final gate, hung itt ttyland - which they de- from the east side of the Huron c s# blei wth relish and rever- River Drive bridge. It's a short g enWe. course but a good work-out. P "The 1Itren river isn't that After making numerous pass-" ch11;gn g," Black noted, es through the gates kayaker b ",it t% gates hung it's a paul Sleator paddled to the y OW place to polish slalom bank and extricated himself T t4toh WAT."C from the cockpit for a coke e OUT TO WATCH break. Sleator began racing e tlis' recently. Maneuvering about three years ago and con- , 0%g a fw gates suspended siders himself a competent pad-!t fttt the n bridges at Tubbs diler in rough water. c Aead an llurpn River Drive,' But even he, occasionally, t they spgn the kayaks, deftly loses control of his kayak to o ever tho water's surface. At the point where he has no choice " their best they have the style except to swim. And preeision of dancers - pad- A firm mastery of the Es- dling Imoothly through a Fred kimo roll is the best way to Atti routine choreographed avoid those humiliating - and ftr kayak. dangerous -- moments. With a Tn th water the 13 foot long well-timed twist of the hips and A Musical Masterpicc L1C MUSKET/MrIodcticons, Inc. Novem ber4. , i 1 1,1 2,13 7-Y976 L dia+Litrdelssohn Thcat Cr Evening Itrformances 8:00p1. (Matinee Nov7 2:00pm) Tickets-$3.0, $3.50 $4.0() Tic atscaVai AlAlCt AC TickCt Cc Irl in hill AtIdit-ritutI cork forceful shove of the paddle, he experienced kayaker is able o right the kayak without ever loving from the boat. "The hardest thing to learn s that you shouldn't get out f the boat -- and you really vant to!" Lang emphasizes. Nnyone who has ever been un- xpectedly dunked can imagine chat it's like to hang upside own from an overturned kay- k. A S A NOVICE, you must learn when you should and when ou shouldn't ditch your kayak. t's a matter of judging wheth- r you're in a position to flip he boat upright. During a race, on make your choice quickly, aking into account whether our chances of survival will e better floating unprotected mong the boulders or fight- ig for balance in the boat. You also consider how badly ou want to win the race. Besides the river itself, over- onfidence is the paddler's reatest danger, according to Raul Lang's brother, James. You've got to stay within your ounds. You have to know what ou can handle and what not. 'he biggest problem is under- stimating the power of the riv-. r." But even when you know he river and yourself, anything an happen. James remembers nside a off this one rock, but it grab- bed me, and I was stuck be- tween two rocks, one at each end of the boat, and had to swim." With the dangers of kayaking come fatalities. Six killed pad- dlers have been killed on riv- ers in the past two years, ac- cording to a top paddler writing for the American Canoe Associ- ation's magazine, Canoe. But the dangers don't faze the kayak kayakers one bit. RS&C mem- ber Sleater says that the ex- citement makes it all worth it. "It's doing something challeng- ing that you have to really work at to be good," Sleater says. "Even to be only rela- tively good requires years of practice, experience. You are constantly reacting under pres- sure, and it gets to be an addic- tive thing. If. you do it right, it's a great high." M.H.T.P. FOR THE BENEFIT OF THE CHILD CARE ACTION CENTER (School of Education) PRESENTS AN Exhbiton ndSale psa 01 of Fine Art Prints Featuring the works of Chgall, Dali, Matisse, Gaugin, Van Gogh, Breughel, Cezanne, Frankenthaler, Homer, Klee, Miro, Monet, Magritte, Picasso, Rembrandt, Re- noir, Toulouse-Lautrec, Wyeth, and others. OVER 1200 DIFFERENT PRINTS The Sale is located 4n THE FISHBOWL PR ICES ARE:;$2.50 EACH, 3 FOR $6 NEW SELECTION EVERY DAY-! Mon., Tues., Wed., Sept. 20-22 9 A.M. TO 5 P.M. II 04' FIND A NEW CAR IN THE CLASSIFIEDS / . ,L1 ,7 he time his boat was pierced n both sides of the cockpit. I thought I would just bounce J/ J r AL t , c 1 _ }F~ / ETLJI,-.re BENNY GOODMAN and his Sextet .11 w I MASS MEETING A JAZZ SPECIAL in HILL AUD., Sat., Oct. 2; at 8:30 He's still the King of Swing to jazz buffs who flock to hear this fabulous clarinetist wherever he plays. Since his first professional job at the age of 14 with a 4-piece band aboard a Lake Michigan excursion steamer .Benny has garnered millions of fans via the ballroom dance floor, radio, T.V., motion pic- tures, and recordings, both jazz and classical. After the concert, top off youc evenirg at the Afterglow/ "Let's Dance'-food, wine, and dancing in the Michigan League ''St ,rd,t" B'a'llroom.v Available at: m