Wednesday, August 21, 1974 THE MICHIGAN DAILY SECOND PENALTY IN EIGHT YEARS: 11in CHAMPAIGN, Ill. (AP- Ath- letic Director Cecil Coleman said yesterday the University of Illinois will accept without ap- peal the punishment imposed for recruiting violations. "We felt we received a very fair hearing," Coleman said at a news conference. "There are some parts of the penalties we disagreed with. We think we can live with the penalty. "We're going to take a very positive attitude and we're not going to cry about the penal- ty," he said. "We had viola- tions, and we're going to pay for it." The National Collegiate Ath- letic Association announced that the Illini basketball team would be on probation for two years. It is prohibited from participating in post-season competition and being on NCAA-controlled television for one year. The penalty also lim- its the number of basketball scholarships which can be of- fered to three for each of the next two years. Gene Bartow, who is starting his first season as Illini basket- ball coach, said he remains con- fident despite the probation. "I feel the penalties that we have received should not really hurt our effort to dt what we were hired to do-that is, build a good basketball program," said Bartow, who appeared with Coleman at a press conference. Bartow said the scholarship limitation will demand more careful recruiting. "I don't feel we are limited all that much," he said. "We will have to recruit vigorously and make sure we get three top players, and we feel we can do this." Col-man explained that the nenalties were imposed for nu- merous violations, most of them involving offering such things as meals, transporta- tion, and other favors to ath- letes without charge. One assistant football coach, Gary Golden, was publicly rep- rimanded specifically for his part in the violations. Golden is prohibited from directly or in- directly recruiting for one year, Coleman said. Golden was accused of pro- viding transportation and ar- ranging for free meals for ath- letes in violation of NCAA rules. Coleman confirmed that one as- sistant football coach was ac- cused of providing bail money accepi to obtain an athlete's release Coler from jail. He would not identify have the coach, but said it was not thei Golden, as earlier reported by prove the NCAA. Illin "He did commit three viola- Black: tions and should have known confer better," Coleman said of Gold- cusset en. "They are violations that his as we've certainly cautioned all of Blac our coaches against in the fu- did w ture. But I don't feel they are wish of a serious magnitude." Illinois has been punished twice in less than seven years by the NCAA. The so-called slush fund scandal of 1966 re- sulted in the forced resignation of three coaches, permanent ineligibility of five athletes and a two-year school proba- tion. "The University of Illinois is now a two-time loser," Cole- man said. "We cannot afford, under any stretch of the imagi- nation, to go three times. Be- cause they'll just throw the book completely at us. I think it would terminate what we know now as the intercollegiate ath- letic program at the University of Illinois." University Chancellor J. W. Peltason issued a statement saving, "We deeply regret that any infractions of NCAA regu- lations took place, and we are determined to prevent any repe- tition of them." The Big Ten Conference also cold take action against the University of Illinois, Coleman said, "But we don't anticipate that a penalty by the Big Ten would be any more restrictive than that of the NCAA." Coach Bartow squelched re- ports that he or incoming bas- ketball star Audie Matthews planned to sue the NCAA in the matter. "I asked Audie about this and he said he didn't know where in the world something like this would come from," Bartow said. "As far as I'm concerned, I plan no suits." Nin In response to the infractions, wor Coleman said the ruling would Vien limit the formation of so-called booster clubs, which are or- ganized to support athletic teams. He also said identifica-U tion cards would be issued to all official athletic representa- tives with expiration dates on B the cards for control purposes. "There is no question in our minds that we can run an hon- est and successful inter- collegiate athletic program," man to doub e it ois man enc d the ssista kma 'hat to p N eteer ld m na. said cheat ters, to you footb also e at e NCA ant, G an sa it ha put thi NCAA ruling . "You don't right light because a very ca- for their having him to dinner. to win. And for pable and great coach's life- Blackman said Golden, his we're going to time profession is in jeopardy." former aide at Dartmouth, was ." Blackman explained that not involved in "the lavish all coach Bob Golden earlier this year had wrongdoing that people have held a news arranged home transportation been led to believe." which he dis- for an already-signed Illinois Golden commented that. "I A implication of football recruit who was olden, stranded at Chicago's O'Hare did not act with wrong iten- id, "The NCAA Airport, and also had the re- tions, but rather with sincere d to do, but I cruit's parents for dinner at concern for a player I recruit- is thing in the his home as a return courtesy ed." New World Record n-year-old Andras Hargitay of Hungary streaks through the pool on his way to a new nark in the 400-meter-individual medley at the European Swimming Championships in His time was 4:28.89. UNIVERSITY PLAYERS PRESENTS PEOPLE APE BETTEP OFF IN ZOOS A PLAY ABOUT THE PARIS COMMUNE OF 1871 BY NEW YOPK PLAYWRIGHT Ardre / Wiler ( \ a FRlEt At)MIttION 4' AIJGU8T 22-24, 8PM, ArENAw THEATFIE,FI1IEZE BLGO. children under twelve not admitted ANN ARBOR AREA PREMIERE! FILMS WHICH REFUSE TO FADE AWAY A newcomer to tis list of "found" movies is "The Harder They Csme," the first Jamaican f e a t u r e ever made and the only ¢rfilm on the list that qual- M~s.:..ii 5 ,as atrue original, a MOVI OF HE EAR! H i~ s mvie s goad that it de- MOVIE OF THE YEAR! V"evesso mewhat o re -Rolling Stone than the limited cult it - M M tention it is now receiv- Mo~azine is hen it in shin Featuring Reggae a iThursday Fi hts nly music star, Screening Room. Jimmy Cliff at .L when it f i r s t opened here at the Embassy The- "More wit, quts, humor and sheer exuberance than most ater in February of last movies you'll see in any one year of movie goinq." year, "The Harder They ---Vincent Canby, N.Y. Times C o m e" received mostly good notices and only one or two unqualified raves. The business was okay but not great. In Boston, however, it played for 26 weeks last year at the Orson welle Cinema, and reopened there again on April 10, this year, and is still playing. I think I can understand why, now that I've seen it at the Screening Room. Although it's a sometimes technically ragged movie, "The Harder They Come" has more guts, wit, humor and sheer exuberance than most movies you'll see in any one year of movie-going. A lot of this-though not all-has to do with the superb music, Jamaican reggae (rhymes with leggay), strictly local, highly syncopated rhythm and blues with associations ts rock and calypso. The film was produced, co-written and directed by Perry Henzel, a white Jamaican with experience at the B.B.C. and in industrial and documentary films, and it stars Jimmy Cliff, the black Jamaican reggae star whose life story provides the raw material for a film that simultan- eously explores a fantasy and satirizes it. This is not a movie to lift the hearts of the members of the Jamaican Tourist Board. Its sympathy is with "the rudies," the jobless young men who hang around Kingston street corners making rude remarks to people who could be tourists. Although "The Harder They Come" takes place almost entirely in the Jamaicani's Jamaica (there is only one short scene involving a resort hotel), and although it is very careful not to portray whites as the oppressors (we see only blacks ripping off blacks), it is a more revolu- tionary black film than any number of American efforts, including "Sweet Sweetback's Baadassss Song." Its anger is less facile, more profoundly moving. Never for a minute is it confused with self-pity, which, more than any other factor perhaps, gives the film its power as well as the continuing appeal that won't let it get "lost." -vincent Canby, New York Times, July 14, 1974 Definitely NOT Cancelled AUDITORIUM A, ANGELL HALL LAST TIMES TONIGHT-7:30 and 9:30 P.M. $1.50 WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 21 Original sound-track album (awarded Best Popular Music THURSDAY! Sound-track album of the year) available on Island Records KING OF at Discount Records stores, special at $4.09. HEARTS e (g$1.2 7:3 ond 9:30 PM $1.25