Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, August 10, 197/ Page Ten THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, August 10, 1 97zu TRANSCENDENTAL MEDITATION as taght by MAHARISHI MAHESN YOGI * NATURAL TECHNIQUE DEVELOPS FULL CREATIVE ABILITIES- * PROVIDES DEEP REST AND RELAXATION * LIFE EXPANDS IN FULFILLMENT 1 INTRODUCTORY LECTURE TONIGHT-AUG. 10-8 P.M. UGLI Multi-purpose Room for further info, call 761 -8255 The Daily will be presenting a series at artieles an the tartunes at B Sheembechler -trained athletes in the professional ranks. Today's piece, the first of the series, deals with Wolverines currently with the Cleve- land Browns. No serious collegiate football buff was surprised when All- American safety Tom Darden was tabbed as the first round choice of the Cleveland Browns. Darden, whose miraculous inter- ception preserved a 1971 Wolver- ine victory over the Buckeyes of Ohio State, was all year long an anchor in Bo Schembechler's pass defense. The Browns. whose once strong game began to deteriorate over the end years of the past de- cade, have slotted Darden in the dual roles of kick return-man, a job he handled with great deft- ness at Michigan, and defensive back in hopes that his aggressive infectious play would pep up a team mired in complacency. HIS PRE-SEASON play foi the meet the UM Barbers Chet, Dove, Harold, and Jay Mon .-Sot MICHIGAN UNION wows Browns Browns has been. as expected, strong. Although somewhat slow- ed down by his appearance in the College All Star game, Dar- den did a commendable job in one half of play against the Rams in the premier exhibition game last Friday. His tight play and tough tackling has earned for "T.D." a starting role tocnor- row against the John Brodie led 49'ers. Big- Came Darden, Staroba and C o m- pany will grace the gridiron ofE Michigan Stadium Sunday. Aug- ust 20, against the always tough Detroit Lions. Tickets are still available at the Ticket Office, Hoover and State. As a result of his gridiron acumen and athletic ability, rookie Darden may earn a start- ing berth in the Cleveland last line of defense. But to do so, Darden must wiggle histway past some wiley veterans, corner back Ben Davis and safeties Ernie Kel- lermnan and Willie Stumner. Gar- den may find that the footbat played down the Ohio Turnpike is a bit rougher than in Ann Arbor. Nick Skorich, Cleveland men- tor, expects Darden to beat out the competition at one of the two spots and team with second year man Clarence Scott to form the nucleaus of a strong, ag- gressive, defensive secondary. PAUL STAROBA, Michigan end and punter from the class of '71, also saw some duty as a punter in the contest against Los An- geles, however his chances of sticking with the parent club seem remoter than those of his more illustrious Michigan collea- gue. Staroba boomed one punt 60 yards but under pressure squibbed one off the side of his foot, which will surely be noted in coaches' notebooks. Staroba will be extremely hard pressed to unseat punter D o n Cockcroft from his throne as Brown booter. And should rookie placekicker George Hunt earn a position on the Brown squad, it will force Staroba to make the team as a wide receiver or spend another year on the cab squad. Africans agree on Rhodesia MUNICH, Germany (A' -- The Supreme Council for Sport in Africa dropped its objection yes- terday to Rhodesian participa- tion in the Munich Summer Oly- mpic Games. The Africans. who had ques- tioned Rhodesia's participation because of its racial policy, drop- ped objections after receiving as- surance from the organizers and the International Olympic Com- mittee that Rhodesia would par- ticipate "under the conditions of a British Colony." This means that Rhodesia. which broke territorial ties with Britain on racial questions, will send athletes to Munich under the British 'flag and will observe the British anthem at G a m e s ceremonies. Olympic identity cards for the Rhodesians will describe them as British subjects, according to yesterday's agreement. Have some. time on Y ' your hands? Truck on down to the d 7 Daily and join the Busi- ness Staff See FRAN at 420 Maynard M-F 10 12 M-W-F 2-4, or Call 764-0560 I DIAL SHOWS NIGHTLY AT 668- 7 & 9 P.M. 6416 SAT. & SUN. from 1:30 H URRY! . CAMPUS LAST 7 DAYS! X-RATED & ANIMATED! COLOR -r-"'^ 5th HIT WEEK! ctotmn rmcaoling "TOTALLY CHEERFUL" --Canby, N.Y. Times DIAL 665-6290 "A BARREL OF LAUGHS" 00 ON61A --J. Crist kyu MATCHLESS HILARITY en Time I Gu Hurry! Must sNOWS AT 11-05 End - n 9- . oOn --- T11E SCROOL OC M.%IUSC preselts Mozart's Opera COSI FAX TUTTEl SUNG IN ENGLISH August 18, 19, 21 & 22-8:00 P.M* MENI)ELSSOIN rHEATIRE Conductor: Josef Blatt Stage Director: Ralph Herbert TICKETS: $3.00 Some reserved seating avail- MAIL ORDERS: School of Music Opera, Men- able at $1.50 for University students with I.D delssohn Theatre, The University of Michigan, cards Sold at Box Office only Ann Arbor, MI 48104 Box Office opens Auugust 14 at 12:30 P.M. Information 764-6118 "C MEDY TNIGHT 8 P.M." Michigan Repertory '72's Production of The Tony Award Winning Musical A FUNNY THING HAPPENED In the Air-Conditioned Power Center Tickets $2 & $3 Box office open 12:30 to 8:00 Phone 763-3333 Good seats still avoilable. Additional performances Aug. 11, 12 I DIAL 662-6264 wo s 21 S .a-..r r'i 'I st B :Y orWINNER DIRECTOR SMIKE NICHOLS E UR A DuATE TECHNICOLOR' PANAVISIOT1 A AnAwoEmbassy R.s.di