a - "4 S'N.... Page 10-Wednesday, September 30, 1981-The Michigan Daily Daily attends 'M' meeting By MARK MIHANOVIC Michigan's Board in Control of Inter- collegiate Athletics meeting in the Crisler Arena lounge was partially opened to members of The Michigan Daily last night. Athletic Director Don Canham presided over the meeting, in which several topics relevant to Michigan athletics were discussed but no major decisions were made. Political Science Professor Thomas Anton, the Big Ten faculty represen- tative, delivered Conference and NCAA reports, but Canham did most of the talking through the rest of the meeting, with no board members raising a dissenting voice on any of his suggestions. Canham spent a significant amount of time recapping past events, in- cluding the formation of the Women's Big Ten Conference and the recent con- troversy involving the NCAA and the College Football Association Last fall, the Daily editors were arrested in an attempt to attend a Board of Intercollegiate Athletics meeting. The editors felt that the meeting came under the Open Meetings Act, but the Athletic Department and the Ann Arbor police disagreed, resulting in some arrests. WELCOME TO DASCOLA STYLISTS " 4 BARBERS " NO WAITING * UNISEX Liberty off State .......... 668-9529 East U, at So. U ........... 662-0354 SPOR TS OF THE DAILY ND fans say no to oust Faust CHICAGO (AP)- Notre Dame Coach Gerry Faust isn't singing the old Dean Martin refrain of "Keep those cards ' and letters coming folks" but he is hap- py that they remain on a positive note despite successive losses to Michigan and Purdue. "I'm getting about 130 let- ters a day and I'd say 126 of them are positive," said Faust yesterday in his weekly telephone hookup interview. "We can still have a great year," said Faust. "Everyone likes to go 12-0 but ,we can't do that now. But if we play well, we can get back into the picture. We can turn it around if we work hard and hang in there." Michigan had been ranked No. 1 in the Associated Press poll but when the Wolverines lost their opener to Wiscon- sin, Notre Dame vaulted into the top spot with an impressive victory over Louisiana State. Michigan gained its revenge by knocking off Notre Dame the following week and the Irish suffered a second straight defeat at Purdue last Satur- day. That knocked Notre Dame com- pletely out of the rankings. Neither the Irish nor Faust are used to losing. "I'M GETTING there, it takes me longer," said Faust about accepting the defeats. "To be perfectly honest, I'm not used to it. I feel a responsibility to the community, to Notre Dame, to the students. "I don't want to let the alumni and the students down, I owe them more than that," said Faust. "There's always pressure but there will be more pressure this week. You have to learn to cope with it. Great teams thrive on pressure. I don't mind it, I just want to see happy faces at Notre Dame and, South Bend." The Irish return home to take on Michigan State this week. The Spartans also have a 1-2 record but they had to struggle last Saturday to defeat Bowling Green 10-7 after Big Ten losses to Ohio State and Illinois. Aware that there will not be any smiling faces anywhere among Irish fans if Notre Dame should lose to the Spartans, Faust explained what some of Notre Dame's problems have been. "We have a lot of people in new positions on offense," said Faust, "it takes time. That's no excuse. We're not trying to make excuses. But we have to perform better. We didn't against Michigan. Last week we played pretty well and our defense was consistent ex- cept for giving up the big play. Once we eliminate that, we'll have a good defen- se." "We're going to get it going," said Faust. "Maybe God is testing me right now to see how I react." Wisconsin on the tube MADISON (AP) - For both financial and recruiting reasons, University of Wisconsin officials are delighted with ABC-TV's decision to' show the Badgers' football game with Purdue here on live regional television Satur- day. "It's coming at a good time," Athletic Director Elroy Hirsch said. "We need the exposure to keep up with the recruiting war. And this will-be great exposure." WISCONSIN HAS not performed on TV since it registered two 1974 upsets - a 21-20 victory over Nebraska and 59-20 over Missouri. 1 3 } i r t Indications were that Wisconsin's 21- 14 upset of Michigan three weeks ago and Purdue's 15-14 victory over Notre Dame last Saturday figured heavily in the network's decision. Saturday's telecast,( 11:30 a.m. CDT) will earn the financially strapped athletic department about $50,000. Badgers ...first TV appearance since 1974 a a GRIDDE PICKS People around the globe are starting to open their windows contemplating that big jump. With foreign stock prices dropping faster than the Wolverines in the polls, some people are worrying where their next meal will come from. Close your windows and stop fretting, your next dinner could come from the Michigan Daily and Pizza Bob's. Just fill out your Griddes and drop them at the Daily (420 Maynard) before mid- night Friday. Not only will the winner receive the free one-item pizza from Pizza Bob's, but you will be able to compete with the "experts" from the football staff. 1. MICHIGAN at Indiana (pick score) 2. Michigan State at Notre Dame 3. Minnesota at Illinois 4. Iowa at Northwestern 5. Purdue at Wisconsin 6. Florida State at Ohio State 7. Missouri at Mississippi State 8. Florida at LSU 9. North Carolina at Georgia Tech 10. Iowa State at Oklahoma 11. Navy at Yale 12. Arizona State at Washington 13. E. Michigan at Central Michigan 14. Auburn at Nebraska 15. Pittsburgh at South Carolina 16. Syracuse at Maryland 17. Utah State at Brigham Young 18.Dayton at Slippery Rock 19. N. Dakota State at Morriingside 20. DAILY LIBELS at Indiana-Jones BILLBOARD A meeting for all persons interested in joining the men's tennis team will be held Wednesday, September 30 in the large classroom in the basement of the Athletic Administration Building (cor ner of State and Hoover), at 4:30 p.m. Students are asked to bring their class schedule to the meeting. Entries for the women's competitive softball tournament, to be held this Saturday and Sunday, must be turned into the Intramural Building today by 4:30. The deadline for all campus singles and co-rec doubles (tennis) is Thursday, October 1. These tour- naments, which have been scheduled for October 3 and 4, will only be held if . enough people enter. RSC0pk 0tedci duser of ntheidu .nSt Prod..atert r. Ae hI I P As he 6thvae re growin u ehou' inJe t e leargest r r t An 'Itradic Nrr h 6 os eq i FMein telcoc rodu~ct a close 2fl panWe'rd riOY id ,v I - icr n-' t afl0 v" b k )e Oa eaI e cor n~ca h oadcast eau 9Pa, rerof sateWcernrne't I din9e is "and e're h \ statoNsp edtingse . ions eart aex e ectr ced ottice sy ented new pfirst i. gCtng eqlui Ve n introdue° ri Mctturer o " e !' 5L Y C Ne're the tar9eS;on' loyar " e Jae te natrp Onre . mI\etein Vt ndustria U I M}I L} hie large '- e~o~as. ead he SOuthfteaStr inr ee 've appe inoratlo r dctuessingdata Wea -f-t runicto ae e aalonicatnOion e\1 pedt psrctin, omm ec nuA de0 cornr n rp nur not aeo an ru"iiati r bldv a grog u and the con 00giSi ad ° in an th ac un.g aeO ted$ a pa, s spana somre dW~lrs are nolg uVr loc uarters adee 1g0/o. 0ad Wrd . lrla.i tins wt won Melbourne' rma e ollbe WorksWeis" donebedtaning9 tac jou ey ortunl at~a r's~~~arlSpaS jor IM scores MONDAY Softball Residence Hall Allen Rumsey 4, Allen Rumsey Gold 2 5th Hamilton 110, Mitchell5 Huber House 'A' 4, Nads 2 5th Hamilton 2 9, Taylor House Blue 0 (forfeit) Allen Rumsey Blue 16, Rotvig Rapists 5 MoJo Bahama Mamas 9, Elliot Zukowkis 0 (forfeit) Too Hot to Handle 7, 3rd Lewis 6 Couzens Barbers 9, Couzens Crussaders 0 (forfeit) Graduate/Faculty/Staff Plus-One 16, 12 So. 2nd 6 Lithopedions 9, H.A. Griffiths 7 Co-Rec Ears & Beers 9, Fisher Persons 2 Michigan house 9, Theta Xi 0 (forfeit) SCORES American League Detroit 14, Baltimore 0 Cleveland 3, New York 2 Kansas City 4, Minnesota 2 Oakland 5, Toronto 1 Boston 7, Milwaukee 2 National League * New York 7, Philadelphia 0 Cincinnati 4, San Francsico 3 Pittsburgh 10, Chicago 6 Les Angeles 5, Atlanta 3 PUBLIC SKATING STARTING SEPT. 14"- Monday-Friday 12:00 to 1:30 p.m. STARTING OCT. 3 Saturday & Sunday 12:30 to 2:15 p.m. (no skating home football Sat.) " .r1 inV asa6 IAW ..