I Page 12-Thursday, October 23, 1980-The Michigan Daily Rumsey, Elliot establish rule in IM foot ball By DAN NEWMAN In much the same way that Ohio State and Michigan turned Big Ten football of the 70's into the Big Two, Rumsey House and Elliot House have dominated residence hall intramurals in recent years. Since 1973, these two houses have combined to win seven resident division championships, five in Division A. During this time, these two houses have compiled a record of well over .750. The manager of Rumsey's football team, Bobby Evani, and Elliot's resident director, Bill Harder, attribute this success to excessive oparticipation and enthusiasm. "The main factor for our domination has been a great participation and a willingness to represent the house," said Evani of his Rumsey squad, which won the 'A' crown in '77-'78 and '78-'79. Harder contends that there is more enthusiasm on his Elliot teams than on the other teams. "I think we take IM football more seriously than the other houses," he said. "Doing well is more important to us." Elliot house won Division A football from 1976 to 1978, and it took the Division B crown last year. How do these teams do it? "They just go out and get the players," said one me'mber of the Intramural Department staff, who refused to commend further. But Tom Phelps, who transferred to Rumsey House prior to the football season, sees it differently. "We just naturally play well together," said Phelps. Indeed, many students consider it un- fair that these two houses-which are all male and have two squads each-always seem to come up with the campus' best athletes. "Not true," according to Harder, who has been Elliot's resident director the past five years. "We're proud of our success because we don't have any real athletes. That's why when we beat those teams with great athletes it's even more satisfying." Harder added that the house has had excellent athletic directors over the years. Asked if these two teams recruitthe best athletes, Phelps responded, "I wouldn't say we recruit. We just end up with excellent atheltes." "You can't recruit," responded Evani. "We just spend a lot of time practicing, sometimes two or three times a week." The question is how long can thi domination continue? Currently, Rum- sey House is 3-0, a definite contender for this year's championship. But it's too early to determine which teams will dominate intramural football in the '80's in the way Rumsey House and Elliot House have in past years. If you wall ~tto 0Th lini / save -TW Uu (tD;T) sTAPr teA f i(s A ' p L71j TS C' LLA ~\and =this As the weekend to do it. - APPLIANCE CO. I is the place. I EVERYTHING IS ON SALE HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES OF THE STOREWIDE BARGAINS .01 METAL TAPE COMPATIBLE TECHNICS SA-505 63 W/ch. min. RMS at 9 ohms. 20- 20,000 Hz. no morei than 0.04% THD. Reg. $298. 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The document was drawn up Tuesday after three days of meetings in suburban Rosemont, the newspaper reported. ACCORDING TO the Tribune, th document is a blueprint for deter- mining if a school is following Big Ten policy, and contains questions to which the university will be asked to respond. The Tribune quoted a Big Ten faculty representative as saying that any talk of expelling Illinois from the conference is "premature." The action was prompted by the con- troversy over the eligibility of Illin quarterback Dave Wilson, but does not focus on Wilson, the newspaper repor- ted. "IN THE LONG run, people will refer to this as the 'Illinois case,' not the 'Wilson case,"' a source told the Tribune. "It goes right to the issue of whether Illinois is adhering to the rules of a voluntary association, even if those rules don't always meet its needs." Wilson, a junior college transfer from California, filed suit against the con- ference and the National Collegiat Athletic Association seeking to reverse a Big Ten decision denying him academic eligibility for athletics. Though the university also was named a defendant in Wilson's suit, school officials have defended his eligibility. Illinois Chancellor John E. Cribbett said last week that university officials had examined Wilson's academic credentials and found him eligible. HOWEVER, BIG TEN officials are questioning whether Illinois maintains adequate faculty monitoring of athletic programs, according to the report. GRIDDE PICKS 'The Phillies are champs, they're having a ball, For the first time in hisorv they've won it all The blessings set forth from the heavens above Came down on the City of Brotherly Love Yet amid the excitement, a bit of despair, A feeling of emptiness fills the air The Phils over KC-a glorious fight But they didn't turn their Griddes in by Friday night. Remember-Gridde Picks must be turned in to the Daily office at 420 Maynard Street by midnight Friday. Winnes receive a small, one-item pizza from Pizza Bob's. 1. Illinois at MICHIGAN (Pick score) 2. Michigan St. at Purdue 3. Ohio St. at Wisconsin 4. Iowa at Minnesota 5. Indiana at Northwestern 6. Arkansas at Houston 7. Oklahoma at Iowa St. . SMU at Texas 9. Notre Dame at Arizona l. Georgia at Kentucky 1i. Pittsburgh at Tennessee 12. UCLA at California 13. Tulane at Georgia Tech 14. Missouri at Kansas St. 15. Harvard at Princeton 16. S. Mississippi at Alabama 17. Northern Michigan at WV. Illinois 18. N.W. Louisiana at Central Michigan 19. Clarion St. at Slippery Rock 20. DAILY LIBELS at Ypsilanti St. F-J I ........ . ix$ 115 f ...__ .,. PHILIPS AF677 semi- automatic turntable. Belt-drive. Electronic speed control. Reg. $149. 1112 RTR IIl Model 2 3-way speakers. 10" woofer, 33/4" midrange, 2/4" tweeter. Reg. $89 each. s65 EA. SANYO M8500 AM/FM portable cassette recorder. AC/DC. 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