LOCAL BANDS 'i 0" = I I Sleep (Continued from Pages) Chris: Crossed Wire, the Frames, Fugitive Poetry. All: Private Angst. Diana: Angry Red Planet and Weird World. D: What about other influences, supra-locally speaking? Eugene Wicke: Taj Mahal, Screamin' Jay Hawkins. Diana: Kurt Vonnegut Jr. Chris: I'm influenced a lot by science fiction books and movies. When I was a little kid, I used to record laser beam noises off of Star Trek and sci-fi noises have always been big with me. Of course combined with other stuff from younger days like Beatles cartoons and the Monkees and Gamelon music... Scott: We just sort of second hand the pop culture thing, taking what we need and discarding the rest. Chris: We take more from the feel of the stuff we like than from the for- ms. I mean, in the beginning, rock and roll was a real physical and human thing, with real pounding drums etc., no synthetic stuff, and we like to think of oursejves as con- tinuing that history.j Scott: But without being so naive as to ignore the age we're living in. I mean, we're not too human. All: Unhuman, inhuman, subhuman superhuman:... Diana: Of course there's no direct lifting of ideas but we can't pretend that we're not influenced by the things that we listen to and enjoy. Eugene: I always liked more rhythmic things as opposed to more melodic ones. That's why the bass has always seemed so appealing. D: How do your songs usually get composed? Diana: Usually, one person has a basic idea and then everyone else just1 builds around it. Sometimes Chris comes up with chords or notes or Eugene comes up with a bassline or Scott, who also plays guitar, will come up with some sort of part. It varies.' Chris: We have different ways. Sometimes we'll just start playing together and something will naturally come about and then Diana will come in with lyrics later. It's a real group effort. Diana: Everyone tries to con- tribute as much as they can without going off in four separate directions. Chris: Our songs are more impor- tant than our own ego trips or whatever so we've never had any problem with that (going off in un- compatible directions). We never even think about that. We give room to each other. D: What about lyrics? What do you sing about? Diana: I sing about what I have to sing about, things that I have problems with, things that bother me. Sometimes I try to consciously write something more positive because people tell me that the words are too depressing. Scott: But I think that we try to resolve things in the lyrics. Diana: Yeah, that's true. Like working on things, especially problems in communication. Chris: She writes visually too. When I write lyrics, which isn't too frequently, I like to do that too. Usually, I have a kind of a feeling when I write lyrics, something that's not very concrete, difficult to explain. The words just sort of come out naturally, a lot like when I'mpainting but just in a different medium. Diana: Sometimes I get g certain feeling when I hear a certain song and I can't really decide what to write about, it's just on my mind at the time. When they start to play a new song, I'll start out just humming along and then certain phrases slip out, almost subconsciously, and I can usually built from there. D: Do you have any type of artistic or commercial goals/visions or is the band completely spontaneous and temporary? Chris: I think I speak for everyone when I say that I can't think of anything more fun than playing in a band and since we do like it so much, our main thing is that we each get what we want out of it. We play what comes most naturally to us, sounds, feelings, etc. Scott: We're just communicating how we feel about things and maybe that's kind of selfish but at the same time we're also sharing. D: Do you have any type of message, any type of idea about how you'd like the band to come across to the audience? Chris: We probably believe in everything that a lot of people believe in. I mean we don't like to see other people get hurt, we believe in peace, everyone doing their own thing, all of the basics. Scott: But we don't feel that any of us are good enough to tell anyone else what to think or feel. Diana: It's more like asking questions than giving answers. Talking to each other. Hopefully, this type of thing will become more popular. D: So now for the vital questions, like the Sleep van. Games recruiterst play By Steve Wise T OMORROW's Michigan vs. Illinois football game will not be televised, but its absence from the airwaves is not the result of poor planning by the networks. The Ilini can't appear on live TV at all this season, and the reason for the blackout raises some significant questions about the state of college athletics. The blackout is one of a number of sanctions imposed on the University of Illinois by the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Illinois' probation is one example of the NCAA's effort to control what some people call an epidemic of cheating in college athletics. And while the Illini and 15 other schools are on probation this year, Michigan and many other schools have avoided such sanctions and ap- pear to have "clean" programs. The rules that are violated most of- ten concern recruiting of prospective athletes. Illinois, in this respect, is a typical case. Recruiting was the issue in almost all its approximately 80 violations, which ranged from buying can make or break a team. "It leads to a situation where everyone tiptoes up to the absolute edge of the regulations," said David Berst, head of the NCAA Enforcement Department. "Some may step over the line or around the rule to receive a competitive advantage." T IS Berst' job to find the footprints on the far side of that line. He gets help from the Enforcement Department's four administrators, 10 full-time in- vestigators, and 25 part-time in- vestigators. The Enforcement Department receives about 500 tips per year from coaches, players and other sources. About 30 of those turn into "major in- vestigations," which can run as long as the two years spent investigating Illinois or as short as two months. After the NCAA completes its in- vestigation, the school must do its own. The results of both probes are passed to the NCAA Infractions Committee, which decides on penalties that can include bans from television and post-season play, restrictions on coaches actions and/or salaries, and reductions in the num- ber of scholarships a school may grant in a given season. Berst's staff operates under num- erous limitations, including the lack of subpoena power to gather evidence of violations and the tendency of violators to lie about their actions. Berst also said some pay-off schemes can be effectively hidden by "laun- dering" money. "If the money is coming out of an uncle's or girlfriend's account, then we can't get the records," he said. "If THE SLEEP ATTACK: Nothing is immune. plane tickets," he said. "We did not get the same answer from two people." Eventually investigators proved the ticket violations and others by following up on the conflicting infor- mation. "We can find out," Berst said. "We're not hamstrung." But they don't pretend to have solved the problem. Berst estimates that about 10 to 15 percent of the 350. "major institutions" in the NCAA are committing intentional violations. That means the 15 to 20 schools per year which have been on probation recently represent about half of the number of schools which are believed to be cheating. "I don't think the enforcement arm is going to solve the problem of cheating in athletics," Berst said. "We're going to have to be more ef- fective in keeping the lid on." One of the major factors in NCAA sanctions has been intent. Critics argue that coaches can easily violate a rule unintentionally because there are 350 pages of NCAA rules, 20 of which cover recruiting. "Many of the violations were very minor in nature," said University of Illinois Vice Chancellor Don Wendel. "We found no evidence that there was an organized plan by any member of the atheltic staff to circumvent the rules." The NCAA's report on the Illinois case tells a different story. Of two former assistant coaches, it said, "This inquiry demonstrates a knowing and willful effort on their part to operate the university's inter- collegiate football program contrary to the requirements and provisions of NCAA legislation." Intent aside, both Berst and Moeller agree that coaches can't claim lack of knowledge as an excuse for violations. "There's some involvement with ignorance, with not knowing a rule, but not with major violations," Moeller said. "That's our job, to know the rules." "You don't need a manual to know you can't hand over a Trans Am," said Berst. Still the less obvious rules in the manual draw criticism. New rules governing what a school may mail to recruits provide two examples. "You can't send an ap- plication," said Michigan's football recruiting coordinator Fritz Seyferth. "They did not identify that as one of the things you can send and that's ridiculous." Before he could mail them to prospects, Seyferth also had to reprint 1,300 promotional brochures because a foldout photograph in the pamphlet was ruled a poster; the mailing rules also prohibits'. sending posters to recruits. The poster rule, according to Moeller, was enacted when some schools began sending recruits, posters more and more often, creating a situation in which less wealthy programs were at a com- petitive disadvantage. Some say the poster rule and others like it are pet- ty, but Moeller says it is useful. "As dumb as some of the rules sound, they're there for a purpose and that's- to control excesses," said Moeller a former Illinois head coach. None of the violations found at Illinois 'You don't need a manua hand over a Trans Am. Enfore, Chris: It'll be a lot like Arthur Penhallow's van (celebrated Detroit FM radio personality) with a big pic- ture of his head airbrushed on the side of it. Diana: Except that it'll have all of our asses instead and you'll have to guess who each one belongs to. Chris: We're going to have Sly Stallone as Rambo on one side, Sch- warzenegger as Commando on the other and Chuck Norris on the hood. Diana: Then I'm not going to ride in it. Chris: And of course a big paper mache head of Bruce Springsteen rotationg on top. D: So what do you get when you join the Sleep fan club? All: We get to practice at your house for a month. You get your own key to the door of hell. Sleep will be playing tonight, November 8 at the Halfway Inn with two other fine local bands, Private Angst and Crossed Wire. 4"T opera men colle abou Be protb scho cons they hand prov scho stake says ama FALL FOR CANOEING AT THE OUTDOOR RECREATION CENTER 'Everybody tries to get one up on the others. They try to find something they can do in recruiting that someone is not doing. . . It's like putting another play in your offense or defense.' - Gary Moeller assistant football coach at the University took place during Moeller's reign there.1 While Berst agrees that the more minor rules are important, he says1 they can cause problems. When a' team is placed on probation, coaches can try to divert attention from their major violations by claiming that the NCAA focused on small, apparently petty violations. "I would just as soon eliminate the rules that create that kind of reac- tion," Berst said. L eonard Koppett, an author and former New York Times spor- tswriter, would abolish more than just a few rules. "I'm opposed to the entire concept of regulating recruiting," said Kop- pett, whose book Sports Illusion, Sports Reality suggests some NCAA reforms. "NCAA rules in themselves are a rotten idea created by a self-serving body," he said. Koppett says NCAA regulations serve only to legitimize the financial aims of member institutions with big athletic programs. In supporting en- forcement, he says, coaches and ad- minstrators are covering up their true motives: profits and victories rather than grade point averages. | NICKELS ARCADE duce the] brim "Th any an $10,t Si par not Uni pro reci recr ded C C 10:0 Plymouth Hubbard Fuller i a m O; 00Ok i IROcref Zoh 2375 HUBBARD PH. 764-3967 HOURS: (RENTAL & RETURN) '.---..-!!---------.----------w---l--www---ww--w, * I * Hours: M-F 7:00 am-7 pm r Sat. 9:00 am-5:00 pm : Sun. 11:00am-7:00pm IU i a s Assorted Croissants a Salads i Sandwiches a Pastries I U .FREE Soft Drink, Coffee or Tea i u ith 1 ACroissant Sandwiches or Deli Sandwich SUNDAYS ONLY * I 715 N. University Next to Comerica Bank r* l w w l l w w w w ! w w w " w w w w w! iw plane tickets for five prospects' visitsf to campus to contacting a prospect int person more than the three timesI permitted by the NCAA. Michigan, by most accounts, keeps closer tabs on the number of+ recruiting visits and NCAA rules in general. Players, coaches and ad- ministrators claim, emphatically and apparently truthfully, that Michigan doesn't cheat. Assistant football coach Gary Moeller said that even from his position on the inside of an honest program, it's not hard to un- derstand why violations occur. "Everybody tries to get one up on the others," said Moeller, who does much of head coach Bo Schem- bechler's recruiting. "They try to find something they can do in recruiting that someone else is not doing. "It's like putting another play in your offense or defense." The problem comes partly from the belief that that extra recruiting play early on we can't get the information, there may be anouther source. That may stop the investigation before it begins." Sometimes, though, investigators discover contradictions that keep inquiries alive. Berst said Illinois' violations became apparent that way. 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