Ken Hoffman lives for fall Saturdays and the park-like setting. MIKE ROSENBAUM SPECIAL TO THE JEWISH NEWS s the sports infor- mation director for Michigan State University, Ken Hoffman has shared in many of the Spartans' recent athletic successes. Without hesita- tion, he cites MSU's 1988 Rose Bowl victory as the most memorable moment of his seven years in East Lansing. But Hoffman is someone who knows the value of stopping to smell the roses every day — not just on Jan. 1. Asked what he enjoys most about his job, he points to day-to-day pleasures, such as "the daily contact with coaches and student-athletes" or MSU's "fabulous campus. It's almost like working in a park every day." why that's And Hoffman, whose career has taken him through high school, college and profes- sional sports, prefers to work in a college setting. "I have a preference for college and university work because of the college rivalries, the college spir- it," Hoffman explains. "I think also the security tends to be a little better athletic department's local radio and television deals. Hoffman, who's taught classes in media relations for athletes, feels that his contact with the school's student-athletes "is really important, too. One of the real perks of the job is get- ting to know some of these fine student-athletes, both the men and the women." Of all the athletes he's known, Hoffman admits that football star Lorenzo White stands out for him. White was an All- American running back who now plays for the NFL Houston Oilers. At MSU, White was a Heisman Trophy candidate and was often swamped by inter- view requests. Hoffman worked closely with White on his interviewing and media-relations skills. Due to the power of tele- vision, "so much of a school's image is developed and determined by the public relations of student- athletes who get inter- viewed," says Hoffman. For this reason, he also carries the title of assis- tant director for university relations. Hoffman deals not only requests." One advantage Hoffman has is the fact that he's worked in almost every facet of sports during his career. He graduated from the University of Toledo, then coached and taught at the high school level for seven years and was an athletic director for one season before moving on to pro sports. Hoffman was the general manager of the Grand Rapids Blades of the U.S. Hockey League in in colleges and universities than it is in the pros, where you're pretty much tied to a coach or an owner or a general manager... "There's nothing like a college campus on a fall afternoon. Especially a fall Saturday afternoon. Hoffman's job can be dis- tilled down to this: most of what you see, hear or read about MSU athletics origi- nates with his office. It produces written materials about all of the Spartan teams, including media guides, news releases, game-day media notes, game programs, brochures and schedule books. The office arranges press con- ferences and interviews with MSU players and coaches and organizes most of the details of the with athletes and the media, but with the school's coaches and administration. He per- forms a sometimes diffi- cult balancing act, keeping media people well-supplied with information about MSU athletics while at the same time allowing the school to put its best foot forward. One of the difficult aspects of Hoffman's job is "trying to please all of the coaches in terms of their desire for publicity and what they want for their programs. And to make people understand that the sports information office doesn't control what goes in the newspapers. It simply presents and releases information and helps media with their 1976. The Blades were league champions in Hoffman's one year on the job,. but his career goals were already shifting. He enrolled at MSU, where he earned a mas- ter's degree in journalism and also worked in the sports information office under longtime sports information director Fred Stabley Sr. Hoffman still considers Stabley as one of the prime influences on his career. Hoffman was sports information director at the University of Detroit for five years and published Prep Football Weekly for three years. He left U-D to become the public relations direc- tor for the Michigan " Ken Hoffman is center stage on press day at Spartan Stadium. Panthers of the U.S. Football League for two years. But when the Panthers moved to Oakland, Calif., in 1985, Hoffman declined to move west because he didn't want to be that far away from his daughter, Natalie, who lives with Hoffman's ex-wife in Ohio. Hoffman and his wife, Brenda, are expecting their first child this fall. After the Panthers left town, Hoffman was public relations director of Michigan International Speedway for one year, then worked for the Toledo Blade for another year before returning to MSU in 1987 as an assistant sports information direc- tor. "I'd never been the assistant before in any- thing," Hoffman recalls. "So that was different." But Hoffman returned knowing that then-director Nick Vista would retire the following year and Hoffman was a prime can- didate for the spot. As much as Hoffman enjoys his work, it's not all roses. Hoffman and his department have handled several controversies, including recent accusa- tions in a lawsuit by for- mer basketball player Parish Hickman — who claimed that he received illegal perks from MSU alumni — and the battle between the athletics office and the school administration over whether or not George Perles should retain the dual responsibilities of football coach and athletic director. Hoffman says the Hickman case was "just like any other major item or event...The first couple MSU REP page 50