THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1968 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN THURSDAY, JANUARY 11, 1965 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGE SEVEN an ... a ... r aii v Convention Arrives at Eligibility Compromise By HOWARD KOHN The Ivy League's academicians gained a compromise on the high- ly-misunderstood 1.6 eligibility rule and Michigan gained a medi- cal grant to study the highly- misinformed issue of football injuries at the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) con- vention in New York yesterday. Taking its cue from a year-old film and documented report on injuries by Dr. Richard Schneider of Michigan's medical school, the NCAA commissioned studies at. both Michigan and Maryland. NCAA reports said the Michigan study would explore possibilities of restructuring the football hel- met. Schenider's documentary had y~CLARK NORTON ~teikijlout... It is now probable that the task of filling Fritz Crisler's shoes in what has been called the most prestigious athletic directorship in the country is entirely in the hands of President Robben Fleming. The Hayes Committee, a presidential advisory commission es- tablished to screen candidates for succeeding Crisler and headed by Prof. Douglas Hayes, met with Fleming Tuesday night to discuss the candidates and may well have presented its recommendations to him at that time. Fleming told The Daily recently that he had asked the Hayes Committee to submit only the names of candidates who were acceptable to every member, but that he had not asked for a specific number or that they be ranked in any order of prefer- ence. Although it is not certain what names the Hayes Committee has turned over to Fleming, it seems likely that at least four men - Dr. Robert Bronzan, athletic director at San Jose State College; Bump Elliott, Michigan football coach; Don Lund, Detroit Tigers' director of player personnel; and Davey Nelson, athletic director atI Delaware, would be considered "acceptable" by the committee. The Hayes' Committee interviewed eight men for the position, all of which had successfully passed a preliminary "test" of ten criteria - for example, that of age. No man over 55 was considered., The four other candidates interviewed by the committee were Don Canham, Michigan track coach; Forest Evashevski, athletic director at Iowa; Bert Katzenmeyer, Michigan assistant athletic director and golf coach; Dave Strack, Michigan basketball coach. Evanshevski denied that he had ever been a candidate for the Michigan post Tuesday 'night during an interview on an Iowa radio station, and said he had appeared before the screen-1 ing committee "only in the role of a consultant."s However, Hayes confirmed to The Daily recently that Evashev-1 ski had indeed been interviewed for the athletic directorship. Two members of the Michigan football coaching staff recently told The Daily that "recruiting in Ohio would be destroyed if Evashevski came to Michigan. Most of the recruiters down there are alumni, and they don't want him to be hired." Thus while Evashevski has attracted strong support from some segments, he does not seem to be popular enough within1 the athletic department to warrant serious consideration. Nelson, Elliott, and Lund have been prominently mentioned for. months in connection with the athletic directorship. Each has a national reputation, would be a good public relations man, and has a solid Michigan background. But Nelson would be the most likely to keep Michigan a powerful entity in the NCAA. Crisler as president of the NCAA Rules Com- mittee is perhaps the single most influential and respected man in collegiate athletics, and is the major reason why the Michigan ath- letic directorship is regarded so highly long after the glory years of Michigan football. Nelson is secretary and editor of the Rules Committee, however, and is a definite possibility to succeed Crisler. In the end President Fleming's decision may rest upon the new organization structure which he devises for the athletic department, which he hopes to submit to the Regents shortly. Fleming has told The Daily that he has in mind "certain candidates if one organ- izational structure is approved, and certain ones if another structure is approved." The Hayes Committee had previously recommended two alternative proposals for reorganizing the athletic department - one proposal would create a separate department of physical education, unattached to the School of Education, and presided over by the athletic director. Singnificantly, Nelson holds this type of position at Delaware right now. The other proposal, like the first, would divorce the financing of the intramural program from the athletic department, but would not set up a separate department of physical education. This would mean essentially that the athletic director would control only intercollegiate athletics, a system that might considered most suitable for Elliott or Lund. But if Davey Nelson flies into Ann Arbor in the next couple of weeks, don't let him tell you he's here visiting a maiden aunt. GRADUATING SENIORS MAJORING IN ~ ACCOUNTING ARCHITECTURE BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION CHEMISTRY ENGINEERING 1i .LANDSCAPE ARCHITECTURE LIBERAL ARTS MEDICAL TECHNOLOGY NURSING RECREATION SCIENCE URBAN PLANNING are invited to meet with our representative on campus January 15 through the 19, 1968 11 Contract your Placement Office for an appointment City of Detroit-Civil Service Commission dealt almost exclusively on in- juries sustained because of mod- ern-day helmets. However, the convention mem- bers spent most of the day con- sidering, compromising, cursing and finally correcting the contro- versial 1.6 rule. NCAA modifications of the rule, which originally said that an ath- lete must project a 1.6 grade point based on a 4.0 scale and maintain at least a 1.6 to qualify for an athletic scholarship, still re- ignited old fires. Even though the rule is now toned down to require only a 1.6 projection on admission, Dr. Ma- son W. Gross of Rutgers protests that the rule is still "ridiculously unjust." Gross defends a member of Rutgers freshman football team admitted with a predicted 1.542. The Rutgers president argues that the boy, a Negro from a culturally-disadvantaged area and the oldest of seven children, would NCAA OKI By BOB LEES In a surpurise move yesterday, the National CollegiateyAthletic Association passed a rule to per-" mit freshmen to compete in all varsity sports except football and basketball. The proposal was ap- proved by a narrow 163-160 mar- gin. "The rule was not discussed at great length on the floor," said Michigan Law Prof. Marcus Plant, NCAA President, last night. "Right now, however, any student not a sophomore, junior, orsenior, will be affected by its provisions." Immediate Effect Plant further noted that the proposal, as it stands, goes into effect immediately. But he said that this point was a "subject of some question," and that the council would review it this mor- ning. The rule applies to NCAA-spon- sored events, since each confer- ence makes its own in-season rules. Regarding the Big Ten, Plant stated that "judging from the way the conference delegates voted, I don't think the Western Conference would be affected by' have had no chance of getting a college education without a schol- arship. Because of the infraction, Rut- gers-a member of the Eastern College Athletic Conference, was placed on a two-year probation barring it from post-season NCAA activity. According to the NCAA, 521 colleges had been in compliance with the 1.6 rule and 81 had not. Ivy League schools were sus- pended from post-season NCAA championships in March, 1966,, after refusing to recognize the rule, but were conditionally re- instated last spring. Dr. Kingman Brewster, Presi- dent of Yale, speaking for the Ivies at the time of suspension, claimed that "the NCAA should have providence only over athle- tics and not academics." Refuting Brewster's assertion, which was echoed again yesterday several times, was Dr. Marcus Plant, Michigan law professor and NCAA president: "We are not invading the uni- versity's right to decide its aca- demic requirements for admission. All we're concerned with is setting up an equalized base for athletes on scholarships. Any university can admit any boy, as long as it doesn't violate the rules for ath- letic scholarships." One of the less-publicized rea- sons for the East Coast distaste of the rule is wide held beliefs that a 2.6 at an athletically- oriented school like Alabama is comparable to a 1.6 at Harvard or Yale. Yesterday's modification, which passed by a 232-92 vote, now eliminates differences between in- dividual university grading poli- cies. All predicted averages of incoming freshmen will, ostensibly at least, be uniformly graded. The only time an athlete must now annually meet a 1.6 require- ment to retain his tender is when the university's eligibility cutoff is lower than a 1.6. Michigan requires a 1.7 predict- ed average and a 2.0 cumulative average for its athletes. "Anyway, the NCAA wants each team to be representative of its student body . . . Alabama's team to be representative of Alabama and Harvard's of Harvard," en- joined Plant. Rutgers athletic director, Al- bert W. Twitchell, reaffirmed, Gross' statements, "There are so- cial and political implications here which Dr. Gross and I feel tran- scend anything of the athletic nature." The Southwest and Sotheast schools joined the East Coast schools in oposing the rule. Paining the Achilles heel of the Southern schools was the clause which sets different requirements for schools which don't measure up to the 1.6 eligibility cutoff. "We're against it because it classifies schools as 'A' and 'B'," protested J. William Davis of Texas Tech. FRATERNITY Frosh for Varsity Squads it. The Big .Ten has had little sentiment for freshman competi- tion in the past." Only in recent years have con- ference schools allowed freshman competition, and then the events have been limited to two or three. per sport. Divided OpinionsI Michigan's coaches, when asked to comment last night, were di- vided in their opinions on the rule. Gymnastics coach Newt Loken stated that "with the pres- ent NCAA and Big Ten predict- ability of 1.6 and 1.7 gradepoints, respectively, I see no reason for not allowing our freshman the opportunity to compete on a var- sity level in the sport of his liking. To wait out a year has always been an unpleasant experience to the. sports participant in that it tends to hinder his athletic devel- opment and competitive edge." Wrestling coach Cliff Keen ex- pressed favor with the ruling, noting that, "like everyone else, I've got some freshmen I might use right now." But track coach Don Canham, while saying that "if everyone else used freshmen, there are four or five I could use right away," ex- pressed a hesitation that all the coaches shared. "A first year boy should take that year just to get academically well set," he de- clared. "Personally, I'm opposed to such use of freshmen for any good academic school." Said swimming coach Gus Sta- ger, "It's not good for collegiate athletics. To face the type of academic and athletic pressure of a school of Michigan's caliber in the freshman year is just not healthy for athletes as students." Baseball coach Moby Benedict summed everything up with a wait-and-see attitude. "In some cases the rule would help us, in some it wouldn't," he said. "From the students' viewpoint, there will be a lot of pressures. But there's still the question of whether the Big Ten would go for it." Il SPORTS NIGHT EDITOR: DIANA ROMANCHUK fI NOW $6.00 NEW POLITICS MEETING Thursday, Jan. 11 8:00 P.M.-Rm. 3X UNION AGENDA: 1 ) Meet New Politics 2nd District Congressional Candidate-Bert Garskof 2) Plans for School Board and Sheriff Campaigns 3) Plans for State New Politics Meeting 4) Discuss Progress of Petition Campaign To Get on Ballot 5) Plan for Draft Resistors (General Hershey's) Ball 6) Plan Future Work with Welfare Citizens NOTE: All who want place on Ballot for Freedom Peace and opposition to the Coroporate Structure Meet Saturday and/or Sunday 12:00 NOON AT THE NEW POLITICS OFFICE (109 MILLER) To Canvass for Signatures-20,0000 are needed to have place on the ballot in '68 -All can help-inexperienced or un- registered people will go out in teams with registered.canvassers. ORDER YOUR MCGEI in the FISHBOWL (TUES., WED., THURS., FRI.) SPONSORED BY STUDENT FRIENDS OF CITIZENS FOR NEW POLITICS 6 I GRADS and UNDERGRADS! SGC ou (ES I Petitioning for: OPENINGS FOR CHILD CARE WORKERS -HAWTHORN CENTER Two Seats on Work-Experience Opportunity with Emotionally Disturbed Children. Hawthorn Center offers mature students a unique opportunity to work directly with disturbed children in a creative, well-supervised, in-patient treatment setting - a particularly rewarding experience for potential professional workers in Education, Psy- chology, Social Work, Medicine and related Be- havioral Sciences. Hours: 32 to 40 hours per week; flexible schedul- ing to include weekends is possible. Student Government Council I REGISTRA TION JAN. 8 thru 12 FISHBOWL WEST QUAD SOUTH QUAD I Petitions can be picked up at: 1546 S.A.B. II U