Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Wednesday, June 5, 1968 Y _ . F y 1 16, .. q v MORNING VIEW CAU CrOls #w ~l V, WNR, C'd :;; : By The Associated Press CHICAGO - Outfielder Elliott Mydaddox; sophomore on Michigan's fifth-place baseball team, won the Big Ten batting title with a .467 mark for the recently completed conference baseball season. It was the second straight sea- son, and third time in four cam- paigns, that a Wolverine player took the leatgue hitting crown. Final loop statistics yesterday also certified Lance Primis of Wig- consin as the winningest pitcher with a 5-1 mark. Prinis also pitched the most innings, 37, and had five complete games for the third-spot Badgers. Last year's conference hitting champion, outfielder Andy Fisher of Michigan, plummeted from his winning .459 to only .132 this sea- son. Other hitting leaders included Dave Heiss, Ohio State first base- man, .422; Geoff Baillie, Wiscon- sin outfielder, .400; Steve Garvey, Michigan State third baseman, .378, and Mike Wymore, Iowa first baseman, .375. Three pitchers had perfect 4-0 marks. They included sophomores Dave Carey and Al Hoffman of title-winning Minnesota and Dan Bielski of runnerup Michigan State. / Michigan State's.Mickey Knight (3-1) had the top earned run av- erage, 0.79. Another Spartan hurl- er, Mel Behney (3-2) led in strike- outs with 44. The Big Ten's RBI leader was Ain't life a kick in the head --Associated Press The post office department sure knows how to cut up. My oh my. For instance, the lady in the picture is holding a postcard mailed 30 years ago to her late husband. The funny thing about it, (ready for this?) is that it was delivered yesterday. Those delight- ful devils in the mailroom sure must have chuckled about that one. --WILL GRIMSLEPa== (EdItor'LNote: This article is the second of a six-part series by Associated Press writer Wil Grimsley. - H. W.) NEW YORK - College football is on a multi-million-dollar escalator to heaven-knows-where, and can't get off. Sports budgets at major institutions have doubled and even quadrupled in the last ten years. Yet the mad race goes on. In- tensified recruiting. More scholarships. Bigger coaching staffs. Newer and modern sports complexes. Increased pay rolls. College business managers, in a financial squeeze, are won- dering like the government where they can whittle away some of the lard. The prospect is bleak. Many are raising ticket prices-Michigan and Michigan State to $6, Notre Dame to $7-but this only fills a small fraction of the need. The Big Eight Conference recently took under study a proposal to cut the number of yearly scholarships from 45 to 40. There's a strong under-current in some academic circles to get rid of two-platoon football, with its required special-. ists and over-sized coaching staffs. Suggestions have been made to arrive at a gentlemanly agreement to cut down recruiting. "It can cost you as much as $500 to court one prospect and then you're apt to lose him," says one coach-but nobody seriously expects it to happen. It's the life-blood of big time college football. Throughout the country, the competition for top talent is fierce, and costly. The day of the flagrant buying of a star quarterback with a Wall Street bonus, a flashy sports car or a closet full of new silk suits is gone, but there still are under-the-table paymentsj and devious means of getting a desired athlete. "You've got to keep with the Joneses down in this league," said a coach of one big Southern school. "If the other guys start getting ahead of you, you just have to cheat." The story is going the, rounds about one farm boy sought by many schools. Ihis father was a destitute planter. The son goot a college schplarship. The next day the father walked into a bank and paid off a $3,000 mortgage. It's just a story, with perhaps basis in fact. It's hard to prove. If it were provable, the National Collegiate Athletic As- sociation would swarm in with penalties flying . The NCAA still keeps a sharp eye peeled for abuses and cracks down on violators, but it never seems to run out ex-culprits. There's always somebody on the penalty list.. Many get away. The source of the financial problem is obvious. College football is big time, outdrawing major league baseball and pro-football in many areas such as the Big Ten with its 60,000 and 70,000 seat stadiums. Yet it is in a tight bind. Baseball continues until the middle of October-half- way through tle college season-and pro football is a con- stant competitor for the entertainment and television dollar. On top of this, college enrollments are multiplying, neces- sitating enargement of facilities; costs geherally are rising and it's taking more than twice as much money than a few years ago to educate athletes on full scholarships. Alabama figures it costs $1,500 to put a boy through a year of colege, Yale puts the sum at $3,000. Either way, it's marked against the. athletic budget. The NCAA places no limit on the number of scholarships that can be awarded. leaving this to the conference or individ- Mike Wlseth, Minnesota first sacker, with 18. In team play, Michigan State led in hitting with .289; Michigan was tops in fielding with .968 and Indiana, with a 5-8 record, was the pitching leader. * * * NEW YORK - Bernie "Boom Boom" Geoffrion, one of the Na- tional Hockey League's all-time great players, was named coach of the New York Rangers in a sur- prise development yesterday. At a press conference, it was also disclosed that Geoffrion will retire as a player. He scored five goals in the 1967-68 campaign during which he was troubled by a stomach ailment. He under- went surgery last month after being sidelined during the Stanley Cup playoffs. Geoffrion, 37-years-old was a star right winger for the Montreal Canadines for 14 seasons through 1963-64 when he quit as a player. He coached the Quebe Aces of the American Hockey League the next two seasons, then was coaxed out of playing retirement by the Rangers in 1966 and signed to a three-year contract at a reported $25,000 annually. daily sports NIGHT EDITOR: FRED LABOUR Bengals get ,bopped; bop Bosox back By The Associated Press BOSTON-Relief specialist Pat Dobson pitched a five-hitter in his first start of the year and Don Wert snapped a scoreless tie with' a leadoff homerun in the seventh inning, leading the Detroit Tigers to a 2-0 victory over Boston and_ a split of their doubleheader last night. The Red Sox won the opener 2-0 on a bases-loaded double by George Scott and the fine pitch- ing of Gary Bell, who allowed only three hits in 82/3 innings before reliever Sparky Lyle got the final out. Dobson, promoted from the bullpen to help the Tigers' injury- depleted pitching staff, retired1 the first 11 men he faced before Carl Yastrzemski grounded a sin- gle to right., A walk, Dalton Jones' bunt sin- gle and a sacrifice put Red Sox runners on second and third with one out in the fifth, but 'Dobson got Russ Gibson on a tap back to the mound and retired opposing hurler Gary Waslewsk on a pop up to escape damage. Singles by Jose Tartabull and Joe Foy brought Yastrzemski up with two out and runners on first and third in the eighth, but Man- ager Mayo Smith stuck with his young righthander and Dobson got the 1967 Triple Crown winner on a fly to center. * * * CINCINNATI - Tony Perez lashed a run-scoring single in the sixth inning to snap a 1-1 dead- lock and fire the Cincinnati Reds to a 3-1 victory over the Atlanta Braves last night. Alex Johnson walked to lead off the sixth against Atlanta rookie Ron Reed, took third on Fred Whitfield's single and scored the go-ahead run on Perez' single. Whitfield took third on the hit and scored the Reds' third run as Johnny Bench bounced Intoa force play. Major League Standings AMERICAN LEAGUE . W L Pct. GB Detroit 31 19 .620 - Baltimore 28 21 .571 21, Cleveland 29 22 .569 22 Minnesota 26 24 .520 5 Boston 25 25 .500 6 Oakland 23 25 .479 7 California 23 28 .451 8% New York 22 28 .440 9 Chicago 21 27 .,438 9 Washington 20 29 .408 10 Yesterday's Results Cleveland 2, Chicago 1 Minnesota 3, New York 0 Washington 4, Oakland 2 California 5, Baltimore 3, 10 innings. IBoston 2-0, Detroit 0-2 Today's Games Chicago at Cleveland, night oakland at Washington, night California at Baltimore, night Minnesota at New York, night Detroit at Boston, night NATIONAL LEAGUE . Sky above, mud below and soul within A muddy land 0 f its OWn9 r "Hey brother, can you give me a ride to the concert," one mud- dy little girl asked 'another Res- urrection City resident in a beat- up '54 Ford. A week , before she hadn't known this "brother''. Chances were fair that she didn't know him the night of the Memorial Day concert by the Reflecting Pool. But for Resurrection City residents, formal introduction is a custom of the outside. In more ways than one, Respr- rection City is a little land of its own. Camped amidst the monu- ments of a capital city, people in Resurrection' City could be living in the county fair-like' excite- ment. If you were a new resident of Resurrection City you would be surrounded by people from all over the country who were anxious to meet you and directed by a concerned and approving or- ganizer (Southern Ch r i s ti a n Leadership Conference). But also there's the mud - fine liquid silt covering that can't be warded off by boots or wooden shanty wallS. And there's the urge to lose sight of ,the prin- ciple and go home. You're maybe bored and undoubtedly would like to get your clothes dried off. ii Education extension service at the Poor People's University K! is I W L Pet. 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