Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Friday, June 7, 1968 _,r.... . .. . . WILL GRIMSLEY (Editor's Note: This article is the fourth of a six-part series on collegiate football by, Associated Press sports writer Will Grimsley TUSCALOO0SA, Ala. - A visitor to the University of Ala- bama campus seeking a conference with head football coach Paul "Bear" Bryant is directed first to a sumptuous, $3,294,000 structure with a glistening dome. He is led to a second floor foyer rich in Oriental trappihgs and' Mosaics, through a cordon of secretaries and into a large, fashionably decorated room that might have come off Wall Street. The wall is panelled. The drapes are think and luxuri- ops. The table is mahoganey and behind it is a tall, ladder-- back chair-The Man's chair. There is a divan, also two upholstered chairs for guests. "The rug," an unofficial usher says proudly, pointing to a gold carpet that almost comes up to the ankles, "It was hand woven in Mexico ... Eh, eh .. .They say woven by virgins by the light of the moon." It is a small jest, of the luxury that surrounds the head- quarters staff of the nation's most sucessful college football team. Someone noted that the walls were bare of the usual foot- ball pictures that normally clutter a coach office. "The Bear wanted to put up some pictures," a spokesman said, "but the interior decorator wouldn't have it. It would spoil the room." The financial squeeze which is gripping many of the na- tion's m'ajor university athletic programs because of skyrocketing inflation fails to manifest itself in this rock bed of football Dower. Bryant has been at Alabama, his alma mater, since , 1958. Since 1959, the Crimson Tide has not been out of the Top Ten football rankings. They were national champions' in 1961, 1964 and 1965, third in 1966 when they were un- beaten., A:Over the period of the last eight years, they lave the best record in the country-75 victories, eight defeats and five ties. They have played in eight straight bowl games. The new athletic complex, opened this year, covers two acres. It is called The Coliseum. It has 15,000 theatre-type chairs to be used for basketball, concerts and convocations. It is cooled by 270 tons of air-conditioning. It houses dressing rooms, film studios and all athletic offices. "We don't spend a quarter of the taxpayer's money," says Bryant. Alabama's athletic program is self-sustaining-thanks to its football success-and operates virtually independently of the rest of the unversity. The athletic fund not only pays the full freight for the over-all sports program but usually has enough left over to pass along sizeable contributions to the university. Fivs years ago the fund donated $300,000. Recently, an- other $200,00 was given to a fund drive. "We have been responsible for raising salaries of the faculty," Bryant said. Football at Alabama is strictly big time. Bryant's coaching philosophy is: "Winning is the only thing." "A tie," he once said, "is like kissing your sister." He has 13 assistant coaches, two graduate assistants and four under-graduate assistants. Each of the 13 assistants has his own private office, only slightly less luxurious than that of his - boss. All offices-dven Bryant's-are equipped with a black- board, two pieces of chalk and two erasers. They hold coaches' sessions in a board room that would do justice to Board of Directors at General Motors. Alabama gives 40 football scholarships a year-the confer- ence limit-and keep its total within the 125 limit. It has 25 basketball scholarphips, eight for track, eight for baseball, five for swimming and five divided between golf and tennis. The football players are the aristocrats. They live to themselves in a colonial three-story brick struc- ture called Paul W. Bryant Hall but referred to as the Bear Bryant Hilton. It's Just like a hotel with a carpeted lobby with circular fireplace, study rooms, private dining room and kitchen. Alabama's budget runs around $1,500,000 a year. Contrary to common belief, the athletic coffers aren't fattened by bowl appearances. "Our biggest purse was $115,000 from the Orange Bowl in 1966," a spokesman said. "Of this, $100,000 went to the conference. The rest was spent on the Miami trip. We took the entire athletic staff and, as ususal, we went first class." Next: Notre Dame, Subdued Grandeur GOTHA M: Basebal's draft begins Sports By The Associated Press For the second time in two months. 'a saddened sports world prepared yesterday to pay tribute to an assassinated national figure by postponing or delaying a num- ber of events over the weekend. All major league baseball games will be played as scheduled today. But tomorrow games in Washing- ton, New York, Chicago and San Francisco and Sunday contests in Baltimore and Boston were called off in memory of the slain Sen. Robert F. Kennedy. Bgseball Commissioner William D. Eckert ordered the postpone- ment of Saturday games in Wash- ington and New York and directed that the start of all other games be delayed until after the sen- ator's funeral. Baseball postponed its opening day games in April after the as- 4assination of civil rights leader Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. Three Saturday afternoon con- tests t were switched to night games. But the Chicago Cubs had to postpone their game with At- lanta because Wrigley Field does not haive lights.. The San-Francisco Giants want- ed to change their game with the world mourns Iennedy death daly 'sports- NIGHT EDITOR: FRED LABOUR New York Mets from 1 p.m. PDT, to 4 p.m. PDT, but the Mets re- fused to play at all Saturday. Giants' and Mets' officials were to discuss the situation today. President. Johnson has, pro., claimed Sunday a national day of mourning. Most major league teams decided to play following appropriate ceremonies. , "All of us in baseball are shock- ed and sorrowed by the tragic death of Sen. Robert F. Kennedy," Eckert said. "Our deepest sym- pathy goes to the members of the Kennedy family." One of Sunday's two scheduled games between Oakland and Bal- timore already had been post- poned from April 11 because of rioting in the wake of the slaying of Dr. King. The International League called off its entire Sunday baseball schedule. All five North American Soccer League games this weekend will be played as scheduled but ceremonies honoring Sen. 'Ken- nedy will be held before each. Six New York State race tracks --two thoroughbred tracks and six harness plants--canceled their programs for today. They were Belmont Park, Finger Lakes Race Track, Roosevelt Raceway, Buf- falo Raceway, Saratoga Raceway and Vernon Downs.' The Emile Griffith-Andy Heil- man middleweight fight at Oak- land was postponed from tonight to Tuesday night. The President's Cup Regatta, a Washington fix- ture, has been postponed indefi- nitely. It had been scheduled for Sunday. PGA officials were. to meet in Indianapolis, Ind., late last night to decide whether to put back the weekends rounds of the Speedway Open golf tournament. A Pacific Coast League base- ball game, Spokane at Indiana- polis, was switched from Sunday to part of a .twi-night double- header Friday. * * * *' * * IBeantown "scene of Iosox loss By The Associated Press BOSTON -- Joe Sparma, sup- ported by homers from Jim North- rup and Norm Cash, settled down after a shaky start and fashioned his first victory over Boston since 1965' yester'day in hurling the V~e- troit Tigers to a 5-3 victory over the Red Sox. Sparma needed relief help in the ninth. Fred Lasher came in and struck out Elston Howard with the bases loaded to end the game. Sparma had settled down afetr Carl, Yastrzemski's three - run homer in: the first inning. The Tigers' right-hander snapped the Red Sox' jinx while squaring his record at 5-55. Northrup hit his eighth homer, a shot into the Boston bullpen in right center, after Dick McAuliffe opened the game with a line single off starter Lee Stange. * * * SAN FRANCISCO - Jim Hart cracked a pair of three-run hom- ers and Juan Marichal became the major league's first 10=game winner yesterday, leading the San Francisco Giants to a 7-2 victory over the Philadelphia Phillies., Hart hammered a 425-foot home run in the first inning after Willie 'Mays single4 and Willie McCovey -walked with two out. Then Hart greeted reliever Dick Farrell with a three-run shot in the seventh after Frank Johnson singled and Mays walked. HOUSTON - Bob Gibson cut, down Houston on three 'hits last night, hurling the National League leading St. Louis Crdinals past the Astros 4-0 for their ninth straight victory. Gibson, squaring his record at 5-5, struck out six and walked two, and allowed only one Astro to get past first base. Ron Davis opened the fourth with a double and took third on a ground out, but was stranded , Orlando Cepeda and Tim Mc- Carver slammed consecutive hom-. ers in the sixth inning for the Cardinals and Cepeda drove' in another run off loser Don Wilson, 4-7, with a single in the third. The homers were Cepeda's sev- enth and McCarver's fourth. * *-* BALTIMORE - The California Angels exploded for seven runs in the seventh inning and then held off a late home run barrage by Baltimore to defeat the Orioles 8-6 last night. Held to two hits through the first six innings by Baltimore starter Gene Brabender, the Angels bunched eight safeties off- ,the big right-hander and relievers Eddie Watt and John O'Donohue before being retired. Baltimore's rookie catcher, El- rod Hendricks, had given' the Ori- oles a 3-0 lead With his fourth homer and a run-scoring single. Jimmie .Hall got the winning rally started with a single to right. He scored on Tom Satriano's double to center. One out later, Ed Kirkpatrick drove in Satriano with a single and then Paul Schaal's double tied it. -Don Buford tagged a lead off pinch homer in the ninth and Curt Blefary added a two-run shot before the Orioles retired. ,, Major League Standings I 7 and crown tygoo with brotherhood AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pct. GB Detroit Cleveland Baltimore Minnesota Boston Oakland' California New York Washington Chicago 33 31 29 27 25 23 24 23 22 21 19 22 22 25 27 27 29 29 29 29 .635 - .585 2% .569 24 .519 6 .481 8 .460 9 .453 9%4 44 10 .431 10% .420 11 ISU blacks warned not to try boycott AMES. Iowa (A) - Iowa State University's athletic council said Wednesday night an investigation shows there is no basis for a charge that Negro athletes have been discriminated against by coaches at the school. And, it warned the Negroes in a strongly-worded statement that if, they follow through with a threatened boycott of athletic teams, they will be dropped from the squad, be barred from further participation and automatically forfeit their scholarships. The Negro athletes, members of a group called the ISU Black Students Organization, had pre- sented a list of demands to an athletic council committee May 20. Yesterday's Results Detroit 5, Boston 3' Minnesota 2, New York 0 California 8, Baltimore 6 Washington 4, Oakland 3 Cleveland 2, Chicago 1 11 innings Today's Games Cleveland at Detroit, night Chicago at Boston, night a Minnesota at Washington, 2, twi-night Oakland at Baltimore, 2, twi-night. California at New York, 2, twi-night, NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pet. GB St. Louis 31 21 .569 -- Philadelphia 25 22 .532 3% tAtlanta 27 24 .529 3Y2 San Francisco 28 25 .528 3% xLos Angeles 28 26 .519 4 Cincinnati 25 24 .510 4% Chicago 25 26 . 490 53 NewaYork 23 27 .460 7 xPittsburgh 19 27 .413 9 Houston 21 30 .412 9 x-Late game not included Yesterday's Results New York 5, Chicago 4 San Francisco 7, Philadelphia 2 ' St. Louis 4, Houston 0 Pittsburgh at Los Angeles, ine. Only games scheduled Today's Games: Atlanta at Chicago y St. Louis at Cincinnati, night New York at San Francisco, night Pittsburgh at Houston, night Philadelphia at Los Angeles, night Open: Mor.,Wed., and Thurs. 4 P.M.-2 A.M. Open: Fri., Sot., Sun. Noon to 3 A.M. (Closed Tues. DeLONG'S PIT BARBECUE 314 Detroit St Phone 665-2266 CARRY OUT ONLY Bor-B-Q Beef Dinner 1/2 Fried Chicken.... Fried Shrimp .. . FREE DELIVERY ......... $1.95 ..$1.55 ....... . $1.60 Mv All Dinners include French Fries and Slow -Associated Press NEW YORK (A)-Charlie Dud- ish, the Georgia school boy who is acclaimed as a football coach's dream, was among the hundreds of young athletes picked yesterday in baseball's annual spring draft of free agents. Dudish, a pitcher-shortstop-out- fielder and power hitter as well as a quarterback , at Avondale High in Decaur, Ga., was drafted for San Francisco's Phoenix farm of the Pacific Coast League. The Giants are hopeful he will spurn a college footbal career for base- ball. The New York Mets used their No. 1 pick of the entire free agent field to take Tim Foli, a 17-year- old shortstop from Canoga Park, Calif. The youngster who will be graduated from Notre Dame High School in Sherman Oaks, Calif., later this month is a 5-foot-11, 185-pounder with power at bat. He also was a quarterback and basketball player in school. Drafting in inverse order to their 1967 finish, the Oakland- Athletics followed the Mets' and grabbed off Pete Broberg, son of the former Dartmouth basketball great, Gus Broberg. The four expansion teams- Montreal, San Diego, Seattle and Kansas City-did not participate in the major league, Triple A or Double A phase of the draft, each restricted to one round. They did take part in the unlimited Class A selections with special permis- sion on the grounds that they have or soon will have farm clubs. W1HITE LEVIS N OW IN Ct O-LO RS tii favorie $49 I 9' #f I', v i color- -~-~~ SPECIAL PJRCHASE Striped T-Shirt, d ". Aftn U