t Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY Tuesday, July 16. 1968 Page Six THE MICHIGAN DAILY FIRED HIS SHARE: Baseball man Lane explains dismissals of managers . . .... MIAMI, Fla. (R)-It's inflexibili- ty-not inability-that costs ma- jor league baseball managers their jobs, says Fran Lane, a man who once took part in the simultane- ous firing of two field bosses. Lane said the manager's role is overrated anyway. "A manager gets too much credit when he wins and too much hell when he loses," Lane said. "Anyway you look at it, a lot of money'is involved and attend- ance falls off when a team's not winning," Lane said. "A major league manager knows he's hired to be fired some day." "The No. 1 reason why man- agers are fired is their failure to adjust to a changing situation or to adjust their style of play to the material they have," Lane said in an interview published in yes- terday's Miami News. Lane was in Miami on business in his current role as special as- sistant to personnel director Har- ry Dalton of the Baltimore Ori- oles, a club whch recently dropped Hank Bauer. Gene Mauch of Philadelphia, Houston's Gray Hatton and Ed- die Stanky of the Chicago White Sox are other managers recently unemployed. "Stanky lost sight of the kind of team he can win with-pitching, defense and speed," Lane said. "With Stanky's kind of team he led the American League most of last season and lost out in the last series of the season. During the off-season he traded away speed dail1 sports NIGHT EDITOR: PHIL BROWN for older, slower fellows with po- tentially stronger bats. He broke up the kind of team he could win with." As for Bauer, Lane said the fir- ing was another example of fail- ure to adjust. "When a manager begins losing with a formerly good hitting team that has a batting slump, he can't just sit back, continue to employ the same tactics of attack and ex- cuse himself by using that cliche, 'you can't hit for 'em.' He should adjust to the situation. He should bunt, hit-and-run and try for one run more." As general manager of the White Sox, Cleveland, St. Louis Cardinals and Kansas City, Lane hired and fired his share of man-, agers. He was involved in the only in- stance of two managers being hired and fired simultaneously- when as Cleveland general man- ager in 1959 he swapped Joe Gor- don to Detroit for Jimmy Dykes. Lane says certain managers are ready-made for certain teams and cited Gordon at Kansas City. "Gordon did a bad job for me in 1959 at Cleveland," Lane said. "We should have won the pen- nant. Then I inherited him at Kansas City in 1961 and we fin- ished a bad last, but he did a fine job as manager." "We had, fringe major league ballplayers and he got the maxi- mum out of them by keeping them loose and not fearful they might be shipped out to the minors the next day. Bauer would do a good job with a young expansion club from which nothing Js expected and I think he'll wind up with one." He referred to Leo Durocher as a manager he said is successful with good teams that are expected to win. "They say Durocher is a good manager of a good team but a bad manager of a bad team," Lane said. "But who can manage a bad team?" 215 S. State -2 1 5 S .,S at e-NA M E T H E B U IL D IN G, Submit a name during the,fair The winner wi I I receive a $50 gift certificate to be used anywhere in the building. THE PRIME MOVER 4 HANK BAUER S Lions open camp following settlement 4' BLOOMFIELD, HILLS, Mich., )P -hWith most veterans in camp, the Detroit Lions opened preseason workouts yesterday at Cranbrook School north of De- troit. Coach Joe Schmidt put the squad through a light, one hour workout in 93-degree heat. Schmidt said "it won't be long before the other veterans will be in camp. They got caught on short notice because of this pen-" sion thing." National Football League own- ers and the players association, headed by Lions' guard John Gordy, agreed to a $3 million in- crease in pension benefits over the next two years in a New York meeting Sunday. Gordy was one of some 15 veterans who failed to arrive in time for Monday's workout. "John called Joe and told him he would be late in arriving be- cause he had to sign papers and wind up details of the negotia- tions in New York," a club spokesman said. "He should be in camp Tuesday." The spokesman said four of the 15 absentees arrived during the workout and most of the rest were expected in camp by night- fall. Veteran fullback Amos Marsh and offensive tackle Roger Shoals are expected tomorrow be- cause of long motor trips from the West Coast. The team is to hold its annual -Associated Press ST. LOUIS CARDINAL rookies begin workouts under the watchful eye of coach Charlie Winner following the settlement of a new pension agreement between owners and the NFL players' as- sociation. The player to the far left in the picture is Rocky Rosema, a standout linebacker and defensive end for three years at Michigan. press day today before getting open the exhibition season Aug.. down to serious work tomorrow. 5 against the American Football The Lions, who wound up with League Bills in Buffalo. The a 4-7-2 nark in Schmidt's first regular season begins Sept. 15 year as head coach last season, against the Cowboys at Dallas. Major League Standings : '":+i:" ## til~sEie i~ii:"r}}::ti.,".;{WE~ : ; 'r;> ":v:.}'r:.oif i DAILY OFFICIAL BULLETIN (Continued from Page 2) 4. The Graduate School Board of Inquiry wili schedule a hearing of the charges. The Dean will provide staff support. The student may have an adviser present such as a member of the faculty, friend, rative, or an at- torney. The hearing will be confiden- tial, but it may be declared open by the Council on the written request of the student. 5. The Graduate School Board of In- quiry will report its findings' and rec- ommendations to the Executive Board of the Graduate School, with copies to the student and his department. 6. Both the student and his depart- ment will be given a period of not more than 30 days to comment on the findings and recommendations of the Board of Inquiry. 7. The Executive Board will then act on the matter. Violations of rules established by in- dividual departments or programs will be handled procedurally by the same unit, which shall recommend appro- priate action to the Graduate School. Each department or program is ex- pected to provide the student with a formal statement of charges, the op- portunity for a hearing at which the student may have an adviser present and may present evidence in his own behalf and the right of appeal to the Executive Board of the Graduate School. The Graduate School reserves the right to delegate authority for enforce- ment of any of its rules of conduct to appropriate other bodies established within its framework. The standards of conduct and the procedures for en- forcing them set by the Graduate ISchool are subject to review by the 'oard of Regents and may not be in conflict with any general university rules nad procedures set by the Board of Regents. Placement BUREAU OF APPOINTMENTS 3200 SAB GENERAL DIVISION Announcement: Peace Corps Week, July 22-26, Ar- rangements and information to be an- nounced. Current Position Openings received by General Division by mail and phone, please call 754-7460 for further information. Anderson Fine Arts Center. Ander- son, Indiana - Executive Director, man with some museum .work, pref. MA, ability to work with cultural grpups in community and teach Art Apprecia- tion courses. Center emphasizes ex- hibits and educational programs. State of Wisconsin - Systems Ana- lyst, degree and 18 mo. exper. in in- formation activities, MBA and no exper. acceptable, for Winnebago State Hos- pital. Director of Community Services for Dept. of Local Affairs and Div., de- gree and min. 3 years in local gov., or rel. areas, public administration duties. Gardner-Denver Company, Grand Ha- ven, Mich. - Design and Dev. Engrs. (2). in area of new product dev. in in- dust. or pheumatic tool indust. BSME aid 0-5 yrs. in design. One position prefers MS or MBA in addition to BSME and 3 years in des. & dev. State of Washington -- Education Program Specialist, MA in ed. plus 3 years teaching, or one yr. grad, study and 2 years supv. exper. in ed. fld. Other positions in Educ. Specialties with more years exper. also, Custom Leatherwork Astrology Charts Hair Styling Bell Bottoms playing live through the Fair PARAPHERNALIA Now opening in Ann Arbor New York's most exciting Fashion Boutique. will present AN EXCITING FASHION SHOW Everything to be found. 4: Antique Jewelry BACK TO BROOKLYN: Yanks give Colavito new home BALTIMORE W--Rocky Cola- Vito, a Bronx boy who found fame in Cleveland and Detroit, finally became a New York Yankee yes- terday in his 18th year of profes- sional baseball. The Yankees signed Colavito as a free agent after he had been cut loose by the Los Angeles Dodgers who bought him from the Chica- go White Sox last March. In all, Rocky played with four different American League teams and in the National before his latest step. To get a Yankee contract, the 34-year-old slugger volunteered to help out the Yankees' bullpen as a part time relief pitcher as well as an outfielder and pinch- hitter.; He was hitting only .204 when the Dodgers cut him loose last week. However, he has hit 369 Iilaria overall winner in '68 'Pt. Huron-Mackinac sail race home runs in the majors, three of them this season. The Rock, a handsome dark- haired athlete who is known for exaggerated muscle - stretching antics before he steps into the batter's box, now lives in Temple, Pa. His family still lives in New York. Among the high spots of his career was the feat of hitting four homers in one game for Cleveland, June 10, 1959. He also hit four for Detroit in a 1961 doubleheader. In 1959 he tied Harmon Killebrew for the American League homer title with 42 and in 1965 he fed the league with 108 RBI for Cleveland. The Yanks also made another player change, sending pitcher Al Downing to their Binghamton N.Y. farm club of the Eastern League on option. They indicated he would be back in a week or two after get- ting a chance to do some pitching in the minors. Downing, 14-10, last year but D-1 this season, has been handi- capped by arm trouble, now ap- parently cured AMERICAN LEAGUE W L Pet. xDetroit 56 31 .644 Baltimore 48 37 .565 Cleveland 50 41 .549 Boston 45 40 .529 Oakland 42 45 .483 Minnesota 41 45 .477 xCalifornia 41 45 .477 New York 39 45 .464 Chicago 37 47 .440 Washington 30 53 .361 x-Late game not included Yesterday's Results Chicago 3, Washington 2 Cleveland 4, Minnesota 2 Oakland 12, Boston 5 Baltimore 8, New York 2 Detroit at California, inc. Today's Games Detroit at Oakland, night Cleveland at California, night Boston at Minnesota, night Baltimore at Chicago, night Washington at New York, 2, twi-night NATIONAL LEAGUE GB 7 10 14 14th 141,.. 15 171. 24 Hair Pieces Frosting Shading Curls, Curls Boots Capes Sandals Custom Clothing Incense Posters Pipes Candles Clothing and fabrics from around the world. Books on: Yoga Magic Astrology Zen Tarot Carvings Hookahs, B rasswork Bottles MACKINAC ISLAND, Mich. OP) -The Class A yawl Hilaria, ownedj and sailed by Hugh Schaddelle of the Detroit Yacht Club, was de- clared the over-all winner yester- day, of the 44th annual Port Huron-to-Mackinac Yacht Race. The big white yawl won with a corrected time of 29 hours, 40 minutes, 29 seconds. Hilaria's elapsed time for the 205-nautical mile course was 32:38:53. Winners, both over-all and in classes, are determined by cor- rected times, which are computed using a complex handicapping formula. The over-all finish also gave Hilaria top honors in Class A, made up of the largest boats in the race. The NY32 sloop Sap- phire, owned by Harry Neesley of the Detroit Yacht Club, was sec- ond in Class A with a corrected time of 29:59:39. The ,12-meter sloop Norsaga took third in the class with a time of 30:03:14. Norsaga, the first boat across the finish line Sunday night had ATTENTION FRESHMEN ,Reserve your the lowest elapsed time of any boat in the race, 30:04:00. Norsaga became the race's un- official scratch boat when the newer 12-meter sloop American Eagle was prevented from reach- ing the Port Huron starting line because of the St. Lawrence Sea- way strike. St. Louis Atlanta Philadelphia San Francisco Cincinnati Chicago New York Pittsburgh Los Angeles H~ou ston W 58 48 45 45 42 43 41 40 41 318 L 31 40 40 45 24 47 48 47 49 52 Pet. .652 .545 .524 .546 .488 .478 .461 .459 .456 .427 GB 11 13 14i/ 15 17 17' 720 The annual sponsored by Yacht Club. sailing classic was Detroit's Bayview Yesterday's Results Philadelphia 5, New York 3 Chicago 2, Pittsburgh 1 Atlanta 4, San Francisco 2 St. Louis 4, Los Angeles 2 Houston at Cincinnati, rain Middle eastern, Indian & African Art pieces Complete selection of Imported Tarot Cards- Clothing, shawls, hats from the twenties. Six unique shops in one building Paraphernalia Middle Earth' Little Things x ~Salon Renissance I n I 0 Michigan Faculty Members- Have you made use of your football Ticket Benefits? If not; here's a reminder that Your a preference for location at Michigan's six Home Football games expires Aug. 1. If you are faculty, an administrative officer and retired from faculty' staff,' but still retain faculty privileges, you can: ts _ __ _._ ._ __ J!_ 1 . _. " i _ ... 1 _ t . _ ._ _. _.r .. _. ...! _.;:: C4".{1 .. ::,-::: ;: *4 A..