MAY, MAY 14,.1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAGEI DAY, MAY 14, 1961 THE MICHIGAN DAILY PAI~F Im"ira Or MAN in fl)tikn by MIKE GILIMAN MAJOR LEAGUE ROUNDUP: Detroit Whips New York; Extends Lead, Who To Blame? WHO IS TO BLAME for the recent basketball scandals that have tarnished the reputations of four eastern and three southern schools? The obvious answer is found by stirring together professional gamblers and athletes eager for an easy dollar, adding some coin seasoning and waiting for the pot to boil. But the editors of Sports Illustrated magazine aren't content with that, and in the May 8 issue of SI point accusing fingers at the presi- dents of the seven schools involved and Walt Byers, executive director of the National Collegiate Athletic Association. Says SI, "They and all other college presidents should share in the guilt for the corruption of the players who took bribes from gamblers to fix games." Alternate answers, of course, are preferred by the schools and by Mr. Byers. The schools point to the obvious answer and disclaim all responsibility. Byers says that the scandals are merely a reflection of the poor moral climate of our times. So who's right? As in most cases when opposing parties to an issue set up their battle lines, the real answer is probably somewhere in the middle. But to the 'neutral observer, sitting on the sidelines, it appears as if Byers is somewhat closer to a correct statement of the situation. To be sure, university officials can't shrug off all the blame in this sort of affair. The SI editorial points quite accurately to the growing up on campuses of a double academic standard that can accommodate the student-athlete. While less true at Michigan than in many schools, few here are blind to the fact that some. of it exists in our own University. And not Just in the classroom, either. Coaches and administrators will deny it, but the double-standard can be (and has been) stretched to cover civil matters too. If you don't believe it, ask the Ann Arbor patrolman-and promise not to identify him-and he can tell you of wearers of the Maize and Blue caught in civil indiscretions that were dealt with somewhat more leniently than the average student. No, Michigan representatives are not going to cast any first stones. But neither are representatives of most schools. At virtually all but the smallest institutions, top athletes get a little "special" care. As one report on the recent: scandals put it, "What's the difference between getting something for playing well, or getting something for playing 'smart'?" To this extent, SI is correct in blaming the seven schools and their administrators for making the athletes susceptible to the bland- ishment waved under their noses. But can anyone seriously suggest that a college president is directly to blame for the incidents? One would guess that Michigan's Harlan Hatcher knows scarcely a handful of the coaches (let alone the players) and is hardly a guiding light in the running of the athletic department. It is hardly likely that most college heads have much more of a voice in spo'rts. It would seem that SI is going a little far afield in search for a scapegoat. MAYBE there isn't any person or persons that can be pinned down fuas the culprits. Maybe Byers' explanation is closer to being accurate.3 Let's face it, this country and the people in it are in danger of losing completely the integrity, the sense of fair play and the inde- pendence that settled the country and developed the industries that brought America to world prominence. Today, we're a nation of leaners-ready to lean on government, union, business association, or the guy next door. Our independence and uncertainty we've traded away for security and dependence. It's easier to pay into big government funds for old age, medical care, education, welfare and housing, than it is to learn how to do and care for ourselves. This is the atmosphere that these athletes were raised in-the something-for-nothing atmosphere that pervades America today. Once we had frontiers. Today (and please, this isn't just a partisan comment) we are blessed with "The New Frontier." Is it really a new -frontier , . . or is it a perversion of what the word frontier formerly meant? Athletes raised to think that society owes them a living can't really be condemned for cashing in on what is "due" to them. The idea of responsibilities being linked to rights-that's out of date! The random collection of thoughts in this corner shouldn't be taken as a criticism of any person, policy, group' of persons or series lof policies. What they do total up to is a rather gloomy commentary. Byers' comment looks more and more accurate in retrospect. Whether we talk about basketball scandals or General Electric scandals we are talking about America and Americans . . . we are talking about the not-so- slow decay of responsibility and independence of these people .. . and we're talking about what Byers terms, "the poor moral climate of our times." It's too bad .. . he's probably right. By The Associated Press The Detroit Tigers, spurred by the homer-hitting of Rocky Cola- vito and Dick Brown, whipped New York for the second straight day yesterday, 8-3, and increased their American League lead over the Yankees to 41/ games. San Francisco clung to its slim National League lead, thrashing Milwaukee 8-5 on Willie Mays' two home runs, one with the bases loaded. Mays' second homer, his eighth of the season, came with one man on base. Bucs Stay Close Pittsburgh stayed close to the top, outslugging the Cincinnati Reds 13-5 as Pirate outfielder Bill Virdon slammed a home run, tri- ple, single, drew two walks and scored three runs for a perfect day at the plate. Tom Sturdivant, sold by Boston to Washington last in the expan- sion draft last December, shackled his former Red Sox mates with one hit as he pitched the Senators to a 4-0 triumph. Gentile Hits 11th Jim Gentile walloped his 11th home run and drove in his 37th run as the Baltimore Orioles de- feated Cleveland 4-1 to move into a virtual second place tie with the Yankees. Minnie Minoso clouted a pair of homers in the Chicago White Sox 10-1 triumph over Kan- sas City. Minnesota walloped Los Angeles ,13-6. Colavito, ejected Friday night when he chased into the stands after a spectator, had the Yan- kee outfielders running dizzily, trying to flag down his two home runs and a pair of singles in five times at bat. The homers were the sixth and seventh of the sea-j son for the Tiger outfielder. Brown Big Bat Catcher Brown batted in three Tiger runs with a single and home run. Brown's four-bagger came in the eighth and snapped a 3-31 deadlock. Phil Regan, a 24-year- old right-hander, went the dis- tance for Detroit, permitting only five hits for his third straight victory. A leadoff two-bagger by Vic Wertz in the fifth inning pre- vented Sturdivant from hurling a Major League Standings no-hitter for the Senators. The right-hander permitted only one more runner to reach base. He was Gary Geiger via a first in- ning walk. Jim King provided Sturdivant with more runs than he needed when he slammed a first inning home run with Gene Woodling on base. Gene Conley was the victim. Brown Gets Win Skinny Brown was credited with Baltimore's victory. The veteran righthander allowed the Indians only five hits in seven innings for his second success without a de- feat. Hoyt Wilhelm hurled the last two innings for the Orioles. The loss was charged to Wynn Hawkins, his first against three triumphs. Veteran Billy Pierce, loser of two decisions this season, finally notched his first victory of the year for the White Sox. The little lefty helped his cause with a pair of run-scoring singles. One came in a five-run second inning which chased Kansas City starter Jerry Walker. SECOND SEMESTER EXAMINATION SCHEDULE COLLEGE OF LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND THE ARTS HORACE H. RACKHAM SCHOOL OF GRADUATE STUDIES COLLEGE OF ARCHITECTURE AND DESIGN SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION SCHOOL OF NATURAL RESOURCES SCHOOL OF PUBLIC HEALTH COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING COLLEGE OF PHARMACY SCHOOL OF EDUCATION SCHOOL OF NURSING SCHOOL OF MUSIC June 2 to June 13, 1961 For courses having both lectures and recitations, the "Time of Class" is the time of the first lecture period of the week. For courses having reci- tation only, the "Time of Class" is the time of the first recitation period. Certain courses will be examined at special periods as noted below the regular schedule. Classes beginning on the half hour will be scheduled at the preceding hour. Degree candidates having a scheduled examination on June 10, 12. 13 will be given an examination at an earlier date. The following schedule designates an evening time for each such examination. The instructor may arrange with the student for an alternate time, with notice to the sched- uling committee. Evening Schedule for Degree Candidates I I NATIONAL LEAGUE W L Pct. San Francisco 16 9 .640 x-Los Angeles 17 11 .607 Pittsburgh 14 10 .583 Cincinnati 14 12 .538 Milwaukee 11 11 .500 x-St. Louis 11 11 .500 x-Chicago 9 15 .375 x-Philadelphia 6 19 .240 x-Playinganight games. YESTERDAY'S RESULTS San Francisco 8, Milwaukee 5 Pittsburgh 13, Cincinnati 5 Philadelphia 3, St. Louis 1 Chicago at Los Angeles (inc.) TODAY'S GAMES St. Louis at Philadelphia Cincinnati at Pittsburgh Chicago at Los Angeles Milwaukee at San Francisco AMERICAN LEAGUE D r 3 B. D D 3 D GB 11/ 2z 3Y s% 10 GB 4- 5% 7 8 8% 9/ 9/ Tuesday, May 16, at 8 at Hillel HONORS NIGHT and INSTALLATION OF OFFICERS Speaker: Dr. Lawrence B. Slobodkin 1961 Recipient, Henry Russell Award "Speculations on Peck Order in Jews" Refreshments 1429 Hill Street All are welcome Regular Exam Time Special Period Regular Exam Time Special Period Mon., June 12 9-12 AM Fri., June 2 7-10 PM Tues., June 13 2-5 PM Tues., June 6 7-10 PM Mon., June 12 2-5 PM Sat., June 3 7-10 PM Sat., June 10 9-12 AM Wed., June 7 7-10 PM Tues., June 13 9-12 AM Mon., June 5 7-10 PM Sat., June 10 9-12 AM Thurs., June 8 7-10 PM I I I IF Detroit New York Naltimore Minnesota Cleveland Bioton Kansas City Chicago Washington Los Angeles w 20 14 15 14 12 10 10 11 9 L 7 10 11 12 13 13 12 14 17 15 Pet. .741 .583 .577 .538 .480 .435 .429 .417 .393 .375 The New Each student should receive notification from his instructor as to the time and place of his examination. REGULAR SCHEDULE ContaCiess Type Lens Time of Class YESTERDAY'S RESULTS Detroit 8, New York 3 Minnesota 13, Los Angeles 6 Chicago 10, Kansas City 1 Baltimore 4, Cleveland 1 Washington 4, Boston 0 TODAY'S GAMES Detroit at New York Boston at Washington BaltimoreataCleveland Kansas City at Chicago Los Angeles at Minnesota So tiny it balances on your finger tip! SO SCARCELY NOTICEABLE * So comfortable to "wear." SPORTS SHORTS: Oregon Breaks Record; Sachs Takes 500 Pole MONDAY TUESDAY *Classes beginning on hour at at at at at at at at at at at at at at at at at at the half 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 8 9 10 11 12 1 2 3 4 hour Exa -Code A B C D Q E F G R H I J K S M N P T will be I Fri., June Sat. June Mon., June Tues., June Sat. June Wed., June Thur., June Thur. June Mon., June 2 3 5 6 10 7 8 8 12 9 2 3 5 10 6 7 9 12 Fri., Fri., Sat., Mon., Sat., Tues., Wed., Fri., Mon., June June June Jpne June June June June June 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 9-12 2- 5 9-12 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 2- Time of Examination 7 By The Associated Press FRESNO, Calif. - Smooth- striding Dyrol Burleson anchored the University of Oregon to vic- tory in the four-mile relay event at the West Coast Relays today in 16:29.3. The time smashed both the official and pending American records. The junior from Cottage Grove, Ore., who last year became the second American to run a mile in less than four minutes, sped the distance today in 4:00.3. Oregon's team of Voctor Reeve, George Larson, Keith Forman and Burleson beat Oregon State and Houston. They eclipsed both the official record of 16:52.6 by an AAU team in 1952 and the pend- ing mark of 16:50.4 by Western Michigan at the Drake Relays. Southern California's Rex Caw- ley cracked the meet record in the 400-meter hurdles, an Olympic event, winning in 49.9 seconds. That bettered the 50.8 that Dickie Howard of New Mexico did in 1959 and was the fastest the race has been run anywhere this year. 500 Trials" INbIANAPOLIS - Eddie Sachs today came back from a bad 1960 wreck and won the pole position for the 500-mile Auto Race for the second straight year. The feat had been accomplished only twice before since the first Memorial Day speed classic 50 years ago. The 22 qualifiers, largest num- ber on opening day since World War II, was faster overall har. ever before. It averaged 145.261, compared with a record average of 144.863 for the 16 qualifiers on last year's first day of trials. * * * Cheerleaders A cheerleading clinic will be held in the Auxiliary Glm in the I-M Building between 4 and 5 p.m. on May 15-18 under the di- rection of the present cheerlead- ers. All interested persons are in- vited. Final tryouts for all posi- tions will be held on September 8. BUT this is not enough to assure success. All day safe wear comes from a combination of con- trolled adjustments plus the thorough conscien- tious care afforded by an interested professional man. .X. Our offices for fitting and adjusting contact lenses are equipped with the most advanced in- struments and laboratory for this specialized service. Fittings are administered by a registered doctor of optometry. For consultation without obligation to deter- mine whether you can wear contact lenses, call NO 5-5306. DrH. W. Bennett-Optometrist 117 SOUTH MAIN ST.-On Ground Floor SPECIAL PERIODS SCHOOL OF BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION I e scheduled at the preceding Acctg. 100, 101, 200, 201 Acctg. 100, 101, 200, 201 Business Ad. 150 Business Ad. 150 Business Ad. 181 Business Ad. 181 Finance 101 Finance 101 Industr. Relations 100 Industr. Relations 100 Indust. Relations 150 Industr. Relations 150 Mktg. 100, 101 Mktg. 100, 101 Stat. 100 Stat. 100 A P N R M H N V P Q G T E S F R Fri., Fri., Wed., Mon., Tues., Fri., Wed., Tues., Fri., Sat., Thurs., Mon., Wed., Sat., Thurs. Mon., June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June June 2 9 7 12 6 9 7 13 9 10 8 12 7 10 8 12 5 13 5 12 3 10 8 10 COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING L .--- J~s E. E.5' E. E. 5 Graphics 1 Graphics 1 Graphics 2, 4 Graphics 2, 4 E. M. 2 E. M. 2 C Mon., U Tues. C Mon., T Mon., J Sat., S Sat., F Thurs., Q Sat., June June June June June June June June LITERATURE, SCIENCE, AND THE ARTS TI Bot. 1, 2 Bot. 1, 2 Chem. 4, 6, 182, 183 Chem. 4, 6, 182, 183 Econ. 51, 52. 53, 54 Econ. 51, 52, 53, 54 Econ. 71, 72 Econ. 71, 72 English 23, 24 English 23, 24 Fr. 1, 2, 3, 11, 12, 21, 22, 32, 61, 62 Fr. 1, 2, 3, 11, 12, 21, 22, 32, 61, 62 Geog. 1 Geog. 1 German 1, 2, 11, 31, 32, 35, 36 German 1, 2, 11, 31, 32, 35, 36 Latin 22 Latin 22 Physics 54 Physics 54 Russian 1, 2, 31, 32 Russian 1, 2, 31, 32 Sociology 60 Sociology 60 Spanish 1, 2, 3, 21, 22, 31, 32 Spanish i, 2, 3, 21, 22, 31, 32 C V B T N V A P R I J Mon., Tues., Sat., Mon., Wed., Tues., Fri., Fri., Mon., Fri., Sat., June June June June June June June June June June June 5 13 3 12 7 13 2 9 12 2 3 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 9-12 9-12 9-12 9.12 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 9-12 9-12 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 9-12 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 9-12 9-12 2- 5 9-12 2- 5 2- 5 2- 5 9-12 U Tues., June 13 I E Q K Wed., Sat., Mon., June June June 7 10 5 S Sat., June 10 D S D R M U, G V M Q Tues., Sat., Tues., Mon., Tues. Tues., Thurs., Tues., Tues., Sat., June June June June June June June June June June 6 10 6 12 6 13 8 13 6 10 SUPER SMOOTH SHAVE New "wetter-than-water" action melts beard's tough- ness-in seconds. Remarkable new "wetter-than-water" action gives Old Spice Super Smooth Shave its scientific approximation to the feather-touch feel and the efficiency of barber shon shaves. Melts your beard's toughness like hot Each course requiring a special examination is assigned two examina- tion code letters. If one is preferred by the department, it is in boldface; students may elect the other only if a conflict occurs and special permis- sion was secured from the departmental representative at registration time in the gymnasium. If neither is underlined, either is available for selection by each student without regard to the section of the course In which he is enrolled. SPECIAL INSTRUCTIONS No date of examination may be changed without the consent of the University Final Examination Scheduling Committee. Questions concern- ing the schedule should be directed to Edward G. Groesbeck, 1513 Ad- ministration Building. SCHOOL OF MUSIC Individual examinations will be given for all applied music courses (individual instruction) elected for credit in any unit of the niversitvFo r time andn lao0 nf vaminatinns _ lleti I i ' opJJ~ls-aloIIC ~fle onlarfne~w tclr~ics-. ; 3. I1 E I