The Michigan Daily-Tuesday, July 17, 1979--Page 11 FIRST BLACK IVY DIRECTOR 'M aide Harris selected Penn AD PHILADELPHIA (UPI) - The University of Pennsylvania yesterday announced the appointment of Charles Harris of Michigan as the new athletic director, the youngest man and the first black ever to be named to the post at an Ivy League school. Harris, 29, served five years as assistant athletic director at Michigan. He will assume his new post on Sept. 1, succeeding Andy Geiger, who resigned last October at Stanford University. HARRIS, A 1972 graduate of Hampton Institute in Virginia, said he never considered his age or race to be a, handicap in the nine-month competition conducted by a university search com- mittee. "I never thought about it that way," he said at a news conference. "I didn't L._ _ .. t. ... -C . 'historical commitment to the ideal of the student as athlete and scholar duplicates my own ideal." "A number of things went into my decision," he said. "I started at a small private school in Virginia from an athletic standpoint. Michigan is a fine, fine institution that offers a lot of great things at different levels. "The kind of program Penn offers, with the Ivy concept of student athlete competing at all levels, I believe is the future of college athletics." In making the appointment, univer- sity Provost Vartan Gregorian called Harris "energetic andsensitive to athletic needs and academic standards. "Two faculty-student panels singled out his leadership qualities," he said. "Our national inquiries reinforced that judgment. For someone so young, he leaves a distinguished record of ac- complishment at the University of Michigan." Under athletic director Don Canham at Michigan, Harris held respon- sibilities for the implementation of af- firmative action and compliance with Title IX, as well as administrative fun- ctions and business affairs. Harris will oversee the function of 33 sports-18 men, 14 women and one coed-at Penn, The Quakers' basket- ball team won the NCAA Eastern Regionals and participated in the final four of the national collegiate cham- pionships. .Harris joined the sports information department in 1973, was appointed ad- ministrative aide to Canham in 1974 and named an assistant athletic director in 1976. "Charles has been a valuable part of our operations here and he will cer- tainly bring some new ideas' and en- thusiasm to his position at Pen- nsylvania," Canham said. co sic wi do me here with any of those con- derations. I don't feel my involvement th Penn at the outset had anything to with age or the fact I'm black." Harris said he felt the university's Harris Lytham jinx? Watson, Jack aim to end U.S. drought at St. Annes LYTHAM ST. ANNES, England (AP)-The Lytham jinx, which has stymied Americans from winning the five British Opens held here since Bobby Jones' year in 1926, is in evidence again. As the field of 152 started gathering yesterday for pre-tournament prac- tice, the U.S. quartet of Tom Watson, Ben Crenshaw, Gil Morgan and Mark Hayes all ran into travel troubles. First Watson, hurrying to catch his plane at Kennedy Airport in New York, picked up his wife's passport by mistake. "It doesn't look much like you," said the airport checkout woman as an embarrassed Watson got his wife to send his own passport from Kansas to New York. Then his Concorde flight was fog-bound, he missed his connection in London, and had to finish the final 250 miles to Lytham by road. Fog-bound Kennedy also snagged Crenshaw's plans for an early arrival here. His flight from Texas was diverted to Newark, N.J., Airport and after a long cab journey he arrived in New York with only 10 minutes to spare to catcn his plane. With him on the same flight were Hayes and Morgan-and their luggage, including their clubs, went astray when they arrived in London. Luckily, both sets turned up yester- day in time for them to get in a couple of practice rounds. Meanwhile, Jack Nicklaus, last year's winner at St. Andrews, had arrived in plenty of time and without incident from Berlin. Nicklaus, who hasn't been having much success since his dramatic Open victory last year, said he hadn't been putting well for around 18 months and was feeling downright Nicklaus uncomfortable with his putter. Then, said son Jackie in a practice round, "You're breaking off your stroke-you're not finishing through the ball." After that, said Jack, "I feel I should be able to putt better this week." Both Nicklaus and Crenshaw singled out Lytham's 201-yard par 3 12th, the only short hole on the back nine, with the green ringed with traps and angled so it slopes across the pattern of the hole. "It's one of my favorite holes in Britain," said Nicklaus. "It's a unique design and I've used the principle a couple of times in designing other cour- ses." Nicklaus is rated a 7-1 shot in the betting to win for the second straight year, but the leader of the pre-tournament odds is Watson at 5-1. Watson reckons that if anyone is entitled to beat the Lytham jinx, he's that man-after his victories at Carnoustie in 1976 and Turnberry in 1977, he's hoping to keep up his sequence of winning here every other year. Brushing aside his disastrous experience in the U.S. Open, where he didn't make the cut, he said he felt his game was on the up-grade now and his driving-a problem in recent tournaments--had been pretty well corrected. JURY DEADLOCKED: Bostock trial extended CROWN POINT, Ind. (AP) - A second trial has been set for Oct. 1 for the man accused of killing California Angels baseball star Lyman Bostock. The first trial ended in a hung jury last week. Leonard Smith, 32, of Gary, Ind., had pleaded innocent by reason of insanity in the slaying, but two court-appointed psychiatrists testified they found him sane. LAKE SUPERIOR Court Judge James Kimbrough declared a mistrial at about 5 a.m. last Friday when the nine-man, three-woman panel ended seven hours of deliberation by announ- cing it was hopelessly deadlocked. "We are naturally disappointed. We are looking for a successful completion of the trial at the next setting," Lake County prosecutor Jack Crawford said. Deputy Prosecutor James Oszewski said he believed jurors couldn't decide whether Smith was insane when Bostock, 27, was shot to death while he sat in acar on a Gary street Sept. 23. POLICE SPECULATED that the bullet that killed Bostock was meant for Smith's estranged wife, Barbara, who was seated next to the baseball player when the shooting occurred. Nick Thiros, Smith's attorney, said his client was insane and was driven to commit the crime by his wife's in- fidelity. Dr. Lee Periola of Valparaiso, Ind., one of two psychiatrists who examined Smith, told the court Smith was emotionally distraught over the failure of his marriage but was sane at the time of the shooting. in ora~o NEW SUMMER STYLES AND COLORS NOW1INs men-s t 05 30, hwse 71- nIckels arcade 761-62O7