0 4 }.r 9 COVER m I Games (Continued from Page 3) other payments totalling thousands of dollars. Former Michigan players say that while Michigan never offered them illegal inducements, other recruiters did. "I was standing in the hallway of my high school," remembered Doug Marsh, a Wolverine tight end from 1976-1980. "A man who was a recruiter came up to me and said, 'How are you leaning?' I said, 'I think I'm going to Michigan.' He said, 'I can give you a lot of things,' and pulled a wad of money out of his pocket." "I have driven a car someone of- fered me," said former Michigan lineman Bubba Paris. 'A 'The rules are set up to give rival bribers an equal shot; . . Who's to say whether an alum- nus should give a kid $10,000., -Leonard Koppett author and sports writer C l t f t 1 t t c I 1 1 one with a probation record may be looked at. first and examined more carefully," he said. The investigations themselves are apparently being examined more carefully. Sportswriters and in- vestigative reporters have turned college cheating into a public concern. "A few years ago, we were able to complete an investigation without anyone hearing about it. That's vir- tually impossible now," Berst said. That publicity has not been lost on Canham. Though he believes many people exaggerate the number of dishonest schools, the growing con- cern over violations is justified. "When you have a crisis, you start to worry about it," said Canham. "It has gotten to crisis proportions." Members of the NCAA responded to the crisis last year by establishing,, with little resistance, a presidents' commission made up . of chief executives from 44 schools. At a special NCAA convention in June, the commission proposed eight measures to tighten up enforcement, all of which were adopted. Along with establishing stiff mandatory penalties for repeat offenders and requiring schools to report on their athletic programs annually, the commission brought in a regulation that holds coaches responsible for their own violations by making penalties ap- plicable even if a coach changes jobs. "The presidents' commission has struck while the iron. was hot and moved in while everyone was in a reform mood and got things done," said Ted Tow, an assistant executive director of the NCAA and the association's liason to the com- mission. "I think there's less cheating than there was," said Canham, "and the president's commission had a lot to do with that, the fact that at least some of the presidents are serious." But to Koppett, who now writes for the Peninsula Times-Tribune in Palo Alto, California, the reforms are not sufficient because college athletic programs are still fronts for professional sports teams. "It's like asking me if my state room has been cleaned on the Titanic. It may be cleaned but it doesn't mean the whole thing isn't going to hit the iceberg," Koppett said. Koppett said concern about cheating runs in 10-year cycles, and he thinks corrective efforts actually have a negative effect. "We're probably in a cycle of outrage right now, but that's probably just driving it further underground. "What it's saying it, 'Hey, you alumni, keep it a little more quiet.' " Michigan doesn't have to say that, according to Canham. He says Schembechler makes it clear to the alumni that he doesn't want their illegal contributions and the alumni respect that. "People say, 'How you gonna han- dle 200,000 alumni?' Well goddammit, you can handle them. We do . .." Canham said. "To hell with them-if they break the rules." 1 . t f 1 Paris said he never received, nor things for A.C., they're not going to do pressure that drives other schools out knew of anyone receiving anything them for anybody." of regulatory bounds. illegal at Michigan. He suggested that If the testimony of Marsh, Paris, "Some schools try hard to stay out as a lineman he might not be as likely Moeller and others is accurate, of trouble, and then there's some to be a candidate for such gifts, but he Michigan does not "do things" that schools that plan to cheat. We're one said he knows at least one high-profile are outside the rules. The fact that no of the schools that try hard not to get player whose experience suggests Wolverine team has ever been on in any difficulties," he said. that Michigan's program is honest. probation lends some credence to the That means more than making sure "I was pretty good friends with An- claim that Michigan is clean. a picture can't be called a poster. thony Carter, and he never got . Don Canham, who as athletic direc- Canham, Schembechler, and Seyferth anything (illegal)," said Paris, who is tor is ultimately responsible for the hold a meeting each year to go over currently with the San Francisco integrity of Michigan's programs, ex- the rules with the 300 "represen- 49ers. "If they're not going to do plains that Michigan resists the tatives of the university's athletic in- terests," volunteers who help recruiting with phone calls and letters to prospects. Seyferth also mails up- dates on regulation changes and makes about 40 trips a year to brief regional recruiting coordinators. More important than checking out possible violations is checking out the people that have to prevent those violations. -A&"We're very careful who we hire," Canham said. "We wouldn't hire anybody who was ever on probation or was ever in any difficulty what- soever." NOVEMBER SCHEDULE OF EVENTS "Usually what happens when a school gets in trouble the first time is they've hired some nut who goes out 0 EVERY MONDAY: GELEN DAVIS' STUD CLUB and does something dumb," he added. 0 EVERY TUESDAY: ROGER "NIGHT FEVER" LELIEVRE "That could happen to anybody. That kith could happen to Michigan." HIGH ENERGY DANCE MUSIC If it did happen, Canham says he would immediately fire the offending: N EVERY WEDNESDAY: LADIES NIGHT coach. Many schools don't react that FREE ADMISSION AND %/ PRICE DRINKS'TIL MIDNIGHT way, and Canham says that per- with missiveness leads to repeated /violations. STEVE KING AND THE DITTLIES "You'vegot 20 or 30 guys 0 EVERY THURSDAY: DRINK SPECIALS( ch) nnh y h o wee mith aughtcheating. Why the hell weren't thithied D.J. DR. BBA "T" I.. The reason people are constan- 0 EVERY FRIDAY tly in trouble like Southern Methodist $1 HAPPY HOUR - 4-7:30 with D.J. LES HARVEY is they don't take it seriously." ,Another reason Southern Methodist is NIGHT: TOP FORTY with D.J. "THE WIZARD" on probation forthe fourth time and SEVERY SATURDAY Illinois for the third time since 1974 lies in the way the NCAA chooses DOMINOI whom to investigate. While denying / SUNDAY NIGHT: the NCAA targets certain schools and M.protects or ignores others, Berst says MEGA FUNK with D.J. "THE WIZARD" , repeat violators are more likely to draw his attention. "If allegations of serious violations FOR FURTHER INFO: 994-53 Acome in related to one institution that's been on probation before and one that's never had a violation, the I .i .. 'm~w 7/AA A r Ci recruiters pa - -:4 -y -Ic ° 9o ! Q i Novembe IA PUb C o T h APPLICATION FOR UNDERGMADUATEADMISSION. 'r{,.v(l,"g CO .Cl' Ib i..p.r d AO; Aryiuanx u..rbnMM x wN r .. «M b e..abx x d.4k.1 f F. rnw Y«. Sw xfx.N aM on.f« gi f4« Nin ..xm hex.e rM rywf..m"Meb « dwn. "~ MKrNW^IKU-wr ran..^e~h ar^xawrw.eb ewe M tir"+aM.n^//'naegYW weM..rb..«".o« MdflO..+awnd MOK'xsme wv."w+..rowwMSror.n.vu«tl. au ..+ v+."<'.M.r.ab.a"a... wbawbw "wlm..r+ «ww SwrY.+r war".mb wir .dMa . iu mxw . .aawNb ho.ew tp.l cwW.w b.rv +s w .ele.d5.r."rvw D,.awarob.aln .r w xw.eowrbn.e.«xuanw - .ronF*. uw+.w. rmq...=u.mv. res ana.. enWr.^^.w ww« Il 1b1 - rwmn aea wnwwWa. r.wr.n«sr.,w«.M.< aMUr.mww 4gMw. ro ix-n l^>- . 1 aer+"uf kt [9nhfip t n.t nrh wtl . Jn..m4«+werna--roY.evr wrrfro"s+.ny a^m. w-W ws«ro.ry.Yw to +.. x ar+^".+a".a .+.^wweb.wawrw... y4bwro« Mt Wvew roraaae.ee.roy+w.derhx^. w"+goq. +« r aMna"wn adms ay.w nar-a waraw. drvMr +.v. wab Yw 'ar"n. ^.wn^ro«aesesaMM war.a.4.vw"aw-r ar..hw. n.^.w amuv . Md4o "aroa+lro... ryn uwu ....a.... .,-.r«.....ew-.. .ar,..a. r. ^a . ....axa xr"r r+a.lie a 5w. ero+ a. mw -..n,.a, d.y.+vr .,,., a.«M,«. 'ar.Y vr«..ra w...w x".wr x a«. + ++ asM a w Ms4 ..r. rv.w.avs. x+ea h++ww.r rows nau.ew u..ea.rrrowws+.Yvir . e m a+nW+nM n^'rw w.YMWY.iI e na n>.W vr4ro. wnnnr wr w ~ M w 6f E f 3 k F S aY p'Jv M!..GS Pictured are materials illegal to send to recruiting prospects. The fold-out cover of the Michigan Media Guide to sports (above) qualified as an illegal poster. Mailing a prospect an un- dergraduate application for ad- mission (left) is also disallowed. 12 Weekend/Friday, November 1, 1985