Page 12-The Michigan Daily- Wednesday, January 24, 1990 MSU retains Perles by naming him AD MEN'S TENNIS RESULTS by Theodore Cox Daily Sports Writer EAST LANSING- The Mich- igan State Board of Trustees voted 5- 3 last night to approve of George Perles taking the position of Athletic Director along with main- taining his position as head football coach effective July 1, 1990. The board would review his position as athletic director after one year, and Perles would receive no pay increase for his added duties. The board also announced that they will not release him from his contract. Perles is said to have told several trustees privately that he would reject an offer from the New York Jets if he was given the position of athletic director. The Jets had reportedly offered Perles $6 million for five years. Perles was not present at the board meeting and has yet to comment on the position. Michigan State President John DiBiaggio stated once again his disapproval of the decision. "At Michigan State we are committed to fairness and equal opportunity. We are committed to those ideals as a major land grant university. I believe the correct procedure for athletic director should include a broad search which includes minorities and women," DiBiaggio said. The board was originally suppos- ed to search for a replacement of current athletic director Doug Weaver and vote on the issue February 2. However, after learning of the Jets contract, the procedure sped up to please Perles. Perles had asked for the athletic position several times. The quick approval of accepting Perles before searching for other candidates infuriated many MSU students and faculty. "Green and White once meant pride and not money," one student said. Former MSU broadcaster Bob Reynolds agreed. "Never, never have I been so ashamed of my school. I know Perles has a degree in Business Administration, but I didn't think he had one in Political Science." In fact, the Downtown Coaches Club was the only organization of the 13 that sent a representative to speak before the board that approved of the proposal. It had been rumored that if Perles got the position of athletic director, MICHIGAN Singles No. 1 David Kass* No. 2 Mitch Rubenstein No. 3 Scott Cuppett No. 4 Terry London No. 5 John Karzen No. 6 David Pierce *Ranked 17th nationally def. Jim Bowers def. Mike Siminski def. Craig Cappelli def. Mike Ridener def. Frank Politi def. Kurt Thomas vs EASTERN MICHIGAN (6-2, 6-3) (6-1, (6-3, 6-3) 6-0) (6-2, 6-1) (6-3, 6-1) (6-1, 6-2) Doubles No. 1 Kass, Cuppett lost to Bowers, Siminski (6-1, 6-2) No. 2 Karzen, Rubenstein def. Cappelli & Ridener (6-3, 6-3) No. 3 London, Peter Kimm def. Politi, Thomas (7-6, 6-2) 'We were very nervous to start the match, but you have to expect that with as young a team as we have. I was pleased with the way we competed and the way we played. The doubles portion of the match was very mediocre at best. We were just not ready emotionally.' -Michigan coach Brian Eisner Perles President DiBiaggio would resign. However, DiBiaggio stated that re- signing over this issue would be "silly." Michigan State Trustee Owen, who voted in favor of the proposal explained that Perles would not be running the program by himself. "Mr. Perles as athletic director will have a supervisor and he will report directly to Vice-President Roger Wilkenson," said Owen. "There is a line of authority that will be established." BASEBALL continued from page I Last April, Western Michigan coach Fred Decker said, "If what the Michigan players told me is true Michigan would definitely be ir violation of NCAA rules." Decket cited illegal tryouts of players and excessive amounts of scholarships granted. New Michigan coach Bill Fre- ehan has already felt the repercus- sions of the investigation. The Wolverine athletic department has 0o p restricted Freehan and his staff from visiting any potential recruits either at home or at games, and from en- tertaining any recruits. "I took the job (aware of the investigation) because I am a proud alumnus of Michigan and wanted to be here," Freehan said. Bruce Madej, Michigan's Sports Information Director, and assistant to the Athletic Director, confirmed that Michigan was cooperating with Big Ten investigators, but acknow- ledged that he did not know when the investigation would be resolved. Denver quarterback John Elway, whose team has lost two of the past three Super Bowls, will only guarantee his team will cover the spread if it increases another point in this year's matchup with San Francisco. Elway: Broncos will cover 'Super1 spread NEW ORLEANS- John Elway of the Denver Broncos, in the tradition of quarterbacks past, offered a Super Bowl guarantee. "Get another point-and-a-half," Elway said, "and I guarantee we'll cover the spread." This falls somewhat short of Joe Namath's Super Bowl III guarantee that the 17 12-point underdog New York Jets would beat the Baltimore Colts. The betting line, measuring the relative worth of Denver and San Francisco, says the Broncos are double digits short of the 49ers, 12 points at last report, up from an original ten. Elway thinks his team's situation isn't quite that bad. "People are not giving us a lot of chance," Elway said. "If we win, it will be the greatest upset of all time. If we lose, well, we're supposed to lose." The quarterback figures that puts all the pressure on the 49ers, and that's fine with him. It takes two teams to make a Super Bowl, and the Broncos are happy to play the party of the second part, odds against them notwithstanding. "Only one other team has a chance to be world champion," Elway said. "I'd rather go to bat and take my chances than not go to bat. I'll risk humiliation for the chance." D V U Rrinn Vniir Parnar Tn 764-0553 News 764-0562 News 747-3334 News 763-2459 News 763-0379Arts and Opinion .763-0376 Sports 747-3336 Sports SKIN PROGRAMS - The University of Michigan Dept. of Dermatology is seeking University of Michigan volunteers to test new therapies for: Medical Center SUN DAMAGED UNEVEN/DARK BLOTCHY BROWN SKIN SPOTS SPOTS (WRINKLES) (HYPERPIGMENTATION) (MELASMA) Black individuals who have Males and Females, uneven dark areas on the face On the face as a result ages 45-70 years and arms as a result of skin of pregnancy or oral with wrinkles. damage. (ACNE, BURNS, ETC.) Contraceptives. OFFICE VISITS FOR FURTHER INFORMATION MEDICATION PLEASE CALL ARE FREE 313-936-4070 S FREE ALEXANDER THE GREAT HE DIDN'T HAVE MUCH EXPERIENCE EITHER. By age 30, Alexander the Great had con- quered the known world. But it wasn't his resume that led him to victory. Instead, he possessed the ambition and perseverance of a dynamic leader. 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