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The NCAA April l&1984, Volume -21 Number 16 ()fficial Publication of the National C’ollcgiate ~_Athletic~~ Association Council approves TV amendments Amendments to the 1982-1985 percent of the nation’s television NCAA Football Television Plan that households. could increase ratings and l Article 12, paragraph (a)--Each member institutions desiring to carrying network will be required to telecast or cablecast football games schedule 76 (was 82) different Divi- inl984andl985havebeenapproved sions I-A and I-AA mstitutions during by the NCAA Council. each two-year period of the plan. Thr Council, with no votes m l Article I3-Each carrying net- opposition, has approved tight modii work will be allowed to select two fications previously rccommcndcd wild-card games in either 1984 or by the Foothall Television Committee lYX5 and one wild-card game in the and agreed to by ABC Sports and other year regardless of institutional CBS Sports. appearance limitations. The Admunstrative Committee l Article I55 A 27th commercial endorsed the revisions March I5 and See Council, puge I2 voted to submit them to the Council for its approval in a mail vote. The ballots were mailed April 4. Insurance The modifications involve three major areas of the plan-the network plan delayed (or football series), the supplementary series, and closed-circuit and excep- Council meets tion telecasts and cablecasts. The until ‘85-86 modifications create a potential for An NCAA-sponsored catastrophic Three NCAA Council members discuss an agenda item prior to a meeting of the Council April increased network ratings, make the injury insurance program will not be 16-18 in Kansas City. From left are Asa N. Green, president of Livingston University; Sondra supplementary series more attractive made available to the membership by expanding the pool of available Norrell- Thomas, associate director of athletics, Howard University, and Hindmun Wall, for the 1984-85 college year. The teams, and allow greater oppor- director of athletics, Tulane University. Afullreport on Councilactions will be published in the program under consideration, as tunities for closed-circuit and ex- April 25 issue qf The NCAA News. outlined in the February 8 issue of ception telecasts and cablecasts. The NCAA News, would have pro- “We believe these alterations vided excess liability coverage for substantially strengthen the potential participating institutions and would to improve network ratings and New Orleans Hilton to be host have offered excess medical and simultaneously increase the attractive- rehabilitation payments and other ness of the supplementary series continuing benefits to student-athletes to NCAA Convention in 1986 initiated two years ago,” said Hugh who suffer catastrophic injuries while D. Hindman, chair of the Football participating in intercollegiate ath- The NCAA Convention returns “We now require a hotel to have square feet), and the round tables Television Committee. “These modi- letics. to New Orleans, Louisiana, for the two ballrooms, one of 24,000 square and opening session will be held in fications also provide needed flexi- fourth time, with the Association’s feet and another of 18,000 square the Grand Salon ABC (I 8, I80 square bility that will assist institutions The status of the program was 80th annual Convention scheduled feet,” said Louis J. Spry, NCAA feet). interested in telecasting or cablecast- examined during the NCAA Insur- for the New Orleans Hilton in January controller, “and there just are not The American Baseball Coaches ing their games through the exception ance Committee’s April l-2 meeting. 1986. many places that can handle those Association and American Football and closed-circuit avenues available The committee decided that the Acting for the Executive Commit- requirements. The increasing number Coaches Association, which annually in the current plan. program should not be recommended for the 1984-85 academic year until tee, the Administrative Committee of delegates puts more pressure on meet in conjunction with the Con- “We are pleased that the networks all contractual commitments from approved the 1,656-room hotel for overflow hotels to handle delegates vention, also will meet at the New and Council have accepted these the necessary parties were in place the January 13-15, 1986, annual who cannot be housed in the main Orleans Hilton. major modifications, which we believe and the policy form had been gathering of NCAA delegates. hotel.” With the new Riverside addition, will improve the trlevision plan for The New Orleans Hilton has corn- approved in Missouri. Officially known as the New opened in October 1983, the New the membership.” mitted 1,300 rooms for Convention A trust was to be established in Orleans Hilton Riverside and Towers, Orleans Hilton has 160,000 square Following is a summary of the Missouri to market the plan on a the hotel recently added a 456-room delegates, the most rooms ever com- feet of meeting and exhibition space. modifications: l Article 7, Regional Divisions ~ group basis. Because lead time was building (Riverside) to the existing mitted by a single hotel. The honors Included in the facility are eight luncheon and business session will On three occasions each year, regional becoming a critical issue, a deadline I ,200-room structure (Towers). The restaurants and bars. a and See Insurance. page 12 hotel is located on the banks of the bc held in the Grand Ballroom (26,894 See New Oheans. page 12 telecasts may be distributed to 75 Mississippi River and is within ;_I walking distance of the French .’ .I -.,,!‘. Quarter. The last NCAA Convention held in New Orleans was in 1980, when 1,075 delegates attended the meetings at the Fairmont Hotel. Other New Orleans stops were in 1928 at the Hotel Roosevelt and 1937 at the St. Charles Hotel. Since the 1980 Convention, attend- ance has increased about 62 percent, with 1,737 delegates in attendance at the 1984 Convention in Dallas. This steady increase has made it difficult to find hotels in the Southern part of the that can house the NCAA Convention. In the News R What can be done to improve intercollegiate ? One writer compiles a listing of the “Top IO” problems ...... 3 The University of California, , breaks the grip of the Univer- sity of Nebraska, Lincoln, on the NCAA Division I men’s title...... 4 A smaller ball will be used in women’s intercollegiate basketball next season __ _. _...... 12 The 1.656-room New Orleans Hilton Riverside and Towers 2 April 18, 1984 The NCAA Comment Our phony athletics code abets dishonesty By Blackie Sherrod Bill Simon, the U.S. Olympic boss, was interviewed countless Olympic medals 70 years ago when somebody discovered he Dallas Times Herald times at the Winter Olympics in Yugoslavia. Unless the had played three semipro basebfl games for 35 cents and a Well, goody goody gumdrop, we are going to drop the domestic telly carried a faulty communication, Simon also quart of buttermilk. masquerade. No more hypocrisy. No more cheating. No more endorsed a free-wheeling operation by all countries, not Simon also mentioned the “amateur” basketball players on dark alley and alias and trenchcoat and phonetap. No more allowing most nations to compete with subsidized professional their European tours in the off-season, making, according to payments under the table and laundryed funds and hidden athletes and forcing the others to go underground. him, “maybe SlOO,OOOfor the summer.” Why keep up the accounts. Honesty will win out. Simon referred to “trust funds” track athletes now are pretext, the Olympic boss seemed to be asking. If I heard him The word amateur will disappear from the U.S. vocabulary; allowed under U.S. (and international) Olympic rules. Pick a right, that is. and when we go forth to international playing fields, it will be a name. Carl Lewis, say, Carl Lewis is in high demand for track For years now, realists have decried the false cloak of case of matching our best against their best. In other words, in meets all over the world. He may be offered $10,000 for one amateurism. It is hardly a new question, but now it seems more Olympic basketball, we would have Moses Malone and Larry pertinent than ever. We are stripping the web from many other Bird and Magic Johnson and Sidney Moncrief going against the practices these days. Civilization is more liberal, more tolerant, poor Ruskies. Larry Holmes would be our Olympic heavyweight more unconcerned with human frailties. More calloused. Tell it boxer, and Renaldo Nehemiah would skim our hurdles. Columnary Craft like it is. Why stick to a phony athlete code that encourages, In many events, it would make no difference, since Uncle Sam even abets, dishonesty? is already represented by its best in pole , for example, and meet, to run a60-meter dash. The money is paid to his agent and scholarships, for example. A kid gets a longjump and IO0 meters. But in others, the stain of recogni;red deposited into a “trust fund.“Carl Icwis’expenses are paid out $30,000 education and (as Bill Yeoman calls it) three hots and a professionalism would be erased, as it is with most other of this “trust fund.” cot, for his athletic services. He’s being paid, right? Never mind countries. what the alum slips him in a locker-room handshake nor the At least, that seems to be the sentiment among Olympic There are liberal interpretations of “expenses.” Some jocks Trans-Am his mama suddenly found the funds to buy. moguls now ruling the roost. Their laws enforcing Olympic say it means living expenses at all times and have purchased Do you really think Mike Rozier was a pure amateur, by the amateurism are but comedy anyway; they are like the little expensive digs out of their trust funds. Lewis, Billy Olson, written rules, while he was gaining all those yards at Nebraska? Dutch boy trying to stick his finger in the Johnstown Flood. Dwight Stones all have big fancy homes. And then after the Did Tony Dorsett ever accept an agent’s advance when he was Oh, they may expel a couple Canadian hockey players so-called amateur finishes his competition, he may draw the setting records at Pitt? Marcus Dupree? Did he ever find a new because of professionalism, and maybe an Italian or two. But remaining funds from his trust account and go about his sport coat in his closet? (University of Texas footballers, two those are token roars from paper tigers. Iron Curtain countries merry, albeit professional, way. decades ago, used to laugh at one mysterious visitor. A late laugh openly at these starched regulations and proceed to do Now, there’s nothing wrong with this, understand. Nothing night knock on the dorm door. The fullback opens the door and exactly as they please. It is like a young Yank MP trying to wrong with Carl Lewis or Olson or Stones demanding and on the floor is a box of three newshirts, just his size. The shirt give a traffic ticket to a KV-I tank in Kursk. receiving appearance money for these track meets, except that it fairy had struck again.) llnless we misinterpreted expressions, the Olympics bigwigs is phony as a Burt Reynolds forelock. It is hypocrisy unsurpassed Of course, the NCAA, in a spasm of integrity, has eliminated are pointed toward the open sea. Senor Juan Samaranch of in this country, except possibly in the political arena. Under the the laundry allowance, $15 a month, for each player. That’s like Spain, new head of the International Olympic Committee, is table, the hands are busy, even though on the surface, we a guy eating a dozen biscuits and gravy, half a strawberry said to favor abandonment of the amateur sham. promote the rules that caused poor Jim Thorpe to lose his shortcake and then using Sweet ‘N I*ow in his coffee. End of basketball glut is foreseen Letters to the Editor Billy Packer, sports commentator Editorial CBS-TV Editor and Publisher The Associated Press “In our January 21 issue, Julian Taber suggested that Stop the home-court advantage “There’s been a tremendous glut of becauseso many readers today are interested in gambling, To the Editor: on television. I believe the 1983-84 season will be the end that newspapers might profitably start a new section Anyone who witnessed the Kentucky vs. Illinois game during the NCAA of that. It’s like when you put four gas stations on the devoted to gambling news that would include a lot of Division I Men’s Basketball Championship, and who knows anything about corners at every intersection. That’s too many, and some statistics and forecasts now carried as sports news. basketball, could not help feeling sick about the homecoun advantage guys will start going out of business. “The idea for the section may have some commercial enjoyed by Kentucky. In fact, coach Lou Henson’s team deserves a medal for “In the next few months, you11 see some of these merit, but we think it is unfair to malign the sports editors coming so close to winning. During the game, it was announced that Kentucky syndicators fall into real financial problems. What’s and sports news simply because a lot of people gamble on had only been defeated eight times at home since 1973. happened has been great for the TV nut who loves sports events. This is the very same obstacle that our basketball team has encountered two basketball, but it doesn’t make financial sense. I think the “They gamble on everything else, too. Where would of the last three years in quarterfinal games. game will regroup into some very solid, regional conference you put news of political campaigns? On the gambling In 1982, we were defeated by Oakland University (in its home gym), which packages.” pages simply because a lot of people wager on the had won 29 straight games at that site. This year, we had to play at Central Andy Co&s, attorney outcome? Missouri State for the quarterfinal game. Its home record for the last 34games Representing University of Oklahoma “A rebuttal to Taber in this issue asks the same was 33-l In both cases, I thought we would have w9n on a neutral court. Murch 20 arguments before U.S. Supreme Court question about stock market news. That market has My guess is that in 90 percent of these situations, the winner of the game is “The reason basketball (on television) has worked SO sometimes been called the biggest crap game in the world, determined by the site chosen rather than the players themselves. I strongly well is that exact situation, that lots of teams were on. mostly by losers. Some people call it investing. But with urge the NCAA to deemphasize the money-making aspect of the tournament They were on in local and regional areas. options, buying and selling short, etc., it is also a gamble. and eliminate this travesty of the home-court advantage. I‘ Live attendance (in basketball) has doubled and “In the last two decades, gambling has been approved Brian Berger tripled and increased during the time that it was un- by many legislatures and electorates in various states. Head Women’s Basketball Coach They realize that many people like to make an occasional Chapman College wager on something>ven a slot machine, or in an off- track-betting parlor. The fact that some people, like Augusta’s Jay Jahn gets a vote Ophions Out Loud alcoholics, are compulsive about gambling and cannot be To the Editor: I 1 restrained is no reason to blame newspapers for publishing After thoroughly examining the National Association of Basketball Coaches’ regulated, and revenues have doubled and tripled and sports news, or any other kinds of news, that might be all-America teams published in the March 28 issue of The NCAA News, I was been more spread around among more schools. The used as the basit for a betting contest.” shocked to discover that Jay Jahn of Augusta College was not among the I5 competitive balance has never been better.” players selected at the Division II level. I realize that the NCAA has nothing to Al McGuire, sports commentator Hayden Fry, football coach do with the NABC selections, but your publication is probably the only NBC-TV University of Iowa medium through which I can express my opinion. I most certainly do not want to take anything away from the young men who Dallnr Times Herald Dallas Times Herald “Basketball has been good to me. I never thought I “I feel I’ve become a lot better football coach over the received the all-America honors, but 1 must question the selection process. would last two years (on NBC); 1just finished my seventh years. I think I’ve done aprettygood job of adapting to Jahn was the nation’s leading scorer in Division II for most of the 1983-84 year. But this will probably be my last contract. When it’s the times. I try to understand the young men of today so I season. He finished the year with a scoring average of 25.5 points per game. In finished, I don’t know if I would still have the desirability, can communicate with them. Hey, when I first started Augusta’s 2%game schedule, which included eight Division I contests, only the enthusiasm. coaching, I was right out of the Marines. There was a lot Georgia Tech held Jahn below double figures. Some say that it is not difficult “It has been a great time. It stopped me from going of one, two, three, four to coaching. There still is some to score for a9-19 team, but when that team has few offensive weapons and one cold turkey. But 1 just think in the wings is either Digger of that, but today you have to be able to communicate. I player is the target of the opponents’defensive strategy, it is not easy to shoot (Phelps), Bobby Knight or maybe Guy Lewis. Somebody try to relate better to my players.” 49 percent from the floor and average more than 25 points per game. is in the wings. It’s their turn. A lot of people don’t last Jahn was a first-team all-America pick by Basketball Weekly magazine. He Hal Bock, sports writer this long. I am surprised my time has lasted this long.” merits, at least, a third-team selection in the NABC poll. The Associated Press Tim Crosby Don Ferrell, academic ndviser “If you want a nonstop, up-and-down-the-floor Sports Information Director State University game, go to the pros. The beauty of college basketball is Augusta College Orlando Sentim-I that it offers an option to the runand-gun game. “They’re (United States Football League) taking our Slowing down the game, ‘taking the air out of the ball,’ students, giving them tryouts, doing other things with is a legitimate approach for a coach under certain The NCAA@,k::,, them, and the students are not finishing that last semester circumstances. ’ 1 of school. I think it’s bad. Once they leave here, there is “The shot clock in basketball is like the designated Published wcctly. except biweekly m the summer. by the National Collegiate AthlcIic Association. Nail Avenue at 63rd Street, P.O. Box 1906, Mission. Kansas 66201. Phone. nothing that makes them finish that last semester. They hitter in baseball. It robs the game of strategy and 913/384-3220 Subscriplion rate: SIS annually. Secondslass postage paid al Shawnee don’t have us to ride herd on them after they leave the reduces the need for decision-making by the coach or Mm~on, Kansas. Address corrections requested. Postmaster send addrcs, changer to campus. manager. The fan loses the fun of the second guess, NCAA Publishing. P.O. Box 1906. Mission. Kansas 66201 “I can seethe continuance of this being a problem. Our speculating on whether his team used the right strategy. Publisher Ted C. Tow Editor-in-Chlcf Thomas A. Wilson kids go right down to the wire. When they’re seniors, all “With the shot clock, there is no strategy. Without it, Managrng Editor.. Bruce 1.. Howard they need is that last semester to graduate. Our kids go to the game becomes a bit more cerebral, not a bad thing. Awstant Editor ., James A. .Sheldon school. What I would like to see is strict enforcement by Put the old gray matter to work, coach. That’s what Advertising Director .., Wallace I Renfro the USFL of a rule that said the kids had to get their college is all about anyway.” The t‘~xmnenf wctwn of The Nt‘hh New\ I\ ollered .1\ ,rpinnw The VICU\ cxprnred do n

Elsewhere The ‘Top 10’ in college basketball: in Education writer compiles list of problems By Buck Turnbull calling fouls for blocking or charging. 6. If a player is called for charging, Des Moines Register If a defensive player is moving to it does not seem right to count a What can be done to improve block the path of the man with the basket that might be scored on the SAT scores of Blacks increase college basketball? Well, let’s put ball, it’s blocking. Period. Play. The average SAT scores of Blacks have risen 22 points since 1976, together a Top IO of things that are All too often, the dribbler is given It also does not seem right when countering a national trend, the College Board said last month. wrong or need refining: the benefit of the doubt. In an NCAA defensive players purposely take the From 1976 to 1983, the national SAT verbal averagedropped six points and 1. The game needs a shot clock. play-off game, a Virginia player charge while making no effort to go the national math average dropped four points. Blacks averaged seven points That has become increasingly apparent jumped in front of an Arkansas man for the ball. This whole area of higher in verbal and 15 points higher in math during the same period. The this season and was emphasized by who had the ball. blocking-charging is a complex issue, College Board report said SAT score increases of Blacks have occurred in all Indiana’s 1O~rninutestall in the second Toot. Charging. Even worse, it making the game truly impossible to regions of the country. half against Iowa. helped decide the game in Virginia’s officiate. favor. 7. A timeout should not be per- Among Blacks who took the test last year, those in private schools had I think 45 seconds is acceptable. Let’s pausehere to discusssomething mitted immediately after a basket, average scores 43 points higher in verbal and 24 points higher in math than My only question is whether it should else that happened late in that game. unless it is called by the offensive those in public schools. be turned off in the last four minutes, The score was tied with around IO team. And the offensive team becomes The trend to rising scores among Blacks does not raise their average scores as some advocate, since this is the to the SAT average for all who take the test. The most recent black SAT seconds remaining when Arkansas the one that takes possession of the time a clock is needed most to keep intercepted a pass near midcourt. The ball as soon as the basket is scored. verbal average is 339 and math is 369, which are 86 and 99 points, respectively, the game going. below the national average of 425 for verbal and 468 for math, according to the Razorbacks had plenty of time to 8. A team that is awarded free 2. The baskets are too low. At report. move in for the winning shot. throws on a two-shot foul should every level above high schools, they Instead, they crossed the halfcourt have the option of taking the ball out should be raised higher than 10 feet. line and called a timeout with seven of bounds. Teacher salaries rise 8.5 percent 3. The sport is over-coached. If seconds left-supposedly to set up a That’s the international rule, and The American Federation of Teachers reports that the average salary for coaches cannot be forced to remain Hay. this option would help reduce inten- teachers rose 8.5 percent in the 1982-83 school year to $20,547. seated during play, then they should But all the timeout did was give the tional fouls by the trailing team in the The teachers’ union added that despite the increase, the size of teacher be restricted to a box in the immediate defense time to prepare a plan of last two minutes. What needs to be paychecks “in terms of real or constant dollars, ” is 10.6 percent smaller than a areaof their bench. Leave it, and it’s action. Thus, the best Arkansas could done is to prevent teams from violating decade ago. an automatic technical foul. do was toss up a desperation 22- the rules for a possible advantage, footer that did not come close, and hoping for a missed free throw by the The increase was attributed to “the catch-up period we are experiencing in 4. Something should be done to Virginia went on to win in . other team. teacher salaries,” according to Albert Shanker, president of the AFT. limit or abolish TV timeouts. Too It would seem to this observer that 9. There are too many teams in the The AFT report found that in 1982-83, the average teacher salary was 86 often, they interfere with the flow of Arkansas had the defense on the run NCAA play-offs. Going from 53 this percent of the U.S. median family income, down from 93 percent in 1971-72. action. at the time of the turnover, then year to 64 next season is absurd. A The highest average teacher salary was in Alaska, %35,297,and the lowest was A start would be to divide college in Mississippi, $14,320, the AFI said. relinquished this advantage with the 32-team field is plenty. games into quarters, a~ ~a.5 done timeout. 10. Nobody should have a home- years ago, instead of halves. Let TV Don’t teams work on these situa- court advantage in the NCAA tourna- has largest enrollment get in the commercials before the tions every day in practice? If not, ment. Look at the break Kentucky game, between quarters and at the Four institutions are among the top 10 in enrollment they should. Yet invariably you see got in hosting the Mideast regional. half, but otherwise television should them call a timeout instead of moving An easy solution would have been to among universities and land-grant colleges, according to a survey by the receive no special breaks. National Association of States. in for the kill. send Kentucky west and Georgetown More students are enrolled at the , Twin Cities 5. More consistency is needed in Back to what’s wrong. to the Mideast. (64,179), than at any other institution in the national association. State University (53,757) ranks second, with the University of Texas, Austin (47,631). third, followed by the University of Wisconsin, Madison Opinions (43,075); Michigan State University (41,765); Arizona State University (40,223); the University of Maryland, College Park (37,413); Texas A&M Margaret Wade, former women’s basketball coach University(36,846); Pennsylvania State University (35,757), and the University Continuedfrom page 2 of (35,286). Roger Murray Delta State University USA Today Texas A&M ranks first among all public instttutrons in enrollment of Sports editor “The game hasn’t changed drastically in the past National Merrt Scholars with 545, and the University of Texas is second with Pusodena Sfar- News 518. “The ladies (basketball players) are running and decade So much is spent on men’s programs, but there jumping better than ever before. Their coordination ~111come a day when women will get their share. We and vision, their emotional approach and preparation will have to have good games to do it.” CEOs named; Hackerman to retire are far advanced from the days when it was fashionable Emily Sherwood, counseling director Five NCAA member institutions have named new chief executive officers in to be erther a jock or a lady but impossible to be both. Temple University recent weeks. New presidents are the Very Rev. Donald J. Harringon, Niagara “But it is important to remember that while some of ThhrAssociated Press University; James R. Rocheleau, Upper Iowa Ilniversity; James A. Hefner, the slam dunks that rattle the rafters are creative and “There has been a clear shift in academic progress. Jackson State University; Catherine Tisinger, North Adams State College, and entertaining, most of them require merely God-given Some (players) may not have thought about education Richard P. Traina, Clark University (Massachusetts). height and ability to jump and relatrvely little skill. Most Important, remember that no matter how earth- before. So few people are going to make it to the pros, Meanwhile, Norman Hackerman has announced he will retire as president for them to count on it would be a mistake.” of Rice University in June 1985, after I5 years in the post. shaking one might be, none of them counts more than two points. Hackerman, a chemist, said he hopes to keep a laboratory on the campus Eddie Fogler, assistant men’s basketball coach “With the women, we are talking athletes, versatile after his retirement and to continue to work with the Robert A. Welch University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill performers who fill to a T Webster’s definition. And Foundation. He is chairman of the scientific advisory committee of the The Washin~tnn Post most important, the ladies are every bit as committed to foundation, which supports research at Texas universities. “By the fall of their senior year, most of the top kids their sport as are their male counterparts.” have already been through a year of pressure recruiting Football player get student post John Wooden, former men’s basketball coach and they’re ready to get it over with. I think for the very University of California, Los Angeles highly recruited player, the rule (early signing period in Kai Fischer, an offensive lineman at the University of Nevada, Las Vegas, TV Gurde November) is good, because he can get it over with and has been elected vice-president for the Consolidated Students at the University “Television may be the worst thing that’s happened to not face the pressure his whole senior year.” of Nevada. college basketball. We’re seeing more dunks, behind- Fischer is a sophomore majoring in casino management. the-back dribbling and passing, trick stuff. College Bill Curry, football coach “I’m pleased that I was elected, and I’m hoping to display the same type of players become flashier because they know large Georgia Institute of Technology leadership and determination in student government that 1 have in football,” audiences are watching. C’FA Sidelines Fischer said. “You have to have so many timeouts, because if you “Very few undergraduates are prepared emotionally are going to get that money, they’ve got to get those or physically to play on a professional level. Very few commercials in. But I believe those timeouts have been seniors or fifth-year guys are ready to play. Freshman applicants show increase detrimental to the game of intercollegiate basketball. “Thmk about it. From the time you’re 14 or I5 years At a time when the number of high school graduates is declining, a number “What you must do is to keep it relatively simple old, people have been telling you that you are special. of Illinois universities are showing increases in freshman applications. (when a team reaches the NCAA Division I Men’s Then you get in college and it’s all done for you. The The increase is attributed to better marketing programs, according to a Basketball Championship). Go with the players’ plane reservations are made, the baggage is picked up. Chicago Tribune article. strengths. Instead of working harder from a physical You play ball, go to practice, go to study hall, go to class. Then, suddenly, you’re a star in Los Angeles with Freshman applicants have increased at DePaul University, Northwestern point of view at tournament time, I feel you should a lot of bucks in your pocket and a lot of time on your University, the University of Chicago, Northern Illinois University and work easier. It should be as much like a regular-season hands. It’s a tough adjustment.” Western Illinois University. road trip as possible.” Some educational experts say the trend may be caused by improved economic conditions, more intense recruiting by institutions and better Tank McNamara financial aid packages. Also, some high school counselors say that high school students are looking around earlier to find the best financial assistance. At Northwestern, an admissions official said more financial help and an increased public desire for highquality education are factors in Northwestern’s 13 percent increase in applications. DePaul has had a 40 percent increase in applicants, but the successof the basketball team is discounted as an attraction to prospective students, according to Nancy Izard, director of admissions. “The reason is, DePaul has developed a marketing plan that got off the ground in the last year.” Two years ago, DePaul surveyed applicants who entered other universities and discovered that 74 percent wanted more opportumty to talk with faculty members and 77 percent urged more emphasis on career planning. 4 THE NCAA NEWS/April IS,1984 Bruins depose Huskers in men’s gymnastics Nebraska’s dynasty in Division I Ohm State, 279.X; 4. Iowa State, 278.85: 5. men’s gymnastics was ended April Nebraska, 277.65; 6. Oklahoma, 277.3: 7. Southern Illinois, 276.4. 8. Iowa, 275.95; 9. 14 when lJCLA captured the 1984 Ilhno~s. 275 5: IO. Minnesota. 274.U.5. NCAA championship. Bruin gym- nasts won four of the seven individual Individual results titles at UCLA’s Pauley Pavilion. All-around: I. MitchGaylord. IJCLA. 116.95: 2 . IJCLA. 115.5: 3 Mark Caw. The Bruins scored 285.05 points, UCLA, I14.05; 4. Chris Riegel, Nebraska, while the Cornhuskers, winners of 113.95, 5. Roy Palaswu, San Jose State, the five previous championships, I I3 X5: 6. Charles Lakes. Ilhnois. I 12.4.7. Joe finished fifth with 277.65. Penn State Ray. Mrnnesora. I I I 75: 8 Tony Pineda, UCLA, I1 I.6 (279.9), Ohio State (279.8) and Iowa Floor exercise: I. Kevin tkburg, Northern State (278.85) finished ahead of the Ilhrvx*. 9.85. 2. Dave Branch. Arirona State. defending champions. 9.65; 3. Chris Rlegel. Nebraska. 9 6; 4. (tie) UCLA’s Tim Daggett dominated Mark Oates. Oklahoma, and Brett Finch, Iowa Stale. 9.2.6. Jim Mikw Nehrarka, 9.1, 7. (tic) the comoetition with titles in pommel John Sweeney. Houston Baprlst. and Terry Bartlett. Penn State. 9 0. Pommel horse: I. Tim Daggett, UCLA, 9.9; 2 Doug Kiew, Southern Illir&. 9.8, 3. Herb Championships Voss, Southern llhno~s. 9.75; 4 Tony Pmeda. IUCLA, 9.7; 5. Joe Ledvora. Illinois. 9.6; 6. Roy Palawou. San Jose State. 9.45: 7. Frank Hibbrtts. Nebra$ka.9.35: 8. Joe Leo. lowa.9.2. =&@4ws Still : I. Tim Daggett, UCLA, 9.8; 2. I (tie) Mitch Gaylord, UCLA, and Jeff Coelho, lorse, still rings and . Springfield, 9.7,4. Mark Case, UCLA, 9.6; 5. Kenn Vwcardi, Penn State, 9 5: 6. John Levy, Teammate Mitch Gaylord won the Stanford. 9.45: 7. (rle) Paul Flshbcin, Illinois- all-around competition with a score Chicago. and Mark D!ab. Iowa State. 9.4. of 116.95. That victory was UCLA’s Vaulting: I Chris Rlegel. Nebraska. IO.: 2. third straight all-around title; Peter (tie) Randy Wickstrom, California, and Mark Casu, UCLA, 9.8; 4. John Sweeney, Houston Vidmar won thecompetition in 1982 Baptist. 9.75; 5. (tie) Bobby Fleming. Temple, and 1983. and Mitch Gaylord, UCLA, 9.7; 7. Scott After winning four individual titles Wllbanks, Oklahoma.9.7.8. (tit) MarkOates, Nebraska gymnasts Oklahoma: Dew Garrett, Eacr Stroudsburg, a year ago, and Brendan Price, Southern Illmoq 9.6. managed only one victory in 1984-m Parallel bars: I Tim Daggett. UCLA. 9.7: 2. Chris Riegel’s IO in vaulting. John Sweeney, Houston Bapust. 9.45; 3. Chris UCLA’s victory is the first for a Riegel. Nebraska. 9.4: 4. Seth RIskIn. Ohm western institution since 1975, when State, 9.35; 5 (Ire) Jim Mikus, Nebraska. and Tony Pineda, UCLA, 9.25; 7. Rob Mahurin. California edged Louislana State. Oklahoma, 8.5. Counting Oklahoma’s share of the Horizontal bar: I Charles Lakes. Illinois. team title in 1977 and its champion- 9.95; 2 Tnn Daggetr. UCLA. 99: 3 Rob ship in 1978, Big Eight schools had Playter, Ohio State, 9.8; 4. Roy Palassou. San Jose State, 9.7; S. Chris Riegcl, Nebraska, 9.6; held the title for the past seven years. 6. Jim Mikus, Nebraska, 9.5: 7. John Levy, Team rem&s Southern Ilhno~r. 9 I: 8. Mark Case, UCLA. I. UCLA, 285.0s; 2. Penn State. 279.9: 3. X.85. UCLA’s Tim Daggett, winner of three events As spring sports begin, UCLA seeks 11th title The NCAA spring championships Division 1 men’s tennis, Division I fessional. pionship trophies. championship three consecutive might begin the same way the winter women’s softball, and Division I Stanford (I I-2) has won seven of Omaha, Nebraska; Augustana, years. Johns Hopkins will get stiff schedule ended-with UCLA winning women’s . the past I I Division I men’s titles, South Dakota, and DePere, Wiscon- competition from Syracuse, which a championship. The Bruins closed Following men’s volleyball this and the Cardinal is ranked No. 3 this sin, are the sites of the three women’s defeated the Blue Jays in a 17-16 the winter schedule by winning the spring are men’s and women’s tennis season behind UCLA (23-O) and softball championships. Texas A&M thriller last year. Southern California (25-2). Stanford is the defending Division I champion, Division I Men’s Gymnastics Cham- championships in each of the three Division III men’s lacrosse natural- also is highly favored in Division I but the Aggies will face tough oppo- pionships and are favored to win the divisions. For dates and sites of all ly means Hobart. The Statesmen women’s tennis, along with Trinity sition from UCLA, the 1982 cham- first spring championship-men’s spring championships, see the list of have won all four championships pion, and Cal State Fullerton. Sam volleyball. 1983-84 NCAA championships else- (Texas) and defending champion and appear headed for No. 5 this Southern Cal. Houston State and Cal State North- The Bruins have won three consecu- where on this page. There are 26 spring. In women’s lacrosse, Delaware Next are four golfchampionships- ridge traded l-2 finishes in Division tive Men’s Volleyball Championships championships this spring in six is the defending champion. and IO of the I4 events overall. men’s sports and five wornen’s. three for men and one for women. II the first two years. Trenton State UCLA is 28-O and ranked No. I in The most dominant Division 11 Houston, Oklahoma and Oklahoma is the defending Division III cham- All track championships are the poll conducted by Volleyball team in tennis is Southern Illinois- State appear to be the men’s favorites pion. common-site events, beginning May News. As if the Bruins needed extra Edwardsville, which has won six in Division I, and Tulsa and Texas Johns Hopkins will try to end 21-26 at Cape Girardeau, Missouri help, the May 4-5 championships consecutive men’s titles. The Cougars, Christian should continue to domi- three years of frustration in Division (Division II), and Northfield, Minne- will be held at UCLA. however, must play without three- nate the women’s scene. Florida I men’s lacrosse at the May 26 sota (Division III). The Division I UCLA may not stop there either, time singles champion Ken Flach Southern and Southwest Texas State championship in Newark, Delaware. championships will be held May 28- as the Bruins are highly favored in and former doubles partner Robert in Division II and Allegheny in The Blue Jays have finished second June 2 at Eugene, Oregon. three other spring championships Seguso, both of whom turned pro- Division III could take home cham- the past three years after winning the See As spring, page 5 1983-84 NCA A championships dates and sites

Basketball, Women’s: Division I chompron-Unwerrny of Southern Call- fornia. 1.0s Angeles, California: Drvision Ilchampion-Central Missouri State Fall Umvers~ty. Warrensburg. Missouri: IJrvrsron III chompron Rust College. Spring Holly Sprmgs, Mwss~ppr. Bwehall: DiviIrorr I, 3XIh. Rosenblatt Municipal Stadurm. Omaha. Nehra\ka Fencing, Menk: Chumpion-, D&o& Mwhrgan ICrelghton Ilnivcrsity hwt). June I-10. 1984: Uwrsiorr II. 17th. Universrty of Cal~forna Rlvcwde. Rlver\~dc, California. May 26-30. 1984. Divrsion Ill, 9th. Fencing, Women’s: Champion , NEW Haven, Connectrcut Marictra college. Marietta. Ohm. May 3l-lunc 1. 19X4 Gymnastics. Men’s: lJ~vr.won I chompron Ilniverslty of Cahfornla. Los , Men’>: Divrrrrm I. X7th. Hear Creek Gcrll World. Houston. ‘I cxa) Angeles, Los Angeles. Cahfornm; D~v~rlun II chompron--East Stroudsburg (IJnwers,ty of Hourton host), May 23-26, 19X4. IJr\r\ron II. 22nd. Gannun IJniverrity of Pennsylvania, tart Stroudsburg, Pcnnsylvan~a IUnivelslIy. Erte. Pennsylvania. May IS-IX. 19X4: Divrskm Ill. 10th. State Gymnastics, Women’s: Division I chompion-Unrversity of Utah, Salt Lake Unwcr\,ly ,,I New York. Orwcgr,, New York. May IS-IX, 19x4. City. lltah: Divbionllchampron lackwnvillc State IJn~veruity.Jackso”villc. l;olf. Women‘s: .I,,/ chompr<,ndrrp. Innishrook Kcwrt and tiolf C‘luh. Alabama Tarpon Sprmg,. tlorlda (Umvorrrty ,,I Georgr., hobt). Mdy 23-26. 19x4 , Men’s: IJrvrston I chompron Bowhng Green State IJmverr~ty. Lncrosse, Men’s: lhwon I. l4rh. Ilrweralty of l~elaware. Newark. I)cl;~warc. Bowling Green. Ohm; Division II champion- Bemidji State Umversity, May 26. IYX4. f~nwwr~ Ill. Sth. campw \itc lo hc dclcrmincd. May IV. 19X4 Remid,ji. Minnesota, LJwisron Ill champrnn Babwn Cnllcgc. Babson Park. Ltwoaw. Wcrmen’,: 3rd , hompw,,h,,~. Hortoo Unrvers,ty. Barton. Mass;l- Massachusetts. chuwts. Mdy 19-20. 19X4 ?rofthall, Wwnen’.: I)rvr\r,,rr I. 3rd. Seymour Smllh Solthall (‘omplcx. Men’s and West Virginia IJnwerGty. Morgan- Rifle, Women’s: Champion Omahx Nebraska (Crelyhton lln~verb~ty Ilust). May 23-27. IQX4: /1rrwo,r II. town, West Vlrgma. 3rd. Aupurtirna I~‘ollcgc. Aqwlana. Sooth I)akoIa. May I X-20. 19X4. 0,ir’ivrr111 Skiing, Men’s and Women’s: Chompron IJmvcr\ity of IJtah. Salt Lake C’lty. III. ltd. St Norhcrl C‘ollege. DePcre. W,rc,rn\m. May 19-22. IYX4 IJtah ‘Trnnic, Mcnk: /JIVI.~VI I. ll)OIh. lln~vcts~ty ol Gcorgla. Athens. Gcory~e. May I?-20, IYX4, I)n,,trr,,l II. 22nd. Southwc\t Tcxa\ State IJnivcr\lty. San and , Men’s: IJrv,rro~ I chompron~- -Unrvers~ty of Florida. Marco\. Texar. Mdy 7-l 3. IYX4: IJ~wrwz Ill. 9th. Enwry Un~verb~ty. . Galncwillc. l-lorida. Urvr.\ron II chum~~ron~Calllornia State Urnvcrsity. (icorg,;,. May 7-12. lYX4. NorthrIdge. Caldornla. Division III champwrl Kcnyun I‘ollege. Gambler. Ohio. Swimming and Diving, Women’s: Urvrsron I chompron-- IJmvers!ty of Texas, Austm, Texas; nrvirion II champion Clarion Il”ivcr\ity “1 Pcnn\yl- vania, Clarion. Pc”“,ylvanm. lJ!vr.vron Ill chumpum Kenyon College. Gambrer. Ohw. Indoor Track, Men’s: Chompron Unwcrr~ty of Arkansab. taycttcvillc. Winter Arkansas. THE NCAA NEWS/April 18.1984 5 Committee approves bowls, TV in the News submits I-A play-off plans Stereo audio used for baseball In addition to the 16 bowl games bonnet Bowl, December 31: Peach officiating crew is unable to complete ESPN has announced plans to continue its use of stereo audio, including that received certification last season, Bowl, December 31; Fiesta Bowl, the game. its live coverage this spring. The national cable sports network transmits the stereo signal by satellite to the NCAA Postseason Football January I: Rose Bowl, January I; ORecommending a minimum of Orange Bowl, January I; Cotton its affiliates. Cable systems with the necessary equipment then can feed the Committee has certified two addi- two days and a maximum of four Bowl, January 1, and Sugar Bowl, sound to subscribers through the FM band in the cable. A standard FM tional postseason games for the days in the amount of per diem paid 1984-85 season. These actions must January I. receiver allows the stereo to be received in the home. to officials in order to establish Last June, ESPN became the first network to present a sporting event in be approved by the NCAA Council According to the committee, these consistency among respective bowl stereo. According to Scatty Connal, executive vice-president and chief in its April 16-18 meeting. 16 bowl games generated gross managements. operating officer, “Stereo gives the sports fans the feeling of being at the receipts of approximately $43 million, The committee, which met April event.” of which an excess of $33 million *Requesting that the Council lo-11 in Kansas City, Missouri, resubmit Proposal No. 157 from the recommended certification for the was distributed to the participating institutions. This is an increase of 1984 Convention authorizing a fine ESPN begins baseball coverage Cherry Bowl, scheduled for December against bowl games that do not 22 in Detroit, Michigan, and the more than S6 million from the pre- National cable coverage of regular-season college baseball made its debut vious year. comply with Bylaws 2-2-(a) through Freedom Bowl, which would be (i) and 2-2-(l) through (0). April I5 on FSPN with Baylor taking on defending national champion played December 26 in Anaheim, The committee also forwarded to Texas in Austin, Texas. California. the Council its summary of a possible *Recommending the word “in- ESPN’s announcers for the seven-week series will include play-by-play formal” be removed from Bylaws 2- The Cherry Bowl would be held in Division I-A football play-off. Milo men Sam Rosen and Tom Hedrick and color analyst Jim Price. Former R. Lude, chair of the committee, 2-(j) and (k) to legalize the current major league pitcher Jim Kaat will serve as analyst for the April 22 Louisiana the Pontiac Silverdome, which has a practices of bowl-game managements seating capacity of more than 80,000. appointed a four-member subcom- State-Miami (Florida) game. mittee last January to study play-off and institutions to make preliminary Rosen has called a number of events for ESPN and also has done play-by- Pledges have ensured the sale of arrangements before the Saturday 40,000 seats, and a payoff of $750,000 possibilities. The subcommittee stud- play for the New York Knicks, Rangers, Giants and Jets. Hedrick, formerly following the third Tuesday in the radio voice of the Cincinnati Reds, is the director of the University of is projected. Proceeds from the game ied approximately 40 proposed play-off formats. November. Removal of “informal” Kansas Sports Network. Price, a former catcher for the Detroit Tigers, has would be used for a scholarship fund from the legislation would permit for careers in food science, dietetics “They (the Council) will look at covered the for ESPN the past three years. institutions to make verbal agree- Five of the network’s cablecasts will be live. and restaurant management at Big our minutes, which reflect our dis- ments before the selection date and Ten Conference institutions. cussion,” Lude said. “The report subsequently sign contracts the sent to them will be a summary Turner plans bid for ESPN The Freedom Bowl would be played Saturday following the third Tuesday paper with data and documentation. at 70,000-seat Anaheim Stadium. in November. Turner Broadcasting System, Inc., reportedly is ready to bid for a They can accept it and let it die or do Organizers for the game reported controlling interest in ESPN, the nation’s largest cable television network something further with it. @Modifying the radio policy for they have received more than $1 (30.2 million homes). bowl broadcasts to eliminate net- million in pledges. The Boy Scouts ‘The Council can look at all factors Texaco, Inc., acquired approximately 70 percent of the national sports works being permitted to carry the of America is the charitable recipient. and put it in front of the Convention.” cable network when it bought out Getty Oil Co. this winter. ABC owns about game. Single stations would continue Lude added that the committee 15 percent of ESPN, while the rest of the stock is controlled by the network’s The following bowl games also to be permitted to carry the game. founding family, headed by Bill and Scott Rasmussen. considered “exam schedules, classes were submitted to the Council for This recommendation was in response Turner spokesman Arthur Sando confirmed that TBS would submit a bid missed and what various bowl 1984-V certification: to concerns expressed by bowl to Texaco. committees think” in regard to a managements in their ability to secure independence Bowl, December IS; Division I-A play-off. “WC hope we’ll be successful,” Sando said. “If we didn’t think this move California Bowl, December 15; more profitable contracts. would strengthen us for the future, we would not be pursuing it.” Holiday Bowl, December 21; Florida Other recommendations submitted l Requiring telecasts of bowl games TBS currently operates the Cable News Network and the Atlanta-based Citrus Bowl, December 22; Sun Bowl, to the Council by the Postseason to be in the same format as regular- superstation, WTBS. December 22; Liberty Bowl, Decem- Football Committee included: season games in standards of presen- ber 27; Gator Bowl, December 28; *Requiring bowl-game manage- tation, commercial format, beverage TBS to carry bowl game again Aloha Bowl, December 29; Hall of ment to have an extra official at the restrictions, promotional announce- Fame Bowl, Dccembcr 29; Blue- game in the event a member of the ments and make-up commercials The Turner Broadcasting System, Inc., has extended its contract for coverage of the Hall of Fame Bowl through 1986. TBS carried the bowl last December under terms of a two-year contract. Terms of the contract extension were not reveaied. NCAA staff profile completed The bowl, which will be played this year on December 29 in Birmingham, Alabama, will bc carrted on WTBS, Turner’s superstation. The game also NCAA staff members have attend- with bachelor’s degrees. Of the 22 administrative staff members have will he syndicated to over-the-air stations. ed 5 1 four-year colleges and univer- with baccalaureate degrees, eight have had more than 40 types of prevtous sities in 2 I states for undergraduate done graduate work beyond that employment. Most common were work and 42 institutions in 18 states degree. coaching (IO have coached in college, Magazine honors Greg Gumbel for graduate study, according to a @Eleven of the 12 without college and four others at the high school Three years ago, On Cable magazine polled its readers to select an recently completed staff profile. degrees have had some college study. level), newspaper reporting or editing outstanding sports personahty. Beginning with that first survey, the wmner has been the same each year-mmESPN’s Greg Gumbel. The 61 NCAA national office (IO), and sports information (eight *Staff members did their under- have been sports information direc- Ballots covering both programs and commentators in seven cable administrative staff members were graduate work in 21 fields of study, tors and six others have been assistant programming categories were carried in the January issue of the magazine. surveyed after a president of a member with soctal sciences (16), journalism SIDs. Gumbel was one of IO sportscasters on the ballot. institution asked how many of the ( 14) and physical education (12) the staff had teaching experience. The most common majors. Their graduate national office also has recetved m- study was in 16 fields, with education quirtes from time to time regarding (IO), law (eight) and sports adminis- As spring other aspects of staff members’back- tration (seven) the most common. ground and traming. Trenton State, Cal State Northrtdge, won the Division 1 Women’s Gymnas- Eight of the nine staff doctorates are Four teams are on streaks in the Central Missouri State, IJtah and tics Championships and the Men’s Institutions attended by the staff juris doctor degrees; the other is in SIX track events. Abilene Chrtstian Kenyon. and Women’s Skiing Championships. span the nation, from Connecticut educational psychology. (Division II men), UCLA (Divrston Trenton State, which could win its Kenyon and Central Missouri State and New York to California and l Twenty-four of the 61 have I women) and Cal Poly-San Iuis third 1983-84 title in Division 111 became the third and fourth schools, Washington, and from Florida and teaching experience, and 31 have Ohispo (Division II women) each women’s softball, won one fall respectively, to win NCAA men’s Texas to Montana and Michigan. been employed by a college or uni- has won two consecutive champion championship--Division III field and women’s championships in the Highlights of the profile include versity in a nonteaching capacity. Of shtps, and Glassboro State has won hockey-and one winter champion- same sport in the same year. Kenyon the followings the 24 with teaching experience, 16 four straight Division 111men ’s titles. ship Division 111 wrestling. Cal turned the feat in Division III l Forty-nine of the 61 have college have taught undergraduate or grad- The NCAA spring schedule will State Northridge claimed Division swimming and diving; Central degrees, including nine with doctor- uate college courses. be concluded with three baseball II titles in women’s volleyball and Missouri dominated Division II ates, 18 with master’s degrees and 22 @Other than teachmg, NCAA championships. The College World men’s swimming and diving. Utah basketball. Series, scheduled June I-IO in Omaha, Nebraska, has become one of the top Selection criteria, date set NCAA events, and it should be no different this year. A different team Certifications has emerged as champion each of for Division III football the past six years, with Texas claiming The following 19X4 gymnastics meets have been certified in accordance with NCAA Bylaw 24: The NCAA Division III Football region winner. the title last year. In the latest poll China vs. USA, April 3-5, Honolulu, Hawaii. Committee has determined the criteria The committee will rank the top conducted by Collegiate Baseball, Championships of the USA, May 10-12, Chicago, Illinois. it will use for first-round pairings 20 teams in a weekly poll starting Arizona State was ranked No. 1, and and the date teams will be selected October 2. The final poll and team Texas was second. for the 1984 Division III Football selections for the championship will Cal Poly-Pomona is the defending Championship, which will be con- be conducted no later than November champion in Division II, but the championships Corner / ducted under a 16-team format for I I. The play-off field will be an- Broncos are ranked 19th in the latest the Iirst time. nounced November 12 at a press poll. Florida Southern, a five-time Four teams from each of four conference in Kings Island, Ohio. winner of the event, is ranked first in The NCAA Men’s and Women’s Track and Field Committees have regions will be selected for first- The committee, meeting April 12- the latest poll, followed by Eckerd. announced two time changes in the schedule of events for the 1984 Division I round games. The criteria (not in I4 in Kings Island, Ohio, also modii Marietta will be the Divtsion III Men’s and Women’s Outdoor Track Championships May 28 to June 2 in preferential order) for first-round fied the availability questionnaire host for the ninth consecutive year, Eugene, Oregon. pairings within each region are used to determine site selection to and the Pioneers hope to continue The men’s longjump qualifying rounds on Wednesday, May 30, have been geographic location, seeding of teams better reflect attendance figures and their winning ways. Marietta, cur- moved from 3 p.m. to 2 p.m. to allow for a four-hour period for the long and consideration for financial conflicts with other activities. rently ranked No. I, has won two of jump before the beginning of the women’s triple jump. success. Semifinal pairings will match In other action, the committee set the past three championships. Saturday’s session, June 2, will begin at noon instead of 3 p.m. to make it the winner of the East region vs. the the maximum number of field passes Through the first 48 championships easier for coaches and athletes to depart on Saturday. North region winner and the winner for participating teams at 65 (includ- of the 1983-84 season, five institutions All of the other scheduled times published in the track and field of the South region vs. the West ing players). have won two championships each- championships handbook remain the same. 6 THE NCAA NEWS/April l&l984 I 1 Legislative Assistance Former Olympic swimmer

Summer camps As plans are being completed for summer sports camps, it is important to tops hall of fame voting note that NCAA summer camp regulations (Case No. 412, pages 364-366, Former Southern California swim- and 1953 NCAA shot put titles. NCAA Division I Men’s Outdoor 1984-85 NCAA Manual) apply to any summer camp that: (a) is operated by a mer John Naber received the most Othrr inductees were the late Duke Track Championships. Southern member institution, either on or off the institution’s campus; (b) involves one votes among 25 former Olympians Kahanamoku, who won three gold Cal’s Wykoff won the NCAA IOO- or more of a member institution’s athletics department personnel in the who have been named to the U.S. medals in swimming; Frank Shorter, yard dash in 1930 and 1931. operation of the camp, or(c) utilizes the facilities of a member institution. Olympic Hall of Fame. winner of the 1972 Olympic mara- Also selected were members of the A prospective student-athlete (as defined under Case Nos. 213 and 412, Naber won 10 NCAA individual thon; the late Frank Wykoff, a 1960 basketball team: Oscar Robert- 1984-85 NCAA Manual) may not be employed by or enroll and participate swimmingchampionshipsfrom 1974 member of the gold medal 400-meter son, , , in a summer camp that meets the description of (a), (b) or(c) above, to 1977 and four gold medals at the relay teams in 1928, 1932 and 1936; , , , with the following exception. Under an NCAA Council interpretation 1976 Summer Olympics. He still Bill Toomey, 1968 decathlon cham- , , published in the February 1, 1984, issue of The NCAA News, it is permissible holds the record for most NCAA pion; Billy Mills, 1964 gold medalist , , Lester for prospective student-athletes to enroll and participate in summer camps individual swimming titles. in the lO,OOO-meter run, and the Lane and Adrian Smith. or conferences conducted by the Fellowship of Christian Athletes, even Also named were F. Don Miller, 1960 U.S. basketball team, which These 25 individuals were selected though such camps or conferences would otherwise be subject to NCAA current executive director of the was coached by . to the hall of fame by members of the summer-camp legislation. U.S. Olympic Committee, and Parry Shorter, who competed at Yale, National Sportscasters and Sports- The restrictions under Case No. 412 on employment of a member O’Brien, the gold medalist in the won the six-mile run at the 1969 writers Association. institution’s student-athletes at summer camps specializing in football or shot put in the 1952 and 1956 men’s basketball originate in the out-of-season practice limitations for those Olympics. O’Brien, who competed sports as set forth under NCAA Bylaw 3-4. The regulations restrict the at Southern California, won the 1952 Drug Education Committee opportunity to conduct practice activities for student-athletes as a part of a summer camp. Until August 1, 1985, the practice limitations in Bylaw 34 will not be applicable to women’s programs at member institutions. approvesA .A revised booklet Accordingly, the restrictions set forth in Case No. 4 12 relating to employment Approval of the final draft of a use by member institutions and met of an institution’s basketball student-athletes at its summer camp that new edition of “Drugs, The Coach with the NCAA Special Committee specializes in basketball initially will be applicable women’s summer and the Athlete” highlighted the on Drug Testing, which is producing basketball camps held on or after August 1, 1985. April 1 l-12 meeting of the NCAA a preliminary report on creation of Use of student-athletes in Olympic promotions Drug Education Committee. an NCAA drug-testing program. The committee also received a Recently, the legislative services staff has received numerous inquiries The publication includes current information on types of drugs and progress report on a survey on drug regarding the participation of student-athletes at NCAA member institutions use by student-athletes that is under in various promotional efforts involving the commercial sponsors of a their possible effects and identifies signs that a college coach can look way at Michigan State University. number of Olympic sports. Institutions are reminded that the provisions of The survey instrument has been Constitution 3-I-(e) and the official interpretations of that legislation would for in detecting drug use by student- athletes. developed, and the sample of partici- he applicable to such activities and could affect a student-athlete’s eligibility. pating institutions has been finalized. In this regard, it is important to note that the provisions of Constitution First published in 1972, the drug- Institutions will he notified this spring 3-I-(e) are applicable if a student-athlete appearing in a picture used in a education booklet was revised in if they have been selected, with data commercial promotion is recognizable by anyone, regardless of whether the 1977. The third edition will be mailed collection to begin in the fall. A final student-athlete is identified by name, is in uniform or makes a verbal this summer to chief executive report is expected by the end of the endorsement of the product. officers, faculty athletics represen- year. This material was provided by the NCAA Iegrslative services staff as an aid to tatives, directors of athletics, primary The committee also reviewed the memher institutions. Ifan institution bus a question that it wouldlike to have women athletics administrators, team results of a survey of drug education answered in this column, the question should be directed to Stephen R. physicians and athletics trainers at and testing programs at NCAA Morgan. director of Iegislutive services, at the NCAA national office. John Naber member institutions. Additional member institutions. The results, copies will be available from the . which will be reported in detail in a national oftice. later issue of the News, indicate that Sponsorship in NYSP increases In other business, the committee few NCAA members have such pro- reviewed the progress of production grams and few have plans to start State College (Georgia): Alcorn State [Jniver- University of Rhode Island; Kust College; Sponsorship in the National Youth of a videotape and film intended for them. Sports Program has increased to 134 rtty: Amencan Internahonal College. Ilnivcr- St Puul‘r Collcgc. Sl. Petcr‘v c‘ollcgc, Cali- sity of Arrzona; Umversrty of Arkansas. fornia State Unrvers~ry, Sacramento; San Fran- institutions, and total enrollment Fayetteville; University of Arkansas, Pine Blur!; cisco State University; Savannah State College; may exceed the 1983 total of 55,000 Bcthune-Cookman College. University of Scranton, Ilnivcrsity of South Leavens earns twomotion youths. Carolina: University of South Dakota. A Rixhop College, Booton College: John H. Leavens, a member of the responsible for implementing the The NYSP, funded by the Federal University: California State Polytechmc Ur+ Universny of South Florida, University of NCAA staff since September 1982, player agent registration program. government through the Health and verrlty. Pomona; Camrws College; Case Southern California; Southern Oregon State has been promoted to assistant After earning his bachelor’s degree Human Services Department’s Office Western Reserve Umversity; Chcyncy University College: Southern Umvers~ty, Baton Rouge; director of legislative services on the at Duke University, Leavens earned of Community Services and spon- of Pennsylvania, University ofchicago; Chicago Southern Umvewty. New Orleans; South- State University: Umverrlty of Dayton. western Collcge(Tennessec), Stdlman College: sored by the NCAA, is designed to legislative services staff. his master’s degree in sports adminis- Temple University. Umverrlry of Tennessee, Leavens, a former assistant to the tration from Ohio State University. offer underprivileged youths, pri- Delaware State College, Univcraity of D&roil. Chattanooga; Tennessee State University. commissioner of the Mid-American As an undergraduate at Duke, marily in major metropolitan areas, Umverrny of District of Columbm. Ehzabeth City State University. Fayettcvillc State Uni- Texas Southern University. University of Athletic Conference, previously Leavens participated in four years of an opportunity for physical and emo- verrlty. Fisk University, FlorldaA&M Uoiver- Texas. El Paso: Univewry ofToledo:Tougaloo served as a legislative assistant. In varsity intercollegiate soccer and tional growth through summer par- rlty, Fordham Unwerrlty. Fort Lewis College. College; Trrmty College (Connecticut); Trmity ticipation in sports and a variety of kotl Valley state Colleges. lJniversity(Texas); Tuskegee Institute; Virginia his new position, Leavens will be served as team captain as a senior. State University; Wayne State University other activities. Grambling State University; Hampton Insti- (Michigan): Winston-Salem State University “We completed our four regional tute; Herbert H. Lehman College; Hunter The following non-NCAA member institw Major college basketball meetings on an accelerated schedule,” Collcgc, University of Illinois, Chicago. Jackson tionr also will participate m the 1984 NYSP: State University; Johns Hopkxns Unrversiry; said Ruth M. Berkey, NCAA assistant Johnson C. Smnh University; Kentucky State Adams State College, Community College executive director and NYSP ad- Ilnivcrsity: University of Kentucky. of Allegheny County. Bronx Commumty Col- sought by Capital Centre ministrator. “The meetings in Los lege, Compton Community College, Concordm KnoxwIle College; Lane College; LeMoync- Angeles, Kansas City, Atlanta and College(Oregon), Dclgado Community College, In a move designed to attract The Capital Centre also is the Owen College; California State University, Denver Awarm Commumty College. Dillard major collegiate basketball games to annual host for the McDonald’s Philadelphia were timed to provide Long Beach: ; California University, Florida Memorml College, Floyd its 19,000-seat arena near the nation’s Capital Classic, which matches the for earlier authorization of funding State Unwerrrty. Los Angeles: University of Junior College. for each specific project. This allowed Louisville; University of Maryland, Eastern capitol, members of the Capital nation’s top senior high school players Shore: Maryvillc College (Missouri); Mcdgar Harris-Stow State College; Haskell Indian for more lead time in the planning Centre in Landover, Maryland, met against stars from the Washington, Evers College. Jumor College; Kennedy-King College, Lawson with coaches and officials from several D.C., and Baltimore metropolitan and implementation of the projects State Community College: Lews-Clark State by each sponsoring institution, and Memphis State Umversity: Metropolitan College; Marmn College; MianwDade Con-~ leading Division I schools during the areas. Slate College; Mdes College; Missisrrppl Valley we believe the additional time for munily College, North; Miami-Dade Corn- NCAA Final Four in Seattle. State University; University of Montana; mumry College. South: University of Missouri, behind-the-scenes work will enhance Morehead State Univenity: Murray State Uni- Kansas City; Monroe Commumty College. Barry Silberman, vice-president College senior the overall program a great deal.” versity; Umvernily of Nevada. Las Vegas: Uni- versily of New Mexico. State University of New York, MornswIle: of arena administration, and Wes Starting as early as May 28, the Northeastern Oklahoma State University; Paul Unseld, vice-president of the Washing- wins 134 sponsoring institutions will offer New Mexico Highlands University, City Qumn College: Rhode Island Community Col- ton Bullets and college basketball Geoff Smith, a Providence College the equivalent of summer day camps College of New York. Norfolk State University. lege; St. Ambrose College; St. Lows Community coordinator, met with several coaches senior bidding for a spot on his at no charge for NYSP participants, North Carolina Central Univenny, North College at Forest Park, St. Petersburg Junior Dakota State University. North Texas State College; S.D. Bishop State Junior College: who expressed an interest in schedul- native England’s Olympic team, won with activities ranging from instruc- University. Ohro State Univerrlty. Oklahoma Scatllc University; Talladega College; Texas ing games at the Capital Centre. the April 16 with tion in lifetime sports such as swim- State Unrversity, Pan American Unwersity, College: Wiley Collcgc; Univcraily of Wisconsin, a time of two hours, 10 minutes and ming and tennis to discussions on Ilnivcrsicy of Pennsylvania. Eau Chre. In the past, the Capital Centre has 34 seconds. career opportunities, nutrition and played host to major collegecontests, Smith, 30, a former firefighter, education. NYSP guidelines require including the prestigious Atlantic took charge at the start and finished, all projects to be completed by August Ice hockey players honored Coast Conference tournament in 1976 unofficially, 80th on the all-time list 31. and 198 1. The Capital Centre also is Joel Otto of Bemidji State and hockey. of marathon finishers in a wind- “We also are pleased to have one of the home arenas for the Peter Barbagallo of Southeastern Otto had 25 goals and 41 assists swept race in the rain. support, under a three-year contract, NCAAchampionGeorgetown Hoyas. Massachusetts have joined Minne- for Bemidji State to lead the Northern He ranked second in the world at from the Spalding Manufacturing sota-Duluth’s Tom Kurvers as Collegiate Hockey Association in “We strongly believe that the 10,000 meters in 198 I. He had trained Company,” Berkey said. “Spalding award-winning men’s ice hockey scoring. He helped the Beavers to a Capital Centre is a prime location for the marathon by averaging betwen will be providing resources to the players. 3 1-Oseason, including a victory over for these types of match-ups,” said 120 and 130 miles per week for the program in the form of financial Merrimack in the NCAA Division II Silberman. “The arena provides ex- past few months. support and athletic equipment, and Otto was named the Division II player of the year by the Hobey Men’s Ice Hockey Championship. cellent exposure for college teams as Smith was the only runner to we are grateful for Spalding’s cooper- Baker Award Committee, and Barba- Barbagallo led Southeastern it is situated in a rich basketball break 2: 10. ation and participation.” gallo earned a similar honor in Massachusetts to a 17-5-l record as region. We are also in a top media Lorraine Moller of New Zealand NCAA member institutions par- Division III. Kurvers earlier had the Corsairs won their second straight market, which attracts the major won the women’s competition in ticipating in NYSP include: been named the 1984 Hobey Baker Eastern College Athletic Conference networks and cable operators as well 2:29.28, followed by Midde Hamrin, Universityof Akron: Alabama ABM Uni- Award winner, symbolic of the out- title. He scored 19 goals and had 25 as in-depth coverage from the local a student at Lamar University from versity; Alabama Scare Unrversity: Albany standing player in college men’s ice assists. stations.” Sweden, in 2:33.5 I THE NCAA NEWS/April 18,1984 7 20 basketball players receive scholarships Postgraduate scholarships of States Basketball Writers Associatron. Durranr mouth. spent the spring semcslcr of lus Jumor starled cvcry game for four years and was a officer, a volunteer in a community hospital $2,000 each have been awarded to 10 has been aclive in his church since high school, year studymg to France. HIS poslgraduale two-time all-America choice. She was the most emergency room and a member of the Eco- and tus college basketball career was inlerrupted plans include law school outstandmg player m the 19x4 NCAA Division nomics and Busmess Advisory Board at Jnale and 10 female basketball players by a two-year mission to Spam. He plans lo Clifford M&tire Maorer (U S Naval II championship Eades has been an officer in Colorado College. She intends 10 enter medical at NCAA member institutions. continue his education by preparing to he a Academy. 3.260 in oceanography)&Maurer, the Fellowship of Christian Athletes and the school in the fall. The Association annually awards teacher. one of the nation’s top shot blockers, became a Harvest Fellowship Campus Group at Central At large 90 such scholarships. In addition to Daniel John Tarkanian (University of star at Navy through perseverance after two Missouri. She will work toward a graduate Mitzi Lorraine Hallinan (Universrty of Nevada. Lac Vegas, 3.770 in business manage- years of little success As a semor. he led Navy degree m physical education next fall. the 20 basketball awards, 25 scholar- Toledo, 3.743 in physical cducatior+A starter ment)GTarkaman WBSUNLVk leader for three to its most viclorles ever and made the ECAC Elizabeth Catherine Ekmekjian (Upsala for every game of her college career, Hallinan ships are presented to student-athletes years from pomt guard. becomrng one of the all-tournament team. His campus acwiues College, 3.460 m accountmg and husmcss led Toledo to three wmnmg 8easo”s. She who participate in football, and 45 nalionP leaders m assists and earnmg honorable have related to his major of oceanography, management)~Ekmekjran holds all of IJpsala’s earned all-conference recognruon and was the awards (25 for men and 20 for me&on all-America honors. He founded an mcludmgabpccial rcscarch project last summer. women‘s basketball scoring records and team captain as a semor Hallinan has been a athletcr‘program at UNLV to help handrcapped Whdecompleting hiscommirmenl to the Navy, averaged 22 points a game as a senior In women) are made to student-athletes YMCA youth leader for the past eight years or disadvantaged young people and has been a he wll be a member of the Civil Engineer ad&ton lo her basketball prowess, she was a and has been a Red Cross and Cancer Socmty in other sports in which the NCAA tutor for hearing-impaired children. Tarkanmn Corps, the area of study he later mtcnds to rehef pitcher for Upsala‘s softball team. Her volunteer. Her graduate plans include a masterS conducts national championshipcom- is a Rhodes scholar nominee, and his post& pursue in graduate school campus actwicies include the accounting club, degree m education, leading toward acareeras petition. graduate plans mcludc a career in international Alternates campus senate and volunteer mcome tax a unwerr~ry professor m exercise science and law. Todd Eldon Hutcheson, Western Illinois assistance program. She also was a volunteer physical educauon. The NCAA postgraduate scholar- Divisions II and III Umverrlty: William Thomas Belko. California for the Boys’ and Girls‘ Club of Lodi and kept Vanetta E. Robinson (Jackson State Urw ship program has presented scholar- Herbert B. Tr,ylor (Bates College, 3.804 m Umverrrty of Pennsylvania: Roger James sta11st1cs for various llpwla sports teams. economics) Taylor ia Rates‘ second-leadmg McDonnell, PomonaCollege: Kuk Alan Lund- EkmekJmn’s postgraduate plans include study versity, 3 492 m special cducation)&Robinson ships to 1,489 student-athletes, worth was cap&m of Jackson State’s team as a senior %2,034,000,since its creation in 1964. career scorer He was the captain of the 1983- blade, Southern Methodist Univerwy: Scott in the area of finance. 84 team. Taylor earned academic all-America Robert Hill, University of Utah; Anthony Ray Sally Jcmn Gangell( HartwIck College, 3 370 after being named the top player in the South- To qualify, a student-athlete must honors, as well as being selected to Phi Beta Boggs. Southwest Missouri State University; rn chemistry)~~Gangell was an all-Amerxa western Athletic Conference the prewous year, maintain a minimum 3.000 grade- Kappa and being chosen as a Charles A. Dana Wilham E Benner Jr.. Mdlersv~lle University player at Hartwick and was named the ECAC she earned four varsity Icctcrs. A dean’s list and scholarshrp wnner. Robmson IScampus coordi- scholar He was a member of the Bates Student- of Pennsylvanra. New York Stare player of the year She holds point average on a 4.000 scale-or nator of Jackson State’s Volunrecrs for Youth I-acuity Athletw Commmec. has advised high Women’s Basketball Hartwick‘s career scoring record. Her other its equivalent-and perform with program. She will pursue a graduate degree in school students and been mvolved I” church Division I campus activities have included afliliation with educatron and plans (0 teach hearing-impaired distinction in a varsity sport. activities. After graduate school, Taylor hopes Kathleen Ann Finn (Prowdence College, the Amerrcan Chemical Soclcty and a year as a and learning-d~rahlcd chddren. Following are descriptions of the to pursue a career in tinancial or investment 3.640 in psychology-The only two-time winner member of Hanwsk’s team. !983-84 postgraduate scholarship management in Providence’s athlete-of-the-year award. Finn GangelI also orgamzed a youth basketball Alternatca winners in basketball. Michael Paul Banas(Umvers~ry of Scranton, averaged better than IO points a game four league. After graduation, she wrll study Claudia Kreicker, North Carolina State Uni- 3.XUXin biology)-One of Scranton’s all-rune consecutive years. Other honors have included analytical chemistry. verslty: Diane Marie Kloewer. horthwcst Men.6 Bankctball leading scorers and rebounders, Banas earned all+mference and academrc all-America recog- Deborah Marie Nalty (Colorado College, Missowl State University; Kelly Jo Robinson, Division I several area honors during his career. He also mrmn. Finn has been a tutor on the Providence 3.881 rn economics) -N&y was Colorado Ohio State Ilnivcrslty: Kclli Julene Benson, Timothy Dean Dillon (Northern Illinois was named academic all-America. Banas is a campus and has been active m the Special College’s leadrng scorer and was the most IJnivcrsity of Nebraska. Lmcoln; Kay Lynn University, 3.640 grade-pomt average in member of AlphaSigma Nu and Alpha Epsilon Olymprcs and the Allantic Highlands Hworrcal valuable player in the conference play-offs As Rlek. Drake Unwers~ty; Tma Louise Palmieri, managcmcnt)&Ddlon led the M&Amerrcan Delta (preprofesrronal honor soczcy) and has Society She intends to pursue a doctoral a first-year senior starter. she was a letter Rockford College; Dorrene Michelle Wolf, Athletuz Conference in scoring in 1983-84. been acuvc ,a several campus comnutreen and program m chnical psychology. wmner in volleyball. Nalty has been a class University of Tampa. averaging 21.2 points a game. He was Northern student government He wll begin a graduate Yolanda Michelle Laney (Chcyney Universrry Ilhmxs mos1 valuable player and earned program at the IJn~verslty of Pennsylvania‘s of Pennsylvania, 3.700 m history)-Laney honorable mention all&America honors He medical school m September. earned all-Amenca honors BSa senior, scormg made the dean‘s list seven consecuuve semesters John Lrc Grave8 (Waahmgton and Lee 25 points a game. She was the most valuable and was named an academrc all-Amerwa as a University. 3.667 in chenusrry and mathe- player m the Fart regional tournament and has Calendar semor. Dillon‘s postgraduate plans are un- matics/ natural scuxces) ~Graves averaged 20 been accepted for the 1984 Olympic trmls I certain. but he is leaning toward completmn of points a game for the tienerals and earned Laney is wcepresidcnt of her renior class and April 23-25 Division Ill Women’s Volleyball Committee, Kansas a busmess administration degree (MBA). first-learn all-conference honors. He was the was homecoming queen. She served as a “big MarcJohn Marotta (Marquette University, team captain. Graves finirhed his career as s~sler”lo youths at a camp last summer Laney City, Missouri 3.600 in political science and economics) A W&L’s seventh leading scorer. Grave has been plans to attend law school. April 23-26 Division I Women’s Volleyball Committee, Kansas City, three-year starter for (he Warriors. hlarotta IS consistently on the dean’s lrst and as a senior Tanya M~ricHuvc(lJn~ven~lyofTennessee, Missouri another academic all-America selection. He was named to Phi Beta Kappa. He plans to Knoxville, 3.360 m pubhc relarlons) Haavc April 23-26 Men’s and Women’s Gymnastics Committees, Kansas was one of the team*s trxxptains in I983-U4 attend medical school at the University of was captain of Tennessee’s national runner-up and led the team rn field-goal percentage. Virginia team thrs season and was selected to the all- City, Missouri Marotta is a member of Alpha Sigma No. Jay Burns Fcrguson (Wmnberg Umverrlry. Southeastern Conference team She also played April 23-26 Men’s and Women’s Swimming Committees, San Diego, natronal Jesuit honor tocicly, and honor 3. I56 in buriness administration)&A two-ume one season of volleyball at fennessee. earrung California societies rn socml wence and political science. all~conferencc relcclion, Fcrguson helped honorable mention all-America honors. Haave In addition, he has been active m the MIdwest April 25-27 Wrestling Committee, Kansas City, Missouri Wittenberg to three conference ttrles and a is a Special Olympxs volunteer and won a May 1-3 Men’s and Women’s Skiing Committee, Kansas City, Athletes Against Childhood Cancer, the Md- second-place natmnal limsh durmg hrs career of Achievement award, along with waukee Council on Alcoholism and several He is one of the few four-year lcttcrmen m scholar-athlete recognition. Her postgraduate Missouri other communrty organuarrons. He plans to Wittenherg lustory Ferguron’s campus activi- plans are toearn an MBA at Denver Ilnivcrsity. May 4-5 Men’s Volleyball Committee, Los Angeles, California attend law school. ties include serwng as a tour gurde for Kimberly Duane Mulkcy (Lowrrana Tech May 4-5 Men’s Volleyball Championship, Los Angeles, California Drvln George Dunant (Brigham Young prospective student-athletes and their parents. Umverrlty. 3 854 in business administration)- Umvers~ry. 3.480 in American studies) Dunant He plans to enter the School of Mortuary Mulkcy earned a reputauon as one of the May 7-8 Executive Committee, Kansas City, Missouri was second-team all-America and averaged Science at the University of Cincinnati and nation‘s best point guards and led Louisiana May 7-10 Division I-AA Football Committee, Charleston, South 21.9 pornts a game 8s a semor. He was named later become a partner m bis father’s funeral Tech to two national champmnstups and one District 7 player of the year by the United home business. second-place finish. Her honors included all- Carolina At large Amerux recognition. Mulkcy was chosen the May IO-I I Recruiting Committee, Kansas City, Missouri Paul Dwight Andcmn (, outstandwig senior I” Louwana Tech’s College May 7-12 Division Ill Men’s Tennis Championships, Atlanta, Academic team 3.670 m government) Dartmouth’s third all- of Business and Administratmn and was named Georgia time scorer and fourth all&tlme rebounder. to a national business honor society. She named in hockey Anderson twice was named first-team all-Ivy intends to pursue an MBA at Louisiana Tech. May 7-12 Division II Women’s Tennis Championships, Chatta- League. He was cowinner of the team’s most Divisions II and 111 nooga, Tennessee Tom Kurvers of Minnesota- valuable player award as a senior and was New Carla Elaine Eadn (Central Missouri State May 7-12 Division Ill Women’s Tennis Championships, Kalamazoo, Duluth, winner of the Hobey Baker England’s only academic all-America player. Unwersny, 3.480 in physical education) Ccn- Michigan Award as college ice hockey’s top Anderson, a three-year honor student at Dart- tral Missouri‘s all-time leading scorer, Eades player, was one of 16 student-athletes named to the first Division I college hockey all&academic team. Teams from the East and West regions were selected, with balloting coordinated by the College Hockey Statistics Bureau. Voting was done by sports information directors at institutions that sponsor varsity men’s ice hockey. Kurvers, acommunications student with a 3.200 grade-point average, Marketing and Promoting Collegiate Athletic Programs was one of two players from the 1984 NCAA Division I championship game named to the West team. The other NCAA Professional Development Seminar was forward Tim Hack of Bowling Green State. June l-2, 1984 The 1984 Division I college hockey Hyatt Regency O’Hare, Chicago all-academic team: East: Goalie-Mario Proulx, Need help with promotion? Radio and Television Providence, senior, 3.370grade-point packages? Marketing? Scheduling special events? average. Defense-Dave Fretz, Clark- Increasing ticket sales? son, junior, 3.400; Ken Code, Plan to attend the NCAA seminar on Marketing Harvard, senior, 3.600. Forwards- Steve Smith, Colgate, senior, 3.500; and Promoting Collegiate Athlettc Programs. Georff Dervin, Cornell, senior, 3.310; Thts intensive two-day seminar offers the exper- Gates Orlando, Providence, senior, tise of many of the best promoters and fundraisers 3.200. in college athletics, as well as that of the nation’s West: Goalie-Kreg Korinek, top officials in radio and television sports program- Northern Arizona, senior, 3.380. Defense-Tom Kurvers, Minnesota- ming. Duluth, senior, 3.200; Glenn Johan- Topics will include: Cable and Collegiate Athlet- nesen, Western Michigan, senior, ics, Radio Networking; The Promotion Business; 3.340. Forwards-Paul Pooley, Ohio Scheduling and Promoting Special Events; Fund- State, senior, 3.350; Tim Hack, raising; Increasing Ticket Sales. Bowling Green State, senior, 3.970; Perry Pooley, Ohio State, senior, The $145 registration fee Includes all sessions, 3.380; John Johannson, Wisconsin, workbook materials, two luncheons and an evening senior, 3.630. reception. Honornble mention: Goalie Wally To register, or to receive more Information, simp- McDonough, Princeton, 3.340; ly return this form. To reserve a hotel room, contact defenseman Rene Cornea&, Maine, 3.200, forward Kelly Miller, Michigan the Hyatt directly at (312) 696-1234. State, 3.540. 8 April 18,1984 I I The NCAA NCAA Record

DIRECTORS OF ATHLETICS ‘Tcnncstee State He had a w&year word of recently coached at Central Michigan, whcrc Wll~ILIAM B LECKONBY,directorofath~ 64-9 at West Virginia Wesleyan and finrshed her teams made two straight appearances in the letrcs bmce 1962 at Lehigh. will retire in second in the NAIA tournament in 1983 NCAAchampionship. ROBERTCORBIN. December LeckonbyJoined the I.chigh rtaffin Samford coach MIKE HANKS chosen at head coach at Santa Monica, California, 1946 as head football coach. a post he held untrl South Alabama. He was named the Tram College, where he had a tive-year record of taking over ab AD .WILLARD ‘BII.1.” America Alhlclic Conference coach of the year 9X-19,choscnat UtahStale JACQUELINE HUYCK. head track coach and charr of the after lcadmg Samford to a 22-X record last HIJLLAH hired at Dartmouth. She has been physical education department at Carleton, season HIS three-year record was 46-38 an ass,rtant at Northwestern the past four named at the Unrversrty of the Soulh, cffcclive WILLIE LITTLE. who led Illrnois-Chicago lo seasons. Interimcoach DON C WILHELM July I. He coached for 27 years at Carleton. a 22-7 record thus winter while serving as has been named head coach at Stephen F. and hia cross country learn won the 1980 mterm coach, has been named full-tune coach Austrn State. He rook over the Ladyjack NCAA Dtvwon 111men ’s championships Dayton coach DON DONOHER, who led program in December, posting a IO-IO record ASSOCIATE DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS the Flyers to the quarterfinals of the 1984 MontclairState’s MICHELINA”MICK1” G. RANKIN COOTER hrred at Georgra NCAA Divismn I Men’s Basketball Champion- CIREI,LO wrll take a one-year maternity leave State, effective July I. He presently rs drrector shtp. has been grvcn a three-year contract of absence. begmnmg June I TED of the school’s physrcal fitness center and a extensron Citadel coach LES ROBINSON RIVERS0 named at St. Thomas. where he professor of exercise science and physical has reccivcd a three-year contract extension. had been a men‘s asristanl coach therapy. Men’s basketball assistants-New Long PAULElTt STEIN has resrgncd at Augustana has held since 19X2. He will remain on the job Division II ASSISTANT DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS Beach State head coach Ron Palmer haa hired (Illinois)toaccept asimilar positron at Nonhern until a successor has been named. The top 30 teams in NCAA Division II CHIPZIMMER has rcrrgned. effectwe June three a.wstants~ED RATLEFF, BRUCE Mlchtgan. Her srx-year record at Augustana NOTABLES baseball through games of April 8 as ranked by 30, at George WashIngton He joined the BIJHRANDT and GLEN MCDONALD. was 9S-S7 RICHARD KEAST named at Two-time natronal champron and four-time Collegratc Baseball, wth season records where George Washington staff in 1982 after serving Ratleff. a former player and assistant coach at Georgia Stare. where he had been serving as all-Amerrca MIKE SHEETS of Oklahoma ava,lablc in parentheses m a srmrlar capacrty at Maryland. Long Beach State, coached m the hrgh school interim coach since January. He had an 8-9 State has been named 1984 wrestler of the year 1. Florida Southern (29-9); 2. Chapman(27- FACULTY ATHLETICS REPRESENTATIVE ranks last season. Buhrandt was a part-time record PI head coach JIM IZARD, who by Amateur Wrestling News RICKY S-2). 3. Troy State (23-6); 4. Stephen F. Austin CHARLES EHRHARDT has been named a&tan1 for the 49~1s last reason. McDonald coached Louisiana State to a 23-7 record and a STOKES of Virginia and KIM MIJLKEY of Slatc(ZS-I l);%Tampa(27-9),6. Shippcnrburg to replace JIM JONES at Florida State will fill Buhraodt’s pan-trmc post. berth in the NCAA play-offs, named at DePaul. Louisiana Tech have been named wooers of (13-2); 7. St Lco(36-8): 8. Cal State Northridge COACHES Women’sb~skctb~1I~CincinnatI ass~slant Women’s burketball mistant- WILLETTt the Frances Pomcroy Na,smrth-Ha11 of Fame (25-12); 9. Vdlanova (Florrda) (25-10); IO. Men’s ba.akcttuIl~Formcr Princeton asrisl- JANE ALBRIGHTnamed at Nonhero Ilhnois. WHITE hrred at Iowa State, after a two-year Award for men and women, respectively. The West Georgia (19-X); Ii. New Haven; 12. ant WAYNE SZOKE named al Columbra Prior to her one season at Cincinnati, Albrighl stint as a graduate assistant at Ohlo State. menP award is given annually IO the nat,on’s Longwood; 13. Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo, 14. Szokc alno has been on the staffs at Rutgers and had been oo the Tennessee staff. LAURA FootbaI~lndianaassistant DANIELKRAT- top player under six-feet tall Thrs rs the first Central FlorIda: I5 Eckerd: 16. Florida Dartmouth. BRUCE STEWARI, formerly GOLDEN. who has a IO-year career record of ZER hired at Ohio Northern Kratzer played year a women’s award has been presented. It Atlantic; 17. Indmna State~Evanswlle: IX. at West Vrrgrnra Wesleyan, selected al Middle 175-77 record. hired at Illmors. Golden most professionally with the Cincinnati Bengala and ~111 be gwcn annually to the top women’s California-Riverside, 19. Delta State; 20. Sam the Kansas City Chiefs durmg the mid-1970s. player under 5-6 Former coaches CLAR- Houston State. 21. Columbus: 22 Mississippi Football aaslatanti Former Texas Chr,stian ENCE MABRY, Trrnrty (Texas); BILL College; 23 Cal Poly-Pomona; 24. JacksonwIle head coach F. A. DRY named offensive line ACKERMANN. UCLA: PAUL BENNETT, State; 25. North Alabama; 26. Chico State; 27. coach at Baylor. Recently, he had been in Northwestern; BILL MURPHY, Michigan and San Francisco State; 28. Valdoata State; 29. private business BRIJCE BIJLOWSKI. Arizona, and DALE LEWIS, Indiana and Augusta: 30. Southern Ilhnois-Edwardsville. offer&w lrnc coach at Wrsconsrn~Eau Clarre. Miami (Florida), will bc inducted ,n the Inter- named defenswe hne coach at Norih Dakota collegiate Tennis Coaches Assoc,at,on Hall of Dlvbion Ill MURRAY ADLER and JOHN HAGEN Fame May 16 The National Association of The top 30 teams in NCAA Division 111 he;e joined the Fordham staff GERRY Basketball Coaches has named the following baseball through games of AprrlS as ranked by GALLAGHER named offcnr,ve coordinator Division III district coaches of the year Collegiate Baseball. wth season records where at Edmhoro He had been head coach for seven Northeast ED HOCKENBURY, Norwich, avarlablc ,n parentheses. years at Morrrs Cathohc High Schoolan Dcn- Easy hl1.l. NELSON, Nazareth. Middle I. Marietta (16-3). 2. North Carolma Wes- vrlle. New Jersey North Carolrna State A,lant,c TOM FINNEGAN, Washmgton leyan (14-3): 3 Wrscons,n~Oshkosh (X-1); 4. graduate assistant BRAD SENTER named dc- (Maryland); South Atlantic ED GREEN, Frostburg State (12-3); 5. La Verne (19-IO), 6. fensivc coordinator al New Mexico HIghlands Roanokc; South TOM BRYANT, Centrc; Eastern Conncctrcut Slalc. 7. Mcthodict: 8 Former Baltimore Colts ass,sraot BOB Great Lakes I)AVID GRUBE, Capital, Upsala; 9. William Paterson: IO Cal Stale VALESENTE has,omed the staff at Kansas, Midwcrt MIKF HEIDEMAN, Sl Norbcrt: Stanislaus: I I. Widener: I2 Occtdental: I3 where he wdl work wrth the offensive unrt after West JERRY SCHMUITt, Nebraska We&m Montclair State: 14. Otterbern; IS. Wisconsin- recovermg from recent heart surgery leyan Long Island tra,ncr GARY W Wh,rewa,er: I6 Oh,o Northern; 1-I. rrenton KERRY HODAKIEVIC ha\ been named GARDINER has been named head tramer for State: IX Vwgmra Wesleyan. 19. Kamapo. 20. Briefly in the News oflensive coordinator al AllcXhcny. He was the 19X4 11.5. Olympic men’s succe, leam MarywIle (Mrssour,); 21. Lynchburg. 22 offcosive line coach last year at the school Glassboro State; 23. North Park: 24 Cue: 2S 1 I DEATHS BOB PETRINO bar been named to a part&woe Ilhaca, 26. St. Olaf. 27 Randolph-Macon; 2X DONALD w “DUDEY” MOORF. 74. Stanford University will bc host to the first Pacific-10 Conference basketball position at Webcr State. Johns Hopkms: 29. Easter,, Mennonite. 30. who cornplIed a 270-107 record at Duquesne coaches clinic April 27-28. The head coach of each conference member school Men’s golf Head foothall coach LLOYD Parrleigh I)ickinson-Madl\rrrr (IY4Y-195X) and 1.a Salle (1959-1963). died will speak for one hour on a preselected topic. The clinic will be held at the KRUMLAUF has beer, given add,tional dutie\ a\ gull coach at North Ccrr,r.,l Ap,ll X after a hrar~t attack ARTHIIR (i Dir&on I Men’s Tennis Hyatt Burlingame in Burlingame, California, about five minutes from San SAMPSON. who was head coach at Tufts Mcni ice hockey---BRIAN MASON. who The top 20 teams in NCAA Drv~sron I men’s from 1926 to 1929, lalcr coached al Columb,a Francisco International Airport. For information, contact Steve Odell, Clinic coached Rochester Inst~tutc 01 Technology to tenors through matches of April 2 as ranked hy and Harvard. and then went on to a carter a, a Director, Stanford Basketball Office, Athletics Department, Stanford, the 1983 NCAA Division II Men’s Ice Hockey the Intcrcollcgiate Icorm Coaches Assocratron, Championship tttle and a ,h,rd-place D,v,sron sportswr,tertorthe Boston Herald. died March wth .\eaaon records ,n parentheses and pomts. California 94305, or call 415/4974563 . . Barron Bremner, assistant to the 29. He way X5. president of Cornell College, rtxently was honored by Division III wrestling 111finish thrs season, hrred al Dartmouth. I. UCLA (23-O) _. . I60 Mm’s ice hockey as&lad RON PETERS COMMITTEE CHANCES 2. Southern California (25-2) 152 coaches for his contributions IO the sport Fresno State University recently resrgned at Norwrch to enter pwate busmess. Mcn‘q Fencing ROBF.RT J. MYSI.IK, 3 Stanford (I l-2). 141 dedicated Beiden Field, Its new baseball stadium, with a standing-room-only Men’s socccr~MIKE HE.R.1ICF.I.L.I, who PrInceton llnivcrsity. appoInted to replace 4. Pepperdine (17-3) .I34 crowd of 4,134. The $2.2 milhon stadium will seat 3,575. coached North Carolma-Greensboro to the Ncale R Stoner. linrversrty of Illmors, Cham- 5. Irinity(I’cxas)(I7-5) ._..__.____.__ 132 Washington University (Missouri) has dedicated a new baseball field m 1982 and 19X3 NCAA D~vrsron III Men’s pargn. resrgned PAUL Cm’.HAUSSER, 6 Southern Methodrst (I 5-6) . . . I21 Soccer Champronship titles and a four-year New Jcrscy lnstitutc of Techwlogy. replaces 7. Arkansas (224) . I IO memory of the Bears’ former coach, the late Lmo Kelly Trenton State record of 70-Y-5, hired al Old Dom,n,on. Stoner 8, cha,r X. Auburn (18.9) I03 College wrestler Orlando Caceres already has qualified for the Summer Womenisof~b~ll PAIJLLTTE STEIN aem Football Rules JAMES (‘. PUFFER. 9 Georgm (23-2) 97 Olympics as a representative of Puerto Rico. But he also is trying to qualify for srgned at Augustana (Ilhnois) (see women‘, M.11.. llnivcrsity of (‘alilomia. 1.0s Angele*. IO. Clemson (20-X) .x9 the United States. Caceres, who holds dual citizenship, qualified for Puerto basketball). appomtcd a‘ the mcdlcal consultant. replacmg II. Miami(Florida)(lX~X) _____..____.__ X0 Men’s tennis Prnfwvlonal star DICK Russell M I.ane. M D. Amherst College. 12. Tcxar(l3-5) ______.._____.__ 71 Rico with a third place in the Pan American Games. He was second at 126 STOCKTON appomted at hrr alma mater. effect~vr September I. 19X4 I3 L.ouwana State (14-7). .61 pounds in the NCAA Division 111 Wrestling Championships The Trm,ty (Texas). eflecttve next lall. As an MrnP TmckandFicld~JOHN 1. MI I’CH- I4 Texas A&M (21-6) _. 4R President’s Council on Physical Fitness and Sports had presented national undergraduate at Trmlty, Stochton won the F.I.I.. University of Alabama, Tuscaloosa. 15. Tcnnesncc(l4~6) _.___.______... ..40 honor awards for contributions to promoting sports participation among 1972 NCAA Division I men’*

L - tom area. The U”lverslly IS corn wed d time pos~bon repMIng to the Men’s Athletic gree required with emphasis an mark&ing M-ectoroFPromoth. PREPERREDQLlAU seven schwls and colleges lvhlc L offer a ~academlcprcgressfrom recrultlngtog DIrector. A bachelor’s degree and Four yearx’ snd busi-. Eitenrwc sales. adverUslng and FlCAllONS. Bechelois deoree: eaarknce broad range of academ& programs and dim. plus assisbnq sbdenlathktes with rekvmtdmlni~~ arc requhd. w3moUoMI eperier~ce required. preferably research atiwbes The Unlversih of Alaska. Slgnltkant demonstmted ulxrience in pro. n athlebcs s&y IL COrnN”sUrate with Positions Available Anchorage. spanron intercOrleg& athletxs rrmbonn, bcket ~1”. management sblls. and wden~e. Sed appl~abon. resume and formenandwamenincrosscounbyRlnn,n ablllty to relate and communicate to various wo letters d reFerence ti Roy Love. Director nardic and Alpine slulng. women’s volleyba 4I. pubho of the University. Salary till be >f Athletics, Portland State Unmrsny. P.O. rifle.. men’s ice hockey. swmm~ basketball. commensurate with -nence and qualifi~ Box 751, PorUand. 0 on 97207 Deadlme and a new prcgram 13 being 7 eveloped m .o asum full and vdunbry compliance cations wth range from ~17,003 through IS May I. 1984. P2.8 Is en aFfirmative Athletics Director women’s gymnasbcs Teams&m& nn the PEQUIREMENTS: AbiFW to interact cam $21.700.Dull-: Remote and market all mien/equal oppoti”Ity employer NCA4D1wston II. Ice hockevdanstocorrmete ‘onabtywllhvarcdadmi.&adcnismHsanduanars men’s ~~terylleylate Ip”ns supernse Ucket I” Dwision I toumamenrs &n’s bark&II IS xxnpus acadermc and suppolt units: same prmnohons. sacs o b&b and bcket MrectoroFAtbletkPmgrams. TheUmverwty in The Great Norrhwst Conference. and :o”nullng apcd-ence. preFer cardlda? wth accountabll, ; d-fop proqrams and rpon dA!aska. Anchorsgc. ir aceporg appllcmons women‘s basketball and volleyball are in The mwkdgc OF NC&A &bona: candidate sonhipsand orspcclalpromobonratatblebc to fill the posibon of The Director of Athletic ContinenBl Dwie League. Due to WA’s nun have good s&al “9ds Ils. and be capable events to IKR(IY ticket sales. attendance. F’mpms.wh,ch IS 12month and Full bme umque location. the Untverst 19 responsible ,f setting ood erampkfor col e students: and fmanc,al support of SIUc‘s athletx The Director has dwect Planning. d-loping for three ma orto~mame”ts. x orthem L,ghts master’. 3 egm nqulred. APPL“ $ To: Char. prcgmm. Direct application bs Fred Huff, LEHIGH UNIVERSITY and manag,ng responslb,l,bes of the da to lnnBti~nal i women’s basketball). The Great Search and SC-i Committee. A.wi?ilant Anstint~recrorof AthWcs. burhem lllinon dayoperationorUniversityofAlsska. Ant or Alaska Shmtout (men’s basketball). and The :o the Director of A7% ktlcs. Acadcmlc end Untwr~ityy.Ca,bondak. lll,no,s 62901 A&. age’s (WA), lntercolkglate athletic pr ram Flrat Interstate Classic (ice hockey) There are Rcgubtmy Affmm. Depltment of lntercol cabon deadkne 13 May I, 1984. SIUC is an DIRECTOR OF ATHLETICS with strong emphasis on compkance w2 the also excellent oppx-~un~tles for xhedukng lcglate AthleUcs. BowtIn Green State Urv Equal OpportunltyfAffirmative Actmn Nabonal Colleg,are Athletic Assoc~abon msaty, Bmvkng Green, 8 h,o 43403. APUJ EmdoKr Lehigh University is seeking candidates for the position of (NCAA) regulations. comrnunn~ rela0ow. be postmarked by May 25,l ZATIONS. Submtt letter of applwbon. dmctmn and tranng of coaches. fiscal conh” A letter of a kcauon. vlu,. and sedemic tmnscripr. resume or cumculum Director of Athlebcs. The Director reports to the Vice responsibility. conformance tith University namer and addresses oT three professvanal ,ik. and three letters of mference by My 17. Marketing/Promotion President for Student Affairs and is responsible for the l,c,es and rocedures. state and federal references Al, materials should be sent 10 1934 Position starting date of July 1, 1984 administration and coordination of a comprehensive Division pws” such as 9ltle IX of the Education Amend Peter T. Gallagher, Dn=ctor of Perxonnel Illdsbnt Atbkk Dfmc+or. Southern Illinois Serwces. Unwersity of Alaska. Anchor%: Dkector OFspm hrkemg. Portland stat ment of 1972. as well as responsibikty for hveofty aI Carbondale. A I2 month. full I (Football I-AA) Athletic Program as well as Intramural and umrk~ng w,h the rommunny m develop,“9 321 I RowdenceDnve.Anchorac,e,AK99 Univerxty. Quakhcabons, Baccalaureate de- private funding sources. The randldates for TheUrwersty of Alaska. Anchoraqe. IS an - Recreational Sports. the pmbon must have: (I) Demonstrated Equal Opportumty, Aff,rmatwe Actlo” skill\ 10 management of wnonnel. develo Employerand Educational In,4ititution. 037968 Mmimum requirements include a bachelor’s degree, a ment. finance and plannm functions: ( ) thorough knowledge of intercollegiate athletics, and demon- expenmce I” a paslllon WI9, adm,nWraWep College Athletic Coaching responsiblkty for an athletic department at Assistant A.D. strated experience and achievement m sports administration; po~t.~ondaryi~l.(3)~horough knowledge fiscal, personnel, and facilities management; public relations. of the NCAA’s regulabons and Title IX of the Faculty Appointment Education Amendment of 1972. and demon Assistant AthkUc Director For Academk The successful candidate must have a strong commitment to strated ab,l,ty to estabksh el%cIive work,” Maim. SouthemMethcd~st Unwwsity. Twb~ Position: Instructor in physical education, head women’s the highest standards and values of intercollegiate and rrlatlonsh~ys &th regulating authont~er. (43 month. full tune pDzitnrl tr~enencc 811 basketball coach, head women’s soccer coach and assistant demonstrated erpenence in directmg and academtc a&s,ng and counwkng of student intramural programs for men and women. Starting date: rr.vnng roaches. (5) demonstrated stnkty to athletes. Salary comme”surate wul erpen in a spring sport. January 1,1985. Send letter of application, resume, and three relate pos,trvely wth students, faculty. staff. ence Appkcabon deadkne Apnl 27, 1984 and the community in developmq support for Send resume tw Barbara Camp. Southern Application deadline May 15, 1984. Send resume and three letters of reference by May 15, 1984, to receive full athletic programs. (6) demonstrated oral and Methodlsr unlwmry. Depmmell of Athletics. current letters of recommendation to: consideration, to: wnnen c~mmun~camn~ skills: (7) demon Moody Colwum. Box 216. Dallas. Texas strated expenence ,n fund rawng UA4 IS a 75275.Southern Methodist Universaty IS an G. Thomas Lawson Vice President for Student Affairs rapldly growing insbtuon of%nns baccalaur Equal Oppnrr,,n,ty/Aff,rmatlve Actton eate and masters degree programs The tmployer Director of Athletics Alumni Memonal Bldg. #27 student woulation IS amxomnatel~ 4.C00 Assistant to the Director of Athktks For Middlebury College Lehigh University vhf! a Fill time mr”rlrn&~ of approlrmatety Academic and Regulatoy Maim. JOB 2.500 UP”4 I5 located I” Alaska‘s largest City. DESCRIPTDN. SuyDleMmmnUy avail&k Middlebury, Vermont 05753 Bethlehem, PA 18015 Anchorage. ti,ch ha3 a total populatwn of acadermc and personal counsekng Sys’em a, .3bo”l250,cco. The campus 15 r,tuated on a Boowlmg tireen State Unwenity on behalf of Middlebury College is an equal opportunity employer. An Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer wooded acreage near the halt of the down student athletes m Dwmon I A proqram with 10 April 18, 1984 1 I I The NCAA The Market

I - - I Rut’s Bamkelbd Coach. North Camkna includeamnst&sdcgree~n~aleducaUan tnce at unluersl(y. cdkgc or high rvhcol level sponslblli~. Secondary coaching (bas&all) Central Univ+ty. Durham. North Gimll~. and substantial experience In cdkgelwel >requalanda ezqmimce in athletic and/or teaching re~nrntakbn as .,g Redders of The NCAA News are invited to use The Market to Anbcqxki rtmung date Jub 1. 19B4. ccachlng and teaching. Doctorate deslrabk. $w&can ,n!&mr envlrwmnt k At+tlc “‘rector&d Char d H locate candidates for positlons open at their insrirutlons, to aallficattcns: Maskis denree In ti&cal salary cammensurate witi prepration ad salary 1s commel-ls”iate wtth ezqlmence. ster I ckgm and ywcal educabon back. educobon ~2nd minimum d Fyo ye.32 &per% 4pplkaacm deadline May IO. Empkayment to rowd prEferred. line May 2. 1964. advertise open dates in their playing schedules or for other encc In coaching basketball at the college wgln June 4. Send mum and letten d I appropriate purposes. level, or an equivalent comb,nat,on of ~ommndabon to: Head Conch Jana s~:~:~~A:w~~~:~~~: An Equal Oppartunity Employer. yY+$;z5 E;;Ezz=g, 6q.O. ~;;~i~~n. /zb-; Dclcn~ Rates are 35 cents per word for general classified advertistng .g~~~&~~~~~~ Had Basketbdl Cmch/Women. Also must coach women‘s track and Reid or softball. (agate type) and $17.60 per column inch for display classified Footbsll Cr,acha. DEGREE REQUIRE conference rcgulaUons and budget speatic* Augustana College. Rock Island, Illmo,s Re MENTS: Baccalaurrale; maskis prefermd. advertising. Orders and copy are due by noon five days prior to lions: 2. Prepare and ustify Ihe program‘s crultlng and teaching responslbllltles in Field Hockey CbXUJFIcATIONS: Dlp~mcc I” WC&I budget lncludlnq fu rJ Ing requirement for phywal educaoon. Must have 0 master’s the date of publication for general classified space and by noon mcrutmentdsh&ntsthktesatcdkgekvet. compebbon. undorms. travel. recruiting. drgne and coaching errperience. Salary is preferably nationally; coaching uperience at equipme@ supplies and auxiliary personnel. neqotlable and cammensuraa wul wlltl. -lead Coach d Women’s Fkld Hockey/ seven days prior to the date of publication for display classified nsbuctor d Physlal Ed&. Non.tenure rhe cdlegiate lewl &erred. p-n ablllty to subtecttothea~mvaldthcAthkUcMreaor: rations Sendwta,tranxnpts,andthree ?&km cammunw,k rvlth cd& and hiih schml advertising. Orders and copy will be accepted by telephone. 3. &onduda syxterr&c pmgram dcoachtng d reference by May II, 19% m: Janan ,oas,bon at the Umucoity d N&m Dame. wail&k “rd I 9~4. WriFhabons. Maste(eis students. RESPONSIBlUTlES: hull wivl far athldic conk* including tralnlng and Eflland. Dwecrar of Women’s Athkbcs. dubes rebtlve tn caachlng varsity faotball. For more information or to place an ad, call 913/384-3220 or practice sessslons. game strategy. sccoubng Augusta~Cdkqe, Rocklsbnd. lllinois61201 jcgm: test“a my and cmchw,g erpenence at he colkge/unr.w&y level: ezqxrience ,n SAtARY’txrutedforpart-bmepasition APFIl. and other components necessary for a Assistant Basketball Coach. Ehchelor’s write NCAA Publishing, P.O. Box 1906, Mission, Kansas 66201. caching llfelan recrear+x,al acUvIues. a CAT0NDE!ADUNE:,%y15,19&.Resu- successful rogram. 4. Recruit pmspecwe degree. rn~n~mum Successful cdkge and fowardcd to Mr. Jlmmye Layccck. Hezd amletesfor R epmgramwhoareacademlcaliy recruiting errperience p&erred Adherence to :ommltment to w e scademtic excelkue of he student athkte. Respxtsibilities:Teaching F&II C-h. Colkge d W,lliim and Ma eligible for college matncutarian and assist mercgulsuon?,dNcwMexlco~Uni~rsihl. P.O. Box 399 W~lliamsbur , Wr lnia 2318 7 them I” obtalnlng financul aId I” a tern Pacific Coast Athkuc Aswxuvbon. and the n the fre3hm.m eneral acaiues pmQram Iah emphssm on Ife.10” recreabonal acbvl. here financial aId 1s we&based. 5. T each N&nalCdkgiiAmt&Awa%a ” .salaly ies: dim, or .Jze .“I administer pl- ANTHE EQZALCoUEiiE OPPORTUNrTY oFvAL* EMROYERABD MARyKs CcuM in phrical education. Thls p&lion is OepRldenl upon qulHkariwand em. a nomtenurr track pos~bon Salaw Cornmen. Re ty To: Keith Colson. D,rec@r d Athkbcs. :,::%$+$&i%?%% “&?z;%%fi’C&?$E+&’ P.8 Box 3145. New Mexico slate Universi Positions Available rppllcatlan. resume. and four letters of Full time pombon open mar cwchlng ex Las Cruces. NM 88003. 505/646412 : -ecommendabon to: Sharon P&m. Char. Applicabons and credentials should be ~;;~~:M~l.l934,.d prience at the college level Ability to judge %pa~tdF++alEdu.215Rakne addressedto.Mr.HcnryC. Lstumore.ALhkUc OPPORTUNI /AF IRMATIVE ACTION athle+xtalentsndhaveathc.m h knowiedge Continued from page 9 Dim&x. Naih Camkna Central Unwemly. %morwl. Unwersl of Notre Dame. Notre of the r&s and regulabons of 4 e NC4A and ba.d&ball tick&(a) ,&dice Uckel bre Durham. Nonh Cardinn 27707. An Equal -~cnDch(wamn‘s2nd &me, Indiana 465 22 the Big 0 Conference. Eqx~?erxe ,n the chure. (b) manqlc advertising campaign,(c) Opportun~ty/Mfrm&tue ANon Employer direction and organlrabon dsuch actawtlesas AMktont Women’s m Coach. Full fCOtbaltcamp,wxtwxlinnr,blkr&d~ tim. alA -“th poslbon bit ,” wpnen’s Football with alumni and high schml coaches. and brukccballprogram: pdmarymponsibilityfor radio and telmsion promotlan and cw&rads. Optronalpreferredqual~licabons. Plwupcri~ recruiting: rep-t So wmen’s bnsketball &ssl&ant Football Coach. NC4A Dws~on Ill. program at college and alumni functions Full time pontion. Defensiw Caardinator w See Market. page I I Master’s degree prefemd: 2.3 yean’ demon ~-- _-. .- ..- .~..~_ -.-

Ivy Group Executive Director and 3 l&en d referenceto Batian Jacobs, xogram d 20 spa% (mak and fernok) Head Women‘s Basketb.all Coach. Manley The Council of Ivy Group Presidents seeks applications and nctu&lgfca&llMdtcsch+ly&aleducadon Fkld House. S accu~ UniKnity. Syracuse. nominations for the position of Executive Director of The Ivy Kutitk¶ an cour5e¶ kadl to NATA cemfi. NY 13210 by x pnl27. 1984. Equal Oppor resume, mnwripu, and three :atlon. QualiRcsUons ~ncT udc MA/MS in tunlty~Aftirm&e Action Em&w recum- II). shamrl chnbmn. HemI Group. The Executive Director reports to the Council of ‘hyxical Education or r&lad a~cd. NATA Adslant Women’s BuktbaU Coach in a Busk&nll couch. W&s Athl&cs, San xMlcauon. Expm-knce as Klsbucbr and Presidents and is responsible for: Overseeing the operations m,ner at colkge l-1 d&mbk. letter d of The Ivy Group office; coordinating the work of Ivy Group rpplicatiorl & -m (llstlng rdemxes) to am-&ikrxempbycr. committees concerned with athletic administration, general ‘rdessor H. wan Mechcw. olair, Depalrment Head Women’s Basketball corh. Central Sports Information ti Ptlpcal Educabon & AthMiCl. Sum Mlchlgsn Unwraty Plan, orgsnlte and policy, admissions and financial aid policy, and such other ;ron Brook Stony B.rc& New York 11794. Bachelor’s degree; erpenence as a pla r or rdminwterall phavs da campeobve D&ion subjects as the Council may direct; and representing The )e &I linelsMayl5.19Bd SUNYStnnyErmk coach in a campditive pmgram: abl.P IQ to wccessincdlaglole -dBportnRdmlhu. Wright State s an affirmative acti”/eg”l opporunny recrut and ldcnofy athktes compatlbk with ‘CLW:p”B”m, mg andOemonemkd ability to retmlt hrghly sblkd Ivy Group to other bodies and associations. The Executive Unhmaltv. Da&n. Ohlo. The Dlrcclor d 9Wcator and cmpkryer. AK 75-34A Ihe prmgmm: mterocbon slulls to deal wth -tam&. pavu public rebbons skills. Director is expected to assist in formulating Ivy Group XutaafNAlAApprmulAthktkTr&lng coaha. &l&es. recruits, parents. and &hers: Mlnlmum d bachebr’s degree required. Send hrkuhm. NATA cerUficat& and master’s qblkty to contribute to 0oc.r coachin as letter of application and campkte resume to’ policy and in overseeing its implementation on behalf of the re uested. SALARY: 513.000.515. 8 00 Council of Presidents. A& IMMENT DATE Juty I, ,984. Appu CATION DEADLINE May I. 1984 Send withg, pub&c pmmdlms skills letter of application, resumt. and Lhree ettlers beglnslmmdlsreiy Uwetxityissn Candidates should have knowledge of intercollegiate ath- sobry commmsurate wtth ql&ficatlau and 3ox 6116. West Vtrglnla Unkwty, Morgan d ncammc”ds,lon 10’ Dr L,nda G. Herman. acbon/equal wpmtunlty employer letics, experience in educational administration and a broad yJgy.&b&~y”~~~d+J~ mm, West Virginia 26X6. Equal Oppolwnlv Associate Athlebc Dwedor. Illinois St&e bdSW#liW&SA cooch/Aaobt. understanding of the issues facing higher education in zmmp(aycr. Univcrsltv. Normal. llkno~r 61761 Eoual ant Athletic Trdner. Individual vlll assist in rde- to: Dr. Mkzhael J. Cusack. Mrectm Uhk&Tr&cr.Fbridal&w&kratUnr.e& Dppan&/Al%rrr&& Action Univer& cmchmgand admlnlstellng wmen’s basket general, including an appreciation of the role of athletics in of AthkUcs. Wright State Unhwaity, Dnytonn. rcckr a fdl~tlmc Head AthWc Trainer. FIX AasJsbmttt&llCmh.ElmhurstColkqe ball program. Duties will include mcruting, the educatlonal philosophy of The Ivy Group. Ohlo 45435. Wrlghl Slate is an Equal wr Iffe~l4~~aimeDlvl-II*KI(~bsll IS vcklng ap llcauanr for rhe posluon or rrahng.lmd~murng.andm~rt~ tinnv Empbvcr mnd women’s golf are Dlvislan I). Require Residence Hal PDwectorand AssIstant Basket sibilities. This perwn wll &a assist the Head Applications and nominations should be sent to: newts NATA certification: odenswz kr,wl. ChctordF’ubkRabUonoond bell Coach Bachelor’s degree requwed Athldrc Tra,ner and have pnrwxy tra,n,ng zdgc snd eapmlmcc In &kuc bak-llng: four lmaskisdegre preferred). Elmhunt Cdl e responsibilities for wmen’s alhktics. &aliR Executive Office nu6m. SouthrreNm Arhkuc “e”‘”onfcrence. /ean’uprknceatthccdkgeIcvcl:ma?rtcis Respc+@Mlttiw Directs spwra lnfwmatt~ ISa member of the CCfW (NCAA Dwmon 77I ) cations Successful hx round in basketball Faculty and Academic Affairs and spxba pro&m a&MI& for lhhcCan- Competitive Salary Appliratlon deadline i> Box 1945 femmce. P#m4&s all -essay informatIon to May 0. 1904. Send letter “I dpplut,or, and in&la, publt and necessary lndlvid,als. and resume to: Alkn Ackerman. DIrector of Ath requlmd: mnCis dcgm and NATA cerL& sdlcib media lmohcmmt through perrv~l kta.E%hunitCd!ege. 19URo~Avenue, cation preferred. Twehre monrh appointrnerrt. Elmhurst, Illinois 60126. Appkcabon deadl,ncMay 15. Submit resume. Providence, Rhode Island 02912 contacts. Dcvclap all necex.w publlcattons esume to: Personnel Omce. Flawa lnter~ l”&dl~ Henl pmgrarrm a 9 pr0motioMI Graduate Aoskhnt Women’s 5skcl+d rhrrclcncnd~=rrnccendtranvrlpcto.Ms. ~4IonaI Unlnrsl Tamlaml Campus.Mww Carol Hammerle. Head Basketball Coach. Application deadline April 30. mat&&s. Responstbllkla lncludc cornpilIng ‘lorida 33199. F% Is an ARlrrnaU~ ActIan/ and ma,“lal”lng escelknt sw%tical Rks. The ~c?a:;~~l:s~2l~~~2:~ FlwnkSpaCenter.Ur+.e&ydWlvonsln The Ivy Group is an equal opportunity employer. 5Jlml oppamnlry Empkycr Dlmr would aulst the Commlulamr In Uw women‘s bask&all program as auigned Green Buy. Green Bay. wkonrun 54301 the develop-t and cmrd,nation d Confer by Head Ccach Quakfictions: Bachelor’s Assistant Coaches. Two full bme as,,sta,,t -. __-._.- ~__. ence tel&slan/r&dla networks. AddlU0Ml re degree.e+erienceinacompetiti~ basketball coaches for w~men’s team Requires bathe s,mns,b~l,bes ,nclude ass,sbng the Commas Basketball rogrnm and good weracbon tills Sbpend Ix’s degree and CM years‘ ccach,ng ergcil sioncr in the arganizabon and admlnl~trsUon yuitian fees rmm and bard and boakfees. of Conlcrencc champonsh,ps events. the Erwollr&nt ;n a m,n,mum d nrnc hours 1s cmrdlnaUon. promolion and ,upwvlvl,lan of necessary to qualify for student ~nsurancc in Director of Intercollegiate Athletics add,bon Appwntmentdate.August 15,19@4. all &lbw,g and aaks of acbwties d the ATHLETICS/PART TIME Conference and addltlansl related dutlcs a, toMay 15.‘1935 Deadkne May 1, 1984. Send The University of Minnesota, Duluth asaylned by lhe Commsslorrr tilifkabons: a ktter of application. resume. and three Al kast two and preferably hue years’ upcri ktters d rcferencetv JIII Hutchtrron. Women‘s ence 1)s a spxta Infommbon dire&x or Basketball Coach. Illinois State Unlvcnity. HEAD COACH Position Description: Full-time (12-month) administrative assistant s ti information dlnctor at the Normnl. Illinolr61761. An EqualOppcltun~ry/ appointment as Director of Intercollegiate Athletics. The Collcglate Kl. Bachelor’s degree required. Affimbve Acbon Emdwer. Women’s master’. prderred Demonstrated succe%sfd Men’s Basketball C&h-Atbktk Dtrectw. position will begin July 1, 1984, or as soon thereafter as production dathkticalby related publlcatlons. Blackbum Calleae. an NCAA Division Ill in& Varsity Basketball ossible. The Director will have administrative responsi- Creabvltysnd InaglnaUontoattmdtheeXte” tut,on, ,s veking-a coach for men’s basketball Division II Uon of euunbal pubbcs in a posibve manner tie wll all) se- as athlcuc director and E-yrllt for operation of the Department of Intercollegiate hbry and Bmeflu. salary commenwrate coach either wmen’s softball or men‘stennis Pennsylvania State Ath etics. Duties will include but not be limited to: with esperiencr and ab,kty Gmd fn e ten= m the spring. The ‘ob requires recrulbng fits. Appllcatton deadline. May 15. I 24 Send athlete whalsn (1” d teaching aPPr0Priate Athletic Conference 1. Supervision of ten men’s and seven women’s athletic msurre and three ktter. d recommndabon cal education courses. Candidates should to. Dr. James Frank, Cammiseoner. burh P preparedLo work wlthl” the framework of Respanslbrlltres mclude prepar- programs. The hockey team competes in Division I. All w&emAthkbcConfe-c.6400RRnDrwe. an academically leledive residential liberal ing for, planning, and directmg other teams compete in NCAA Division II, or NAIA New Orkans. Ladslana 70126 ati cdl e and a need.based financial aad practice(mcludingscouting). the program 3 la&bum offern a major in phyzkal coachmg and superv~a~on of the Division I. education: nine men‘s and smen women’s basketball team at practices and 2. Administration of an annual budget in excess of $1 lntercolleglstetwms finlmum requIremenU games; end the recruitment of million. qualified athletes for admission 3. Recruitment, su ervision, and retention of coaches to West Chester Consultabon with appropriate athletic depart- and professional/c Perical staff. menf personnel for scheduling 4. Fund-raising and public relations. HEAD BASKETBALL COACH and budget, inventory of equip- 5. Scheduling. ment. arrangements for trans- portation, food and lodging 6. Active involvement in professional associations. WOMEN’S through Athletic Department A more complete job description will be sent to each Bpolts lnfomuu0n Dilutor. Mercyhurst personnel. Attendanceat Depart- applicant. College is seeking a competent Spar& lnfm FULL-TIME POSITION ment and Conference Sport Qualifications: The minimum qualifications for the posi- mabon Dhctor to cwrdwu%e day.today CommIttee meetings (PSAC). fundions d the SlD &.ce Send ktkn d Under the direction of the Associate Director. tjle Head maintenanceand distribution of tion are a bachelor’s degree and three years of experience re,“rn and appncauon 10 Len CykskJ. Coach is responsibleforthedevelopment, admmlstration, statisfics and pla er profiles in administering an athletic rogram. Preference will be Athkbc Dwectm, MC ursl Cd-. Erie. where requested. Providing or Pennsytvanla 16546. “c” k&-iq date Msy 1. and leadership of an NCAA Division I level basketball given to those who have a cf..ministered both men’s and 1984. securing academic and personal team. guidance for team members, women’s pro rams, demonstrated proficiency in inter- Assktant Bpwts I”f0rnuclon Mlutor. unt. representative at Press Confer- collegiate at F letic fund-raising and public relations wslty d Hc.ustca Hcuston. Teras Full bme. The successful applicant will have expertise in identifying 12.month position BA degree in journall~m ences and other selected public efforts, a working knowledge of the policies governing or related R&t one to?hree)rcs~~ experiare and evaluating potential team members and a proven relations funcbons. intercollegiate athletics and a commitment to the In sports lnforrmbon or related Rcld. Rw commitment to the student-athlete’s progress and s,bk for as&ring SID with fcotball snd men’s QUALIFICATIONS Bachelor’s academic enrichment of student-athletes. baaewll gameopcra+&ans. pmgrams, medii development in highereducation. Evidenceof recruiting Degreeminimum. Demonstrated g”!des. l”tcr.eaad ph& 5e%¶lon¶. handling success and technical skills in basketball programs successfulcoachingexperience- Salary: Salary is competitive and negotiable. champaonshipx and speclsl events Saln must also be demonstrated. preferably at the college level- Term of Contract: Fixed term; renewable. commensurate wtth vriencc and quall 7 and successful competitive ex- cattansck&gdateMaylI Dw&.3p$Icabm md resume to’ John Kasser, DIrector d A Baccalaureate degree is required, in addition to 3-5 perience Ability to work withm Last Date Applications Accepted: May 1,1984. Athktics. U d HouuOn. 3855 Hdman. years’ successful coaching experience in collegiate the framework of the PSAC Housran. 1-sT 7 CO4 A&: ASID arch. structure and regulations. Contact: To be considered for the position each candidate basketball with emphasis on program development and must submit a letter of application, resume, and three administration. Master’s degree preferred. Salarycommensurate with quali- Athletics Trainer ficahons and expenence. Send letters of recommendation by May 1,1984. Applications Term of appointment will commence immediately upon letter of application, resume and and nominations should be sent to: selection and will run through June 30. 1985. Salary a1 least three letters of recom- Athkdc Trainer. Serve as trainer for I5 NCAA mendation supportmg qualifica- Dr. Edmond F. Lundstrom Dms,on II men’s and women’s spob. Teach commensurate with experience and consistent with the Search Committee Chairperson under~raduatc athletlr tramlng classes tions, postmarked by May 15. Masters degree and NATA cerllfication. University structure. Submit letter of application, resume 1994, to Susan W Lubkmg, Department of Health, Deadline A+xll 30. Apply to’ Dr Carob V and any supporting documents no later than April 27, Search CommIttee. Athletic Physical Education and Recreation Hodgcs.Athkbcs Dwectczr. Longvmd Cdkge. 1984, to: Department. South Campus, Farmville. VA 23901. EEOIM Employer Room 205, WEST CHESTER University of Minnesota, Duluth hsbtmt Athktk Tmlncr. E,Tezbve Au usl Manager, Campus Personnel Services UNIVERSITY. West Chester. PA Duluth, MN 55812 I. I9B4,9%~month posItIon. requwes N 1 TA Fairleigh Dickinson University 19383. 218/726-7159 cerufkd. ~aster’s Degree preferred. 2.3 years college uperience preferred. Send lktter d 1000 River Road An Equal Opportumty/Affirmative The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity application. rewm and 3 letters d wference Teaneck. NJ 07666 Action Employer Women and to Uonald Lowe Head Tra,ncr, Manley &Id minor&es are encouraged to educator and employer and specificall invites and Equal Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. apply encourages applications from women an Jminorities. tun~ty/ARirmaU~ A&n Employer. .I AwlI 18.1984 11 The NCAA The Market

- Send ktter d applicabon and resume tm R@alIEbrdbn/~: Fulldmtenure md brmhum. Salary mmmerwrale rvim Theodore F’aubudrss. Director d AtikUcs. rackpz&mwthteachlngsndhdcmch~ng spenence snd credenhals. Position avaibbk Smnt Anrvlm Calkge. Msnchestcr. New Tnslbilitier in hro *+)m=n’s spark. Salary IR 03102. hint Arwlm Cdlge is and nnkdcpmdcntuponqualficatians ph D opp0ltunlty/ Afrfm-advc Anion preferyd. master’s acceptable. Teachrng will hnmon Unrwwty, Norfdk VA 23508. An Open Dates Positions Available ecus ,n the arem d adapbves and wells. 4ffirmative Action/Equal Opportumty Ccachlng/mcrutUng rrsponsibilitks wll be 10 5rnDlaKr. huodth=follovlngwomn’~spo~vd~ll. i&d 6-h. Women’s l3asketbdl sndVolky Continued from page 10 3oftball. cross country br track Applicatians uall. Full.dme. I @month pa&on. RRponsibk Swimming 2,andMaday. ence as a f&nil recruiting ccadinatar. and/orlnqulderto Mr Richard Bww. Chatr. or coaching and recruiting. Also responsible taun;smnrsu*,- Wrestling Depar+mwnt d Physical Education. Central br organizing Intmmurals. Bachelor’s degree December 3.1984. Contact Chuck Schwan. Callcge.~ells. Iowa 50219. phone. (515)628. equ~redwthdemonstratrated abllityincoachl 815/Eoao~. 5225 Central College is an Equal Oppor mmcn‘s spms. preferably at colkg~ate leve“9 mm’% Easrbdl. Dlvbion I. St&al Urw=rsIty. Mm’s Hti Wr&ling Coah/lnsbuctor of De Land. Florida. has open, time position. At least three years’ f&II tunty/AtTrrmathe Acdon Employer. 3w1sron III Apphcam should rovide a letter s for 1985 Pbyskal Education. California Slate College. witiorv,ltoumament.Marrh 1 coachng~ddf~qu.srIe~ks If applicabon. resume and tF 46 letters of 7 23 Contact Eaizersfleld. lmmediatc opening for qualtfied txommendatron to. Bobby hyior. D~redar Pete Dunn. 904/7344121. =xt 555. and/orrec=i~rsatthecallcgcorprd~~uonal indlwduai to assume responsibility for men’s kveI.Pmvenkadersh~pandathorwghknmvi ,f Athlebcs. Maryville College. Maryv~lle. W-‘s5skef&atl.fZ+i&nI.Vlrgw~T.xh NCAA Division II Wmtling Pmgram Coach rennessee 37601 Appllcabon deadline May Unnws~ty oeeks teams to camp&e in its edge of the game of fmlball. Should be able mustbeabletoorganl~and d,redall asp=& to teach and work with vrs Applicalian ?. 1984 Equal oppmtunity cmplayrer. arrualC- ahlma3oanuc.- ddw program including plannng. scheduing. 17.18and 19.1984 TeamsareguaranlRd deadknc Wedn=&y.Apnl 5.bySp.m.FoR budgeong. and recwtlng of student athletes BOTH FOSITIONS. send letter d applicaban three arrles. contact Carol Alfano. and resume to: Muke Gottfried. Head Foxball Graduate Assistant ?03/%8 5037 Coph,UruKrsitydI(ansar.Allen~e(dHoune, appdntment). Applicabon deadline Aphi27. Womn’s BaskcUd. Un,ven,ty d Colorado Lamnce. KmYJs 66045. Kans3as (IniversitY xkaed fro-n b&=Uxll. w hockey ym~. seeking teams to complete Lhe field in the Dmctor aid Department Char Position I964 A~licaUon letter. resume. and three Ziraduatc Assistants. Assarilant Coaches in IS an equal opportunitylafftmxmhve action current r=comm=ndahons should bedimed &tbdlorvdf+dl.Addfti0rwaI~rtireinone Second Annual ConverseL=Ay Buff Cbsslc employer. available Au ust 17. 1984. Salary rang= kpartment of AthlcUcs I” hoclwy. fmtball. on kcmkr 78. I 984 pka* c0inw cd ,o Ru&y Carva,al. Diream of Athlebcs. Cal, or more d tie fdlwng dew&k fitness ~sk&ll. bawball. backwomen’s basketball. 520.148 to B27.840. Submit c-r ktter, Barry or Beth Bums m 3X/4926086. fornia State Callege. Bakersfield. 9001 -, v.inter first aid/ClT, a eu uomen‘s track women’s softball. uromen’s tiilcd cuticulum vita. placemem Rk9. (111 defmu. (33%)- Y &ad wmn’s bnWll Wamen’r Basketball. Dtvfsim I. Brigham collegeuanscnpts,andthreckaersd~m. Stockdale HI hway, Bake~fleld. Cailfomla ,olleyball,andurom=n‘sd,ving. D&es Include ice Hockey 9331 I 1099 @SB Is an ~EOE. coach ,n NUA fXsion Ill pogram. Abilii tn votingwith headcoach,” mcrwong,strengrh Young unlvenlty needs a fourth team for a mend&on ta Dr. Jean L Perry. Chair. .argaeedf-*uaaini caldiboruw tourmmsa- Department of Fl+cal Education, San A,,bmnt WmcUr,g Cm&. Bachelor’s r*,n,ng. and operanon d sport prcgram. requmd. master’s degree preferred %E program dslrabk Requires M% ‘rl phY-=l Stipend 52.940 average. pc&b!llty of tulhon be. 6u: ccmq LEl&yziPz.- Ad&ant Hockey Coach and Rink Mamgcr. Franciwo State University. 1,600, Hdloy educadon or rdabd am lvim dcmanarated Avenue. San Franc~sco. Cakfomla WI3 , years‘ succ=ssful coaching eqxnence. prder wwer Apply Georgrne Brczch Director of Womm’sV~DMsbnLUrwmtyd To admmist=r the ice arena and r&ted ably at Division I Icycl. Eqxience in freesMe teachnq -rbse and coading -n=nce I” .V,omen‘s Athletics. Manhalo State Unh’en~ry. Nolmem brua. Cedar Falls. fmva. needs h*o facilities, and as5ist the unity hock coach. 415/469.1258. by May Il. 19Bd. An Equal bask&all. 7515-(5565%)~T=ach lnvlir Opportunity/AfirmaUuz Acbon Employer. and Gmco -tl,ng Send letter with resume *ankato. Minnesota 56031 Appkcabons team to corn* tJYumament septembcr 2s ContanJos+G.Sabd.Oirectord x dkbcs. to Richard P. Cidney. Msdey Fwldhoure. and a vadety d after INDMW wti 3ccepted untd po%lhonn filled. and Se*mber29.19&l Gill 319/27322141. N~nvlchUnirssny,N~.Vcrmont05633. Adstant Men’s & Women‘s Swim Coach- S acme Unwrsity. Syracuw. NW York sekcted from bmdmintca. bmbimg. oif. gym An Equal Oppotin~ Employer Graduate Asslsmnt. The Un~ven~ty d Rwzh. I r 210, by May 15.1934 Equal OpponunItyI Me. hundball or mcq&ll. L idoral mend IS welung a candidate to assist Head afhrdive actIon employer cqaerbu in one or more d the fdlovlng desmbk fibles .3cddks. .adbmture/cutck.n Head Coach. MscMurray Cdleqe is accepUng acfMtk¶ Rrst *id/cFu. or rlldcnu. (35 Soccer applrcabons for head wesUing coah R-n 45x,-t&i wmen’s tennis conch and &her Indiana University for9rrwnuu Grad* mm CflerMsncr’s sabilities include: Coaching wrestling team. head -‘s tennis coach m h=ad softball degrees in Education. ?I uman~bes. Sports teaching in the ph ~cal educabon d RITE”, coach in NCAA Dhrisicn III pm@m. Requim Had C-h. MacMurray Collqle 1saccepting football Msnagemcnt. Arts and Saence Send corn and asswng w tr the coaching d” M.% in physical educabcn or re!awd (1~ mti applications for head sc-xercoach tadima Salary 1s commens”ratc wul =qxn=nc= Head Wrestling Coach nationa~~mnked I)ltinon Ill pmgram. Reswn plek rerurne and lettern d recammendaUan ~tmchmgexprb3e*dcodkg to Warren Hammer, AquatIc Director. Robms Master‘s degree requred Send letter d a =zqxrknceintRlnisandsoWall DiPXta$, slbllws mcludc Coaching soccer. texhlng cabon. resume and credentials by Apnl 27 to Responsibilities: Coaching, scouting, recruiting, some rn the physical education depaltment plus Center, University of Richmand. Richmond. c&rlandordmd.¶ts,tyMuy15.1984.to VA23173,byMayI.l984 Dr Robert Gay, Athletic Dimctor, MaMurray Keith Fmnch. R-1 Educa&n Dcpamt classroom teaching. Qualifications: Ability to coach and another adminrstrative duty. Salary cmmnen College. Jacksonwlk. llkno~s 62650 curate with experrence M*s.tMS degree uw.bcrosu. M=. WI 54601 ~EOE recruit the highly skilled athlete; master’s degree preferable; required. USFA license preferred Send ktter of ap I,c.tlon, pesume and CRde”b& by Tennis Physical Education previous intercollegiate coaching experience desired. April $7 to Dr. Robert Cay. Athlebc Dvector. Approximately 10 percent teaching duties in school of MacMurray College. Jack.wnvill=. Illinois Miscellaneous 62650 HPER. thorpc Uniwnity in Allants. Georgia. s&s &wI,Pnt Directar~Rec~tional S arts. Coach. Hsvaford Colkg= seeks patt.bme applicabons for men‘s and women’s tennis degree ccltiticate ram I” He&h and Salary: Commensurate wtth experience. Application dead- head %ncer coach far iu wmen’s in&cd coach. Position wuld begrn September 1984. Ftwsical FAucatwan“ $, D preferred. but ~helor’rdqrnrcqulrrd:Mant=isp 4 e& I iate team tilch wll begin play ne.xT fall Send resume and three letters Or ref=renc= to: M&in degree acceptable u&h three years’ F!xpenence In collegelewl intramural 9p0lll line: April 30,1984. Application Procedure: Send resume mgrams Areasdnesponsib~lt~esto m&de, 2 dress ktter of application srd resume plus Mr. Jack B&shire. Director d AthkUo. eqx.riencc in ccachtng. teaching and/or to: names of three refenmces to: Gneg Kmmer C&k~yUmb”:..y.gW P=ah* R-4 recre.?hon management. Salary. ~16.000 F mgramming and scheduhrq Competitive stein. Df,&cwdAthkbcs. HawfordColkge. $24.0Xt Rank: A.&stant Professor StarQn intramural abnlies and toumaments: super Ralph N. Floyd Hawford, PennPylvanla 19041, no bter than Date August I Applw&on deadline: May I 4 visron, training and =&~abon d student hpdl 25. 1984. Haverford Cdkge 1s an ksc send resumR to: Dr. Rzhsrd HerbstnO personnel and Intramural &ties. fkfd/caun Director of Athletics mamtcnance and equipment purchasing: Affirmative Action/Equal Opportunity College of Educauon. Gannon University. Track and Field ‘Inrvenity Square. Erie. PA 16541. EEO/AA assisdng *ItA publishing lnbamural programs Assembly Hall EiTlplO~,. Indiana University Bloomington, Indiana 47405 Indiana University is an affirmative action STRENGTH COACH and equal opportunity employer. NORTH CAROLINA STATE UNIVERSITY Raleigh, North Carolina COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY Preferred Qualifications: Bachelor’s degree minimum, Master’s degree preferred. DIRECTOR OF SPORTS INFORMATION Responsibilities: The administration and supervision of strength programs for the football, track and wrestling teams. DUTIES AND RESPONSIBILITIES: This position deals primarily in the areas of publicity, publications, public Volleyball Duties include the maintenance and repair of the strength HeadWomm ’lSoccer bath. Saint AnwIn? room and its equipment. relations and promotion in the area of intercollegiate Colkg=.Manchcrder, New Hampshire NCAA athletics. The Director is responsible for keeping the Division II. hndme. Plan. organin and coach. Salaw: Competitive salary commensurate with qualifications ublic, through the media, informed of the results and Also wll require deKl mental sklls for first Ccach in coaching, mruiting. candu&ng and experience. year varsity prcgmm. 7 olkge playing aped pradlm and other admlrvsu~ dubo as E ackground of Columbia’s men’s and women’s athletic encc or eqwakrlf cdkge ccachlng CI- mlgd. Credentials lhould rc!fkcl mature pricnce rderd. Ewe rdatiMs vim ab~llty to wh wtttt srudmt&kt=s and to ad North Carolina State University: The University has an teams. This means preparing and sendin out hundreds student P IdR Snhry commensurate wth in Lhe dorefoprwnt d a Divlsfan I ralkyball enrollment of approximately 22,ooO students and competes in of general and statistical reports to me 3. la throughout eqmicnce ad quallficabons. Application prcgrmn Qmlukauon~ Mulb be accepted deadkne May I StarUng date September 1 into graduate pmgram a Sylxuv UnnrrnRy: the Atlantic Coast Conference. the country and to the home towns of the student Application deadline: May 4, 1984. athletes. The job also involves the reporting of the results of all contests to the media and to various athletic Application procedure: Send application, resume and conferences. The Director must represent the Department Assistant Women’s Basketball Coach letters of reference to: as the official spokesperson for the University to all Tom Reed media in the areas of intercollegiate athletics. The public Delta State University seeks an Assistant Women’s Basketball Head Football Coach relationsaspect deals with many important policy matters. Coach and Physical Education Instructor. Master’s degree North Carog Sg; University The Director must handle the media at all athletic events, required. Previous coaching and recruiting experience which also includes hiring and supervising many of the desirable. Minorities and women are encouraged to apply. Raleigh, North Carolina 27695-8502 personnel involved with the press operation. The Director Application deadline May 15,1984. Send resume to Dr. Brad North Carolina State University is an Equal deals extensively with alumni and with the general Hovious. Athletic Director, Delta State Universi , P-0. Box Opportunity/Affirmative Action Employer. public covering athletic policy and history. Another A-3, Cleveland, MS 38733 (601/846-7572). EO I! . important aspect of the job is the production of the varsity publications, printing of media guides and game programs for all varsity sports as well as supervising the editing and publication of Lines on Lions, the alumni Rochester Institute of Technology newsletter. The Director is also involved in promotions Men’s Head Basketball Coach and advertisin both in television and soliciting adver- HEAD COACH OF ICE HOCKEY tising for pub f Ications. The Director supervises three University of Minnesota, Duluth full-time persons and is responsible for many other part- The Department of lntercoll iate Athletics at Rll is seeking time personnel. Description: Full-time ( 12 months) position in the deparbnent an outstanding candidate to7 III the head coaching position of intercol iate athletics beginning May 15,1984, or as soon vacancy which exjsts in the men’s ice hockey program. QUALIFICATIONS: Bachelor’s Degree required, Master’s as possible % ereafter. Coach assumes ovemll responsibiliv for Degree preferred; experience in sports public relations NAIA I/NCAA II intercollegiate basketball program. primary QualMcations: A bachelor’s degree and at least two years of field; thorough knowledge of athletics, experience in duties include recruiting qualified student-athletes, scheduling, successful coaching at the college level. writing, editing and press relations; displayed adminis- organization and administmtion of practices and games, Salary: Commensurate with coaching experience and qualifi- trative abilities. supervision of assistant coaches, budget preparation, summer cations. SALARY: The position offersacompetitive salary,commen- camp and league supervision, and alumni booster group Deadline for Applications: May 1.1984. surate with qualifications and experience. Excellent relations. Additional teaching, coachi or adminisbatjve Application Procedure: Submit letter of application, resume fringe benefits available. duties will be assigned based upon quall?++I cations. and three letters of recommendation to: POSITION AVAILABLE: As soon as possible. Applications, Qualifications: Bachelor’s degree and successful basketball Louis W. Spiotti nominationsand three lettersof recommendation should coaching exPerience are required. Master’s degree and colle Director of Intercollegiate Athletics be submitted no later than May 1, 1984. Send all giate coaching experience preferred. Rochester Institute of Technology information to: Salary: Salary is commensurate with experience and qualifi- 1 Lomb Memorial Drive Mr. Al Paul cations. P.O. Box 9887 Director of Athletics Applka&n Procedure: Letter of application, resume, official Rochester, New York 14623 436 Dodge Ph sical Fitness Center toll e transcripts, and three l&ten of recommendation Rll, a privately endowed, coeducational universiv, composed Colum ITla University shoudbeforwardedbyMay1.1984,to:Y of nine colleges, was founded in 1829. The Institute enrolls New York, New York 10027 Dr. John Keener, Chair 16,000 full and part-time students preparing for technical and COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY PROGRAM: Columbia Uni- Basketball Search Committee professional careers. versity is a member of the Ivy Grou ECAC and NCAA 166 Physical Education Building The Institute’s ice hockey program, which competes in the Division I. Admission to the Col Ppege, Barnard, and UnEusi of Minnesota, Duluth New York Coil iate Hockey Association, the ECAC (Division Undergraduate School of Engineering is based primarily u% , Minnesota 55812 It), and the N%A (DIMsIon’ . Ill), is an integral part of the on academic achievement and financial aid is awarded The University of Minnesota is an equal opportunity educator athletic program. on the basis of need. and em layer and specificalty invites and encourages appli- Rochester Institute of Technology is an Equal Opportunity/ COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY IS COMMITTED TO AFFIRMA- cations /co m women and minorities. Affirmative Action Employer. TIVE ACTION AND EQUAL OPPORTUNITY PROGRAMS. 12 THE NCAA NEWS/April IS,1984 I I Newsworthy Women’s basketball to use I I ;,/,?I I ,“ .II’ Schools from 27 states and the District qf Columbia partici- p/* <’ ,‘& pared in the 1984 NCAA Division I Men’s Basketball a smaller b a11 next season 2.#,a I ./ .a,,. Championship. Two states managed to receive berths in the A 4.!ij, A,,, ” _( fieldfor all (in each case two) of their Division Ischools. Can A controversial and perhaps signi- which brought a positive response 0 you name those two states? ficant change in women’s college toward the smaller ball. In the most basketball will occur next season recent survey, conducted this spring, Tulane tackles budget problems when the sport begins using a smaller the vote was 22 I - I77 for the new ball After discovering a Sl.2 million deficit in the athletics department last basketball. (NCAA Division I 115-83, Division year, a Tulane University official says”We may end up a few thousand in the The use of the smaller ball was II 35-33 and Division III 39-25). red or in the black, but we’re going to be relatively close” to making the approved April I6 in Washington, Critics of the smaller ball have budget this year. D.C., by the United States Girls’and pointed to the cost of purchasing “We’re right on target,” said Chuck Knapp, senior vice-president who Women’s Basketball Rules Commit- new balls, the corresponding benefits oversees athletics for the school. Knapp did not release the exact figures, but tee. The rules committee, acting under to sporting-goods manufacturers, the he did say that Tulane’s athletics budget is around $5.5 million. the auspices of the National Associa- use of the bigger ball in international Cost-cutting measures have been instituted, Knapp said, and head football tion of Girls and Women in Sport, competition and damage to the credi- coach Wally English is to submit his budget for next year in a week. There are writes and administers playing rules bility of women’s basketball. projections that the football program will finish this year $25,000 to $40,000 in women’s intercollegiate basketball. Other committee actions indicated in the red. The new ball will be 28% to 29 a trend toward a blending of men’s inches in circumference and weigh and women’s rules: I8 to 20 ounces. It is approximately l The committee voted against the Tryouts set for world deaf games one inch and two ounces smaller IO-second rule usrd in men’s play The United States Committee, World Games for the Deaf, has announced than the hall currently in use, which but did adopt a back-court (or over- tryout schedules and eligibility rules to select athletes for the XV World also is used in men’s play. It also will and-back) rule. Games for the Deaf in Los Angeles July 10-20, 1985. be a narrow-seam ball (seams Nora Lynn Finch .A 30-second shot clock was Track and field tryouts will be held at the Texas School for the Deaf and approximately ‘/a Inch). studies were conducted last summer retained; however, there was dis- the University of Texas, Austin, June 26-30, 1984; swimming and “The NCAA people on the com- at camps-one by William S. Husak, cussion of moving to a 45second tryouts are at Emory University July I l-14; wrestling tryouts are at West mittee-all three divisions support- director of the motor behavior clock, with which the NCAA Men’s Trenton, New Jersey, July 12-14: and tennis, women’s basketball and men’s ed the small ball at the meeting,” laboratory at California State I)ni- Basketball Rules Committee is ex- soccer tryouts will be held at Gallaudet College July 18-2 I. said Nora Lynn Finch, assistant versity, Long Beach, and the other perimenting. Badminton, cycling, shooting, table tennis, and men’s and women’s athletics director at North Carolina by Bette Harris and Jackie Dailey, l The committee discussed a three- volleyhall candidates will be considered on the basis of documented State lJniversity and the NCAA assistant professors of physical point play, which the men’s com- performances and are invited to request entry forms. Division I appointee to the rules education at Longwood College and mittee has been using on an experi- Candidates must be hearing-impaired citizens of the United States, and committee. “We believe the smaller Bowling Green State University, mental basis. amateur athletics status is required. ball is positive in terms of skill respectively. Both studies indicated OAII technicals assessed against For further information, contact Henry White, Team Director, Florida development and the pace of the the smaller ball increased skill levels the bench will be charged to the head School for the Deaf, St. Augustine, Florida 32084. game. (see November 21.1983, and January coach, which corresponds to the “We believe the potential of the I I, 1984, issues of The NCAA News). men’s rule. Women’s program to be enlarged dunk and of quicker play is greater. I The committee also examined data l The committee adopted language think it is a historic day for women’s from the South Dakota State High similar to the men’s rule on violations Western Carolina University will restructure its women’s athletics program basketball.” School Federation, which used the during a free throw. by eliminating gymnastics and adding five other sports by the 1986-87 Other NCAA spots on the l6- ball in girls’play this winter. Another @Causing the backboard to vibrate academic year, according to Robert L. Waters, director of athletics. person committee are filled by competitive study was conducted during a field-goal attempt or Waters said that tennis, golf, cross country, indoor track and outdoor Haniett Crannell, Millikin University this season by the Empire State attempting to place a hand on the track will be added to the women’s program. (Division III), and Pam Gill, Univer- Conference, an NCAA Division II backboard to gain an advantage will Gymnastics has been part of the women’s program since the early 197Os, sity of California, Davis. Other league. However, according to Finch, be penalized with a technical foul. but Western Carolina was the only institution in the Southern Conference appointees are from the NAGWS, results from that experiment had not This rule is similar to the men’s rule. sponsoring the sport and one of the few schools in the region with a team. Amateur Athletic Union, National been finalized. @Also similar to the men’s rule, a Extensive travel became necessary in scheduling, Waters indicated. Association of Intercollegiate Ath- Finch said the reaction from technical foul will be assessed when letics, Women’s Basketball Coaches coaches and players to the South a player touches the ball while an Rick Kuhn’s sentence reduced Association and National Junmr Dakota experiment had been highly opponent is attempting to inbound The sentences of former Boston College basketball player Rick Kuhn and College Athletic Association. favorable. The only negative statistic the ball. four others were reduced April I6 by a Federal district court judge. A majority vote is necessary to reported in that study was a slight l The committee eliminated its Kuhn and the others were convicted in 1981 for taking part in a game- pass a rule. According to Finch, the decrease in field-goal percentage for prohibition on bands playing while fixing conspiracy during the 1978-79 season. Kuhn had been sentenced to small ball issue passed 12-4. shots taken within five feet of the the game is in progress. However, prison for IO years, which was reduced to four years by District Court Judge Before enacting the change, the basket. the committeeencouraged institutions Henry Bramwell, who presided at the original trial and sentenced the men. committee examined a variety of The WBCA has conducted three and conferences to apply their own Kuhn began serving his sentence eight months ago after losing an appeal and data on the smaller ball. Two major surveys of its membership, each of game-administration policies. now will be eligible for parole after serving I6 months. The five men had filed sentence-reduction motions, four of which were supported by the Justice Department. The four whose motions were Council supported had testified in the recent trial of two others implicated in the C‘ontmued from page 1 exception telecasts may be waived football series will have priority over plot --former Boston College player Ernie Cobb and gambler Peter Vario- minute, which shall be taken during by the committee in cases of sparsely the supplementary series carrier in both of whom were acquitted. the half-time intermission, has been populated markets. the selection of games, if the selection The four men sentenced with Kuhn, each a known gambler and added to the commercial format. l Article 16, Note 5 -For an ex- is made no later than the Monday bookmaker, received original sentences of four to 20 years and had those This commercial also was available ception telecast or cablecast, any preceding the date on which the sentences reduced from time served plus probation to I2 years in prison. One in 1983. conflicting game not sold out shall game will be played, provided that: of the four, James Burke, whose reduction motion was not supported by the (l)No institution is required to appear l Article 16, Permissible Areas of be deemed “sold out” if the applicant Justice Department, recently was indicted in New York on an unrelated on either series; (2) an institution Reception of Cablecasts and Retrans- institution agrees to guarantee pay- murder charge. that originally has scheduled a night missions of Exception Telecasts by ment of unsold tickets equal to the average paid attendance of the con- game is not required to (but may) Nevada with Nrvoda-Las Vegas and Nrvada- Reno and West Cable Systems The l20-mile radius move the game to the afternoon if a: Virginia with Marshall and West Virginia. restriction on the retransmission of flicting institution over the past three cl years plus $5,000, provided the total the game is selected by a football reimbursement shall not exceed series network (the game still may be Insurance stadium capacity less seats sold for cablecast at night on the supplemen- the game multiplied by the current tary series even if it is selected by a Continued from page I execution; however, those over which 1984-85 so that plans could be for- average ticket price. football series carrier), and (3) if a of April I5 had been established. the Association had no control were mulated regarding their institutional game is selected for both series at or Grant Osborn of the University of not ready. insurance programs,” Osborn said. l Article l9-Closedcircuit presen- about the time the game originally Massachusetts, Amherst, chair of “The committee believed a decision tations may be authorized for non- was scheduled to be played, the “Because of this uncertainty, the the NCAA Insurance Committee, needed to be made. Some matters commercial purposes at the discretion institution shall award its rights to committee believes there is not suffi- said that some of the proposed had not been resolved to the commit- of the committee, primarily for presen- the football series network. cient lead time to inform the member- program’s requirements were not in tee’s satisfaction, so it was decided to tation to a closed meeting of a bona A minimum of not more than four ship satisfactorily about the pro- place when the deadline passed and delay offering the program. We were fide alumni or booster club, without nor less than two (as determined by visions of the program and to make it was uncertain when those commit- unwilling to commit to it until we geographic limitations. the committee) of the total team it available to institutions for purchase ments could be finalized. The policy had seen all the pieces fitted together.” aArticle 23, Appearance Rules- appearances on the supplementary in 1984-85,” Osborn said. also has not received anproval_ . from Osborn said it was the intent of New appearance rules for the supple- series shall be reserved each year for the Missouri Division of Insurance. “We have been receiving calls from the committee to pursue the imple- mentary series were detailed, and the Division I-AA teams. All agreements that directly in- member institutions wanting to know mentation of an NCAA catastrophic priority of the football series over For further information on the volved the NCAA were ready for if this program would be available in injury insurance program, as initially the supplementary series was defined. modifications, contact David E. directed by the NCAA Council. The The new appearance rules for the Cawood or James W. Shaffer at the program under consideration will supplementary series include the NCAA national office. New Orleans continue to be reviewed, as will following: (I) A team appearing four Continuedfrom paKe 1 hotel. other programs that may be proposed times in any year on a football series health club and jazz musician Pete The 1985 Convention will be held for 1985-86. Osborn thinks that as regional telecast may not appear on Next in the News Fountain’s club. The facility is located January 14-16 in Nashville, Ten insurance companies learn more the supplementary series the following A story on the April 16-18 meeting adjacent to the Rivergate Convention nessee, at the Opryland Hotel. It will about the incidence of sports-related year; (2) no team may appear more of the NCAA Council in Kansas Center and is just a few blocks from be the first trip to Nashville in Con- injuries, specially tailored insurance than twice each year on the supple- City, Missouri. the Louisiana Superdome. vention history. The hotel is located packages will be easier and perhaps mentary series, and (3) any I2 teams Nominating Committee and Men’s From the New Orleans Inter- next to Opryland USA and the Grand less expensive to acquire. that have appeared in two or three and Women’s Committees on Com- national Airport, the Hilton is about Ole Opry. Questions or requests for additional football series regional telecasts in mittees for the 1985 Convention a 20-minute drive on Interstate IO. A The Opryland Hotel is about IO information should be directed to any year each may appear on the selected. train terminal is located nearby and minutes (seven miles) from the Nash- Osborn or Richard D. Hunter, direc- supplementary series the following Final men’s and women’s basketball helicopter pads and a cruise ship ville airport. The Opryland will tor of finance at the NCAA national year and in games against each other. statistics in Divisions II and III. terminal are located adjacent to the provide bus service. office. The two carrying networks of the