The Battalion. (College Station, Tex.) 1893-current, February 06, 1980, Image 13

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    tonygallucci—second guesses
THE BATTALION Page 13
WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1980
Yes, athletes are students too
STOP SCROUNGING
for class notes, readings and quizzes.
Ask your prof if his/her notes, etc. are on file at KINKO'S —
all copied and ready for you — or call us to check.
KINKO’S COPIES
W I believe that basketball has ai)
•'CB importer)f place in the general edu-
ff cutional scheme and pledge myself to
iHE| | cooperate with others in the field of
'' education to so administer it that its
Rvalue never will be questioned
In,--
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G.R. Edwards from the Coaches’
Creed of the National Association of
Basketball Coaches.
I have a feeling Norm Ellenberger
never read his book. And it’s not that
the Univeristy of New Mexico is an
isolated case, but with the troubles
surfacing at UNM and Arizona State
University we are compelled to won
der how many other schools are in
volved in the same circumstance.
Texas A&M certainly is not.
Further, we must ask ourselves,
once again, if college athletics has
not gone beyond what the general
public would consider a reasonable
boundary. Without trying to “second
guess” what the general public
thinks about the subject, I would like
to pursue the subject from a little
different angle.
I will never make excuses for the
gambling associations that have been
revealed at the University of New
Mexico. There is not and never will
be an excuse for that. Whether or not
reports of point-shaving and orga
nized crime involvement prove to be
true, it is to the detriment of college
athletics that an association between
them was ever made.
I want, instead, to focus on the
athlete as student. Hazarding a
guess, I think it not unreasonable
that 50 percent of college athletes
'"erle wou ^ never consider enrolling at a
major university if a suitable profes
sional farm system was available. I
to S uess that knowing that few athletes
would advance beyond a farm system
if they ever even had a chance within
sities are not pro franchises, but they
have been knighted to take athletes
and prepare them for the “real
world” that so many face. Somehow I
feel much better helping athletes
than worrying about how much tax
money might be used by those who
would go through high school, some
small farm system and never make it
to the Big Apple.
We must also realize that there are
many excellent students who also
happen to be excellent athletes. A
farm system and/or the lack of col
lege athletics might prevent those
lucky such people from exploiting all
their talents.
“Jocks have it made” is a dogma of
the twentieth century and it is very
difficult one to defeat. Fact is,
athletes don’t have it made. For ev
ery professor sympathetic to athletes
is at least one who would much
rather flunk all the jocks in his clas
ses. It would be best, of course, if
everyone was treated equally. But I
fear that is as naive a wish as thinking
Norm Ellenberger is totally inno
cent.
This year four members of the
A&M basketball team will graduate
with four athletic letters each. Con
sider that only five other basketball
players have done that previously,
mostly because of the freshman eligi
bility rule. These guys have had to
breathe basketball and attend school
contiguously for four years to be
among the elite.
Someone tell them they haven’t
earned the right to join the rest of the
world as spectators and supporters
just because they were athletes
while earning their degrees.
846-9508
201 College Main
4C Copies
WE’RE SPREADING
THE NEWS
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GIVE
Thank you for
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NEW CUSTOMERS
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OLD FRIENDS
APPRECIATED.
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The use of universities as a farm
system, per se, is advantageous for
the athlete, pro sports and the uni
versities in the long run. Providing
educational opportunities is the least
we can do for what may be the most
beloved and admired single group of
" people that, just like us, must learn
i.. to make a daily living.
Importantly, we are not the ones
expected to provide athletes with
that education or even the opportun
ity. That function is for those who
have enough money to choose where
0 e ' f they distribute it. The public simply
ne « rea p S spectatorial and emotional
benefits.
We are asked only for tolerance qf
those athletes who go through the
educational system without taking
advantage of the things that are given
them or we may occasionally be
asked to tolerate some of the indulg
ences that studious athletes require.
Indeed, instead of griping about
athletes not attending class we
should be making every effort to en
courage them to do so and helping
them when they need it.
This should not be done simply
because of an athlete’s past accom
plishments but because the athlete
has as much reason for being here as
anyone else — to gain an education,
albeit it a different one than that of
the pure academician. The scholar
ship is his or hers because of their
athletic abilities and they must per
form those abilities to retain that
scholarship. They must also maintain
a minimum academic standard.
Thus, the student-athlete is ex
pected to concern himself with one
standard, ostensibly for his own
■ good, and at the same time maintain
/ another — athletics — which, if he is
good, will, in a sense, be his educa
tional preparation for the future; and
i ar ^ ' will, if he is not good enough for the
| professional ranks, be for his own
satisfaction. Collectively, all those
athletes meeting their athletic stan
dard will provide benefits to the en
tire student body, the university and
the community. A well-coached,
mentally-prepared team can be a
university’s best ambassador.
A improperly run program can
i destroy a university’s reputation, the
: communities trust, student egos,
coaches recruiting budgets and,
perhaps saddest of all, it can destroy
the lives of the athletes.
Students who are on academic
scholarships do not have to maintain
a double standard. Granted, univer-
|liDecker's Qualify
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/
Sutherland
named athletic ■
grades adviser
Leroy Sutherland Jr., Cain Hall
dormitory supervisor, has taken on
the added responsibilities of acade
mic counselor for athletes, it was
announced last week.
Sutherland replaces retired en
gineering dean Cliff Ransdell who
has served as interim academic coun
selor since last August, according to
Texas A&M Athletic Director Mar
vin Tate.
“Sutherland has done an excellent
job as supervisor of Cain Hall,” Tate
said. “We are confident he will do
equally well in the all-important role
of academic counselor.”
Sutherland is a native of Bangor,
Maine. He received a bachelor’s de
gree in physical education from East
ern New Mexico University at Por-
tales in January 1971.
Flavors btl.
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SEGO LIQUID..^., 0ct „ 49* LISTERINE.. ”" )2oz btl
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Del Monte Cream Style Golden
Corn, Cut Green Beans, Sweet
Peas l # 303 17 oz. cans)
or Campbell's Pork & Beans
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Texas Ruby Red
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9 Redmond Terrace
COLLEGE STATION
aiul
BRYAN,TEXAS
Double Green Stamps every Tuesday with^2.50or more purchase