w M Parker Calls; Horses Dance aters Cite Pro, Con Athletics Emnphasis By KENNETH WINTER Are intercollegiate athletics be- g overemphasized? The discussion, part of a col- ge debate series broadcast by a etroit radio station, was pre- mted as part of the Michigan nion's Creative Arts Festival, bich ended Saturday night. Proposing an affirmative an- ver to this question, two debaters om Wayne State University, won debate Wednesday over two Uni- rsity students, who defended ie present practices of colleges ward their athletes. Wayne's David Butler attacked day's emphasis on athletics arging, "The overemphasis on bletics means an undue em- iasis on winning." He added that aches' job status and salary tes are based on how many nes they win, not on their aca- mic qualifications and ability teach. Promising Athletes Colleges give scholarships to en- e promising athletes, even ough they may not be scholas- ally qualified; and to keep them ademically eligible, schools give ese athletes "special considera- an" with special dormitory, class tendance, dining and curriculum cilities, he continued. Policies stressing athletics are aconsistent with the purposes of university." Anything not di-f ctly contributing to this pur- se-education-should be secon-M pry. But the first emphasis in bletics today is to win, which not an educational goal, he inmented. He attacked this practice as iypocritical, because schools pro- faize Team Sets Luditioning Time Tryouts will be held at 7 p.m. dlay in the Michigan League idio for the Frosh Weekend aize Team floorshow, Nancy eitay, '65, assistant general airman of the Maize Team, an- unced yesterday. vide the greatest rewards for athletic prowess, not for educa- tional achievement." Value To Participants Representing the University, William Wiers, '65E, said that athletics should not de-emphasize because of their value to the par- ticipants. "They provide a positive good to the individual. Athletics give stu- dents recreation, competition and harness his atavistic tendencies," Wiers claimed. He said that participation in athletics provides a "positive good" to the individual, by furnishing opportunity for recreation and competition, and by developing character. "Basis of Society" "Competition is the basis of our society," Wiers added. He commented that coaches are not hired and fired on the basis of how many games they win, but for "winning within the rules." He admitted, however, that some Big Ten schools had dropped coaches because of poor won-lost records. Also representing the University, Marjorie Wallace, '62, cited the advantages to the institution of a good athletic program. "Esprit de Corps" She said that a school team generates an "esprit de corps" which envelops the campus and the community. Miss Wallace added that specta- tor sports eive students a chance to relax after a week of studies,t and bring alumni back to campus, reviving their interest in the col- lege. Russell Davidson of WSU quot- ed Robert Maynard Hutchins of the University of Chicago, who said, "Athletics are to a university as bullfighting is to agriculture." De-Emphasis, Endowment Davidson said that the institu- tion will benefit from athletics just as much, even if they were de-emphasized. He noted that Harvard, with less stress on athletics, still enjoys a richer alumni endowment than the Uni- versity. HONOR YOUR PARTNER-Ivan W. Parker, associate dean of men, calls a unique square dance which he arranged for horses at the Michigan Riding Club annual horse show Sunday. The drill team pranced through an afternoon at "The Country Fair," featuring the square dance and other routines under the direction of Douglas Frazier. Square dance calling and writing is Parker's hobby. "I am an occasional writer," he says. "I write for occasions. GOA, ELECTIONS: Park Calls India 'Changing Panorama' By JAMES NICHOL$ "as tough and bombastic as any- Prof. Park saw "a great decision Contemporary India is a "wide one else," he said. point coming in Indian politics." panorama of change, progress, andI- sometimes retrogression," Prof. India's Status le foresaw a power struggle In Richard L. Park of the political "India will never have the stat- India when the popular prime science department and director of us that it had before Goa," Prof. minister leaves politics. Krishna the Center for Southern Asian Park said. Menon's faction, favoring a strong Studies, said in a talk Sunday aft- In the third Indian general elec- ernoon in the Conference Room of tion, held this year, Prof. Park nd powerful state, may become the Michigan Union, saw "a continuing slow decline" Nehru's heirs, he added. He said that his speech, "Re- of Nehru's ruling Congress Party, cent Political Developments in In- and a gain in strength for groups ' j il gi i dia-Goa and the Third General "at both ends of the political spec- Election," dealt with only two of trum." The election was character- many topics he might have chosen. ized by "the rise of right-wing i Prof. Park asserted that India's groups" and by a gain in strength D1AL NO 5-6290 recent seizure of the Portuguese for the Communists. enclave of Goa "was probably jus- The Congress Party won "an ENDS THURSDAY tified," but not under internation- overwhelming majority" of the al law. He called the action a seats in parliament, but it does SIN"athrma "conquest," and criticized the not truly represent the popular "circuitous arguments" Indians use vote, he said. IMVIL tAWIRO to justify it. Saturation Technique Seizure Justified Prof. Park said the re-election However, Prof. Park said the of Krishna Menon in North Bom- seizure was justified "from the bay reflected Nehru's popularity as perspective of the government of well as Menon's. His Congress Par- India." He cited the 14 years of ty used a "saturation technique." unsuccessful bilateral negotiations dividing Menon's opposition among and the "fruitless" United Nations several small parties. declarations against colonialism which preceded the Indian inva- The blockade of the PortugueseTe h colony by Indian troops "tied down eracst ituLte a good section of the Indian army" which was needed for deployment An institute designed to aid in the. north, where the Red Chi- teachers and school administra- nese are encroaching on Indian tors on courses on communism will lands. The political advantages to be held at the University of South- Prime Minister Nehru and De- ern Califprnia beginning June 25. fense Minister V. K. Krishna Men- Four courses, a lecture series on on were important, too, Prof. Park Communist doctrine, a teachers' said. seminar and evening forums will He added that Nehru was sur- form the six-day program. It will prised at the world reaction to be open to the public. the seizure of Goa. "The govern- Nearly 100 high school teachers, ment miscalculated how seriously as well as junior college instruc- many people in the world would tors and administrators, will at- take it." tend the six week institute, held The move destroyed the "stereo- under the newly created Research Shows at 1, 3, 5, 7, 9 P.M. type" of India as a peacemaker. Institute on Communist Strategy Feature 8 Minutes later This "stereotype" was not entire- and Propaganda. ly accurate since the Indians, re- The institute was made possible * FRIDAY * garding "their own territory," are by a $325,000 gift from a USC Alec Guinness Rosalind Russell .__na_____f____"___-_n_ , ... *"A MAJORITY OF ONE" See J.G-o. "STILL AT IT" 'A Swiggin' Saga' i. is coming Thurs., March 29 and Fri., March 30 at Lydia Mendelssohn ...08:00 P.M. * * * * 11 FACULTY DISCUSSION UBJECT: Islam in the Modern Near East .FADER: Dr. Geo. Hourani; All faculty welcome 'IME: Wed. 12 o'clock lunch; Mich League Don't Miss:" PNADECUT RO IHNEBSRIN BOERER Death Takes 'U' Professor Lemuel L. Laing, 67, former pro- messor in the School of Business Administration and University faculty member for 16 years, died Sunday. Prof. Laing received a bachelor of business administration degree from the University in 1930, and prior to that studied in the literary college. He first joined the fac- ulty as an instructor of econom- ics in 1939, and in 1943 was nam- ed associate professor of account- ing. Prof. Laing was a certified pub- lic accountant and a past member of the Michigan Association of Public Accountants, the Ameri- can Institute of Certified Public Accountants and several other pro- fessional associations. 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