Eight THE MICHIGAN DAILY Thursday, April 15, 1971 4 z. 4 ' Athletics and school: Are they com patible? a TONIGHT MIKE SMITH Ann Arbor country-western superstar By TERRI FOUCHEY and BETSY MAHON Daily Sports Analysis Last of a series The athlete in the athletic world is expected to be at the top of the heap. The majority of students think this supremacy carries over into the classroom and most social situations in the non-athletic spec- trum; making life at the university relatively easy for any athlete. Michigan athletes disagree with this illusion. The prevailing opin- ion among athletes is that, if any- thing, the attitude of the majority of people on the Michigan campus makes it harder to be accepted as a person if one is also saddled with the brand of "jock". A junior hockey player gives an example of preferential treatment, supposedly so widespread, unfor- tunately not in Ann Arbor. "When we took a trip to Denver the guys on their team were amazed that we worried about studying. They said that when they started the coach told them, "Just go to class- es. Don't worry about the work, it'll be taken care of and you'll get through." The case of a former basketball player is unusual only because of the fact that he was in engineering. He observes, "It seemed like the people in the department were proud to have a varsity athlete in I in a performance that will undoubtedly shake America's breweries at their foundations. their program." His next comments describe the normal situation most athletes, and most students for that matter, encounter in classes. "I got some breaks and I always used them to my advantage." If any different sort of treat- ment is accorded athletes, it seems more have met the sentiments de- scribed by a junior football player. "You go into some classes and you sense that the teachers are out to screw you. They want to prove to you that you can't play football and go to school." A senior baseball player offers an example of finding such a teacher. "The first day of English 123 the teacher said to put down what we wanted to do and I said I wanted to make the freshman baseball team. He wanted to knew if I was a baseball player and said he didn't like athletes. I couldn't get out of the course and ended up with a D." Most teachers aren't quite so obvious in their dislike. As a senior hockey player states from personal experience, they don't bend over backwards to show the athletes favoritism. It's usually the other way around. "I got this paper back in an English class. The first com- ments were 'Great game. Congrat- ulations on the two goals. D."'. Another former basketball player attempts to put the athletes' class- room experiences in the proper perspective and to present the facts to disbelievers. "It's a fal- lacy that athletes have an easy ride through every class. The teachers expect the same results from them as from other students. Also most people don't realize that a phys ed major is one set of courses (the chemistry require- ments) from being a pre-med ma- jor." Two juniors express the fact most athletes take in trying to get the degree without too much hassle. Their methods strongly resemble 141 ill sTRET 711951S those used by normal students to make life easier. The football play- er says, "You meet both attitudes in teachers. Some have precon- ceived idea, 'He's a jock, he'll ex- pect things. I'm going. to be hard so he won't think he's special.' Others take the opposite view. A guy who's smart . will use these things. You look for who's going to help you. You haven't got the time to be fighting with teachers." The hockey player comments, "If I know a teacher gives athletes preferential treatment, then I'd rather get out and do it on my own. Part of the system is using connections, but I'd just as soon find and earn them myself, then go into a class knowing the guy's going to give you a break." Summer jobs and help after grad- uation are what the majority of people thik come as part of the deal when an athlete is on scholar- ship. A former basketball player clarifies the situation. "Concern- ing jobs, it's a case of if a Michi- gan man is in the position to hire someone, if he can hire a Michi- gan athlete, he will. A senior hockey player gives an example of this, "There's a Michi- gan man in personnel at the GM plant in Ypsi and he's gotten a lot of summer jobs for athlete:." Job' for athletes are not solely dependent on the pull of well- placed Michigan men within cor- porate structures. The Athletic De- partment does give athletes leads on jobs available. Another senior hockey player describes the pro- cedure. "They just tell us where the job is, but we have to go and get it ourselves." This aversion towards using the fact that one is an athletes is nur- tured by the perception of being categorized immediately when the secret is out. A junior football player, who, like most, doesn't do anything outside of wearirg the varsity jacket to advertise that he is an athlete reveals the attitude most athletes hold toward notor- iety. "Some don't know who you are and I'd rather have it that way." These feelings are echoed by a junior trackman. "I don't usually tell my teachers. Around this place I don't feel like advertising I'm a jock." The main complaint of athletes concerning contacts with non-ath- letes involves being seen as only an athlete, not a person. Express- ing the grievances. of all athletes is a senior football player. "Peo- ple can really get on your nerves II by relating to you only as a foot- ball player." A junior offers his method for changing people's minds. "I go out of my way to say things in class so they know that I've got something other than the 'M' jacket. I think the stereotype is fading and I'm do- ing all I can to make sure it does.", The stereotype which athletes1 are put into is, as a junior foot- ball player describes it, "One where people look at you in one of two ways. Either as a superhuman and then it's all admiration or else as a dumb jock-'He causes tui- tion hikes.' " A senior hockey player details his problems with the stereotype and how the majority of athletes have taken to handling it. "When you come down here from Canada, you have the opinion that a degree in physical education from an American university is really great. Then when you get here a lot of people look down on you be- cause of being in it. It gets to the point that you try not to say you're in P.E. because you can feel that everybody has such a cold atti- tude toward P. E. majors." Not only the physical education majors, but all athletes find that there is a certain amount of stigma attached to that block 'M'. The rea- son for this is perhaps in these observations of a former basket- ball player. "A lot of athletes per- petuate the image of a 'dumb jock' because that's all they're ex- pected to be. It's hard to break out of it, once you've been stereo- typed. If I thought someone was dumb, I could convince myself that they were, no matter what they did." Encountering this static tends to make the athletes stick together as a senior football player notes. He also gives some reasons why this may be enforced togetherness. "We are clannish. However, peo- ple don't approach you on a one- to-one level. You 'can't get to real- ly know others." Concerning that most important segment of the non-athletic pupua- tion, two junior hockey players air some complaints regarding the fairer sex and its response to them. A junior football player perhaps offers a solution to the interactions with females. The first hockey player says, "Being an athlete limits contacts with non-athletes, especially with girls. A lot of them take the 'dumb jock' attitude." His teammate agrees, "You turn off more girls than guys up here I , Billiards Table Tennis Bowling Foosball Michigan Union Open Regular Hours During Exams and Break when you tell them you're in P.E. and a jock." Their classmate has this sug- gestion, while also warning of its drawbacks. "An athlete can play on hero-worship. The shortcut is to see it and use it. However, he shouldn't make this his mainstay, because the girl was attracted to him as a jock, not as a person." Along with the stereotype goes the fact that when an athlete speaks, his ideas are taken to be those of the whole athletic depart- ment. The press has helped to fos- ter this opinion and most athletes show some wariness to talking on all subjects with a reporter. A junior football player expresses how the coaches feel about this is- sue. "Bo says we have to watch what we say because we don't want to say anything that might reflect badly on the squad." One of his junior teammates ex- pands on this, "The coaches feel the same way as the players do about our speaking out on certain topics. They see the players as individuals with individual opin- ions, but they know there's a prob- lem with the press. So they tell us to make sure people know it's our view, not to be construed as that of the athletic department." Another junior states the nature of the problem with the press. "The coaches tell us to stay clear of trouble, demonstrations, protests, etc~, because they might try to make a story of our being there." Contrary to popular belief, as a junior trackman attests to, most coaches don't take the "close your mouth" attitude because it might make people think they hold the views of their athletes. "I never saw a coach who was worried about his players' views being taken as a reflection of him." Two seniors propose the attitude they would like to see the non-ath- letic world to take regarding ath- letes and their opinions. A football player suggests, "You can't open your mouth unless you're speaking for the whole team. People are individuals, even athletes; and when they speak on something, they're not represent- ing everyone else. However, peo- ple often relate what an athlete says back to the entire team." A basketball player wishes the same deference. "People should realize that an athlete is an indi- vidual. A lot have the idea that his sport is the only thing he does. He has his own views like anyone of the fans." Exerting on the fields of compe- tition, practicing to be prepared for these battles, putting forth a little effort in the classroom and maintaining at least a semblance of a social life are the elements of an athlete's life contending for a share of his waking hours. Te main problem is one of time, as stated earlier in this series. The academic and athletic divisions are for the majority the two prime as- pects and deciding how to juggle them so both receive the proper at- tention is process every athlete goes through. The conclusion ar- rived at reflects his own ideas and priorities. Which aspect takes precedence in a junior swimmer's life is de- tailed in his words. "The education is paramount; the sport is second." Making the education para- mount is completely up to the individual, coaches' platitudes and i press releases notwithstanding. A junior football player tells why. "In the back of each coach's mind, football is before academics. If a guy wants a degree he has to look out for himself. They (the coach- es) have a job; they have to win; and they know what they have to have to win." Contrary to popular opinion, every athlete who signs a tender, is not a candidate for a degree in physical education and the de-, partment doesn't press indecisive students to take the "easy" way out. "They don't push us into P.E.", a junior football player observes. A junior teammate agrees, "They give us a free hand in the courses and major we want to take." A junior trackman, whokis in physical education, relates an ex- perience not exactly to the con- trary, but not precisely in agree- ment. "During my first counsel- ing appointment, the P. E. coun- selor kept telling me to take this geography course because it would make for an easier load. I didn't, and even since I got a 3.0 my first term I haven't had any hassle." Two junior football players of- fer some reasons why most ath- letes bothered very little concern- ing their academic life. One re- marks, "Sometimes they (the peo- ple in the athletic department) do not have a total grasp of the academic situation." His teammate concurs, "The coaches don't know anything about courses up here. I think that's why they don't usually say anything about what we take." Everybody knows that athletes can get into any course any time they want to, even after they've taken the final.'Practice time does cut into class time and so most athletes try to schedule their class- es between nine in the morning and three in the afternoon. The time taken up by practice isn't the only reason for this as a sen- ior hockey player points out about the toll taken by practice. "You can't take night classes because you're so tired that it's impossible to sit through them." ,f The eternal quandary of all stu- dents; how much time to study; is, of course, even more ofap rob- of course, even more of a problem for athletes since part of their non-studying time is rigidly struc- tured for them. A senior foot- ball player gives advice for every- one, "As far as studying goes, bud- ;eting your time is what is neces- sary." The athlete's part of the bargain is to remain eligible and to put out. The department's portion is just to give him the money to come to school and beyond mak- ing sure he remains eligible, there is little- the department will do in the form of study help., A junior football player de- scribes how athletes no longer ex- pect the athletic department to hand them everything, including grades and their degrees. Instead, r' they look to one another and fel- low students. "The coach is look- ing out for the coach. That's what we should expect. The athlete to- day is more aware of what's hap- pening and how he is the only one who cares about his getting through. What we have to do is relate this to the guys coming In so they'll know what's happening." Two fellow juniors sum up the athlete's position at Michigan and why they, along with the ma- jority interviewed, will continue being "jocks". One says, "Sure, it's a lot of hard work, and it's not fun as far as practicing on Tues- days. But on Saturday afternoons, when you play you feel a part of all the tradition, the people all around you. You just can't beat it and you realize that you've had fun and the whole deal's worth it. Combined with the awareness that it is all worth it, that it's up to him to get the education 'he wants out of it, is a fair assess- ment of exactly where the schol- arship athlete is in 1971 at Mich- igan. The other junior expresses this, "Athletes are in a posi- tion so that if they are together there isn't anything they (the ad- ministration or otherwise) can do." ould You Like To Learn To SPEAK Hebrew? The Jewish Community Center is offering a special audio-visual course in modern conversational Hebrew for university students who have little or no knowledge of the Hebrew language. Register now for the 8 week intensive Ulpon course June 28-August 20, 1971 Fee of $125 includes follow-up consultations by correspondence through June, 1972. Partial scholarships are available. For additional information and registration forms call or write to the Hebrew Department, (313) 341 -4200, 18100 Meyers Road, Detroit, Mich- igan 48235. Natural " Food AT EDEIN FOODS SPRING CELEBRAT/ION PRICE REDUCTION Brown Rice . ....30c/lb. Rolled Oats ..... 20c lb. Wheat Flour . 5 lb.-$1.00 Pastry Flour ... 5 lb.-75c Many more items reduced forever! ALSO SPECIALIZING IN: Nuts, Seeds, Dried Fruit, Teas, Herbs, Spices, Fresh Vegetables and much more CHECK OUR PRICES! You'll be surprised!!! BUY IN QUANTITY (300 LBS.) FOR WHOLESALE PRICES 211 SO. STATE ST. Mon.-Sat. 10 A.M.-6 P.M. Friday 10 A.M.-8:30 P.M. THE JAW- STRETCHER BIG SCOT 49c double cheeseburger pleaser SCo ttys 3362 Washtenaw St. (Just up from Arborland) Ticket information Information concerning 1971 student football tickets was re- leased yesterday. The cost will be $16.00 for seven home games. They will be charged through Students Accounts Office after tic- kets have been picked up and the football coupon from Registra- tion has been turned in. Distribution of the tickets will be as follows: Group 4-September 9-primarily seniors Group 3-September 10-juniors Group 2-September 13-sophomores Group 1-September 14-freshmen Hours will be from 8:30 until 4:00 p.m. Proper I.D. with the proper imprints must be presented. Spouse tickets may be purchased for $21.00 at the time of proper student group exchange day. Tickets will be issued in the next lower priority. Checks should be made payable to the Michi- gan Ticket Department. Those students who wish to take in any away games can also pick up applicationcards*for those games. They should be mailed to the Ticket Office with proper remittance by the last week in April. Picking the winners i R the sheer beauty of Schiaparelli stretch panty hose is a delight to behold in spring fashion shades And the shape-tracing fit is second nature to the Carmalon yarn. Sheer in one size 2.50 Longer-wear, one size $3, Long-wear Regal for 5'1" and over, $3. t s 4 i". ;'..y j ...;. i. Y F r. L 4 s Z "A '" \r .}fZjf¢'; (Continued from Page 2) Kuen maybe. So the sum of all these deductions is that Pat- ton will take Best Picture, crowded by Love Story. That al- so means, in the Academy's pe- culiar cosmology, that Patton's Franklin Schaffer will win ex officio the Oscar for Best -Di- rector. As for the others .. . Best Actor: Despite his ray- saying, and maybe even because of it, George C. Scott will cop the statue; Hollywood loves self-flagellation. If n o t Scott, then Nicholson. Where oh where are Alan Arkin and Dustin Hoffman? Best Actress: Actually, they should never have opened up this category - Glenda Jack- son outclasses the rest of the field. To my m a l e chauvinist mind, Ali MacGraw is heaven on earth, but she can't act. And Jane Alexander of The Great White Hope frankly isn't good enough even for the Academy. Carrie Snodgrass and Sarah Miles have an outside chance. Still, I put my money on Miss Jackson. Best Supporting Actor: Chief Dan George should win if only to atone for the oversight of Little Big Man and its director Arthur Penn. My saner, more cynical half tells me, however, that Gene Hackman will get the Oscar for I Never Sang for My Father. Best Supporting Actress: I confess, I'm stumped. Helen Hayes and Maureen Stapleton in the same category. Senti- ment will favor Miss Hayes just as it will favor Melvyn Douglas for Best Actor. But somehow I just can't imagine them giving it to anyon ebut Karen Black. There must be justice some- where. Huh? 4.- GIANT SALE AT STUDENT BOOK SERVICE Will Continue Thru End of Finals Prices Reduced on ALL BOOKS, Supplies and (!) Aquarius Waterbeds Thousands of Books 50% off or cheaper TONS of books at 30c per pound! IN 'A Im CLI Roi Try Ta; EUROPE $199 LONDON SPAIN kpril 30-May 7 May 1-May 9 JDES: INCLUDES: undtrip Jet Roundtrip Jet ans., Hotel, Trans., Hotel, xes. Transfers Taxes, Transfers . I I I ,!VV I ttVtv -1 1- -7 1* U ________________________________________________________________ U STEVE-761-9231 PAI I i