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March 12, 1987 - Image 9

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Michigan Daily, 1987-03-12

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-.
+

Women's Tennis
vs. Eastern Michigan
Tomorrow, 7 p.m.
Track and Tennis Building

SPORTS

Sports Law Symposium
Sponsored by Lawyers' Club
Today, 4:30 and 6 p.m.
Hutchins Hall

t

The Michigan Daily

Thursday, March 12, 1987

Page 9

y ng THE LINT
E Divers aim for MIHIGAN9
Abe J(1.r) F (6-s
(NCAAMarberths (.3iii;7

By ALVIN BORROMEO
It's tournament time! Slam
dunks, fast breaks, the Final Four,
Cinderella teams, basketball,
basketball, basketball. March is the
month of champions for the
NCAA.
But basketball is not the only
sport in which college athletics is
conducting a championship. March
is also the month for the NCAA
women's swimming and diving
championships which will be held
in Indianapolis, Ind., March 19-21.
Swimmers have already qualified
for the event by their performance

during the regular season. Members
of the diving squad, however, must
qualify by participating in the
NCAA diving regionals to be held
today through Sunday in
Champaign.
One Michigan diver has qualified
for the championships. Junior Mary
Fischbach will be representing the
Wolverines in the one and three-
meter springboard.
If the regular season is any
indication of how it will do (15-0;
6-0, Big Ten Champions), then
look for the diving team to be well
represented in Indianapolis.

Parrish grievance

Athlete
By IAN RATNER
Chris Brewster, a Michigan track
and cross-country runner, will
receive the Harmon-Rice award,
presented to a national member of
Phi Delta Theta fraternity who
shines on and off the playing field.
"It's an honor," said Brewster,
who will be presented the award on
Sunday by Michigan Associate
Athletic Director Don Lundt. "The
award signifies my ability to
combine academics, fraternity
activities, and athletics."
Brewster, a senior from London,
Ontario, becomes the first
Michigan athlete to win the the
award, which is named after
Michigan's 1940 Heisman Trophy
winner, Tom Harmon, and
legendary sportswriter Grantland
Rice, both Phi Delta Theta alumni.
A six-time letter winner and
captain of both the cross-country

hailed;
and indoor track teams, Brewster
won the award based on his'
achievements during the 1985-86
campaign.
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Associated Press
Villain-ova
Gary McLain, shown here after Villanova's victory in the 1985 NCAA
championship, has admitted that he sold and used drugs while in college.
His confession is revealed in an article written by Sports Illustrated.
Prug testing ruled
unconsttutional

to he hear
TAMPA (AP) - A hearing on a
grievance by the Major League
Baseball Players Association
against the Philadelphia Phillies
over Lance Parrish is another
skirmish in the continuing
controversy between the union and
owners over free agents.
Arbitrator George Nikolau is
scheduled to hold a hearing here
today on the association's
contention that the Phillies
breached a $1 million, one-year
agreement with free-agent catcher
Parrish.
The association claims the
Phillies reached agreement and then
insisted on a clause under which
Parrish promised not to sue
baseball for alleged collusion in not
signing major free agents.
THE PHILLIES contend the
contract always was predicated on
the former Detroit Tiger accepting
the no-suit clause.
Gene Orza, general counsel for
the association, will represent the
union. Attorney William Webb.
will represent the7Phillies.
Others expected to take part
include Phillies' president Bill
Giles; attorney William Landman,
representing Parrish; the player's

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7~o/e~Y4t

d today
agent, Tom Reich; and Lou
Hoynes, counsel for baseball's
Player Relations Committee.
The association already has a
grievance being heard on the
owners' alleged collusion against
major free agents.

Print or Type legibly
in the space providec
the copy as you woul
like it to appear.
(ACTUAL SIZE OF AD)

SAN JOSE, Calif. (AP) -
Mandatory drug tests required by the
National Collegiate Athletic
Association are an unconstitutional
invasion of privacy, a judge ruled
Wednesday in granting a
preliminary injunction sought by
Stanford University diver Simone
LeVant.
The ruling, in the first legal
challenge to the NCAA's one-and-a-
half-year-old drug-testing program,
applied only to LeVant but could
hold broad implications for
thousands of athletes.
LeVant, a 22-year-old senior will
be the only athlete at
championship-qualifying events in
Arizona this weekend, and possibly
the NCAA finals in Indianapolis in
two weeks, who will not have to
submit to urine tests.
"I FEEL wonderful," LeVant
said. "I am happy to hear
everything the judge said. I feel I
set a precedent. No other athlete has
been willing to challenge the
NCAA. We've won the first step. I
hope this makes other athletes
think about their situations more."
"It is broad. It is sweeping. It is
a, complete repudiation of the
T. CAA's drug-testing program,"
said Robert A. Van Nest, one of
LeVant's attorneys.
Santa Clara County Superior
Cpurt Judge Peter G. Stone agreed
w ith LeVant that mandatory urine
Wtests are an obtrusive, unreasonable
aid unconstitutional invasion of
privacy and said there is a
"reasonable probability" she would
win in a trial court.
The judge said the testing
program does not appear to
accomplish its goals and has very
little relationship to the health of
4hletes. He criticized the NCAA
for not coming up with other
iethods to discourage drug use.
THE NCAA "cannot require
this athlete to give up that very
v*luable right, the right of
pyivacy," Stone said.
Stone rejected virtually every
argument posed by the NCAA
attorney Richard J. Archer, who
said he didn't think the NCAA
would appeal the ruling since
Le~ant would be graduating this

will do everything it can to protect
its (drug testing) program."
Although the ruling affects only
LeVant, Stanford athletic director
Andy Geiger, he added, "I expect the
case has been noticed by other
athletes and I expect there will be
questions raised."

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