Football vs. Wake Forest Saturday, 1 p.m. Michigan Stadium SPORTS Field Hockey vs. Kent State Saturday, 10 a.m. Tartan Turf The Michigan Daily Wednesday, September 21, 1988 Page 7 Adam's Rib, BY ADAM SCHRAGER NFL drug enforcers... ...questionable calls Imagine approaching your car after a hard day's work and noticing a dent 'the size of a crater. Recently, the NFL found a Dent the size of a 275- pound Chicago Bear in its official drug policy. The policy has already nabbed many superstars in this still young 1988 season. Celebrated players such as Lawrence Taylor, Dexter Manley and Charles White have been suspended for 30 days for having traces of drugs found in their urine. Less than two weeks ago, the NFL announced the latest of their suspensions. The league stated that Chicago Bears running back Calvin Thomas and perennial All-Pro defensive end Richard Dent must sit for 30 days. Thomas was guilty for traces of cocaine and marijuana, and Dent was whistled for not taking the test. Not taking the test? A player gets 30 days for not taking a test? Haven't they finished college yet? Someone call Perry Mason. Get Della Street on the line right away. Let's go to court. STEVE ZUCKER, Dent's lawyer, filed an immediate injunction to allow Dent to play in the Bears' second game against Indianapolis. One day after the suit was filed, the league dropped the suspension and scheduled a special hearing before NFL commissioner Pete Rozelle to settle the issue. Dent had taken an initial drug test on Aug. 1 with the rest of the Bears and had not shown any trace of drugs. But the league decided to test Dent again because of previous "drug-related incidents." After being specially tested in May and then again with his team in August, Dent refused to take the latest test on Aug. 23, administered because of "reasonable cause" on the part of the NFL. It was this "reasonable cause" that prompted the first challenge to the league's drug policy and forced Rozelle to make a decision. It was also this "reasonable cause" that spurred controversy and many questions about a previously vague policy. Can the league infringe on an individual's rights because of "reasonable cause?" Who decides what is "reasonable cause?" WHITE WAS SUSPENDED for alcohol abuse when he was 'previously caught for using cocaine. Isn't alcohol a legal drug? The Bears' Thomas was suspended because he had failed a previous test that he claims he never knew about. When Bears president Michael McCaskey was asked to show documentation of Thomas being notified, he couldn't, thus questioning whether Thomas was ever warned. But even with people crying personal foul over these other two incidents, it is the Dent scenario that is crucial. If people can be tested for the league's "reasonable cause," then these other cases don't matter. It is obvious that players know how to get around being caught in drug tests. Taylor documented how he carried around another teammate's urine 'in an aspirin bottle in his athletic supporter to beat the routine Giants drug test. Something definitely needs to be done. Rozelle met with Dent personally last week and retracted the 30-day suspension with the guarantee that he would subsequently agree to take all drug-related tests. But Dent won't be the only one to challenge the all- powerful NFL's very weak and porous drug policy. And if the league isn't wary, it could get clipped. THE SPORTING VIEWS Olympics should open its doors to all athletes I BY PETER LEE During the tenure of International Olympic Committee (IOC) President Juan Antonio Samaranch, there has been a trend toward allowing professional athletes to compete in the Olympic Games. To some, this trend has been alarming because they feel the original intent of the Olympics is being violated. Others, including Samaranch, believe the IOC must face the realities of the times by including professionals in the Games. Samaranch's stance is appropriate when considering the changes in the Olympic movement since the modern Games began in the 1890s. The Games have become a multi- million-dollar business. For the 1988 Summer Games, $5.47 million is the projected figure for television revenue alone. In addition, there is more money spent by corporate sponsors for individual athletes, and in the case of Eastern Bloc countries, money is supplied by the governments. THE ATHLETES also do not mind receiving "material resources" from sponsors or governments. The fact that many Olympic athletes make a living as a result of their sport makes the notion of amateurism in the Olympics a hypocritical one. People who have listened to Carl Lewis sing know he must be making a living some other way. Furthermore, the athletes are given incentives to participate not just for the love of their sports, but to win. Governments, sports federations, and corporations lavish cash, houses, cars, and even exemption from military service to the winners in the Games. Another apparent hypocracy is in the way in which professionals can compete in some Olympic sports like ice hockey and tennis and not in others such as basketball. amateurism goes back only to the 1890s, whereas the tradition of the original Olympic Games goes back to the days of the ancient Greek civilizations. In these games the athletes were professional soldiers competing in soldierly events such as javelin throwing, wrestling, and foot racing. If the Olympic movement was to adhere to this tradition, then professionals should be allowed to compete in the sport of their profession. Who is to say by what tradition the IOC should follow? In the absence of a clear, just answer to this question, maybe complying with the times is not such a bad idea. EVEN IF the IOC allows all professionals to compete in the Olympic Games, all will not be lost for the diehard supporters of amateurism. In sports like baseball and hockey, and perhaps basketball and tennis, there will most likely never be total professional participation because of conflicts with professional seasons and events. The Tigers, however, might not be too reluctant to lend Homero Hernandez (Is that his name now?) for a stint in the Games. The state of the present-day Olympic movement warrants that professionals should be allowed to compete. This would promote a greater degree of fairness in the Games and allow for the eradication of the biggest contradiction in the Olympic movement without irreparably damaging the future of the Games. The spirit of true amateurism is no long present in the Olympic Games. With this in mind, the IOC should once and for all let the world see its greatest athletes competing in what is perhaps the greatest showcase of athleticism. A Associoted Press Olympian Carl Lewis is one athlete who benefits from the International Olympic Committee's professionalism policy. Although the current trends indicate that it will probably be best to allow all professionals to compete in the Olympic Games, proponents of amateurism claim by letting professionals participate, tradition is being violated and that the Olympic movement is swaying from its original intent. IN THE REALM of history, this is a very modern view of tradition. The tradition of If you've ever dreamed of being behind the controls If you're cut out for it, we'll give you free civilian of an airplane, this is your chance to find out what it's really like. flight training, maybe even $100 a month cash while you're in school. And someday you could be flying A Marine Corps pilot is coming to campus who a Harrier, Cobra or F/A-18. can take you up for trial flights. Get a taste of what life is like We're looking for a few f _ L A 11 at the top. The flight's on us. Stop by and see a Jostens representative, Mnnday Sant 1-thru FridayS ent 92 I