Page 10-Wednesday, August 5, 1981-The Michigan Daily . THE SPORTING VIEWS Three athlet;s... ... the spi 4 rit they share By JOHN FITZPATRICK Daily sports writer An athlete is a difficult creature to define. What must one do in order to be one? Have the keen batting eye of a pro ball player, perhaps, or the graceful flexibility of a gymnast? These are physiological requisites-what of the intangibles? Emotions such as tenacity and dogged courage are often brought to mind when thinking of the quintessential athlete, as well as a willingness to surpass one's limitations, and the conviction to do so. Terry Fox was such an athlete. His name may be familiar to some, as it was mentioned in the national media several weeks ago. Fox was the man who at- tempted to run across Canada last year' to raise money for cancer research.The task he set for him- self was imposing enough, but the handicap he carried with him was a potentially greater onus. Terry Fox had only one leg, his left; the other he had lost to cancer. Fox completed 3,000 of the 5,000 miles that lay before him. Each day he would rise early and, ignoring incessant fatigue and stiff joints which begged for relief, would shuffle down some desolate highway. He believed in himself, and it was this belief and the contempt for the supposed "disability" he had, which drove him forward, day after day. And pain was always there. The disease had not left Fox; it was spreading throughout his body even as he ran twenty, thirty, or even more miles every day. He would have to vomit frequently, but he persisted. He was nuturing a cause, this stubborn athlete, and in the tradition of true athletes he carried on. But in September of 1980, he could continue no longer. 3,000 miles had passed under foot, and as Fox was hospitalized, donations to the Canadian Cancer Society poured in, the total amount reaching into the millions. Fox fought the cancer which was now in his abdomen and lungs with the same courage he had displayed during his run, but he was fighting a losing battle and passed away last June. It is this spirit, the endurance which Faulkner wrote of mingled with the bravery which was. Hemingway's subject, that Fox highlighted with such excellence. It is the spirit of athletics. Harry Cordellos is an athlete. Cordellos is a marathon runner and water skier who works for the Bay Area Rapid Transit system in San Francisco, providing information to lost travelers. Harry Cor- dellos is also blind. He has'run a sub-three hour marathon, and is a relentless trainer. "But doesn't his blindness hinder him?" it might be asked, along with countless other questions as to just how a blind man can run a marathon, and run one quite well. Cordellos an- swered these queries towards the end of a short ar- ticle he did several years ago concerning his first marathon: "Hut what about those questions?" he wrote. "Every marathon runner could write a book about his first marathon. If this summary does not seem too different from most of them, then maybe blindness is not the tragic handicap people often make of it." Bob Hall is an athlete. Hall, with massive shoulders and a heavily muscled upper-body, is one of the pioneers in wheelchair "running," and has twice won the wheelchair division of the Boston Marathon. Hall frequently trains in excess of 100 miles a week, much of it over the rolling hills of his hometown, Belmont, Massachusetts. Each of these men display a resoluteness and in- domitable will which is to be found in that "spirit" mentioned before. It is tempting to look upon them as freaks-as anomalies, interesting to look at because they are unique. But they are not unique, and do not think themselves to be so. Unique, perhaps, in the sense that they are sportsmen, and that many people are not, but only in that sense. As such, they are to be admired and respected. They have never asked for pity, for they are athletes, and that is enough. I 4 EAST LANSING (UPI) - Mar- cotics Squad said undercover JONES WAS not a teacher in tin D. Jones, the part-time agents made four drug buys from East Lansing, but had been em- wrestling coach at East Lansing Jones - one for as much as $600 ployed as a coach on a part-time High School, was arraigned - during a two-month in- basis. yesterday on charges of selling vestigation leading up to Jones' East Lansing Superintendent ets cocaine and valium. arrest. W. Robert Docking said no action However, Wriggelsworth said will be taken against Jones pen- Jones, 25, of Lansing, was there was no evidence that the ding the outcome of his trial. released on his own recognizance former high school athlete had C o k e and $4,000 bond following been selling drugs to his "He is currently our wrestling arraignment in Lansing District wrestlers or other students. coach. He has not been tried yet," Court on three counts of Jones wrestled and played Docking said. delivering cocaine and one count football while attending Eastern A preliminary examination of delivering valium. High School in Lansing in 1972-74. was set for Aug. 21 in Lansing. DET. LT. Gene Wriggelsworth He has a degree from Michigan Jones faces a maximum term of of the Tri-County Metro Nar- State University. five years in prison if convicted. AP Photo Spring training? ....... in Ann Arbor? The Cincinnati Reds continue their workouts at Michigan's indoor practice the Reds chose to come to Ann Arbor to utilize the fieldhouse's artificial surface. fieldhouse yesterday. Getting prepared to resume their strike-interrupted season, The Reds will continue with their "summer" training through tomorrow.