From THE NATIONAL OBSERVER
printed on the inside, back cover of the 1963 CAC Spring Sports
Festival program
hosted by Washington and Lee University
Lexington, Virginia
May 10-11, 1963
"No Pay, No Pressure, No Hypocrisy;
Five Schools Make Sports Fun Again!"
In the midst of the flourishing football factories
of the South and Midwest, a small band of schools stands for these
athletic ideals; No pay, no pressure, no hypocrisy. They're proving
that intercollegiate sports can be an amateur pastime of fun and
successful for all - players, fans, alumni, even faculty.
The group is the brand new College Athletic Conference. Its members
are Washington and Lee University, located here in the shadows of
the Blue Ridge Mountains of Virginia; Centre College of Danville,
Kentucky; the University of the South, at Sewanee, Tennessee;
Southwestern of Memphis, and Washington of St. Louis. Their symbol
of league supremacy: An old locomotive bell donated by the Norfolk
and Western Railway.
Conference rules say simply: "All participation in sports by
members of its teams shall be solely because of interest in and the
enjoyment of the game. No financial aid shall be given to any
student which is conditioned upon, or for the purpose of
encouraging, his participation in intercollegiate athletics."
On the Honor System
What's more, an honor system governs the
conference. Each member is expected to live up to its commitments
without any policing.
This new athletic life is not due to a lack of an athletic
tradition. Centre's famed Prayin' Colonels claimed the national
collegiate football title in 1921. Sewanee's team of 1899 won 12
games without a loss, whipping Texas, Texas A&M, Tulane,
Louisiana State, and Mississippi. Southwestern won 7, lost 1, tied
1 in 1938, and included Mississippi State among its victims. In
1950, Washington and Lee won 8, lost 2, and played in the Gator
Bowl.
Long ago, though, each of the schools quit subsidizing athletics,
and knuckled down to the job of turning out students. Their
decision - and the new conference - are steps in American
education's draft toward higher academic standards.
Putting a coat and tie on an athlete (as Washington and Lee
requires), and making him go to class doesn't mean that a school is
an athletic pushover. Washington & Lee's Generals were
undefeated in football the past two years. Sewanee won 5, lost 2,
and tied 1 last year.
Washington and Lee typifies the CAC's spirt. There are 48 boys in
this year's football squad, and before the season's out, every one
of them will get to play. In fact, most of them will play in every
game. Says Coach Lee McLaughlin, "I simply feel that it's good for
morale to get a chance to play." Besides, he adds, "The boy who's
fresh plays better."
Spark of Leadership
McLaughlin isn't a tough coach, but he's able to
set afire a spirit that makes the team hustle. Boys run full speed
from late afternoon laboratories to the practice field, unbuttoning
shirts as they go, so they won't miss practice.
Bobby Payne, a tackle and senior co-captain from Louisville,
Kentucky, comments: "They don't drive us until we're ready to drop
dead. We all have a good time. When football becomes a task and
drudgery, its not football. Here we enjoy it."
The school's athletic department is under the watchful eyes of a
faculty committee. Budget, schedules, eligibility, and personnel
matters are in the committee's hands.
Coach McLaughlin says that "I don't even want the scholarship
committee to know which boys I'm interested in."
Dr. William Hinton, chairman of the psychology department, and head
of the faculty athletic committee, is happy to have on campus some
students who happen to be good athletes.
"I like to see a few hard-nose boys around," he says. "It adds a
little flavor." Hard-nose athletes are boys who look the part -
big, burly, tough.
On the typical campus, perhaps 5 per cent of the male students take
part in varsity athletics. At Washington and Lee, it's 33 per cent
- 350 of the all-male school's 1,050 undergraduates. And under the
program of purity, no sport is more important than any other.
So-called minor sports - soccer, lacrosse, golf, tennis - get all
the money and equipment they need.
The amateurism delights athletic director Cy Twombly, the leathery,
41-year veteran of Washington and Lee athletics. He says: "We don't
have to keep up with the Jones any more. It's an entirely different
atmosphere."
In the old days, he said, an athletic association ran the school's
intercollegiate athletics, and existed almost entirely apart from
the rest of the school.
He adds: "Now, we're running our own house. Coaches and athletic
people are a lot better off. If they keep their noses clean, they
don't have a thing to worry about."
President Cole's View
Washington and Lee President Fred Cole sees the CAC
as giving the collegiate athlete a "fair shake" at last. This may
sound peculiar in view of critics' charges that college athletics
are recruited, coddled, and ride and educational gray train that
education can't really afford.
But Dr. Cole's point is interesting. To him, and to others in the
CAC, the pressures of big-time collegiate athletics shunt the
athlete into an isolated corner of the campus. He spends most of
his years pursuing one thing: Athletics. Dr. Cole reasons that if
he's brought into the main-stream of campus life, and forced to
live and study as any other student, his horizon will expand. New
talents will be uncovered.
CAC officials say they aren't crusading for purity in college
athletics. Their policy fits them fine. At the same time, Dr. Cole
wryly says: "A great many schools could profit from this."