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Holyfield-Foreman Watching Holyfield struggle with an aging Foreman gave me a renewed appreciation of Muhammad Ali's accomplishment in Zaire in 1974 in knocking out a younger, supposedly invincible Foreman. It is ironic that in defeat Foreman gained the one thing that Holyfield needs-respect. Majoring in Football As a graduate of Toledo ('79), I was prepared to be angry with Douglas S. Looney's article about Evans, but I'm not. The article is honest. Evans is honest. You may wish, as I did, that he had hit the books as hard as he hit the blocking sled, but it's difficult to criticize someone who is following his dream. I'm not sure whom I am more disgusted with, Jerry Evans and his father for their self-serving, arrogant attitudes or the university administration for admitting Evans in the first place and then letting him freeload for five years. I am sure whom I feel sorry for: every Toledo student cleaning trays in the cafeteria or working the night shift at McDonald's to pay his way through school, and all the parents making sacrifices to send their sons and daughters to Toledo. As the holder of bachelor's and master's degrees from Toledo, and as a football season-ticket holder for 35 years, I would like to ask Looney and Evans one question: If Toledo is a football factory, why aren't we winning more? "Who is to say he has done wrong?" writes Looney. I will. As part of my student fees at Toledo, I pay $62.48 per quarter for intercollegiate athletics, most of which is used to underwrite scholarships like the one that was given to Evans. I am not pleased to have helped pay for Evans's scholarship, which enabled him to exist until the NFL picked him. Perhaps he would like to use some of his pro football salary to reimburse the university for his tuition. Well, the draft has come and gone, and Evans, who you projected would be a second-or third-rounder, didn't go until the eighth round, when the Phoenix Cardinals made him the 204th pick overall. I guess the $300,000 starting salary he expected is out of the question. Maybe that $22,000-a-year job with a geography and planning degree looks better now.
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