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THE Thames Star.

TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1928. THE OLYMPIC GAMES.

"With malice towards none; with charity for all; with firmness in the right, as God gives us to see the right."—Lincoln.

The Council of the New Zealand Olympic Association is disappointed at the result of its appeal for assistance in raising a fund sufficient to enable a team of athletes to be sent from the Dominion to the Olympic Games at Amsterdam. The smallness of the response bears its own significance. It can only be regarded as expressive of a doubt on the part of the public respecting the value of participation in these international events. 'The strongly unfavourable verdict on the'Olympic Games that wa'fe passed a few days ago by a prominent London journal may be taken at least as an indication .that in the Old Country there is a certain amount of misgiving respecting the meiits of these international competitions and the desirability of their encouragement. The public has probably :-.ot quite forgotten that the last Olympiad was productive of some uncdifying srrenes and a good deal of international .friction —productive, that is to say, of an atmosphere entirely different from that which should prevail when athletes from the various countries of the world are competing in friendly rivalry. But the chief cause of the lack of support which the New Zealand Olympic Association laments must be the feeling that the benefits derivable from the. sending of a small party of selected competitors from this country to the other side of the world would not commensurate with the expenditure which the scheme must involve. The Association's am-, bition has been to ;raise £IO,OOO for the purpose of sending a team of perhaps twenty athletes to Amsterdam. This works out at £SOO per head. The idea was no doubt a bol.d one, but the Association was calculating upon an enthusiasm for the project among sports bodies and the public which has distinctly failed to reveal itself. Such a result is really not very surprising. Even among those who are closely in touch, with athletics in the Dominion there has been, a marked apathy towards the effort to secure the participation of New Zealand at the Olympic Games. There is always the possibility that the desire -to have this country represented in all descriptions of international sports may be carried further than is warranted by the calibre of the proposed .contestants —a mistake which, a small community is somewhat likely to make. The decision to enter for the Davis Cup a New Zealand team which has not the remotest chance of success furnishes an .illustration in point. -

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/THS19280327.2.10

Bibliographic details

Thames Star, Volume LXII, Issue 17387, 27 March 1928, Page 4

Word Count
437

THE Thames Star. TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1928. THE OLYMPIC GAMES. Thames Star, Volume LXII, Issue 17387, 27 March 1928, Page 4

THE Thames Star. TUESDAY, MARCH 27, 1928. THE OLYMPIC GAMES. Thames Star, Volume LXII, Issue 17387, 27 March 1928, Page 4

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