Paré was a captain on the Georgetown University tennis team, and in 1928 he reached the doubles final in the NCAA Championships.
In 1929, he won the U.S. National Clay Court Championship singles title after a five-set victory in the final against J. Gilbert Hall.
For 40 years, until his retirement in 1973, Paré's Green Wave squads were a national powerhouse and won 20 Southeastern Conference team titles.
That year was also monumental in another respect for Tulane, as Paré's squad captured the school's only team national championship, winning the 1959 NCAA title.
Following Paré's arrival in 1933, the Green Wave added another six singles titles to its trophy case, including an impressive three straight in 1953,54,and 55.
However, the winning continued into the late 1950s, as Crawford Henry and Ron Holmberg teamed to give Tulane the NCAA doubles champions in 1957 and 1959.
Henry and Holmberg also led a strong 1959 squad, as Tulane won the first NCAA Championship in school history.
The duo again captured the NCAA doubles crown that season, giving Tulane its eighth individual national championship under Paré.
After Georgia Tech won the first post-war SEC championship in 1946, Tulane reasserted itself in 1947, winning three straight which would begin a run of 15 league titles in an 18-year span.
Florida briefly halted the rolling Wave by capturing the 1950 SEC crown, but Tulane responded by winning nine straight titles from 1951 through 1959.