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Reverend Jesse Jackson, head of People United to Save Humanity (Operation PUSH) calls the NCAA racist and threatens a boycott of college football bowl games.
1975 (Mar 17)
The Reverend Jesse Jackson of Chicago, Illinois, head of People United to Save Humanity (Operation PUSH), said during a press conference in New York City that the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) was racist and warned that a Black boycott of the college football bowl games may be the next target of civil rights groups. Jackson remarked that “the NCAA is not fair. ... The colleges don't have Black head coaches. They will select an assistant grudgingly but they don't consider the Black man to be head coach or athletic director. ... We found that the selection committees for various bowl games are almost totally white. This is a situation we intend to change.” Earlier, Jackson had met with Michael Burke, president of Madison Square Garden in New York City, and Peter Carlesimo of Fordham University on the issue of giving Black colleges a role in the National Invitational Basketball Tournament (NIT). Jackson's organization had threatened to picket the NIT unless changes were made. Under an agreement reached with Burke and Carlesimo, two athletic directors from Black colleges would be elected to the NIT Selection Committee (Jackson suggested the names of Earl Banks of Morgan State University and Eddie Robinson of Grambling University), at least one Black institution would be invited to compete in future NIT events, and the New York branch of Operation PUSH would play a supportive role in the promotion of future tournaments. Jackson said that the pressure on the NIT was part of a national program to break down racial barriers that extended beyond the playing field.
References:
- • Hornsby, Alton. Chronology of African-American History: Significant Events and People from 1619 to the Present. Detroit: Gale Research, 1995.