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“Out of the Quietness, a Clamor: ‘We Want Football!”’ The California State Colleges, Educational Opportunity, and Athletics

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  20 January 2017

Marc A. VanOverbeke*
Affiliation:
Department of Leadership, Educational Psychology and Foundations, Northern Illinois University; e-mail: mvanover@niu.edu

Extract

The president assembled the students shortly before they were to leave for winter break. He had a major announcement to make. Earlier that fall, the students had petitioned the president to develop an intercollegiate football program, and he had appointed a faculty and student committee to study the matter. He now was prepared to tell the gathered students whether he agreed to lead his college fully into athletics. He started slowly and told the students that their college was only six years old, much had been accomplished in that time, and many were tired and now hoping to “lie down on the new lawn under one of those new trees out there and bask in the glory that is Sacramento State College.” The president, however, was more amused than tired, as he continued. “But no! The dust blew and the rains came and then the fog! And out of the quietness and the thickness of the fog—a shout—a clamor: We want football!” The college already had an athletic program, and he tried to understand why the students would clamor for more. But, the fact remained that they had asked for football, and he now had to tell them what would become of their petition.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © 2013 History of Education Society 

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References

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