Harry Edwards

From KeyWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:TOCnestleft Harry Edwards is an Emeritus Professor at the University of California at Berkeley, best known for writing the “Revolt of the Black Athlete” in the late 1960’s.

Activism/academia

Edwards, born in East St. Louis, Illinois in 1942, attended Fresno City College from 1959 to 1960 as a four sport student athlete. He transferred to San Jose State University (SJS) in 1960 on an athletic scholarship in track and field. While he had success on the track field, Edwards and other black student-athletes confronted housing and employment discrimination and a segregated campus social life. Moreover the university funneled black student-athletes into a physical education curriculum to keep them eligible to compete in intercollegiate sports. Few graduated during the years of their athletic eligibility. Determined to earn a social work degree, Edwards began challenging the system. In 1964, he became the first black student-athlete since the early 1950’s to graduate from SJS.

Edwards then began graduate work in sociology at Cornell University where he was one of the first students to study black sociology. After receiving his M.A. in 1966, Edwards took a temporary leave from Cornell to teach at SJS as a visiting professor during the 1966-1968 academic years. This period also spawned the “Revolt of the Black Athlete,” following Edwards and Kenneth Noel’s formation of the United Black Students for Action . This controversially led to the cancellation of SJS’s opening football game with the University of Texas at El Paso in 1967. San Jose State University became the first major college in the U.S. to cancel an athletic event under the threat of racial protest. The cancellation led the university to reform its athletic program, addressing many of the concerns the UBSA raised.

Shortly after the San Jose State protests, the UBSA transformed itself into the Olympic Project for Human Rights (OPHR), an organization designed for the specific purpose of boycotting the 1968 Summer Olympics. Edwards was the lead organizer and public face for the OPHR. Despite much public criticism, personal threats and constant FBI surveillance, Edwards and the OPHR led a successful boycott of the New York Athletic Club Indoor Track Classic. OPHR also led anti-apartheid protests that prevented South Africa being reinstated into the Olympic Games in 1968.

The high point of the OPHR protest came on October 19, 1968, at the Mexico City Summer Olympics when Tommie Smith and John Carlos shocked the world by protesting against racism and human oppression with a black-gloved fist salute while standing on the winners’ podium. Ironically this protest occurred as Edwards was studying in graduate school at Cornell University and working on his first major book, The Revolt of the Black Athlete.

In 1971 Edwards earned his Ph.D. from Cornell and became a sociology professor at the University of California, Berkeley. While there he developed the field of race and the sociology of sport. Edwards retired from the University of California on June 30, 2000. He continues to lecture and write books on black athletes and amateur and professional sports.[1]

RSB rally

Dfdsa.JPG

Sociologist Harry Edwards called for an end to current medical school admission exams yesterday at a September 28, 1977 rally protesting the Bakke decision.

Addressing a noontime crowd of about 300 persons in the S.U. Amphitheater, Edwards claimed that the tests were inconsistent and geared towards preserving the status quo of the American Medical Association.

Many of the persons at the Revolutionary Student Brigade sponsored rally were attracted by the music of Prairie Fire and the fiery words of Edwards, a former SJSU student and instructor who has , been the subject of a recent tenure controversy at U.C.-Berkeley.

SJSU Affirmative Action officer Steve Faustina and Rene Singleton, a representative of the Committee to Fight the Bakke Decision, also spoke.[2]

"National Day Of Protest Against The Bakke Decision"

Abadescolicious.JPG

The "National Day Of Protest Against The Bakke Decision" was held Saturday October 8, 1977" with rallies in Oakland, St. Louis, and Washington D.C.. Oakland speakers were Maria Abadesco, National Committee to Overturn the Bakke Decision (MC); John George, Alameda County Supervisor MC); Harry Edwards, U.C. Berkeley Sociology Professor; Hazaiah Williams, President, Center for Urban/Black Studies Graduate Theological Union, Josie Camacho, Lee Brightman, Rep. Ed Ed Roybal, Lorenzo Carlyle, Aileen Hernandez, Gilberto Mendoza.

Organised by the October 8th Coalition.

References

Template:Reflist

  1. [1]
  2. [SPARTAN DAILY 69, Number 15 Thursday, September 29, 1977 page 1]