MEDIA= O To Be Heard, Not ^^^11 Black college football may have been sentenced by a court ruling from token TV appearances to none. By ED HILL While shock waves from the Supreme Court's decision to strip the NCAA of its control over college football on television rippled from the Ivy League to the Pac 10, none may have registered as high on the Richter Scale as those felt by historically black colleges, who may disappear from the air waves altogether. Like the split-up of AT&T or the rate of inflation, the subject can be complicated and confusing, so here's some brief background on the decision before we go further: In June of this year, U.S. District Court Judge Juan Burciaga ruled that the NCAA may no longer serve as the colleges* sole agent in the sale of TV rights. This opened the door for the individual schools and/or conferences to negotiate their own packages to the networks (ABC and CBS), the cable stations (WTBS and ESPN) and individual stations that carry college football. Major conferences such as the Southeastern, Southwestern, Pac 10, Big 10, Big Eight and ACC, as well as such major independents as Notre Dame, Pittsburgh and national champion Miami, stand to gain financially from the decision while the smaller schools and lesserknown conferences may lose what little they were getting under the original plan. The NCAA is divided into four classifications based on criteria that II A -jBQ BdKV>? Kg^\ include the sizes of schools and their stadiums, enrollments and numbers of scholarships. The four are Divi sion I-A, I-AA, II and III. One hundred five colleges and universities play football in Division I-A, 85 in I-AA, 122 in Division II and 195 in Division III. There are no predominantly black colleges in Division I-A. However, several black schools are classified as 1-AA. The MidEastern Athletic Conference (MEAC) and the Southwestern ^CU/An n-o niiutiiv n^uiiivikiivv yjTT nv/ aid I-AA leagues composed . of predominantly black schools while Tennessee State and Florida A&M are I-AA independents. They will feel the sting of the decision. Under the old setup, each of those conferences and/or independents was guaranteed one regional game annually on either ABC or CBS. The money earned from those appearances, which totaled $680,000 per telecast in 1983, was distributed to the individual schools or conference, depending on the conference's formula. In the MEAC, 70 percent of the money went to the schools playing the game while 30 . percent went iu mc icaguc. nan vn the league money was divided among the football-playing schools in the conference while the other share was put into the MEAC's coffers and used for salaries, office ex .cr, ccllece s* jBfr * r*4 y MA ^L||e^RSHHHP|^^^^HR vkjMI penses and the sponsorship of nonrevenue-producing athletic tournaments and championships. The SWAC formula is a bit different. The two televised schools received equal shares; another share was distributed among the footballplaying schools in the SWAC, and the remaining portion went into the conference treasury and was used for office operations and tournament sponsorships. It won't be anymore. *It is certainly going to impact upon our conference from a finan"I am especially concerned aboi torunaments. Some of that reven women's basketball tournament at ships. With this decision, those eve rial aspect," says SWAC Commissioner Dr. James Frank, "That money was something we looked forward to in our budget planning. Now that it may no longer be available, we have to find some other means of funding to offset that." "I am especially concerned about the future of our conference tournaments," says Grambling Head Coach and Athletic Director Eddie Robinson. "Some of that revenue was used for thfngs like our women *s basketball tournament and i ITI H VIfW wmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm r our track and field championships. With this decision, those events may be in serious jeopardy.'* Says MEAC Commissioner Ken Free: "No question, it is going to have a tremendous financial impact on our conference. We looked forward to the regional telecast and the money it generated. Without it, we are put in a position where we will have to make some serious adjustments in the coming months/' The Division II schools, which also reaped benefits under the old plan, although not as many, will be it the future of our conference ue was used for things like our id our track and field champion*nts may be in serious jeopardy. " ? Eddie Robinson affected too. There are two predominantly black conferences in Division II ? the Central Intercollegiate Association (CIAA) and the Southern Intercollegiate Athletic Conference (S1AC) - and a few in dependents such as Central State of Ohio (last year's Division 11 runnerup) and Cheyney State. They'll lose both money and exposure, though the ClAA's head man says there wasn't very much of either to begin with. "As far as the CIAA is concernPlease see Page 18 5555S5ESS3 September, 1984-Page 19