/ * The Sports Column The storm ? By BARRY COOPER Syndicated Columnist ___ A \J \l r* nr 2 ? A A 1 ^ 1 * * 'v.; uaaiy w<u is aooui to oreaK out in intercollegiate athletics ? a battle as intense as a Hearns-Hagler fight, as bitter as a hate group marching through a black neighborhood. The issue is a piece of National Collegiate Athletic Association legislation called Proposition 48. Approved by the NCAA last summer and scheduled to take effect in August 1986, the measure would require incoming student-athletes to score at least 700 on the Scholastic Aptitude Test or the equivalent of 15 on the American College Test. i_ -j J.m? ? in auumon, me amieies would De required to have at least a 2.0 high school grade-point average (on a 4.0 scale) in a specific number of college preparatory courses. This is heavy-duty stuff. Studies show that 56 percent of all black students fail to score 700 on the SAT, an exam which is culturally and racially biased. With a 700 SAT score being the cutoff, it is likely that the adoption of Proposition 48 would deliver a severe blow to the number of black athletes who enter colleges each year. All 1 *1 rui-uiawA ucuKciuaii icaius sutu as mc 011c at Georgetown would become a thing of the past. Blacks would no longer dominate that sport as they do now, nor would they hold the advantage on many college football teams. rroposition 48 might well bring about reform in the classroom. Moreover, it most certainly would give more white kids a chance to play. iiwHiiMimiiimiwwimMiummiHmiiiHmmwttHiniiiiiiimniimi The Doggett lege Nassau, The Bahamas, in just ente August. to run in During basketball season ~ The T. Doggett plays point guard for the schedule n a l aI. . # - - a ^ ? ranincrs -- me 3-ioot-z, Dogge 130-pounder hurt her jaw. It was world ca feared broken, but proved only lap race to be a-severe bruise. sixth-$ra At the start of the prep track Soon season, it was discovered'that* and wor Doggett had enlarged septa. This all-con explained her discomfort in runn- Greenst ing the 800, her least favorite caught t event. An operation caused her to signed h miss nearly a month of the that tim season. Clara H As the season wound down, Forsyth she was complaining of pain in .state 10 her calves. After an examination, and now her physician determined that she decided had compartment syndrome, in hurdles which the muscles stretch out- hurdlers wardly, almost to the point of 4^Som becoming detached from the rUn the bone. For a hurdler, this is a most ' *But, i painful condition. sprinter "Running on your toes hurts a hurdler, lot," she says. "But when you Browi land after clearing the hurdle, special, you're miserable." well, ex Dudley Coach Lonnie Phifer He deci instructed Doggett to to run on heptathl grass whenever possible. Now her talents, doctor believes she may simply 44If p have shin splints and has directed more th her to lessen her load this sum- would w mer- said last "I'm not gonna run any of the it turnec invitationals," says Doggett, who four ev< has been running all over the East two rel; Coast since she joined Charlie Dudley Brown's Pacesetters Track Club title sine when she was in sixth grade. *41*11 jwo < ?? Bennie McBrlde What con Bennk 1. Match you to just the rij or used car at the right p a m m ? z. make sure your new car budget. 3. Help you finance your c just the right monthly p? 4. Be available when you c need attention. I Bennle can do It mopei I 722-4197 | W>rt fourth and >r< gathers over Prt Such a likely outcome has not been lost on black educators , - - - - * Vfwiwivtj lauivitu Proposition 48 as being cloaked in racism. Dr. Jesse Stone, who will retire in September from his post as president of historically-black Southern 1 IniversitY, *air) it is easy to see the real purpose behind this legislation. "Proposition 48 is not an academic rule in its entirety," he said. "The grade-point average part of it is an academic rule. The rest of it is just a smoke screen to make it appear that something was being done about academics when what they were doing was really trying to come up with a way to sweep Slacks out of athteties.M The idea for Proposition 48 was formulated a few years ago and subsequently passed at last summer's NCAA convention in Dallas. However, black educators were not invited to participate in the decisionmaking process until it was time to cast the votes. Now the momentum has shifted. The uproar from black legislators has been so loud that Propostion 48 likely will be altered before it takes effect. Most officials think that the SAT requirement will be dropped. The outcome likely will be known June 20-21. when the NCAA officials gather in New Orleans for their annual convention. Black educators will be ready. "I think the black athlete was dominating athletics to the dissatisfaction of some people," Stone said. "By the same token, you see that this movement is not only spreading through athletics, but through the entire md From Page B1 r the TAC meets I have the hurdles and partici to make the nationals." the winning 4x400 relay AC Junior Olympics are the Panthers' roared to d for August in Seattle. victory over High Pc tt's entry into the track drews. me when she won a two- Next year, Dudley she around a softball field in little trouble repeating a ide Field Day activities. become only the seco after that, she entered team to win three straig 1 the 60-yard dash at an County, propelled lers meet in the >oro Coliseum. That :he eye of Brown, who er on as a Pacesetter. At e, the team was led by airston, the former East Jk standout who holds the ^ I 0-meter hurdles record attends Auburn. Brown to put Doggett in the because he had so few and too many sprinters. etimes a sprinter can't I hurdles," Brown says. n Pam's case, a good r 1 turned out to be a great | 1 realized Doggett was She could do everything I cept run long distances. ded to enter her in the on to capitalize on her am could participate in MfiSBSBSBSS lan four events, Dudley in the state title," Brown 1 year at the sectionals. As i out, Doggett's winning * ents - two hurdles and . ays - was enough for to win its first girls track I . JLM :e 1970. j ? ^ J weeks ago, Doggett won IS Take aj a.m. to 7 Nai Aer Oly Ste{ Rac Tw( *!)" fits your Take ad "mint. Saturda. >r your car ] Come See all 111 sr q >ad mci-771 A United Way Agei t is >position 48 1 academic structure, and the people being >cE hurt the most are black. What these folfcs are S trying to do is make it tougher for black kids & to go to college.'*? c Although Proposition 48 would knock ^ many blacks out of college athletics, it is ^ clear something must~be ~?tone to raise the _ educational standards of student-athletes. Many coast through high school and then waste up to five years of college, all in the hope of earning a professional contract. When that does not happen, we have more tragic case? of athletes who not only failed to earn their degrees but also failed to gather any meaningful skills while in college. rules like Proposition 48 are no solution. i4l think that the university has an enhanced responsibility for that student who pro vides such great attention for the university and helps it earn thousands of dollars," Stone said. "We have got to work with these kids and see to it that they do get an education while they are out there helping the schools on the gridiron or basketball court." Larger schools, which depend heavily on the black athlete, would not be the only ones hurt by Proposition 48. Historically black schools, whose squads are all-black, would be hard-pressed to find enough players who meet the standards. It would appear that Proposition 48 may have arrived before its time. A 2.0 gradepoint average and demonstrated success in college preparatory courses should be enough to earn admission to all but the most stringent colleges. And men like Dr. Stone Please see page B9 IttlHHIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIItllllMlllllltltltlMHHItftMtltMMIIIMtMttlllllflHIIII % lltUIINNNIttlMNIIIIIHHNHIHNIHMMIINHMtlNNNfNIHIINIMIWIIIHINIII pated in jumper Kathy McMillan, won team as five in a row from 1972 through 26-point 1976. )int An- The spoils of success include a rlailv en nnl \; r\ f loMarc /-?/-*! I juppl J V/1 IV I IV 1 3 I I VIII VUl" ' >uld have leges hoping to lure Doggett. The nd would decision will be Pam's, according I ?nd gifls' to her parents. I ;ht. 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