Authors: Simon Henderson
Claiborne, Jerry
Clark, Robert
Cleaver, Eldridge
Cobb, James
Cohodas, Nadine
college athletics crisis: as context for black athletic revolt
college football: as bulwark against school integration importance to southern identity integration of SEC teams
Colorado State University
Congress of Racial Equality (CORE)
Connolly, Hal
Connor, Bull
Cooper, Jay
Cosell, Howard
Crimson Tide
Cummins, Jack
Cunningham, Sam
Daley, Arthur
Daley, Robert
Dawson, Willie
Demas, Lane
Dennis, James
desegregation.
See
school integration
“Desperate Coach, The,”
DÃaz Ordaz, Gustavo
Dickey, Doug
Dobler, Conrad
Dobroth, John
Dooley, Vince
double consciousness
Douglass, Frederick
Doyle, Andrew
DuBois, W. E. B.
Eaton, Lloyd
Edwards, Frank
Edwards, Harry: black athletic revolt and Black Power rhetoric of 1968 Olympic ban of South Africa and 1968 Olympic boycott and founding of OPHR NYAC boycott and as a polarizing figure on sport and racial politics; tactics and leadership style; on white supporters of OPHR. See also
Revolt of the Black Athlete, The
Edwards, Keith
Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1965
Evans, Lee
Farran, Pat
Farrior, James
Feliciano, José
female athletes
Flowers, Richmond, Jr.
Fons, Mike
Fosbury, Dick
Fox, Gary
freedom struggle.
See
black freedom struggle
Freeman, Ron
Gaither, Jake
Gatlin, Justin
Gaughan, T. J.
Gay, Tyson
Georgia Tech
Gitlin, Todd
Glazer, Nathan
Graves, Bibb
Green, Bill
Greene, Charlie
Grier, Bobby
Griffin, Arthur, Jr.
Griffin, Marvin
Grundy, Pamela
Guttman, Alan
Hall, Jacquelyn Dowd
Hallock, Wiles
Hamilton, Melvin
Hano, Arnold
Hansen, Thomas
Hartmann, Douglas
Harvard crew: support for OPHR
Hathaway, Stanley
Hayes, Elvin
Haynes, Abner
Hemery, David
Henderson, Russell
Henderson, Tom
Hendrix, Jimi
Herrerias, Rene
Higgins, David
Hill, Darryl
Hines, Jimmy
Hoffer, Richard
Hoffman, Paul: on attitudes of athletic administrators; on Harvard crew questionnaire 1968 Olympic protest and; on OPHR demands pre-protest opposition faced by
Holloway, Condredge
Holmes, Hamilton
Holmes, Richard
Hood, James
Humphrey, Hubert
Hundred-Yard War, The
(Cartwright)
Hunter, Charlayne
Hustad, Ken
integration.
See
school integration
International Olympic Committee (IOC)
interposition doctrine
interracial dating
Iversen, Allen
Jackson, Leroy
Jackson, Peter
Jackson, Wilbur
James, Larry
James, Ron
Janeway, Eliot
Jensen, James
Johnson, Gene
Johnson, Jack
Johnson, Magic
Johnson, Michael
Johnson, Rafer
Jordan, Michael
Jordan, Payton
Joseph, Peniel
Kellner, Douglas
Kemper, Kurt
Kennedy, Bobby
Kennedy, John F.
Kidd, Bruce
King, Horace
King, Leon
King, Martin Luther, Jr.
Klarman, Michael
Langenkamp, James
Lanier, Bob
Lewis, George
“liberal individualism,”
Lipsitz, George
Lipsyte, Robert
Livingston, Cleve
Lomax, Louis
Los Angeles Sentinel
Los Angeles Times
Louis, Joe
Lucy, Autherine
Lyons, Thomas
MacAloon, John
Malcolm X
Malone, Vivian
Marquette University
Martin, Charles
Matthews, Vince
May, Don
Mays, Willie
McClain, Lester
McClellan, John
McDowell, Cleve
McGirr, Lisa
McGuire, Al
McKissick, Floyd
McLennan, Bob
McMullen, Jim
McVea, Warren
Memminger, Dean
Mendenhall, Rashard
Meredith, James
Mexico City Olympics.
See
Olympics (1968)
Michener, James
Middlesboro (Ky.) Daily News
Miller, Larry
Miller, Lennox
Milton, Fred
Miroff, Bruce
Mississippi State University
Mitchell, Bobby
Moore, Kenny
Morgan, Dave
Morgan, J. D.
Moye, Gus
Musso, Johnny
Nagel, Ray
National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP)
National Basketball Association (NBA)
National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)
National Conference of Black Power
National Football League (NFL)
National Summer Youth Sports Program (NSYSP)
Newell, Pete
New Right
New South movement
Newsweek
Newton, Michael
New York Athletic Club (NYAC) boycott
New York Renaissance
New York Times
New York University
1968 Olympics.
See
Olympic boycott movement (1968); Olympic podium salute (1968); Olympics (1968).
Nixon, Richard
Noel, Kenneth
Norman, Peter
Northington, Nat
Oerter, Al
Ole Miss.
See
University of Mississippi
Olsen, Jack
Olympic boycott movement (1968): basketball boycott impact of South Africa ban origins and initial impact of views of black athletes on
Olympic Committee for Human Rights (OCHR)
Olympic Games: U.S. political agenda for
Olympic podium salute (1968): black freedom struggle complexities revealed by as complex expression of Black Power events of meanings ascribed by Tommie Smith and John Carlos; media response to USOC response to varied reactions of U.S. Olympic team
Olympic Project for Human Rights (OPHR): alternatives to boycott; basketball boycott and formation and goals of; NYAC boycott and South Africa ban and support from Harvard crew
Olympics (1968): concerns over potential protest at controversy over South Africa ban
Only a Game
(Daley)
Oregon State University
Owens, Jesse
Owens, Jim
Owens, Terrell
Padgett, Jim
Page, Greg
Patterson, Floyd
Patton, George
Paul, Robert
Peeples, Nat
Perkowski, David
Peterson, Adrian
Pittsburgh Courier
Pitzer, Kenneth
Plant, Marcus
Poage, George
Pont, John
Pope, Clarence
Pope, Steven
Presley, Bob
professional sports
racial identity: as an issue in black athletic revolt at Berkeley shift in focus of athletic activism toward
Rafferty, Max
Ray, Clarence
Raynor, John
Reagan, Ronald
Reed, James
Respond (protest group)
Revolt of the Black Athlete, The
(Edwards)
Richardson, Bill
Rieder, Jonathan
Robeson, Paul
Robinson, Earl
Robinson, Jackie
Roby, Douglas: action taken to stem Olympic boycott; on NBA poaching; reaction to Harvard crew support of OPHR warning against Olympic protest
Roche, John
Rodgers, Pepper
Rooney, Art, II
Rovell, Darren
Russell, Bill
Sally Minor Baseball League
Sample, Johnny
San Jose State College
Savannah Citizens
“Say it LoudâI'm Black and I'm Proud” (James Brown song)
Sayre, John
Schmeling, Max
school integration: college football as bulwark against history of relationship of sports to
Schuchman, Robert
Seagren, Bob
segregation: college football and the forces of in professional sports
Shanklin, Don
Sharpton, Al
Shinnick, Phil
Shropshire, Ken
Simmons, Blanton
Smith, Bobby
Smith, Pat
Smith, Tommie: cultural “rehabilitation” of image 1968 Olympic boycott movement and podium salute and post-Olympic career; reaction to Harry Edwards
South Africa: 1968 Olympic ban of
Southeastern Conference (SEC)
Southern Christian Leadership Conference (SCLC)
southern identity: relationship of black southerners to sport and
Southwest Conference
sport: continued racial prejudice in; historical place of black athletes in U.S. sports integration of limitations as a vehicle for black freedom struggle myth of racial progress and NCAA's response to racial problems in race relations and redefinition of sporting ideal in 1960s; relationship to school integration southern identity and white supremacy and
Sports Illustrated
Sports in America
(Michener)
Spurrier, Steve
Stanback, Haskel
“Star-Spangled Banner, The,”
Steketee, Scott
Student Disturbance Act
Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC)
Students for a Democratic Society
Students United for Racial Equality (SURE)
Sullivan, John
Summer Youth Project
Swagerty, Jane
Tannenbaum, Robert
Taylor, Ike
team discipline
Texas Western College.
See
University of Texas at El Paso
Thomas, Duane
Thomas, Joe
Thomas, John
Thompson, George
Time
Today
(TV show)
Toomey, Bill
Topchik, Jack
Towler, Dan
Twitter
Tyson, Mike
Tyson, Timothy
Tyus, Wyomia
UCLA.
See
University of California at Los Angeles
Underwood, John
United Amateur Athletes (UAA)
United States Olympic Committee (USOC): athletes' rights and response to podium salute stance against Olympic protest
University of Alabama
University of California, Berkeley
University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA)
University of Georgia
University of Kansas
University of Kentucky
University of Maryland
University of Mississippi
University of Tennessee
University of Texas at El Paso
University of Wyoming
Unseld, Westley
Van Deburg, William
Vaught, Johnny
Vázquez, Pedro Ramirez
Virginia Baseball Association
Waddell, Tom
Walk, Neal
Walker, Fleetwood
Walker, Irvin
Wallace, Don
Wallace, George
Ward, Horace
Washington, Kenny
Washington Redskins
Weisenberg, Barry
White, Phil
white athletes: criticisms of podium salute Harvard crew support for OPHR responses to black athletic revolt on campus views of 1968 Olympic boycott movement and OPHR views of NYAC boycott
white backlash
White Citizens' Councils
“White Majority,”
white supremacy in sport
Whitfield, Mel
Wiggins, David
Wilkins, Roy
Williams, Ben
Williams, Joe
Williams, Robert
Wilson, James
Winter, Bud
Wolfe, Bob
Woods, Tiger
Wright, Stan
Young, A. S.
Young, George
Young, Larry
Young Americans for Freedom
Zang, David
Zerfoss, Alan
Zimmerman, Paul
Zirin, Dave
C
IVIL
R
IGHTS AND THE
S
TRUGGLE FOR
B
LACK
E
QUALITY IN THE
T
WENTIETH
C
ENTURY
S
ERIES
E
DITORS
Steven F. Lawson, Rutgers University
Cynthia Griggs Fleming, University of Tennessee
Freedom's Main Line: The Journey of Reconciliation and the Freedom Rides
Derek Charles Catsam
Subversive Southerner: Anne Braden and the Struggle for Racial Justice in the Cold War South
Catherine Fosl
Constructing Affirmative Action: The Struggle for Equal Employment Opportunity
David Hamilton Golland
Sidelined: How American Sports Challenged the Black Freedom Struggle
Simon Henderson
Becoming King: Martin Luther King Jr. and the Making of a National Leader
Troy Jackson
Civil Rights in the Gateway to the South: Louisville, Kentucky, 1945â1980
Tracy E. K'Meyer
Democracy Rising: South Carolina and the Fight for Black Equality since 1865
Peter F. Lau
Civil Rights Crossroads: Nation, Community, and the Black Freedom Struggle
Steven F. Lawson
Freedom Rights: New Perspectives on the Civil Rights Movement
edited by Danielle L. McGuire and John Dittmer
This Little Light of Mine: The Life of Fannie Lou Hamer
Kay Mills
After the Dream: Black and White Southerners since 1965
Timothy J. Minchin and John A. Salmond
Fighting Jim Crow in the County of Kings: The Congress of Racial Equality in Brooklyn
Brian Purnell
Thunder of Freedom: Black Leadership and the Transformation of 1960s Mississippi
Sue [Lorenzi] Sojourner with Cheryl Reitan
For Jobs and Freedom: Race and Labor in America since 1865