Rutgers Blasts Imus' "Despicable" Remarks
But Players Stop Short Of Saying Radio Host Should Be Fired; They Will Meet With Him Privately
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Play CBS Video Video Rutgers Women Vs. Imus Members of the Rutgers Scarlet Knights women's basketball team describe how their "moment was taken away" by the comments made by radio host Don Imus. Nancy Cordes reports.
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Video The Wrong Kind Of History The women's basketball team at Rutgers University will meet with radio host Don Imus to let him know their displeasure at his derogatory remarks. Richard Schlesinger reports.
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Video Rutgers Players Speak Out CBS News RAW: Essence Carson, Rutgers University women's basketball team captain, said she and her teammates were hurt by radio host Don Imus' disapraging remarks.
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Rutgers basketball players listen as coach C. Vivian Stringer speaks at a news conference, April 10, 2007. From left are Rashidat Junaid, Myia McCurdy, Brittany Ray, Epiphanny Prince and Dee Dee Jernigan, all freshmen. (AP)
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Don Imus on the air, April 10, 2007. (MSNBC)
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Rutgers team captain Essence Carson, April 10, 2007. (CBS)
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The Rutgers University team at a news conference on April 10, 2007. (CBS)
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Rutgers head coach C. Vivian Stringer, April 10, 2007. (CBS)
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In the meantime, however, the televised version of "Imus in the Morning" has lost three sponsors: Staples, Bigelow Tea, and Procter & Gamble.
Starting Monday, Imus will be suspended for two weeksfor calling the Rutgers players "nappy-headed hos."
Rutgers' athletic director, Robert E. Mulcahey III, thought a meeting with Imus offered the team's players a chance to listen to him and hear what he has to say. Several players said they wanted to ask the host why he would make such thoughtless statements.
Ten young women donned their game faces today and walked out onto the national stage, reports CBS News correspondent Nancy Cordes. They were determined to show they are nothing like the derogatory terms used to describe them.
"We all agreed the meeting with Mr. Imus will help," Essence Carson, a member of the team that lost the NCAA women's championship game to Tennessee last week, said. "We do hope to get something accomplished during this meeting."
With uncommon poise for students so young, the Rutgers Scarlet Knights described how they went from elation to outrage in the space of 24 hours, adds Cordes. They went from playing in the college basketball championship to being humiliated on a national radio show.
"Unless they've given 'ho' a whole new definition, that's not what I am," said player Kia Vaughn.
Head coach C. Vivian Stringer said her players "are the best this nation has to offer, and we are so very fortunate to have them at Rutgers University. They are young ladies of class, distinction. They are articulate, they are gifted. They are God's representatives in every sense of the word."
She said it's not about the players "as black or nappy-headed. It's about us as a people. When there is not equality for all, or when there has been denied equality for one, there has been denied equality for all."
She further said: "While they worked hard in the classroom and accomplished so much and used their gifts and talents, you know, to bring the smiles and the pride within this state in so many people, we had to experience racist and sexist remarks that are deplorable, despicable, and abominable and unconscionable. It hurts me."
"You imagine in sports that the winners circle is genderless and colorless, and they got disabused of that notion rather abruptly," Sally Jenkins, a sports columnist for the Washington Post, told CBS News correspondent Richard Schlesinger.
In Washington, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino was asked if President Bush thought Imus' punishment was strong enough.
"The president believed that the apology was the absolute right thing to do," Perino said Tuesday. "And beyond that, I think that his employer is going to have to make a decision about any action that they take based on it."
Imus started the firestorm after the Rutgers team, which includes eight black women, lost the championship game. He was speaking with producer Bernard McGuirk and said "that's some rough girls from Rutgers. Man, they got tattoos ..."
"Some hardcore hos," McGuirk said.
"That's some nappy-headed hos there, I'm going to tell you that," Imus said.
Imus' comments about the Rutgers players struck a chord, in part, because it was aimed at a group of young women enjoying athletic success.
It also came in a different public atmosphere following the Michael Richards and Mel Gibson incidents, said Eric Deggans, columnist for the St. Petersburg Times and chairman of the media monitoring committee of the National Association of Black Journalists. The NABJ's governing board, which doesn't include Deggans, wants Imus canned.
"What I did was make a stupid, idiotic mistake in a comedy context," Imus said on his show Tuesday morning, the final week before his suspension starts.
Asked by NBC "Today" host Matt Lauer if he could clean up his act as he promised on Monday, he said, "Well, perhaps I can't." But he added, "I have a history of keeping my word."
Of the two-week suspension by MSNBC and CBS Radio, he said: "I think it's appropriate, and I am going to try to serve it with some dignity."
© MMVII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





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See all 612 CommentsCBS should interview Snoop Dog to get the pimp/ho perspective. I think you dropped the ball on that CBS. Think of how many new young viewer$ this would attract. After all another 10 soldiers died in Iraq today for our freedom$.
Were the "white" girls of Rutgers offended or was it cool for them to be categorized this way?. I wonder what kind of music and videos these women watch? Do they dress in a puritanical fashion off the court? Will they need years of therapy? Probably so after the media is through with them and they realize they are just people like everyone else who has to deal with everyday life. After all, another 10 soldiers died in Iraq and Afghanistan today for their freedom$.
I love to watch hypocrites interviewing hypocrites. Some good does come out of this as I can use this as a lesson to teach my children on how not to act like an idiot when they become adults. It's sad we all have to grow up to behave like children instead of keeping the honesty of our childhoods in tact.
Guess Rutgers does not believe either.
Frightening to know I am alive during a time where we all as humans will be forced to never speak at all.
Imus has been doing this for years. Best press CBS has gotten in years and years. And they fire him? I pay a pretty penny for my cable, and yes, I have been annoyed that my week has been all about Imus and Rutgers' need for press and respect regarding women's basketball.
There are so many bigger issues out there...more important issues, and I was always grateful for the humor of Imus. Humor keeps us all from taking ourselves too seriously. If someone wants to call me a ho, who cares, I don't, whether I am one or not. And there is not one friend or acquaintance of mine...caucasian, african american, asian, hispanic, etc. that has not had nappy hair at some point.
We're all human.
Spend some time researching Rush L., Glenn Beck (Obama is not black enough), Michael Savage, Sean Hannity, Michael Medved and William Bennett (abort all black babies, the crime rate will drop).
Educate yourselves on racism. True racism. Not humor that provides a press opportunity and is a threat to our freedoms. Haven't enough of them been taken away already?
Guess Rutgers does not believe either.
Frightening to know I am alive during a time where we all as humans will be forced to never speak at all.
Imus has been doing this for years. Best press CBS has gotten in years and years. And they fire him? I pay a pretty penny for my cable, and yes, I have been annoyed that my week has been all about Imus and Rutgers' need for press and respect regarding women's basketball.
There are so many bigger issues out there...more important issues, and I was always grateful for the humor of Imus. Humor keeps us all from taking ourselves too seriously. If someone wants to call me a ho, who cares, I don't, whether I am one or not. And there is not one friend or acquaintance of mine...caucasian, african american, asian, hispanic, etc. that has not had nappy hair at some point.
We're all human.
Spend some time researching Rush L., Glenn Beck (Obama is not black enough), Michael Savage, Sean Hannity, Michael Medved and William Bennett (abort all black babies, the crime rate will drop).
Educate yourselves on racism. True racism. Not humor that provides a press opportunity and is a threat to our freedoms. Haven't enough of them been taken away already?
Guess Rutgers does not believe either.
Frightening to know I am alive during a time where we all as humans will be forced to never speak at all.
Imus has been doing this for years. Best press CBS has gotten in years and years. And they fire him? I pay a pretty penny for my cable, and yes, I have been annoyed that my week has been all about Imus and Rutgers' need for press and respect regarding women's basketball.
There are so many bigger issues out there...more important issues, and I was always grateful for the humor of Imus. Humor keeps us all from taking ourselves too seriously. If someone wants to call me a ho, who cares, I don't, whether I am one or not. And there is not one friend or acquaintance of mine...caucasian, african american, asian, hispanic, etc. that has not had nappy hair at some point.
We're all human.
Spend some time researching Rush L., Glenn Beck (Obama is not black enough), Michael Savage, Sean Hannity, Michael Medved and William Bennett (abort all black babies, the crime rate will drop).
Educate yourselves on racism. True racism. Not humor that provides a press opportunity and is a threat to our freedoms. Haven't enough of them been taken away already?
Is that supposed to be okay?
I do believe that if this is the toughest thing they have ever faced they are lucky, and if this has scarred them for life they aren't ready to face the world as adults. I've spent my career working with people who have been raped, beaten, shot, had family members killed etc.! Let's put this in perspective. The man was very wrong, he apologized and is being punished. But he is a man. We seem to expect less from the people running our country than a radio talk show host!
Oh, and let's not leave out the "honorable" Senator Corker (see anti-Harold Ford political commercial) from Tennessee. And, maybe, Saxby Chambliss (see vicious political ad against Vietnam amputee Max Cleland),
and almost all rap music performers, too.
Anybody ever hear of rap music????
They are very accomplished and well spoken (I almost said "articulate" but I stopped myself in time) women, as you would expect of Rutgers University student athletes.
They include a former high school class valedictorian, a premed student and a classical musician who plays seven instruments.
In other words, the type of women who wouldn't give Don Imus and Bernard McGeek the time of day in high school.
No wonder they're so bitter.
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