Proud to be an alum of the school that bears his name...
Thank you for that video. I had not seen it before.
I remember attending a Rutgers football game back in my freshman year. After the game, I walked up the bleachers to leave and saw President Bloustein sitting alone in the top row while everyone left. I felt a little bad that no one approached him or said hello. How often can you engage your University president on a casual basis?
I feel even more bad now that I was one of them.
Ed Bloustein on Paul Robeson and the Hall of Fame:
A change at the top did not alter the opinion that the man Walter Camp declared was the “greatest defensive end to trod the gridiron” shouldn’t be kept out of the Hall of Fame. In the September 24, 1975 Targum, Rutgers president Ed Bloustein said, “We don’t ask our football players what their political affiliations are and I don’t think it should be asked when it comes to being considered for the college football Hall of Fame… his championship of the common man made him one of the most controversial figures of our time. His espousal of racial equality was very, very unpopular at the time. But he was also one of the greatest football players in the nation in addition to being a great scholar-athlete and a great artist… Mr. Robeson has told me, through his son, there is no single honor he misses more than membership in the Hall of Fame.”
Robeson died in January of 1976. Inducted into the Hall of Fame in 1995.