Schools
Kneeling Controversy The Latest Racially-Tinged Incident At ETSU
Lawmakers are threatening to punish any future protests by student-athletes at public campuses across the state.

By Anita Wadhwani, Tennessee Lookout
April 7, 2021
In northeast Tennessee, a controversy over the decision by college basketball players to take a knee during the National Anthem continues to reverberate across the campus and community, with the looming possibility state lawmakers will act to punish any future protests by student-athletes at public campuses across the state.
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On February 15, players and coaches on the East Tennessee State University Buccaneers’ team linked arms and knelt in protest against racial inequalities and injustices during Black History Month at an away-game against the Chattanooga Mocs.
Within a week of the game, which the Buccaneers narrowly lost, 27 Tennessee Republican state senators signed onto a letter urging each of the state’s public university presidents and chancellors to “prohibit such actions going forward.”
Find out what's happening in Memphisfor free with the latest updates from Patch.
Lawmakers grilled ETSU President Brian Noland in routine budget hearings at the Tennessee Legislature, which has the power to decide the school’s funding going forward. And many of the school’s fans and boosters threatened to withhold support, including the prominent owner of Johnson City Honda, who repossessed the vehicles he had, for years, lent to coaches and staff for their use.
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