Nice article about Powe
Posted: Sat Sep 02, 2006 9:21 pm
I dont feel sorry for this bum at all.
http://www.commercialappeal.com/mca/spo ... 72,00.html
The statement comes from Jerrell Powe's own papers, filed by his own lawyers, and it is enough to make you weep.
"I am the mother of Jerrell Powe," states Shirley Powe. "Jerrell really is a good child but he just can't read. Please give him a chance to attend Ole Miss."
Well, then.
By all means, c'mon in!
He's a good child.
He just can't read.
Why let a little thing like that stand between a 340-pound defensive tackle and his ability to play for the glory of State U?
Which, in this case, is Ole Miss. But it could be any of a hundred schools.
This is the first Saturday of college football season and isn't it a lousy time to be reminded what you're watching out there?
Marching bands and academic fraud, school spirit and hypocrisy.
If you're one of the many college sports fans who prefer to block out all this unpleasantness, what do you do now?
Powe is one of the best prospects in the country. He's big and fast and everything else a defensive tackle should be.
"You know Cortez Kennedy and Russell Maryland?" said Ole Miss coach Ed Orgeron, earlier in the summer. "He's the next one, he's a man."
Except the NCAA Clearinghouse ruled Powe hadn't satisfied his academic requirements. Powe sued, alleging he had.
Thursday, a Mississippi Chancery Court judge granted Powe a temporary restraining order, requiring Ole Miss to admit him, put him on scholarship and let him practice with the team.
You can see the logic behind the decision, right? Why let a little thing like illiteracy keep a guy out of school?
The parties reached a compromise: Powe was permitted to enroll as a part-time student until the NCAA reviews his case Thursday.
At which point, the NCAA will fold. Because that's what the NCAA always does when the lawyers show up.
But in the meantime, the documents filed in support of Powe provide a dispiriting -- if unsurprising -- reminder of what college football is all about.
Powe is "essentially a non-reader." He has learning disabilities. Instead of a diploma, he was given a "certificate" from Wayne County High School.
[b]So Powe spent a year at Hargrave Military Academy, where he did about like you'd expect.
Of the 45 courses he took outside the Physical Education department, Powe got F's and D's in nearly half of them.
But then, lo and behold, he started taking correspondence courses from BYU. He took 14 courses, to be precise, all of which he finished between April 2005 and August 2006.
And he did great! Imagine that! [/b]
It's a farce, of course, an embarrassment to Ole Miss. But this isn't just about Ole Miss, and it certainly isn't new.
Dexter Manley spent four years at Oklahoma State without learning to read. When former Auburn halfback James Brooks was charged with failing to pay child support, he couldn't read the court documents.
The judge asked Brooks how he graduated from Auburn.
"I didn't have to go to class," he said.
Big-time athletes learn this early. It may be the one thing they do learn.
If you can play, you can pass. And pass and pass and pass.
"I didn't know until he was almost finished he wasn't getting the education he should have gotten," said Shirley Powe.
Mind you, she could have asked.
"I have to work to support my family and have never been able to help my children with homework," she said.
Poor, poor kids.
So we take children with disengaged parents and wonder why they can't read. But we shove them from grade to grade because what else is there to do?
Then, when it turns out they can't play for our favorite university, we file lawsuits on their behalf.
Whereas, we care a lot more about football than we do about education.
Whereas, we don't mind if our university is corrupt as long as it wins.
Just for a moment, assume Powe deserves a chance to study at Ole Miss. Why should he play right away? By his own admission, he can't read. Shouldn't he spend a year or so on that?
He should, if reading is what mattered. He should, if this was anything other than professional sports dressed in cap and gown.
It's not, though. It's an institutionalized lie.
And today, at stadiums all across the country, fans will choose to believe it all again.
http://www.commercialappeal.com/mca/spo ... 72,00.html
The statement comes from Jerrell Powe's own papers, filed by his own lawyers, and it is enough to make you weep.
"I am the mother of Jerrell Powe," states Shirley Powe. "Jerrell really is a good child but he just can't read. Please give him a chance to attend Ole Miss."
Well, then.
By all means, c'mon in!
He's a good child.
He just can't read.
Why let a little thing like that stand between a 340-pound defensive tackle and his ability to play for the glory of State U?
Which, in this case, is Ole Miss. But it could be any of a hundred schools.
This is the first Saturday of college football season and isn't it a lousy time to be reminded what you're watching out there?
Marching bands and academic fraud, school spirit and hypocrisy.
If you're one of the many college sports fans who prefer to block out all this unpleasantness, what do you do now?
Powe is one of the best prospects in the country. He's big and fast and everything else a defensive tackle should be.
"You know Cortez Kennedy and Russell Maryland?" said Ole Miss coach Ed Orgeron, earlier in the summer. "He's the next one, he's a man."
Except the NCAA Clearinghouse ruled Powe hadn't satisfied his academic requirements. Powe sued, alleging he had.
Thursday, a Mississippi Chancery Court judge granted Powe a temporary restraining order, requiring Ole Miss to admit him, put him on scholarship and let him practice with the team.
You can see the logic behind the decision, right? Why let a little thing like illiteracy keep a guy out of school?
The parties reached a compromise: Powe was permitted to enroll as a part-time student until the NCAA reviews his case Thursday.
At which point, the NCAA will fold. Because that's what the NCAA always does when the lawyers show up.
But in the meantime, the documents filed in support of Powe provide a dispiriting -- if unsurprising -- reminder of what college football is all about.
Powe is "essentially a non-reader." He has learning disabilities. Instead of a diploma, he was given a "certificate" from Wayne County High School.
[b]So Powe spent a year at Hargrave Military Academy, where he did about like you'd expect.
Of the 45 courses he took outside the Physical Education department, Powe got F's and D's in nearly half of them.
But then, lo and behold, he started taking correspondence courses from BYU. He took 14 courses, to be precise, all of which he finished between April 2005 and August 2006.
And he did great! Imagine that! [/b]
It's a farce, of course, an embarrassment to Ole Miss. But this isn't just about Ole Miss, and it certainly isn't new.
Dexter Manley spent four years at Oklahoma State without learning to read. When former Auburn halfback James Brooks was charged with failing to pay child support, he couldn't read the court documents.
The judge asked Brooks how he graduated from Auburn.
"I didn't have to go to class," he said.
Big-time athletes learn this early. It may be the one thing they do learn.
If you can play, you can pass. And pass and pass and pass.
"I didn't know until he was almost finished he wasn't getting the education he should have gotten," said Shirley Powe.
Mind you, she could have asked.
"I have to work to support my family and have never been able to help my children with homework," she said.
Poor, poor kids.
So we take children with disengaged parents and wonder why they can't read. But we shove them from grade to grade because what else is there to do?
Then, when it turns out they can't play for our favorite university, we file lawsuits on their behalf.
Whereas, we care a lot more about football than we do about education.
Whereas, we don't mind if our university is corrupt as long as it wins.
Just for a moment, assume Powe deserves a chance to study at Ole Miss. Why should he play right away? By his own admission, he can't read. Shouldn't he spend a year or so on that?
He should, if reading is what mattered. He should, if this was anything other than professional sports dressed in cap and gown.
It's not, though. It's an institutionalized lie.
And today, at stadiums all across the country, fans will choose to believe it all again.