In the early 1920s,
Harvard president A. Lawrence Lowell, a proponent of immigration restriction,
expressed the opinion that his university had a Jewish problem. He proposed a solution that would limit
Jewish enrollment to 15%, which he believed had become necessary because “the
anti-Semitic feeling among the students is increasing, and it grows in
proportion to the increase in the number of Jews. If their number should become 40% of the
student body, the race feeling would become intense.”[1] Lowell
discussed the rude and crude manners of Harvard’s Jewish students and believed
the quota would help them assimilate. He
declared that Jewish students did not “fit in” to Harvard’s social environment due
to their interest in academic achievement rather than athletic participation.[2]
As other elite
colleges followed Harvard’s lead in establishing Jewish quotas, American Jews
celebrated college sports as reflective of Jewish modernity and
integration. American Jews believed
college provided a gateway toward greater social opportunity and
acceptance. University of Michigan
quarterback Benny Friedman became a Jewish race hero for his athletic and
academic success and Harold Rigelman, a leader of the Jewish fraternity Zeta
Beta Tau (ZBT), proposed the idea of ‘Pro-Semitism.’ Jews would “continuously
and persistently, by their sportsmanship on the athletic field,” illustrate
their “race appreciation” and positive contribution to society.[3]
The idea that athletic
success could encourage acceptance and facilitate integration gained credence
due to a controversy over Jewish basketball at Yale, which occurred at the same
time that Harvard’s Lowell
began publicly arguing for quotas. After
the Yale basketball team finished last in the Ivy League during the 1922
season, Yale alumni demanded an end to discriminatory practices against Jewish
basketball players in order to field a winning team. The school’s final defeat of the season
occurred against the Atlas Athletic Club of New Haven, a Jewish club, as a
fundraiser for the Jewish War
Relief Campaign.[4] Games between colleges and community teams
occurred frequently in the early 1920s and some independent clubs proved
superior to colleges who placed little emphasis on basketball.[5] Yale’s marginal commitment to basketball proved
disastrous when Sam Pite, a former Atlas player who had starred for both the New Haven and Hartford
YMHA’s quit the Yale team during the 1922 season because he believed he had
been “frozen out” by the anti-Semitic coach.
Rumors of this situation had existed for years, but Yale alumni did not
oppose such behavior until the basketball team finished in last place in the
Ivy League.[6]
Pite played the central role in both Yale’s decline in
1922 and its triumph in 1923. Prior to
the 1922-1923 season, Yale hired a new coach, Joe Fogarty, who told newspapers:
“It makes no difference to me whether a player is black or white, Jew or
Gentile, so long as he can play basketball.”
Fogarty’s tolerance directly contrasted his predecessor’s intolerance,
but elite Jewish players like Pite did not depend on the whims of coaches. “Basketball followers” considered Pite one of
the “best players in the state,” while others “went farther” and called him
“the best of the lot.” Pite initially
stated he would not return to the Yale team despite the coaching change. He eventually did, and along with other
Jewish players, led Yale to the conference championship in 1923.[7]
[2] On
the quota controversy, see Feingold, A Time for Searching, 16-22; Marcia Graham Synnot, The
Half-Opened Door: Discrimination and Admissions at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton , 1900-1970 (Westport, CT.: Greenwood Press,
1979). Harvard’s Jewish population increased from approximately 7% in 1900 to
21% in 1922. See Jerome Karabel, The Chosen: The Hidden History of Admission
and Exclusion at Harvard, Yale, and Princeton (New York : Houghton Mifflin, 2005),
86-109. The result of the quota was the
introduction of non-academic requirements, including ‘character.’ Harvard, Yale, and Princeton
pushed for the use of standardized tests.
[3]
Marianne R. Sanua, “Here’s to Our
Fraternity”: One Hundred Years if Zeta Beta Tau, 1898-1998 (Hanover, NH:
Zeta Beta Tau Foundation, 1998), 70-72; Quote from Sanua, Going Greek, 144-145.
[4]
“Yale Alumni Assail Heads of Athletics,” New York Times, June 17, 1922. On
the Atlas-Yale game, see House Notes, Community News, March 1922. Also see Oren, Joining
the Club, 78. Oren explained that
the game attracted three thousand fans, the largest basketball crowd in New Haven up to that
point. On other athletic clubs, such as
the Brooklyn Dux, see Levine, Ellis Island to Ebbet’s Field, 30-34.
On the Brownsville Boys Club, see Gerald Sorin, The Nurturing
Neighborhood: The Brownsville Boys Club and
Jewish Community in Urban America ,
1940-1990 (New York: New York University Press, 1990).
[5]
The Connecticut Hebrew Record relished the prominent role of three
former YMHA stars in Yale’s title in 1922.
See “Yale: Joseph and his Brethren,” Connecticut Hebrew Record, April 6, 1923 . The New Haven
YM-YWHA simply published the American Hebrew’s article with no additional
commentary, see Community News 4, no. 8 (August 1922); “Round the Town,”
Community News 4, no. 11 (November
1922).
[6]
Quote on ‘frozen out’ from “Sam Pite Decides to Play for Yale,” Hartford
Courant, November 10, 1922; On Jewish basketball at Yale prior to the
controversy, see Oren, Joining the Club,
79-80.
[7]
“Nutmeg Boys May Star,” Hartford
Courant, December 19,
1922 . Fogarty played with Jewish professionals in the 1910s; Oren, Joining the Club, 78-80.
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