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Dr. Amy Bass, Associate
Professor of History and Director of the Honors Program in The College of
New Rochelle’s School of Arts and Sciences, is supervisor of the Research
Room for NBC’S broadcast of the Winter Games in Torino, Italy. This
will be Dr. Bass’s fifth Olympics working for NBC: she was on site
for Atlanta 1996, Sydney 2000, Salt Lake 2002, and Athens 2004. This winter,
Dr. Bass will be sending CNR her impressions of the Games for publication
on a special "CNR at the Winter Olympic Games" section of the CNR Website
at www.cnr.edu.
Her first book, Not the Triumph but the
Struggle: the 1968 Olympic Games and the Making of the Black Athlete
(University of Minnesota Press, 2002), focuses on the Mexico City Olympics,
when track-and-field medalists Tommie Smith and John Carlos defied the system
by raising black-gloved fists at the flag as the “Star-Spangled Banner” was
being played. Dr. Bass examines that protest, spotlighting the history of
black athletes and media
coverage of athletic events. She recently published In The Game: Race, Identity, and Sports
in the 20th Century (Palgrave, 2005), a collection of essays on the
global influence of sports on racial ideology.
Dr. Bass received a Ph.D. with distinction from the
State University of New York at Stony Brook in 1999, with a specialization
in U.S. History and a comparative field in Cultural Studies; an M.A. with
distinction from Stony Brook in U.S. History in 1994; and a B.A. in History
from Bates College in 1992. She is an alumna of the Williams College/Mystic
Seaport American Maritime Studies Program.
O F F I C E O F C O M M U N I C
A T I O N S
29 Castle Place, New Rochelle, NY 10805
info@cnr.edu
© 2006 The College of New Rochelle
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