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Piccolo's
actions and family leave a lasting legacy
By
Ross Griffith
Guest Columnist
After
watching the remake of the movie Brians Song and reading the Old
Gold and Black articles about Brian Piccolo in December, I was compelled
to write this article. I also was moved at a recent basketball game
when the student-coordinated Brian Piccolo Cancer Fund Drive presented
the university a check for $47,250, making a total of $576,000 raised
since students began these outstanding efforts in 1980.
Brian
Piccolo was my classmate at Wake Forest and had an impact on the university
(and me) in additional ways not known publicly. As a member of the tennis
team, my locker was located adjacent to the football players lockers.
Both of us were members of the Monogram Club (situated in Huffman Residence
Hall at that time), and we regularly watched Washington Redskins football
games with other "lettermen" in the club. Brian was always
friendly, outgoing and witty, consistent with the portrayal of him in
the movies and writings about him.
Piccolos
friendship with Gale Sayers, his African-American roommate of the Chicago
Bears, is well emphasized in Brians Song and other published works.
However, his sensitivity to racial issues actually led to history being
made at Wake Forest while he was a student here.
After
the 1963 football season, Wake Forest was "in between football
coaches" for a significant period of time. Brian Piccolo and our
classmate John Mackovic proceeded to coordinate the recruiting of black
football players for the entering class of 1964 in the absence of a
head football coach.
At
that time, Edward Reynolds, one of three black students living on campus,
lived in my suite. Brian and John brought a number of black high school
recruits to our suite over time. As a result of their efforts, Robert
Grant, Kenneth Henry and Willie Smith entered the university in the
fall of 1964 as the first black student athletes at Wake Forest. Wake
Forest was, thus, the first institution in the Atlantic Coast Conference
to integrate its football program.
While
I was working in the admissions office in the late 1960s, Brian Piccolo
came back to Wake Forest to complete his degree one summer between football
seasons with the Chicago Bears. I vividly remember seeing and talking
to him as he ate lunch in the cafeteria with our popular trainer, Doc
Martin. While on an admissions recruiting trip in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.
in 1975, I was thrilled to represent Wake Forest at the dedication of
the new "Brian Piccolo Stadium" at St. Thomas Aquinas High
School, Brian Piccolos other alma mater. Brians parents
and his two brothers were also proudly in attendance at this very moving
event.
In
1985, I began my first year as an academic adviser to entering freshmen
at Wake Forest. I also had my first opportunity to select a qualified
student adviser to assist me. I chose Lori Piccolo Bruno, 87,
Brians oldest daughter, to work with me effectively in this important
process during her junior and senior years.
Additionally,
Lori and her sister Traci Piccolo Dolby, 89 eagerly went with
me to the 20th Reunion of the Class of 1965. They enjoyed meeting many
of their fathers classmates from Wake Forest.
Coincidentally,
one of my 2001 freshman advisees is attending Wake Forest on a football
scholarship and is a graduate of St. Thomas Aquinas High School, Brian
Piccolos high school. The legacy of Brian Piccolo continues for
me in a most positive way.
Gale Sayers and Brian Piccolo, both running backs for the Chicago Bears,
began rooming together in 1967.
During the 1969 season, Piccolo was cut down with cancer.
They had planned, with their wives, to sit together at the Professional
Football Writers annual dinner in New York, where Sayers was to be given
the George S. Halas Award as the most courageous player in pro football.
But instead, "Pick" was confined to his bed at home. At the dinner,
Sayers stood to receive the award, tears in his eyes. The ordinarily
terse athlete had this to say as he took the trophy: "You flatter me by
giving me this award, but I tell you here and now that I accept it for
Brian Piccolo. Brian Piccolo is the man of courage who should receive
the George S. Halas Award.
I love Brian Piccolo, and I'd like you to love him."
"I love Brian Piccolo." How many times have you heard a man say
something like that? Not very often.
Yet how much richer would our lives be if we had the courage to declare
our affection as Sayers did that night in New York.
--Rodney L. Cooper,
institute director at Western Seminary in Portland
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