PISCATAWAY, N.J. -- The Rutgers University women's basketball team blasted Don Imus yesterday for "racist and sexist remarks that are deplorable, despicable, and abominable," and agreed to meet with the embattled radio host.
Starting Monday, Imus will be suspended for two weeks for calling the players "nappy-headed hos."
Rutgers players, who had not spoken publicly until yesterday, called his comments insensitive and hurtful -- but reserved judgment on whether he should be fired until after they meet him.
"Unless they've given 'ho' a whole new definition, that's not what I am," said Kia Vaughn, the team's sophomore center.
Calls for Imus's dismissal have been growing since he made the remarks about the team -- which includes eight black women -- a day after the team lost the national championship game to Tennessee on April 3.
Officials from office supply chain Staples, Procter & Gamble, and Bigelow Tea said they pulled advertising from Imus's show in response to his comments.
Head coach C. Vivian Stringer and several players said Imus's comments took the luster off an incredible season.
"The Rutgers university women's basketball team has made history," said Essence Carson, a junior forward. "We haven't done anything to deserve this controversy, and yet it has taken a toll on us mentally and physically."
Rutgers's athletic director, Robert E. Mulcahy III, thought a meeting with Imus would offer the team's players a chance to listen to him and hear what he has to say. Several players said they wanted to ask the host why he would make such thoughtless statements.
"We all agreed the meeting with Mr. Imus will help," Carson said. "We do hope to get something accomplished during this meeting."
Imus, who has made a career of cranky insults in the morning, was fighting for his job following the joke that by his own admission went "way too far."
The talk show host, while acknowledging the severity of his mistake, said he just had not been thinking when he made the comments.
Stringer defended her players. "They are the best this nation has to offer . . . young ladies of class, distinction. They are articulate, they are gifted. They are God's representatives in every sense of the word."
She said it's not about the team being black or nappy-headed. "It's about us as a people," she said. "When there is not equality for all, or when there has been denied equality for one, there has been denied equality for all.
"While they worked hard in the classroom and accomplished so much and used their gifts and talents, you know, to bring the smiles and the pride within this state in so many people, we had to experience racist and sexist remarks that are deplorable, despicable, and abominable and unconscionable. It hurts me."
In Washington, White House spokeswoman Dana Perino was asked if President Bush thought Imus's punishment was strong enough. "The president believed that the apology was the absolute right thing to do," Perino said.
On the show yesterday, Imus said, "What I did was make a stupid, idiotic mistake in a comedy context."
Asked by NBC "Today" host Matt Lauer if he could clean up his act as he promised on Monday, he said, "Well, perhaps I can't." But he added, "I have a history of keeping my word."
Imus said on "Today" that he believed his show should have a regular black cast member and more frequent black guests.
Of the two-week suspension by MSNBC and CBS Radio, he said: "I think it's appropriate, and I am going to try to serve it with some dignity."
The Rev. Al Sharpton, who also appeared on "Today," said the suspension was not enough.
"I think it is too little, too late."
Sharpton said politicians should refrain from going on Imus's show.
Comic Bill Maher, CBS News political analyst Jeff Greenfield, and former Carter administration official Hamilton Jordan all appeared on Imus's show yesterday.
Imus's radio show originates from WFAN-AM in New York City and is syndicated nationally by ![]()