Don McPherson
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- For other people bearing a similar name, see Donald McPherson (disambiguation).
Donald G. McPherson (born April 2, 1965 in Brooklyn, New York) was an NFL and CFL quarterback drafted by the Philadelphia Eagles in 1988 after a college career at Syracuse University during which he finished second in the 1987 Heisman Trophy voting. He also played for the Houston Oilers and for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats and Ottawa Rough-Riders.
After retiring from football in 1994, McPherson joined the staff of Northeastern University's Center for the Study of Sport in Society, before becoming the first executive director of the Sports Leadership Institute at Adelphi University. As a social activist he has founded several outreach and mentoring programs, and regularly speaks at college campuses as a critic of gender roles, stating that the standard constructions of masculinity and femininity both limit men's emotions and overall well-being as well as contribute to gendered violence such as domestic violence, stalking, and rape. In this capacity he has testified before hearings of the United States House of Representatives.
[edit] External links
- Bio at Adelphi University
- 2004 Congressional Testimony - Transcript
- McPherson: Be a "real" real man (Rochester Democrat and Chronicle article)
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Categories: Canadian football stubs | 1965 births | Living people | Canadian Football League quarterbacks | Hamilton Tiger-Cats players | Ottawa Rough Riders players | American football quarterbacks | American social workers | African Americans | Syracuse Orange football players | Philadelphia Eagles players | Houston Oilers players