20151230_me_nba_makes_a_pass_at_gun_control_issues.mp3?orgId=1&topicId=1060&aggIds=4499275&d=193&p=3&story=461400346&t=progseg&e=461459719&seg=10&ft=nprml&f=461400346

It's an incident largely forgotten, but in 1964, the NBA — then a struggling fourth-string major league — finally got its All-Star Game on prime-time TV. The players refused to leave the locker room until the owners agreed to negotiate with their union. The All-Stars were prepared to strike on what was essentially the most important night in the league's history — and the essence of their own personal future. But they weren't bluffing.

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At almost the very last minute, yes, the owners caved, the game went on ABC, and the NBA headed into the big time.

I was reminded of that the other day when the NBA, players and management together, dared start a campaign against gun carnage — emphasizing in television spots that guns are involved in the deaths of 88 Americans every day — and thereby effectively lining up against those, like the NRA, who fight stiffer firearm regulation.

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