Letters
Black Issues in Higher Education, April 25, 2002
DEAR EDITOR:
We at Eastern Washington University, just 30 miles from the north Idaho border, are having a different experience than that described in Kendra Hamilton's article "Race in the College Classroom" in your March 14 issue.
Our courses in African American studies are filled to overflowing with 100-plus students in most classes. We have added additional sections to accommodate large waiting lists. Many students also successfully complete a minor in African American studies.
The reasons for these extraordinary class sizes are twofold. One is a genuine interest by our students to learn about different cultures, particularly African American culture. The other, we believe, is the skill of faculty who teach about the often-difficult history and events in a challenging manner.
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We are very proud of our students' seriousness in learning about African American history and culture and their willingness to discuss current events to develop a more global understanding.
Sincerely, Nancy J. Nelson Director
DEAR EDITOR:
I read with great interest the March 29 article on the sister presidents of Bennett and Spelman in Black Issues In Higher Education. I was indeed surprised to see that the writer did not refer to the first woman president of Bennett College, Dr. Willa B. Player. Dr. Player served Bennett during the mid-50s through the mid-60s when she left Bennett to take a position at the U.S. Department of Education. On her retirement from the Education Department, she volunteered quietly with the UNCF, evaluating scholarship applications among her efforts.
Dr. Player is in her nineties and continues to reside in Greensboro, N.C., although she is not physically well. She presided over Bennett with a stellar but quiet dignity. Before becoming president, she had served as vice-president, college registrar and French instructor. She studied at the Sorbonne in France and conducted seminal studies on the education of Black women.
Dr. Player encouraged us to participate in the sit-ins and civil rights demonstrations in the '60s. Contrary to popular opinion, it was Bennett students who were also leaders in the well-celebrated dime store sit-ins in Greensboro. That movement was organized at Bennett. The strategy for the Greensboro Four to sit at the counters while we shopped was made at Bennett. We decided that the men would sit in the event that there would be beatings -- and the men wished to protect us.
She is known in Greensboro for having invited Dr. Martin Luther King to speak on the campus when no other institution, including churches, would have him.
An article in your paper about Dr. Player would be inspiring to other African American women in academia or for that matter in any profession.
Thanks for listening, Gwendolyn Mackel Rice Bennett College '61
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