|
Los Angeles Times, CALIFORNIA: Ventura County Edition
Monday, May 3, 2004

A Pilgrimage of Black Pride
Oxnard couple takes
California students across the country to introduce them to historic African
American colleges.
By Darryl Kelley
GREENSBORO, N.C. - Wearing white hard hats, 17 black youngsters from
California listened in respectful silence as an African American museum
curator led his first tour of a converted Woolworth's store that was a key
battleground in the civil rights revolution 44 years ago.

"This museum will show," said Robert L. Haynes, motioning toward the
building's unfinished shell, "what it was like to have your existence not
valued, to have your life considered meaningless. To be invisible."
He described how four freshmen from nearby North Carolina Agricultural &
Technical State University endured taunts, curses and worse to sit with
whites at the Woolworth's lunch counter until they were served.
"And when you go back to California," Haynes said, "I want you to think what
are the things you can change, that you can take courage in, and see a
result."
The California youngsters, most of them high school age, had come to North
Carolina during Easter vacation in search of their cultural roots - and,
just maybe, a college education among their own race. Now they were
mesmerized as they embraced a common history.
Said Michael Lee, an Oxnard ninth-grader, "I felt I was special."
While other teenagers spent Easter break at shopping malls and amusement
parks, these youngsters from Oakland and Fresno, Los Angeles and Sacramento
journeyed 3,000 miles to tour campuses at nine historically black colleges
and universities in North Carolina.

African American Students
Look East for College Careers |
For the 15th straight spring, Irene and Bedford Pinkard from Oxnard led the
April trip to colleges that offer students an alternative to the
predominantly white campuses of California.
"There's a nuturing at these black colleges: They take you from where you
are and move you to where you need to be," said Irene Pinkard, 60, a high
school trustee and retired community college administrator.
She and her 73-year-old husband, a city councilman, were born in the Sourth,
have family there and still embrace that region's strong sense of black
community.
"Youngsters need to see African Americans in positions of leadership," said
Irene, the daughter of a Methodist minister. "They need to see there's more
to African American achievement than music and sports."
The Pinkards' annual tour reflects a heightened interest by blacks in the
Sourth, where the 2000 census showed nearly 700,000 African Americans had
moved during the previous five years.
Enrollment at 105 historically black colleges and universities, monstly in
the South, increased by 29% to 287,000 from 1976 to 2002. The United Negro
College Fund's research institute also reported that in 2002 about 29% of
all African Americans who received bachelor's degrees attended historically
black campuses.
"Enrollment has been steadily increasing in light of the perceived hostility
around affirmative action diversity at major institutions," said M.
Christopher Brown, the research institute's executive director. "And people
are now just beginning to recognize the quality of these programs."
Increases have been particularly sharp among students from California, which
now has the second-highest enrollment of all states at the 39 colleges that
are members of the fund, Brown said.
They are drawn to black universities, many founded to educated freed slaves
after the Civil War, by lower tuitions, flexible entrance requirements and
low student-teacher ratios. And they want to spend time in an environment
where they are not judged each day by the color of their skin.
Many applicants have never set foot on a college campus before, said Michael
Lomax, president of Dillard University in New Orleans and
president-designate of the United Negro College Fund. "And if we've
developed a specialty," he said, "it's turning low-income, high-performing
kids into college graduates."
Wide-Ranging Group
The Pinkard group - an array of students from families both prosperous and
poor - came together by word of mouth through family, friends, and church
connections. They ranged from an 11-year-old sixth-grader to three high
school seniors. For the first time, boys outnumbered girls, 10 to seven.
Their parents are ministers, business owners, prison guards, criminal
investigators, maintenance and officer workers, a social worker and a public
transit train driver. MOst paid a fee of $750 for airfare, ground
transportation and main meals.
Some of the students had been to black colleges before and were eager to
return. For Janea Odom, a junior at a suburban Sacramento high school, the
trip was a fact-finding mission.

"My father doesn't want me to go to a black college; he says the world's of
all races," she said. So what I'm asking on this trip is, how can a black
college benfit me as a black woman?"
For seven days and nights, the California youngsters made the most of their
Carolina adventure.
After a Saturday flight from Los Angeles, former Compton Community College
administrator Janet Bowman, now an Asheville, N.C., resident and an old
frienend of Irene Pinkard, led the busload of students through an eventful
EAster Sunday that climaxed with a circle of prayer and dinner at her home.
Bowman, author of guide to America's black colleges, took the group to an
early ervice at an all-white church, where mumbers first watched them
warily, then welcomed them warmly and finally invited them to brunch. Bowman
directed the youngesters' bus to a historic Baptist college, Mars Hill,
where she now teaches.
"A black man saved this college," Bowman said. "They owed a bill, and he
allowed himself to be held as collateral until the bill was paid."
"He took one for the team," quipped Jeremiah Penny, an Oxnard senior,
cracking up the others.
Inside the Mars Hill library, a collage of photos on Bowman's office door
revealed a blunt message. Among those of "achieving black women" was
National Security Advisor Condoleezza Rice.
"In high school her counselor told her she was not college material," said
Bowman, herself a coal miner's daughter from West Virginia who earned a
master's degree from USC and a doctorate from UCLA.
The next day, another former Californian came through for the crew at the
old Wolworth's store in downtown Greensboro, when curator Haynes responded
to Irene Pinkard's persistent requests and agreed to open the International
Civil Rights Center and Museum 10 months early.
It was the highlight of an extraordinary day of images at or near North
Carolina A&T, founded in 1890 as the Agricultural and Mechanics College for
Colored People an dnow one of the largest black colleges in the nation and
the top producer of African American engineers.
The tour drove up Harriett Tubman Streen and the visitors repeated softly
the name of the former slave who dedicated her life to freeing others. The
tour passed Ales Haley Hall, a dormitory named for the author of "Roots,"
whose father attended in 1932. It passed the student offices, where former
presidential candidate Jesse Jackson, a 1964 graduate who led civil rights
demonstrations in Greensboro, had served.
It came to a science building where Challenger astronaut Ron McNair earned a
physics degree with a 4.0 grade average. "Whoa, 4.0," the youngsters said.
It passed the Paul Robeson Professional Theater, where celebrated poet and
best-selling author Maya Angelou sometimes speaks.
Then the tour rolled to a stop in front of an aging brick dormitory. There
in 1969, student William Ernest Grimes "lost his life for the cause," the
guide said, when National Guardsmen shot M-15 bullets through a wall at
protesting students. Dozens of large holes still pock the exterior. The dorm
will be torn down this summer, but the wall will be preserved, the guide
said.
"What I saw today," said Rhyan Thomas, a senior at King Drew Magnet High
School in Los Angeles, "really made me feel proud, how they embrace their
history. And there are so many successful people coming out of here. Wow."
For five more days, the students listened and learned. Dressed in Levis and
sweatshirts, they laughed and sang and flirted. They scored well when the
strict Irene popped quizzes each evening. During orientations, they asked
questions about costs, scholarships and college specialties.
Some were impressed with the larger, fast-growing public universities that
were studded with new red-brick buildings and generally required better
grades and test scores for entry: a 2.5 grade average and 920 on the SAT for
out-of-state A&T applicants, for example.
Others preferred the slower, more comfortable environs of the small private
colleges that seemed willing to do just about anything to admit a student,
such as allowing a 2.0 grade average with no SAT minimum at tiny Shaw
Univesity in Raleigh.
Ears pricked up when a guide at Shaw told the story of benefactor Willie E.
Gary, an attorney and cable television mogul who gave the college $10
million several years ago when it really needed it.
A member of a migrant farmworker family, Gary showed up desperate for a
college education in 1968 with $10 to his name, the guide said. "We accepted
Willie E. Gary like he was. And we waived the application fee."
Winning Converts

In the end, at least three in the California group said they wanted to
attend a black college.
Even before the trip, 17-year-old Rhyan had made that decision. She had
already been admitted to three schools and was awaiting word from Howard
University in Washington, D.C., perhaps the nation's most prestigious
historically black campus.
By the trip's end she had applied to two more: North Carolina A&T, which
impressed her with its doctoral program in biology and its open pride in its
past; and Shaw, founded in 1865, the oldest black college in the South.
Rhyan created a stir when Shaw admitted her within hours. She is now seeking
a full scholarship of $14,882 a year.
"It just seems at a black college they'd be more focused on me," said Rhyan,
whose mother is a social worker and whose father works in construction.
For Anthony Robinson, a sophomore at El Segundo High School whose parents
are government investigators, the tour was a valuable lesson.
"My teachers tell me I have the potential for A's, but I've got to apply
myself in class," said the lanky 15-year-old. "And sometimes I forget what
makes me special from white or Asian or Hispanic. So this was a positive
reinforcement of that whole thing."
The Pinkards began the trips in 1990 after escorting Irene's son to
Louisiana for a taste of Grambling State University. Since then, about 230
students have taken their tour and about three dozen have gone on to attend
black colleges. "It's great to be surrounded by so many black students who
are goal-oriented," said Cheryl Gillbreath, a former tour participant who is
a pharmacy student at Howard.
"I realized I was in a box in Oxnard," she said. "Here I still may be
limited, but the box is bigger and the door that opens the box is unlocked.
And when I get to that door, there'll be no limitations on me." |
 |