Posted on 03/29/2012 2:17:58 PM PDT by jazusamo
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Although we all know that death is inevitable, we are still seldom fully prepared for the death of someone who has been important in our lives. So it was with the recent death of Dr. Marie D. Gadsden, at the age of 92. Mrs. Gadsden's only official connection with me was that she taught me freshman English at Howard University, more than half a century ago. But she and Professor Sterling Brown were my two idols when I was a student there and both remained so for the rest of my life. Mrs. G, as I came to call her in later years, was not only a good teacher, and a demanding teacher, but also one with kindness toward her students. I can still remember one very rainy night when a young lady from her class and I were walking up the street together from Howard University, when a car suddenly pulled over to the curb, a door was flung open and we were invited to get in. It was Mrs. Gadsden. When I decided that I wanted to transfer to Harvard, both Mrs. G and Sterling Brown wrote strong letters of recommendation for me letters that may have had more to do with my getting admitted than my mediocre grades, as a night student who was carrying too many courses for someone who worked full time during the day. Mrs. G put me in touch with a lady she knew in Cambridge, who rented me a room, and also put me in touch with a lovely young woman who was a student at Radcliffe. Mr. Gadsden, her husband whom I had come to know by this time, said to me: "Oh, Tom, now she is picking out your women for you!" He had a great sense of humor. In the decades that followed, Mrs. Gadsden and I remained in touch, usually by mail, even after we were both long gone from Howard University. Since she had many sojourns overseas, her letters often came from exotic places, principally in Africa. She was my most important confidante, and her wise words helped me through many tough times in my personal life, as well as in my professional career. She encouraged my work, celebrated my advancement and, where necessary, criticized my shortcomings. All of it helped me. At one point, I returned to Howard University to teach for a year. Among my students was a young African woman who had studied under Mrs. Gadsden in Guinea. This young lady, just recently arrived in the United States, seemed almost frightened by it and by my economics class, which met two hours every night during the six weeks of summer school. The class was moving ahead at a rapid pace and, when this young African woman fell behind, I knew it would be very hard for her to catch up. She failed the first two weekly tests and, when I spoke with her about it after class, she was thoroughly embarrassed and quietly began to cry. I then went to see Mrs. Gadsden, who was back in Washington at this time, and who knew this girl and her family back in Guinea. "So you think she's going to fail the course?" Mrs. G asked. "Well, she's not going to learn the material. Whether I can bring myself to give her an F is something else. That's really hitting somebody who's down." "You're thinking of passing her, even if she does not do passing work?" Mrs. G said sharply. She reminded me that I had long criticized paternalistic white teachers who passed black students who should have been failed and she let me have it. "I'm ashamed of you, Tom. You know better!" Now it seemed as if I could neither pass nor fail this young African woman. In desperation, I began to meet with her in the office for an hour before every class to try to bring her up to speed. At first, it didn't look like these private lessons were doing any good, but one night she finally began to grasp what economics was all about, and she even smiled, for the first time. The young woman from Guinea did B work from there on out and I was tempted to give her a B. But her earlier failing grades could not be ignored, and averaging them in made her grade a C. When I saw Mrs. Gadsden later, she said, "Our friend was overjoyed at getting a C in your course! She was proud because she knew she earned every bit of it." That was the Mrs. G I knew. And I never expect to see anyone like her again. |
Sowell is a national treasure and a brilliant mind!
Old school all the way and I salute them both. But now we are stuck with the reparations generation who vote 97% for Marxist freebie man Obama and like the racist temper tantrums of the Reverends Sharptoon and Jackson
Please God - just one cloning machine!
God Bless TS.
I guess old men like me always tear up when positive stories from great men appear. Especially with all the reverse racism we have to put up with every day.
Indeed. I'm grateful that I had one.
If you can't appreciate the pure beauty of the violin after hearing this, something's wrong with your ears.
Or you can get raw with these strings.
How about this gamechanger from America's Got Talent (which they SHOULD have won).
And finally, this, dedicated to the one and only rdb2, whose eyes are growing dim.
Either way, the violin is sweet yet LETHAL.
Do it!
You're not alone, UB. :-)
A lovely tribute and we owe Mrs. G a debt of gratitude for her contribution to the education of the good Dr. Sowell. May she Rest In Peace.
Why only students? Each of us needs a Mrs. G.
Bless you for everything you accomplished, Mrs. G, and Thank You for gifting us Dr. Sowell.
Why only students? Each of us needs a Mrs. G.
Bless you for everything you accomplished, Mrs. G, and Thank You for gifting us Dr. Sowell.
AWESOME! I’m still crying. I LOVE DR. SOWELL! And what sucks is I have a cold, and crying is NOT helping the stuffed up nose, but it’s TOTALLY worth it!
Thank YOU for pinging me to this article!
It’s going out as an e-mail in a moment...
Binger, binger, bing....
I've taught you better than this.
That is no such thing as REVERSE racism: only racism.
Binger, binger, bing....
I've taught you better than this.
There is no such thing as REVERSE racism: only racism.
Fred Sweets/THE WASHINGTON POST - Marie Gadsden, Jonetta Barras and Rufus N. Ragin III attend a reception at Market 5 Gallery in Washington in 1981. Gadsden, a leader in education and philanthropic foundations, died March 14 in Washington. She was 92. |
Thank you much for posting her photo and link to the article. What a bio and genuinely fine woman, I can see why Dr. Sowell is proud to have known her.
Excellent. Thank you so much, and RIP, Mrs. G.
Good one ... happy in one sense that I read the article, sad to read of Mrs. G passing. Nice tribute.
I was right about the hat! Older black ladies are the queens of cool hats! (My Latin American ladies have marvelous hair, but they don’t get into hats, sadly.)
OK Grandma.
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