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The ‘Belles’ are Back

Bennett College for Women is ever mindful of its place in history while preparing students for their future in a global society.

The “Bennett Belle.” The words conjure an image that is genteel, old-fashioned — hats and gloves, brown-skinned women in flowing white dresses beaming as they take that final walk to graduation. The Bennett College for Women campus certainly reinforces the image, with its broad, tree-shaded lawns and quadrangle and its historic buildings — fully 15 of the 29 total have National Register status, from the majestic Annie Merner Pfeiffer Chapel to the Carnegie Negro Library facing busy East Washington Street.

But the pleasant paradox of Bennett College is the way in which old and new are meeting there in such intriguing ways – in, for example, the poised personage of Mesha White, student government president and campus ambassador. “We say at Bennett that you come here to meet the woman you’re going to become,” White says, as she guides a visitor across the Greensboro, N.C., campus on a brisk, sunny late winter morning.

White has all the grace and poise one would expect of a “Belle,” but she’s also a global citizen, speaking with passion about her semester in Ghana, her interests in business and communications, her hopes of getting into Columbia University’s international studies program — or perhaps a job in Washington, D.C. — next year.

White is also, according to Bennett President Julianne Malveaux, one of the most dynamic student activists on the campus of 689 students — a young woman who, one weekend before, had organized a peace and justice march that drew upward of 700 students from Bennett, North Carolina A&T State University and the University of North Carolina-Greensboro to commemorate the lives of two young N.C. A&T students murdered in random acts of violence. “The young men had been shot at [N.C.] A&T, but it’s not an [N.C.] A&T problem — it’s a young people’s problem. So Mesha was fantastic — she simply stepped up and organized it. I marched with them for a little while, and it was incredibly inspiring to see so many young people gathered on a Saturday,” Malveaux says.

 Implementing a 21st-century Vision

Malveaux is quick to draw connections between Bennett’s present and its past, reminding visitors that Bennett’s iconic president, Willa B. Player, gave the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr. his first pulpit in Greensboro — when “all the ministers were too frightened;” that for every A&T student who sat at a lunch counter, there were 10 Belles outside holding placards, marching and singing as they went to jail; that Player demonstrated her own commitment by entering the jail herself to take the girls their homework.

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