Four Blacks Named Rhodes Scholars for Next Year

Date: Wednesday, November 25, 2009, 4:39 am
By: F. Finley McRae, Special to BlackAmericaWeb.com

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Ugwechi Amadi, a senior at MIT, is among the four blacks selected to be Rhodes Scholars in 2010.

For the second year since 1994, four African-American undergraduates have won Rhodes Scholarships, which carry with them the privilege of studying at Oxford, England's oldest and most venerated university.
 
Named for the South African mining magnate, Cecil John Rhodes, the scholarships, worth about $50,000 each for two years, have been prominent passports to gateways of power, privilege and prestige since they were created in 1903.    

Two of the four blacks are men, and two are women. They are Andre McCall from Truman State University, Ugwechi Amadi, an MIT senior, and two Harvard College undergraduates, Darryl Finkton and Jean Junior.
 
Representing 12.5 percent of the total of 32 winners from colleges and universities in the United States, the four men and women will take their places at Oxford next fall with the 28 other scholarship winners from this country.  All 32 scholarship winners were elected by 16 committees operating under the umbrella of the Rhodes Scholarship Trust, based in Vienna, Virginia.

More than 7,000 winners worldwide have been selected since 1903, but no exact number for North Americans are unavailable because paper records for several years were not transferred to microfiche; at least 3,000, however, hailed from this country and Canada.   

Along with blacks from this country, Africans from South Africa, Kenya, Zambia, Botswana, Lesotho, Malawi, Namibia and Swaziland were selected. Jamaicans and Caribbean were also chosen as well.  Other scholarship winners of color will represent India, Germany, New Zealand, Australia and Canada.
    
For most of the past 46 years, American blacks have won at least one Rhodes. Two African American seniors were chosen in 1963 - John Edgar Wideman, a University of Pennsylvania student, and J. Stanley Sanders, from Whittier College, near Los Angeles. In some of the years after Wideman and Sanders were selected, most recently in 1996, no blacks were chosen.
 
In 1907, Alain Locke, the intellectual wizard known as the father of the Harlem Renaissance, was the first African-American awarded a Rhodes Scholarship. That ignited a threatened boycott by the white, southern winners, who claimed they'd refuse their scholarships if Locke's were not rescinded. Rhodes officials were not intimidated and said Locke's selection would not be withdrawn. The southerners dropped their threat, but never spoke to Locke during his two years at Oxford.

No blacks were welcomed into the Rhodes circle of winners for more than a half century - 56 years - until Wideman and Sanders were elected in 1963.

Wideman is a distinguished professor at Brown University, a MacArthur Genius Award winner and a nationally acclaimed writer. Sanders, a respected Southern California attorney, is well known in political and business circles and was a mayoral candidate in 1993.   
  
McCall, reached at his St. Louis, Missouri home by BlackAmericaWeb.com, is the the first Truman State University student to win a Rhodes Scholarship since its founding in 1867. Truman State's president, Darryl Krueger, was apparently so thrilled by the marketing, publicity and advertising possibilities for the Kirkland, Missouri university that he expressed his gratitude to McCall. "Thank you. Thank you very much," he told him.

For the the 21-year-old McCall, whose father, Alvin, is a cellist with the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra, and its only black musician, his election "was a tremendous relief."  Now relaxing on Thanksgiving break, McCall, who carries a 3.92 grade point average and tutors freshman logic, said he "felt a fair amount of pressure to win this scholarship for my school and my family."

A religion and philosophy major, McCall, whose mother, Anna, is a violist, will study philosophy at Oxford. He has a double minor in English and Music and is .....


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Yes My PEOPLE! Represent!


by   
Brownman1234
December 7, 2009, 12:38 pm
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No scholars from HBCU's? SHOCKING.


by   
Jiggy5
November 30, 2009, 8:53 am
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Congratulations to all of the recipients of the Rhodes Scholarships!! May GOD guide you and keep you on your educational journey at Oxford and beyond. You are the pride of our race, especially knowing the amount of hard work that you "put in" to reach this level of achievement. Again, congratulations!!!


by   
Elynor
November 28, 2009, 6:55 am
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Congrats to ALL scholarship recipients; I pray you ALL go on to do great things. May your efforts better the world in general, and America in particular. AVOID ultra liberalism!!!!!


by   
WhatIThink
November 27, 2009, 4:22 am
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Congrats to our Scholars! Actually Myron Rolle who's an African American was a awarded the Rhodes Scholarship in 2008. He's currently studying at Oxford University for the 2009-10 Academic year. He played safety for Floriday State University Football team.

Source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myron_Rolle


by   
MSJAYE10
November 25, 2009, 5:17 pm
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