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2008 valedictorian is different kind of 'Morehouse Man'

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"The few times I have held back and tried to pick my words wisely or even go against what I truly believe, that's when I've caught the most flak," he said.

With each semester, Packwood's grades remained high, his confidence grew and his resume became more impressive. Summers were spent on Wall Street at Morgan Stanley and Goldman Sachs, he studied abroad in London and Costa Rica, and his studies have taken him to China and Switzerland.

He also drew attention with his looks _ some Atlanta University Center coeds took to calling him "Tom Cruise." His photo album on Facebook shows a smiling Packwood posing with dozens of young, black women who fill his page with notes.

As Morehouse embraced him, Packwood became an unlikely ambassador for the school.

"Josh Packwood is Morehouse," the college's president, Robert Franklin, said in his inauguration speech in February. "He happens to be Euro-American and brings much appreciated diversity to our campus."

Wendell Marsh, a junior English and French major who is black, said talking to Packwood as a high school senior helped make up his mind to come to Morehouse.

"Right now we live in a time where people say the black institution is obsolete, that you can get a better education at a majority institution," Marsh said. "To see a white guy who had declined Harvard for Morehouse, I figured it was good enough for me."


Packwood raised "the bar for everyone," said Stanton Fears, a senior economics major.

"The best man got it, that's how I look at it," Fears said. "It's about equality here, too. If he wants to come here and make a name for himself, he should be allowed the same types of things we're allowed."

Being surrounded by black men for his undergraduate career has taught him more about diversity, Packwood said.

"I've been here for four years and yet, I cannot give you the definition of black," he said. "I cannot tell you what a black man is. I really learned to look much deeper. It takes a lot of effort to know people."

___

Shake. Lean. Embrace. Release. The soulful ritual is repeated several times as Packwood greets his fellow classmates on one of his last days on campus. Some congratulated him amid the buzz that he might be named valedictorian. There were those who thought there would be some bitterness, but animosity for Packwood's accomplishments was scarce that day.

Brandon L. Douglas, a junior business major who met Packwood as an intern on Wall Street after his freshman year, said Packwood has been a standout not for his skin, but for his successes on campus.

"He kind of sticks out, but he's still relatable and he works with all of us," Douglas said. "You don't see a skin color with him anymore. You start looking more at his character."

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2008 valedictorian is different kind of 'Morehouse Man'

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  • Posted By:
    The Uppity Negro at 05/13/2008 5:05:07 PM
    Comment:
    well, I have three questions surrounding all of this. 1) Would all of this press happen if he hadn't been white? (and yes the same applies to Obama and his blackness) 2) Would the same opportunities that Mr. Packwood garnered be the same for black students at a TWI (traditionally white institutions) and 3) why is it that people still compare HBCU's to TWI's as if TWI's are the "white" standard?

    just my uppity negro thoughts, JLL

    www.uppitynegronetwork.wordpress.com
  • Posted By:
    bighak2002 at 05/13/2008 10:22:33 AM
    Comment:
    This brother exemplifies a developed sense of racial cultural developement. I applaud the brothers on campus who welcomed him.
  • Posted By:
    SatchelPaige at 05/12/2008 10:41:52 PM
    Comment:
    Since African-American enrollment in majority institutions is steadily increasing, HBCUs must recruit the best students of all races to maintain viability. I expect there will be some problems.

    For instance at Fayetteville State University (HBCU) 23% of all students are white or hispanic. There were rumors about changing its name from Fayetteville State Univ. to UNC-Fayetteville(UNCF ironically) to be more inviting to prospective white students.

    It is easy to predict scenarios such as the demand for a Mexican history class, the establishment of white fraternity on a HBCU campus, or as I have heard, an all white line of Zetas. All these scenarios do not bother me at all but could (or maybe will) bother others.

    I hope all students are welcolmed with open arms but we must realize some are not matriculating for the black experience but for the education.
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