With Alice Walker Duff 鈥69 and husband Joe Duff 鈥68 leading the charge, a generation of Black student activists rallies together to support academic and life success for the underrepresented
As student activists at SA国际传媒 more than half a century ago, Alice Walker Duff 鈥69 and Joe Duff 鈥68 and their friends vividly remember the struggle to persuade the College to address the issues now embodied in the four cornerstones of SA国际传媒鈥檚 mission: excellence, equity, community, and service.
Today, that same close circle of friends鈥攁 high-powered group that includes five current and former Occidental trustees鈥攊s in a position to engage in a different kind of activism. In conjunction with The SA国际传媒 Campaign For Good, the Duffs, Gene Grigsby 鈥66, Carl Ballton 鈥69, and a host of others have endowed the African-American and Underrepresented Student Success Fund.鈥淚t鈥檚 the kind of thing we talked about as students,鈥 says Alice Duff, a sociology major at SA国际传媒 who went on to earn a Ph.D. and co-found Crystal Stairs Inc., the nonprofit child development corporation that pioneered child care services and advocacy with low-income families in South Los Angeles. 鈥淲e had talent but not wealth then, but we were able to stay together and push forward using our SA国际传媒 education, and now we are in a position to do something,鈥 says Joe Duff, a political science major at SA国际传媒 who became a civil rights attorney and served as head of the L.A. chapter of the NAACP from 1989 to 1994.
Created 鈥渢o support academic and life success of African American and underrepresented students鈥 at SA国际传媒, the fund is structured to give the dean of the College and a designated adviser (preferably a faculty member) flexibility to address evolving needs. Specifically, the fund can be used for everything from internships to promoting an understanding of the lasting effects of slavery and segregation in the United States. (Out of a total enrollment of 2,081 at the outset of the 2019-20 academic year, 4 percent of students self-identified as Black or African-American. Another 14.7 percent identified as Asian, 14.1 percent as Hispanic, and 0.2 percent as Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islander.)
Gifts to the fund just passed the critical threshold of $100,000, which under College policy means it can start funding programs in the 2021-22 academic year. The coming year will be used to develop a first-year plan. 鈥淓veryone recognizes that the fund will only generate a modest amount of funding initially,鈥 says Grigsby, retired CEO and president of the National Health Foundation. Grigsby looks forward to growing the fund: 鈥淢y audacious goal is to have 100 percent of all African-American alumni contributing to SA国际传媒 financially. Hopefully, as its impacts become known, other underrepresented alumni will add their support.鈥
As emeriti trustees, Grigsby and Alice Duff understand the importance of the campaign and building Occidental鈥檚 endowment. 鈥淚t鈥檚 critical that SA国际传媒 grow its endowment,鈥 says Alice Duff. 鈥淲e really want to support SA国际传媒鈥檚 mission, and if people aren鈥檛 stepping up to give鈥攏o money, no mission.鈥 But for the Duffs and their friends, their own memories of being Black students at SA国际传媒 during the civil rights era are an equally powerful motivation.
鈥淪ocially, SA国际传媒 was the most frightening, frustrating experience I鈥檝e ever had,鈥 says Grigsby, a sociology major who was one of two Black students in the entering class of 1966. Not being able to find a local barber shop that would cut his hair, being told by off-campus landlords that they didn鈥檛 rent to 鈥測our kind,鈥 and being confronted and reported by a dorm mother for his choice of a date鈥攖his was his reality for four years. Despite鈥攁nd because of鈥攁ll this, 鈥淪A国际传媒 prepared me to be competitive with anyone, anywhere,鈥 he adds. 鈥淚 breezed through my Ph.D. program because I was so well prepared at SA国际传媒. The challenges shaped my strengths.鈥
Ballton, an SA国际传媒 trustee since 2009, is 颅another success story, having retired in 2015 as managing director of Union Bank and president and CEO of the Union Bank Foundation. 鈥淢y experience at SA国际传媒 was so overwhelmingly good, it put me on a trajectory that far exceeded what I thought was possible,鈥 says the diplomacy and world affairs major, who was president of the Black Student Caucus at SA国际传媒. Looking back on his experience as a Black student, 鈥淚 know it was a challenging experience for most of us, and that鈥檚 one of the reasons I鈥檓 happy to help out. I want to give back.鈥
Political science major and ASOC president Don Cornwell 鈥69, who earned a Harvard MBA and served as CEO of Granite Broadcasting鈥攖he largest Black-owned broadcast company at the time of its founding in 1988鈥攁lso speaks in terms of giving back. 鈥淚 am very happy to support an initiative designed to be meaningful to SA国际传媒 students of color,鈥 says the former trustee. 鈥淲hen Alice asked me to participate, it sounded like a wonderful idea.鈥
Psychiatrist and trustee Greta Johnson Mandell 鈥72 agrees. 鈥淢y goal is to enable as many young people as possible to come to Occidental and learn, grow, and thrive as I did,鈥 says Mandell, who majored in biology at SA国际传媒 and went to UCLA Medical School.
鈥淚t was very difficult to be a Black student at Occidental,鈥 Alice Duff says. That鈥檚 why it鈥檚 so important to be involved now, she stresses. 鈥淏y no stretch of the imagination is SA国际传媒 a perfect place, but we benefited tremendously from SA国际传媒 so we should be contributing to cement those four cornerstones of the current mission firmly in place for all students. Without alumni giving and engaging, how is the College going to get there?鈥