This story from the Atlanta Journal Constitution deals in a straightforward and honest way with the topic of diversity in the dorms. Apparently Catherine Donnelly, the woman assigned to be Michelle Obama’s roommate at Princeton, was from Georgia and, um, “wasn’t used to” living with black people.
[Donnelly’s mother Alice] Brown, 71, explains that she was raised to think that way. She recalls hearing her grandfather, a sheriff in the North Carolina mountains, brag about running black visitors out of the county before nightfall. And Brown’s parents held on to the n-word like a family heirloom.
However much you may disapprove of their attitudes, you have to admire how forthright Donnelly and Brown are in this article. At this point, most people in America want to have marched with MLK Jr.; who wants to have cheered for the pressure hoses and the dogs? Brown, though, doesn’t blink at the truth. She admits that she “stormed down to the campus housing office and demanded Donnelly be moved to another room.”
There wasn’t another open room, and Donnelly came around so fast she probably had whiplash. Donnelly says she found Obama “smart … charming, interesting and funny.” But the two traveled in different circles. Second semester, a space opened up elsewhere, and Donnelly moved out.
Today, Donnelly and Brown are more open-minded than they were, although Brown, now in her 70s, retains more of the suspicion and hostility she grew up with (”Where I draw the line is interracial marriage,” Brown says without embarrassment). And both are drawn to Barack Obama as a candidate, despite their affiliations with the GOP:
[Brown is] a sucker for Harvard grads, especially eloquent ones. “He thinks well,” Brown said recently, though she and Donnelly are still undecided voters. “He seems to be a thoughtful person. He considers everything.”
Like a Sesame Street episode, this story ends with a lesson learned: “We thought this is so ironic,” Brown says. “[Obama] could be the first lady, and here we wanted to get my child out of her influence.” Indeed.