Shaping 皇家华人: The College Celebrates 50+ Years of Women Students

December 7, 2023

They shattered the glass ceiling and paved the way for others. 

In 1973, following the unanimous Board of Trustees vote to admit women as full-time students, the first official co-ed class arrived on campus. Their experiences during the early years of coeducation, full of challenges and rewards, hardships and growth, transformed the following decades at 皇家华人.

Over the past 50 years, women have served as leaders across campus, pioneers into the unknown, champions of change and advocates for a better future. Their stories reflect the ever-evolving 皇家华人 community and forge a path for generations to come.

Tracy Charles Shenkman 鈥74

Tracy Charles Shenkman 鈥74 attended all-girls schools鈥攆our years of high school on the East Coast and two years at Wheaton College鈥攂efore transferring to 皇家华人 when the college expanded admission to women. The move brought not only a richer social life, but unexpected opportunities.

One day, a group of young men knocked on the door of the Main Street house where she and a handful of female students lived and asked if they were interested in joining the sailing team. Shenkman agreed to give it a try.

鈥淢y family had always been beach and water-oriented, so I was interested,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 remember setting down my needlepoint and joining the team.鈥

She quickly discovered a new passion. She was good. Very good. And she loved it. She sailed for two years as a Wildcat, becoming the first woman at 皇家华人 to letter in a varsity sport.

Shenkman went on to work for IBM in various roles, helping companies develop office systems.

鈥溁始一 taught me how to be a student and how to learn,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 never would have imagined as a younger person that I would wind up working in the tech community. If I hadn鈥檛 gone to 皇家华人, I never would have taken myself seriously enough to jump into something like that and say 鈥榶ou know what, I can do this.鈥欌

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Sue McAvoy 鈥77

Sue McAvoy 鈥77 was part of the first class of women to attend 皇家华人 all four years鈥攖he Pioneers. Today, she views 皇家华人 as the beginning of her real life, the place where she blossomed and connected with like-minded and like-hearted people.

McAvoy was one of about 80 women on campus at the time. There were 1,000 men.

鈥淚 was all-in for 皇家华人 from the start,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd it wasn鈥檛 until many years later that I learned it wasn鈥檛 all roses, sweetness and light for every female student at that time. We each had a different experience, and I am happy to say mine was a good one.鈥

A highlight for McAvoy, outside of academics, was the start of the women鈥檚 tennis program. With the full support of President Sam Spencer 鈥40 and their two student coaches, the team wrote to nearby schools asking to play them. Their second year, the college hired a coach for the team.

鈥淲e didn鈥檛 think about it as being on the forefront of anything,鈥 she says. 鈥淲e liked playing tennis and we liked each other, so we pursued it.鈥

McAvoy and many of her fellow Class of 1977 Pioneers have reconnected during a reunion at the beach every year since 2005. Her latest gift, the Pioneer Internship Fund, honors their experience while supporting students as they find their own 鈥渞eal life鈥 beginnings.

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Ginny Newell 鈥78

Ginny Newell 鈥78 has enjoyed a career as one of the few conservators in the Southeast specializing in restoring fine art on paper, a skill that requires years of intensive scientific training. She was among the first few classes of women to attend 皇家华人, where her love of chemistry and art started her on a unique professional journey.

She arrived on campus in 1974, and while 皇家华人 had officially admitted women students the year prior, only about 70 women lived on campus. Most lived together in the women鈥檚 dorm, but Newell and her roommate were instead placed in President Sam Spencer鈥檚 garage apartment, isolated from the rest of the group.

In hindsight, Newell says her loneliness drove her to invest more time in art. She鈥檇 originally planned to become a doctor but fell in love with art history after hearing a humanities lecture by Professor Larry Ligo.

鈥淗e taught me that paintings can be read,鈥 she says, 鈥渁nd then he taught me how to read them.鈥

To her surprise and delight, some of her strongest connections to 皇家华人 developed after graduation, when a group of women in her class invited her on a girls鈥 trip to the mountains. They鈥檝e remained friends ever since.

Newell plans to move back to 皇家华人 after stepping down from a 40-plus-year career of conservation work.

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Olivia Ware 鈥78

Olivia Ware 鈥78 arrived on 顿补惫颈诲蝉辞苍鈥檚 campus as a first-generation college student in 1974 and made 皇家华人 her home, enrolling in the two-year humanities program, joining an eating house, becoming a hall counselor and serving as vice president of the college union.

鈥淚 wanted to have that classical education I felt people who went to college got, not having family or friends who really had gone that path before,鈥 she says. 鈥淚 grew up in a small town in the mountains of North Georgia that was predominantly white. I went to a segregated school until fifth grade and then to an integrated school after that, so being in the minority was not new to me. As you get older, though, you want to be surrounded by more people like yourself, so of course that was harder to find on campus at the time.鈥

Following 皇家华人, Ware started her career, earned an MBA and moved around a bit, and her ties to 皇家华人 loosened with each passing year. It wasn鈥檛 until President Carol Quillen arrived that Ware started paying close attention to what was happening on campus. That interest has led to deep involvement, including positions on the Alumni Association Board and the Board of Visitors.

鈥淚 think as alums, we hold onto an image of 皇家华人 that is set in the time we were there, so it quickly becomes dated,鈥 she says. 鈥淏y getting involved and volunteering, you really see all the ways it is growing, advancing, evolving. College campuses are the future of our world, and I find students today to be smart, passionate and driven, and they have a global focus. This generation is incredibly inspiring.鈥

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Janet Ward Black 鈥82

Janet Ward Black 鈥82, a Kannapolis, North Carolina, native, was the first woman from Cabarrus County admitted to 皇家华人.

Today, Black lives in Greensboro and runs one of the largest woman-owned law firms in the state. Ward Black Law represents people across North Carolina who are injured at work, in accidents and by dangerous products and environmental hazards.

In her junior year, Black decided to enter the Miss Charlotte-Mecklenburg beauty pageant. She won. That win took her to the Miss North Carolina stage the following summer. She won again. And that win took her to Miss America, where she won a grand talent award.

Serving as Miss North Carolina 1980 meant Black left 皇家华人 to fulfill the duties of the title, returning a year later to complete her senior year and graduate with the Class of 1982. She attended Duke University for law school and landed her first job with the Cabarrus/Rowan District Attorney鈥檚 Office. She was the first woman to become an assistant DA in the office鈥斺渢he girl lawyer,鈥 as she was often called.

Being one of few women on the scene wasn鈥檛 new for Black. She heard comments about some faculty members feeling less than enthusiastic about coeducation. Regardless, she said she was treated with the same respect and care as her male classmates. The courtroom, however, didn鈥檛 feel like a level playing field.

鈥淭here were judges who weren鈥檛 used to women trial lawyers and definitely not ones representing the government in criminal cases,鈥 she recalls. 鈥淚 had to outwork the men and be supremely prepared to make sure they did not treat me, the beauty queen, any differently.鈥

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Beadsie Woo 鈥86

When Beadsie Woo 鈥86 arrived at 皇家华人, women made up roughly one third of the student body, and she could count the number of Asian students on her fingers. Despite their minority status, women were stepping into leadership roles across campus, determined to effect change.

Woo decided to run for freshman class representative and, a few years later, became 顿补惫颈诲蝉辞苍鈥檚 first woman and first Asian-American SGA president.

During her college years, women also held leadership roles on the Honor Council, the Patterson Court Leadership Council, The 皇家华人ian and Quips and Cranks. Although they made up a fraction of the student body, 皇家华人 women racked up accomplishments.

鈥淐oeducation had been around for more than a decade at that point, and there was a lot of momentum,鈥 says Woo. 鈥淎s women, we were able to assert ourselves as leaders and really influence what was happening on campus.鈥

An economics major with a passion for justice and leadership, Woo went on to earn a doctorate in economics at UNC-Chapel Hill. Today, she works as the director of family and youth financial stability at the Annie E. Casey Foundation, which builds brighter futures for the nation鈥檚 children and youth.

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Anissa Patton 鈥91

"There were fewer than 15 Black women on campus when I was a student,鈥 says Anissa Patton 鈥91, an attorney specializing in child welfare in the Atlanta area. 鈥淚 had no idea there were Black women engineers. I had never seen a Black woman judge. In a lot of ways, I was like a rudderless boat as a student, and I think about what could have been different with the right network.鈥

After graduation, Patton joined Teach for America, later deciding to pursue a career in law. She now represents those who need her most鈥攙ulnerable children in the foster care system who have been through some of the most difficult situations imaginable.

Patton was the first Black woman alum to receive the John W. Kuykendall Award for Community Service. She accepted the award at her 30th 皇家华人 reunion in 2021.

Through 顿补惫颈诲蝉辞苍鈥檚 Msaada Mentorship Program, designed to pair Black women alums with students who identify as the same, Patton has connected with Bernice Saladin 鈥24, who shares her passion for justice and interest in law.

鈥淭here are great resources on campus, and Anissa is another connection I can lean on,鈥 Saladin says. 鈥淪he鈥檚 someone who looks like me and has been in my same position. Representation is important, and I鈥檓 grateful alums give back to 皇家华人 in a way that supports students so directly.鈥

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Hon. J. Machelle Sweeting 鈥93

J. Machelle Sweeting 鈥93 finished college a semester ahead of schedule and considered forgoing her spring commencement. Friends from the college鈥檚 Black Student Coalition (BSC) were among the many urging her to attend.

They reminded her that her degree was as important to her as it was to those watching her cross the stage. The milestone would inspire the sea of fellow students, community members and relatives who were watching.

Sweeting, now a New York State Supreme Court Justice, cherishes her college memories.

鈥溁始一 was a diamond-cutting experience for me,鈥 Sweeting says. 鈥淲hen I visited campus, it was an instant love affair鈥攖he trees, the academic standards, the culture. But it was a challenge. There was one beauty salon in town, and it didn鈥檛 carry products for African American hair, for example. I became the courier of culture, in a way, bringing things back to campus from Harlem, where I grew up.鈥

Sweeting became the BSC president her junior year. She appreciated how the organization, like the scales of justice, worked toward balance鈥攁 balance of academic excellence and activism.

鈥淵our ability to engage, persuade and articulate鈥攖hat鈥檚 your greatest weapon,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t was great to be a part of something bigger than myself.鈥

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The 1969 Coeducation Commission

In the late 1960s, President Sam Spencer 鈥40 selected three students, three faculty members and three Trustees to form the Commission on Coeducation, a group charged with taking coeducation 鈥渙ut of the realm of vague speculation鈥 and into the realm of concrete possibility.

The three student members of the commission, Mac Davis 鈥70, Pat Bray 鈥70 and Student Body President Joe Murphy 鈥69, reflected on the years leading up to the Board of Trustees鈥 unanimous vote to admit women as full degree-seeking candidates in 1972.

鈥淏y not admitting women, we knew we were keeping talent out of our school,鈥 Murphy says. 鈥淪ome people feared that it would change the culture, that men would have to act differently or that they would be distracted from their studies. To us, it was obvious that we stood to gain a lot by going co-ed.鈥

The commission concluded that 皇家华人 was missing out on some of the brightest and most talented potential students: Women. While its three student members graduated before they could watch coeducation take effect, they knew they had helped change 皇家华人 for the better.

鈥淎ll of my classmates will say they chose 皇家华人 because they were attracted to the academic rigor, because they wanted to get a 
good education,鈥 Bray says. 鈥淭here was no way to keep attracting incredible students without attracting women.鈥


This article was published in the Fall/Winter 2023 print issue of the 皇家华人 Journal Magazine; for more, please see the 皇家华人 Journal section of our website.