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Elizabeth Duncan Koontz : ウィキペディア英語版 | Elizabeth Duncan Koontz
Elizabeth Duncan Koontz (June 3, 1919 – January 6, 1989) was a national figure in education, civil rights and the women's movement. She was the first African-American president of the National Education Association and director of the United States Department of Labor Women's Bureau. ==Early life and education== Born Elizabeth Duncan in Salisbury, North Carolina to educators Samuel E. and Luna Bell (Jordan) Duncan in 1919. She was the youngest of seven children in a family of educators and learned to read by seven years old. Her father was a high school principal; her mother an elementary teacher; her brother Samuel later served as president of Livingston College in Salisbury; and her other brother, John, was the first African-American commissioner of the District of Columbia. Koontz attended segregated schools in Salisbury and graduated as salutatorian from Price High School in 1935. She graduated with a BA in English and elementary education in 1938 from Livingstone College. In 1941, she earned her master’s degree from Atlanta University.〔 She also studied at Columbia University, University of Indiana, and North Carolina College. Elizabeth Duncan married fellow teacher Harry Koontz in 1947.〔
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