enne ann^\ Friday, April 3, 1987 BENNETT COLLEGE, GREENSBORO, N. 0. Vol. XLVIIl, No. 5 Black College Advantage Scott to succeed Miller: New president-elect Dr. Gloria Dean Randle Scott looks forward to new position with positive energy, (photo by Publications Office) New president Dr. Gloria Dean Randle Scott — a distinguished pro fessor, scholar, consultant and leader—will become the 11th president of Bennett College. The second woman to head the college in its 113-year history, she will replace Dr. Isaac H. Miller Jr., who re tires in June. Scott will be the fourth president Bennett has had since it was designated all-female in 1926. She is leav ing Grambling State Univer sity where she serves as a professor of education. Her selection was an nounced by Robert S. Chiles Sr., chairman of the Board of Trustees, March 17. Scott has held key positions at several institutions. She has been the vice-president of Clark College and an assistant to the president of Texas Southern University. Her background includes six years at A&T where she taught, worked as the director of institutional research and planning and became a spe cial assistant to the chancel lor She has also held posts at Knoxville College where she spent two years as the dean of students, Marian College and the Indiana Uni versity Medical Center. Scott, who took three de grees at Indiana University, has won honorary degrees from her alma mater and Fairleigh Dickinson Univer sity. A native of Houston, she belongs to 10 professional or ganizations, has made pre sentations to more than 40 organizations and has pub lished 16 articles. During a three-year term as national president of the Girl Scouts of America, she gained increased attention to and appreciation of her or ganization. She is known as effective advocate of women and education. The new president, who has been a guest lecturer at num erous institutions across America, has worked as a consultant to the Ford Foun dation, the U.S. Office of Civil Rights, the National Institute of Education and the U.S. Department of De fense’s office of manpower. Her varied background in serving on commissions and committees includes respon sibilities on behalf of the State Board of Higher Edu cation of North Carolina and the National Urban Coalition, and she received a presiden tial appointment to the Na tional Commission on the Ob servance of International Women’s Year. In 1985, Dr. Scott served as a workshop facilitator and presenter at the United Na tions End of Decade Interna tional Forum in Nairobi, Kenya. She was a panelist on post-secondary education for The White House’s “Tuesday at the White House.” A member of Delta Sigma Theta, Inc., Dr. Scott is mar ried to Will Braxton Scott, Ed. D. by Carla Bannister The author of Blacks in Col lege substantiated the superiority of black colleges over white insti tutions for black students during a Black History Month address. Dr, Jacqueline Fleming said that “Black students do better at black colleges.” “Attending an all-black insti tution, blacks have a greater in tellectual ability than the blacks that attend a predominately white college or university and that is due to the fact that in black collegics blacks are given a greater opportunity to excel,” the adjunct professor at Barnard College said. Dr. Fleming’s book is the first comprehensive study of black stu dents’ success in black and white institutions. Black colleges offer four advan tages that allow their students to have twice as much intellectual development as black students at predominately white colleges. The first advantage is that “blacks have closer friends and more of them.” The second is that the relationships with teachers are better. “The black student is known by the teacher as a indivi dual and not as a number,” said Fleming. The better the teacher knows a student, then the more the student wants to excel in her studies. This student-teacher re lationship often leads the stu dent to contacts within the busi ness world. The third advantage is that students have more incentive and energy to compete and join in extra-curricular activities, fulfill ing a student’s need for involve ment and pride because the stu dent learns to be more self-effi cient, self-confident and assertive. The fourth advantage was that black institutions teach blacks to take on leadership roles that are not available to them in predomi nately white colleges. Fleming added that being at a all-black, women’s college teaches black women how to take control of their own lives. They learn how to be effective, outstanding leaders and how to be aggressive and self-assured because there are positive black female role models around and students are not com peting with men. Dr. Fleming al so pointed out that when a black woman attends an all-female black school she is more likely to be come famous than if she goes to a co-ed school. Dr. Fleming’s research and ex periences disclosed many shocking facts. She found that black women have the same leadership poten tial, aggressiveness, creativity and assertiveness as white males. She also said that there is twice as much intellectual growth in blacks that attend black colleges than blacks that attend predominately white colleges. This fact was backed up by the evidence studied in grade point averages, grades on standardized tests and com petence in mathematical skills. Belle likes deejaying by Tammy Reed Some people would say she’s got a natural “rap.” She speaks with a beat and she likes to be out-front. The extroverted persona lity of senior De’Janiera Little is very well suited to being a dee jay. She loves to talk and she’s been doing that for two years at A&T radio sta tion WNAA. “When I am in the lime light, I am able to explode with the music,” said Little, a Belle majoring in communi cations. Little gets this sensational feeling because the music is a reflection of the rhythms of her life. Two formative influences on Little’s desire to pursue a career in radio were deejay Jerry Wells of WDSA in Phi ladelphia, Little’s hometown, and her friend and Bennett alumna Susan Smith. Little started out as a news broadcaster at WNAA. Now she is production manager, news writer, broadcast jour nalist and assistant with lab students. You could say she’s thrown herself into radio. “I received my Federal Communications Commission license for a radio operator,” she says proudly. Ever since her childhood, she has wanted her talents to be recognized by people, and now she finds she’s created a coterie. “I love being a disc jockey because I have lots of secret admirers,” she explains. “Even though I have not met any of the guys, I re ceived lots of flowers,” she says. Little is self-propelled, and her enthusiasm and hard work will help her attain her dreams. “My future goals are to attend grad school or work part-time at a radio station,” said Little. She wants to own her radio station in Charlotte, a major metropolitan area in the Sunbelt where demands for quality radio are likely to increase. She patterns her life after WNAA general manager Tony Welbome. Little feels that he pushes her harder be cause she is the youngest an nouncer at the station. “With this determination nothing can stop me,” said Little. Her tenacity is attested to by English instructor Michael Gaspeny. “Once I taught Dee a course in which she had little interest. But despite this drawback, she stayed longer and worked harder than the (See Page 3) Student leader reflects a column by Vicky Dunn Usually, the SGA President uses her school newspaper as a voicebox for information and education. Perhaps the fact that my tenure has only recently allowed me time to write should say something about the multiplicity of my responsibilities. If I was de nied the time to write, I cer tainly compensated for it in speaking opportunities. These, without a doubt, were among the richest of my experiences. So what is the most im portant lesson I have learned this term? How to choose a qualified college president? How to manage human re sources? How to juggle con ferences, luncheons and oc casionally a class or two? How to plan successful insti tutional mutinies? Almost all of the above are at least partially true. None of them, however, rivals the experience of Expressions 101, a crash course in public relations. Perhaps I brought the gift of gab with me, but was it gracious gall, the right way of saying difficult things, that became my forte? Unable to recall a true epip hany, a moment when the proverbial lightbulb went on and true rhetorical greatness was realized, I simply have to settle for readily available memories. In the presence of such political greats as the Honorable Terry Sanford, there was the inclination for brevity. I can recall, however, many long conversations with disheartened Belles over ac creditation, excellence and the ever-elusive black male. As I recall, the mere presence of Rev. Jesse Jackson rendered me speechless while a quick “hello” in the quadrangle often turned into a brief con ference. The significance of this is that my most important mo ments as SGA president weren’t in the heat of a spot light; they were in the heat of a muggy office whose windows would not budge. It was not the flash of cameras that impressed me most, but the multiplied flicker of hope I saw reflected in your eyes. And it was not in the pre sence of dignitaries that I de livered my best oratories, but on the sidewalks of this cam pus, where I delivered living ones. And they say talk is cheap-huh!! Next Banner May 1 Copy due date April 21 Art due date April 24