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TOP 50 COLLEGES FOR AFRICAN AMERICANS.


DayStar Research's exclusive report for Black Enterprise reveals the schools with the best environments for black collegians

WHEN LISA The first personal computer to include integrated software and use a graphical interface. Modeled after the Xerox Star and introduced in 1983 by Apple, it was ahead of its time, but never caught on due to its $10,000 price and slow speed.  Hollingsworth was searching for a college three years ago, she could have gone just about anywhere she wanted. The Los Angeles Los Angeles (lôs ăn`jələs, lŏs, ăn`jəlēz'), city (1990 pop. 3,485,398), seat of Los Angeles co., S Calif.; inc. 1850.  native had a 3.47 grade point average and 1050 SAT score. Hollingsworth thrived on academic achievement. Always in the top 15% of her class, taking advanced placement (AP) and honors classes, she'd she'd  

1. Contraction of she had.

2. Contraction of she would.

she'd have ~would
 taken SAT prep courses during her junior year of high school, along with college-prep classes at the University of California The University of California has a combined student body of more than 191,000 students, over 1,340,000 living alumni, and a combined systemwide and campus endowment of just over $7.3 billion (8th largest in the United States).  at Irvine Irvine, town, Scotland
Irvine (ûr`vĭn), town (1991 pop. 32,507), North Ayrshire, SW Scotland, on the Irvine River estuary. Industries include iron and brass foundries. Other products are chemicals, electric goods, and clothing.
. Therefore, when it was time to apply to college, she was more than prepared. Going to college was never in question, only where.

"First I wanted to exhaust Exhaust may refer to:

In mathematics:
  • Proof by exhaustion, proof by examining all individual cases
  • Exhaustion by compact sets, in analysis, a sequence of compact sets that converges on a given set
 all possibilities, so I applied to schools in California California (kăl'ĭfôr`nyə), most populous state in the United States, located in the Far West; bordered by Oregon (N), Nevada and, across the Colorado River, Arizona (E), Mexico (S), and the Pacific Ocean (W).  that were large, predominately white public universities in the University of California system -- UC Berkeley Berkeley (bûr`klē), city (1990 pop. 102,724), Alameda co., W Calif., on the E shore of San Francisco Bay just N of Oakland; inc. 1878. Originally (1820) part of a Spanish rancho, the site was purchased by Americans in 1853. , UCLA UCLA University of California at Los Angeles
UCLA University Center for Learning Assistance (Illinois State University)
UCLA University of Carrollton, TX and Lower Addison, TX
 and UC Irvine," explains the 20-year-old, whose mother is a regional sales manager sales manager ngerente m/f de ventas

sales manager ndirecteur commercial

sales manager sale n
 for BLACK ENTERPRISE. "Then I applied to Spelman Spelman may refer to:
  • A women's college in Atlanta, Georgia, USA, see Spelman College
  • Caroline Spelman, British politician
  • Henry Spelman, British antiquarian
  • John Spelman, British writer
 and Xavier Xa·vi·er   , Saint Francis 1506-1552.

Spanish Jesuit missionary. A cofounder of the Jesuit order (1534) with Ignatius of Loyola, he established missionaries in Japan, Ceylon, and the East Indies.

Noun 1.
. I had always wanted to go to Spelman since it had good research programs and a reputation for producing strong black women. I applied to Xavier based on a summer program experience I had there. I was accepted at all five schools, but [because of] my interest in medicine and Xavier's reputation for placing the largest number of African American African American Multiculture A person having origins in any of the black racial groups of Africa. See Race.  pre-med students going on to medical college, I decided to come here."

Whether considering historically black colleges and universities Historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) are institutions of higher education in the United States that were established before 1964 with the intention of serving the African American community. They are often liberal arts colleges or universities.  (HBCUs) or the Ivy League Ivy League

Group of eight universities in the northeastern U.S., high in academic and social prestige, that are members of an athletic conference for intercollegiate gridiron football dating to the 1870s.
, private or public schools, small regional or large national research institutions, African American students cast their achievements, applications and aspirations aspirations nplaspiraciones fpl (= ambition); ambición f

aspirations npl (= hopes, ambition) → aspirations fpl 
 across a broad academic landscape. Today's potential entrant en·trant  
n.
One that enters, especially one that enters a competition.



[French, from present participle of entrer, to enter, from Old French; see enter.
 has more than 3,200 colleges in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area.  from which to choose.

But how do black students and their parents make the right choice about what is often the most critical and costly step in a teenager's future? What factors should be considered--grades, test scores, location, reputation of the institution and/or and/or  
conj.
Used to indicate that either or both of the items connected by it are involved.

Usage Note: And/or is widely used in legal and business writing.
 its ethnic composition? And, is it possible to predict whether that child will obtain a college degree in four years?

These were the questions that prompted Thomas (language) Thomas - A language compatible with the language Dylan(TM). Thomas is NOT Dylan(TM).

The first public release of a translator to Scheme by Matt Birkholz, Jim Miller, and Ron Weiss, written at Digital Equipment Corporation's Cambridge Research Laboratory runs
 A. LaVeist, Ph.D., associate professor of health policy and management and sociology at Johns Hopkins University Johns Hopkins University, mainly at Baltimore, Md. Johns Hopkins in 1867 had a group of his associates incorporated as the trustees of a university and a hospital, endowing each with $3.5 million. Daniel C.  in Baltimore Baltimore, city (1990 pop. 736,014), N central Md., surrounded by but politically independent of Baltimore co., on the Patapsco River estuary, an arm of Chesapeake Bay; inc. 1745.  and CEO (1) (Chief Executive Officer) The highest individual in command of an organization. Typically the president of the company, the CEO reports to the Chairman of the Board.  of DayStar Research, to conduct research targeted specifically for African Americans. The result? The first ever listing of the BLACK ENTERPRISE/ DAYSTAR TOP 50 COLLEGES FOR AFRICAN AMERICANS.

For a school to be included on the list, it had to be an accredited accredited

recognition by an appropriate authority that the performance of a particular institution has satisfied a prestated set of criteria.


accredited herds
cattle herds which have achieved a low level of reactors to, e.g.
 four-year institution with a black student enrollment of at least 1.5% and/or be a large or well-known well-known
adj.
1. Widely known; familiar or famous: a well-known performer.

2. Fully known: well-known facts.
 university that would be of interest to black students. The list and its ranking was developed by LaVeist, who surveyed 1,077 African American higher education higher education

Study beyond the level of secondary education. Institutions of higher education include not only colleges and universities but also professional schools in such fields as law, theology, medicine, business, music, and art.
 professionals in the academic and social environments of colleges and universities around the country. (For more on research methodology, see sidebar (1) A Windows Vista desktop panel that holds mini applications (gadgets) such as a calendar, calculator, stock ticker and Vonage phone dialer. It is the Windows counterpart to the Dashboard in the Mac. See Windows Vista and gadget. , "How We Crunched The Numbers.")

WHY DO THIS SURVEY?

Now, school rankings aren't aren't  

Contraction of are not. See Usage Note at ain't.


aren't are not
aren't be
 new; there are lists for the best colleges, colleges with the best value and the best business, medical and law schools. But none of those lists are focused on black students, except for one published by Black Issues in Higher Education, which ranks schools based solely on the number of black graduates. It was this lack of information and his earlier experiences as a graduate student teacher at the University of Michigan (body, education) University of Michigan - A large cosmopolitan university in the Midwest USA. Over 50000 students are enrolled at the University of Michigan's three campuses. The students come from 50 states and over 100 foreign countries.  that suggested to LaVeist that such a list may be necessary.

"I met a number of African American students that weren't were·n't  

Contraction of were not.


weren't were not
 doing as well as they could have been," he explains. "And, I was talking with teachers at other universities and they were experiencing the same things. I couldn't could·n't  

Contraction of could not.


couldn't could not
 help but think the reason for the poor performance was just that many black students are making the wrong choices in trying to select an environment in which they can flourish."

An increasing number of high school students are being confronted with that choice. The latest report by the College Board, sponsors of the Scholastic Assessment Test, found that the number of students taking the SATs has risen to nearly match the number of incoming college freshman at accredited four-year institutions--1.2 million. It also found that in 1997-98, 11% of those who took the SAT were African Americans.

The College Board also reports that more students are taking the Advanced Placement Examination. By taking AP exams, college bound students hope to increase their chances of gaining admittance Admittance

The ratio of the current to the voltage in an alternating-current circuit. In terms of complex current I and voltage V, the admittance of a circuit is given by Eq. (1), and is related to the impedance of the circuit Z by Eq. (2).
 to the country's most selective institutions. Last year, 635,000 high school students took the test. Among them 321,000 were seniors who were college bound this school term.

While 70% of all colleges and universities are not as selective in their admissions requirements, according to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 Donald M. Stewart, president of the College Board, it's the competition for that 30% of schools--including many HBCUs--where test scores, GPAs and the difficulty of high school courses taken come into play. A degree from one of these schools often translates into higher starting salaries, faster career advancement and acceptance into graduate-level professional programs.

In their recent book, The Shape of the River: Long-Term Long-term

Three or more years. In the context of accounting, more than 1 year.


long-term

1. Of or relating to a gain or loss in the value of a security that has been held over a specific length of time. Compare short-term.
 Consequences of Considering Race in College and University Admissions, William G. Bowen William G. Bowen is a senior research associate at The Andrew W. Mellon Foundation where he served as President from 1988 to 2006. He was the president of Princeton University from 1972 to 1988. , Ph.D., and Derek Bok Derek Curtis Bok (born March 22, 1930) is an American lawyer and educator, and the former president of Harvard University.

Bok was born in Bryn Mawr, Pennsylvania, and graduated from Stanford University (B.A., 1951), Harvard Law School (J.D.
, Ph.D., the former presidents of Princeton and Harvard respectively, compared the success of black and white college students entering the classes of 1976 and 1989. They found a direct correlation Noun 1. direct correlation - a correlation in which large values of one variable are associated with large values of the other and small with small; the correlation coefficient is between 0 and +1
positive correlation
 between acceptance into selective colleges and a student's GPA GPA
abbr.
grade point average

Noun 1. GPA - a measure of a student's academic achievement at a college or university; calculated by dividing the total number of grade points received by the total number attempted
 and class rank at graduation Graduation is the action of receiving or conferring an academic degree or the associated ceremony. The date of event is often called degree day. The event itself is also called commencement, convocation or invocation.  from college with the amount of money that graduate earned and how high they rose in their careers. According to the authors, "for women and men, blacks and whites, average earnings were highest for those who attended the most selective schools, putting them at about $20,000 more on average than their peers going to less selective institutions."

The goal of the BLACK ENTERPRISE/DAYSTAR TOP 50 list is to help African American parents and students make the most enlightened choices about where to attend college and identify where students are most likely to be successful. We also provided four smaller lists of the top five schools within the following categories, as defined by the Carnegie Foundation
This article is about the Dutch Carnegie Foundation, owner and manager of the Peace Palace. For other uses, see The Carnegie Foundation.


The Carnegie Foundation ("Carnegie Stichting" in Dutch) is an organization based in The Hague, The Netherlands.
 for the Advancement of Teaching: national universities, national liberal arts colleges It may never be fully completed or, depending on its its nature, it may be that it can never be completed. However, new and revised entries in the list are always welcome.

Liberal arts colleges
, regional universities and regional liberal arts colleges. (These smaller lists exclude the HBCUs, which, by virtue of their scores, would dominate each category as they do the top 50 list.)

Adds LaVeist: "People are going to look at the list and focus on where they are placed, but that's not what this is about. This list says that out of a universe of more than 3,000 schools, these 50, plus the honorable mentions, have fostered a great reputation among black educators and have done a good job of graduating students. Any school on this list should be proud--no matter where they are on it."

WHO'S NO. 1?

When Audrey Forbes Manley, M.D., was inaugurated as president of Spelman College Spelman College: see Atlanta Univ. Center.
Spelman College

Private, historically black, women's liberal arts college in Atlanta, Ga. Its history is traced to 1881, when two Boston women began teaching 11 black women, mostly ex-slaves, in an Atlanta
 this past October, officially taking the reins reins
pl.n.
The kidneys, loins, or lower back.
 of the all-woman's college in Atlanta, she knew she'd become guardian of one of the most respected institutions of higher learning higher learning
n.
Education or academic accomplishment at the college or university level.
 in America. After all, she is a graduate of Spelman, has served as a trustee on its board and is the widow of its fifth president. Now, the former U.S. Assistant Surgeon General The U.S. Surgeon General is charged with the protection and advancement of health in the United States. Since the 1960s the surgeon general has become a highly visible federal public health official, speaking out against known health risks such as tobacco use, and promoting disease  has come home to serve as the bridge from Spelman's past into its future and as its first alumna president.

"Spelman has changed in significant ways since I was a student. The student body is larger, there's more diversity of interests and involvement of the students and the city of Atlanta has changed too," says Manley. "But in all that, the Spelman woman has not changed. The same kind of bright, talented and intelligent women that were attracted to Spelman 50 years ago are still attracted today."

As a testament to that interest, the college received 33,000 inquiries last year; it selected only 550 for its 1998-99 incoming freshman class from more than 4,000 applicants. Women in its entering freshman class boast an average GPA of 3.4 with a composite SAT score of 1106. Today, 37% enter Spelman majoring in the sciences.

Cited by other surveys as one of the top regional liberal arts colleges in the country, Spelman is the No. 1 school on our list. The school's reputation has been enhanced over the past 10 years by Manley's predecessor, Johnnetta B. Cole Dr. Johnnetta B. Cole (born October 19, 1936) is an American academic. Cole was the first African American female president of Spelman College from 1987- 1997. She was president of Bennett College from 2002-2007. , Ph.D. Under Cole, the school's endowment A transfer, generally as a gift, of money or property to an institution for a particular purpose. The bestowal of money as a permanent fund, the income of which is to be used for the benefit of a charity, college, or other institution.  increased to $156.3 million over 10 years, the Years, The

the seven decades of Eleanor Pargiter’s life. [Br. Lit.: Benét, 1109]

See : Time
 second largest of any HBCU HBCU Historically Black Colleges and Universities . She added to its infrastructure with the Camille Olivia Hanks Noun 1. Hanks - United States film actor (born in 1956)
Thomas J. Hanks, Tom Hanks
 Cosby Academic Center and obtained funding to build a new science building which broke ground this past October.

But Spelman is not alone. HBCUs claim nine of the top 10 spots on our list. In addition to Spelman, two other Atlanta University Center Atlanta University Center, at Atlanta, Ga.; coeducational. The largest consortium of historically African-American educational institutions in the country, it was organized in 1929 when three schools—Atlanta Univ.  schools--Morehouse College, Spelman's all-male counterpart counterpart n. in the law of contracts, a written paper which is one of several documents which constitute a contract, such as a written offer and a written acceptance. , and co-ed Clark Atlanta University--join Florida A&M University in Tallahassee and Washington, D.C.'s, Howard University Howard University, at Washington, D.C.; coeducational; with federal support. It was founded in 1867 by Gen. Oliver O. Howard of the Freedmen's Bureau, to provide education for newly emancipated slaves. A normal and preparatory department was opened the same year.  to round out the top five schools on the BLACK ENTERPRISE/ DAYSTAR TOP 50 list.

The competitiveness of HBCUs is underscored by one of the most impressive finds of this effort: while HBCUs were only 10% of all the colleges surveyed by LaVeist, they represent nearly 50% of the schools on the BLACK ENTERPRISE/DAYSTAR TOP 50 list.

While 35% of black students go to HBCUs, most attend predominantly pre·dom·i·nant  
adj.
1. Having greatest ascendancy, importance, influence, authority, or force. See Synonyms at dominant.

2.
 white colleges and universities. When she was looking for Looking for

In the context of general equities, this describing a buy interest in which a dealer is asked to offer stock, often involving a capital commitment. Antithesis of in touch with.
 a college to attend, Samanthia Sanders San´ders

n. 1. An old name of sandalwood, now applied only to the red sandalwood. See under Sandalwood.
 of Fort Washington, Maryland Fort Washington, Maryland is an unincorporated census-designated place in Prince George's County, Maryland in the suburbs of the capital city of the United States of America, Washington, D.C., south of the downtown district. , says she was looking for one with name recognition and racial diversity. "I didn't want my degree to be questioned. I wanted people to know what school I went to. I also wanted something that would prepare me for what the world is actually like, because the world is not all-black," says the 20-year-old Florida State University Florida State University, at Tallahassee; coeducational; chartered 1851, opened 1857. Present name was adopted in 1947. Special research facilities include those in nuclear science and oceanography.  business major.

"As college boards report, FSU FSU Florida State University
FSU Former Soviet Union
FSU Ferris State University
FSU Fayetteville State University (North Carolina)
FSU Frostburg State University
FSU Finance Sector Union
 is the only university in the country in the top ten for white and black students," says the school's provost, Lawrence Abele Dr. Lawrence Abele serves as Provost and Vice President for Academic Affairs at Florida State University. Prior to serving as Provost, he was Dean of the College of Arts and Sciences. , Ph.D.

However, FSU, No. 26 on the BLACK ENTERPRISE/ DAYSTAR TOP 50 list, is not the top representative of the Sunshine State. That honor As a verb, to accept a bill of exchange, or to pay a note, check, or accepted bill, at maturity. To pay or to accept and pay, or, where a credit so engages, to purchase or discount a draft complying with the terms of the draft.  goes to Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University, at Tallahassee; land-grant and state supported; coeducational; chartered and opened 1887; predominantly African American. . Better known as FAMU FAMU Florida Agricultural and Mechanical University
FAMU Federación Argentina de Mujeres Universitarias (Spanish)
FAMU Federation of Australian Maritime Unions
FAMU Fault Alarm Monitor Unit
, the public school was also named "College of the Year" by Time magazine/Princeton Review for 1997. Like other schools on the BLACK ENTERPRISE/ DAYSTAR TOP 50 list, the college is a favorite among corporate donors and recruiters. It's also giving strong competition to prestigious Ivy League and research schools such as Harvard (No. 28) and the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Massachusetts Institute of Technology, at Cambridge; coeducational; chartered 1861, opened 1865 in Boston, moved 1916. It has long been recognized as an outstanding technological institute and its Sloan School of Management has notable programs in business,  (No. 45) for African American National Achievement Scholars. "We have a strong set of academic programs and job opportunities are among the best in higher education. We also have a graduate feeder feeder

abbreviation for self-feeders. Used in feeding groups of animals at intervals of several days. Feed has to be dry and comminuted so that it will run down the spouts from the hopper into the troughs.
 program which pays for FAMU students with a 3.0 GPA or higher to go to certain grad, medical or law schools," says FAMU's president Frederick S Frederick, city, United States
Frederick, city (1990 pop. 40,148), seat of Frederick co., NW Md.; settled 1745, inc. 1817. The processing center of a fertile farm and dairying area, it makes beer, household items, optical and glass products, leather goods,
. Humphries, Ph.D.

Perhaps no public higher education system has faced as much scrutiny and vilification as the University of California. Comprised of eight campuses in different parts of the state, the UC system is considered to be the elite level in California's educational system. But the advent of the anti-affirmative action initiative known as Proposition 209 decimated what little there was of any formal inclusion efforts directed specifically to minorities. What resulted was a steep drop in acceptances, and in the number of students applying. This included those who were admitted and ultimately decided not to enroll. Henry and Catherine Joseph of San Diego San Diego (săn dēā`gō), city (1990 pop. 1,110,549), seat of San Diego co., S Calif., on San Diego Bay; inc. 1850. San Diego includes the unincorporated communities of La Jolla and Spring Valley. Coronado is across the bay.  said they'd prepared their 18-year-old son Reggie to be rejected by the UC system in the wake of Prop 209's passage, although he had a 3.65 GPA and scored 1180 on his SATs. "That's when I decided that I couldn't just rely on my GPA and SAT scores," the younger Josephs says. "I had to have more leadership and extra curricular activities."

After deciding to stay in state--"there's no place better than California," says Josephs--to pursue his ambition of becoming a filmmaker, he applied to UC schools in Berkeley, Los Angeles, Santa Barbara Santa Barbara (săn'tə bär`brə, –bərə), city (1990 pop. 85,571), seat of Santa Barbara co., S Calif., on the Pacific Ocean; inc. 1850.  and San Diego. But he hedged his bets and also applied to Cal State Long Beach, the elite private institution of the University of Southern California The U.S. News & World Report ranked USC 27th among all universities in the United States in its 2008 ranking of "America's Best Colleges", also designating it as one of the "most selective universities" for admitting 8,634 of the almost 34,000 who applied for freshman admission , No. 30 on the BLACK ENTERPRISE/ DAYSTAR TOP 50 list.

Joseph, now a student at UCLA, was accepted at all except Berkeley. And while the Prop 209-era environment for African American students at UC systems schools may be uncertain--only 131 enrolled at UCLA in 1998, down from 219 the previous year--the school made the BLACK ENTERPRISE/DAYSTAR TOP 50 list at No. 42.

GAINING ADMITTANCE

Test scores and GPAs aside, what distinguishes successful African American students who gain entrance to highly selective colleges is often their motivation and drive to succeed. Chloe Hilliard, 18, has been in accelerated classes and programs for gifted students since she was in elementary school elementary school: see school. . While this distinction would be notable for any student, anywhere, it's absolutely attention-grabbing for Chloe, who's spent her entire academic life attending New York City New York City: see New York, city.
New York City

City (pop., 2000: 8,008,278), southeastern New York, at the mouth of the Hudson River. The largest city in the U.S.
 public schools. "Chloe got the best of what New York City public schools had to offer," say her parents, Vincent and Valeida Hilliard. The largest public school system in the country, New York City public schools have been noted primarily for extremes: Westinghouse scholars--usually white and Asian--on one end, and large numbers of dropouts--usually black and Latino--on the other.

Hilliard says she and her parents started discussing colleges during her sophomore year at Manhattan's Murry Bergtraum High School Murry Bergtraum High School for Business Careers is a public secondary school in New York City. It is located in Lower Manhattan, adjacent to the Brooklyn Bridge and City Hall. ; by that time she had decided on journalism as a career. Just over six feet tall, her extracurricular activities included serving as the school yearbook editor, school newspaper editor-in-chief, member of the student advisory management and a co-captain of the girls basketball team.

Her journalism teacher, Wayne Gagnon, showed her how to take structured courses that would lead to a college major in journalism. When she started the college application process, Hilliard turned to Gagnon and her parents for help. "The college counselors would advise Asian students where to go, but when it came to African Americans, they would just ask `where do you think you can get into?'" Hilliard recalls. The fact that NYU NYU New York University
NYU New York Undercover (TV show) 
 only offers academic scholarships, was "another reason why I looked at NYU," says Chloe, who scored 1140 on the SATs and maintained a 3.3 GPA in her advanced placement courses. Hilliard found the school also offered one of the top journalism programs in the country. While she applied to and was accepted by five East Coast schools, she chose NYU, No. 43 on the BLACK ENTERPRISE/DAYSTAR TOP 50 list, because she wouldn't be far from her home and parents in Brooklyn.

The determining factor was the amount of scholarship money she could get. Although it would cost about $34,000 a year to attend NYU, Hilliard got a full academic scholarship package from the university, along with a state tuition assistance program The Tuition Assistance Program is a financial aid program for students who are New York State residents and are attending a post-secondary institution in New York.  (TAP) supplement. She also won two private scholarships, including one from the New York New York, state, United States
New York, Middle Atlantic state of the United States. It is bordered by Vermont, Massachusetts, Connecticut, and the Atlantic Ocean (E), New Jersey and Pennsylvania (S), Lakes Erie and Ontario and the Canadian province of
 Association of Black Journalists. It was enough. "Price is so significant," says mother Valeida. "Once a child has a dream and you've been stressing it all along, you have to support it. If your child is willing to do the necessary things--grades, applications to school and scholarships essays--there is help out there."

GET AN EARLY START

The process of getting into and being successful in college starts early. Stewart of the College Board suggests students take the right academic courses, "real math, science and English courses and advanced courses, not just general ones. Affluent families spend lots of money on prep courses, but they help only marginally." Stewart points to the PSAT PSAT Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test
PSAT Puget Sound Action Team
PSAT Particulate Source Apportionment Technology
PSAT Predicted Site Acquisition Table
PSAT Princeton South Asian Theatrics
PSAT Pacific Situation Assessment Team (DoD) 
, normally taken during the sophomore year, as the best diagnostic measure of a student's achievement thus far. "It lets them know where they're going their junior and senior year and what courses they'll need to take."

Likewise, William Bowen, president of the Andrew Mellon Foundation Mellon Foundation, officially the Andrew W. Mellon Foundation, philanthropic trust formed (1969) through the merger of the Avalon Foundation (est. 1940 by Ailsa Mellon Bruce) and the Old Dominion Foundation (est. 1941 by Paul Mellon). , which focuses on higher education issues, says parents and students should really think through how hard the student wants to work. "People have to be honest with themselves. How interested are they in academics? Our study shows that while some students have lower test scores and grades coming in [to college], they took advantage of the opportunities they were given once they were admitted."

Most colleges and universities practice some kind of "diversity" that's not limited to just SATs, ACTs or GPAs. "We reserve 10% of our freshman class for students who show potential [to succeed in college], but may not have met the traditional admissions requirements," says William Harvey Harvey, city (1990 pop. 29,771), Cook co., NE Ill., a suburb S of Chicago; inc. 1895. Its manufactures include steel castings, metal products, chemicals, machinery, and electronic equipment. Harvey has an oil research center. The city was founded by Turlington W. , president of Hampton University Hampton University, at Hampton, Va.; coeducational; founded 1868, chartered 1870 as a normal and agricultural school; known as Hampton Institute 1930–84.  in Virginia Virginia, state, United States
Virginia, state of the south-central United States. It is bordered by the Atlantic Ocean (E), North Carolina and Tennessee (S), Kentucky and West Virginia (W), and Maryland and the District of Columbia (N and NE).
, No. 7 on the BLACK ENTERPRISE/ DAYSTAR TOP 50 list.

The average SAT score is 1050 with a 3.2 GPA; Hampton requires a minimum score of 920. Harvey says they would consider a student with a 900 SAT score on the strength of his or her transcripts and a good recommendation by a guidance counselor guidance counselor Child psychology A school worker trained to screen, evaluate and advise students on career and academic matters . "The theory here is that all of us have had some help in our lives, or we would not be where we are today," he explains. "But once they're in, they have to perform like everyone else."

However, the key to performing well in a competitive environment is ensuring that the student is within an academic range of his peers. "You must look at the personality, temperament temperament, in music, the altering of certain intervals from their acoustically correct values to provide a system of tuning whereby music can move from key to key without unacceptably impure sonorities.  and experience of the student in helping to determine the environment that's right for him or her," says DayStar CEO LaVeist.

Experts suggest students and their parents look at the school's strengths and how it fits with what the student wants to study. Joyelle Johnston, currently a senior at Union High School in Union, New Jersey, plans to major in premed/psychology when she starts college in the fall of 1999. With solid SAT scores, 1150 on the first try and 1270 the second, Joyelle is looking for a liberal arts college Liberal arts colleges are primarily colleges with an emphasis upon undergraduate study in the liberal arts. The Encyclopædia Britannica Concise offers the following definition of the liberal arts as a, "college or university curriculum aimed at imparting general knowledge  on the East Coast and seems sold on Cornell University Cornell University, mainly at Ithaca, N.Y.; with land-grant, state, and private support; coeducational; chartered 1865, opened 1868. It was named for Ezra Cornell, who donated $500,000 and a tract of land. With the help of state senator Andrew D.  in upstate New York Upstate New York is the region of New York State north of the core of the New York metropolitan area. It has a population of 7,121,911 out of New York State's total 18,976,457. Were it an independent state, it would be ranked 13th by population. , No. 50 on BLACK ENTERPRISE/DAYSTAR TOP 50 list. "I want good courses and teachers, with a diverse student body at a highly selective school, but not on too large of a campus," says the captain of her high school color guard. Her other choice is Duke University (No. 20 on our list) in Durham, North Carolina Durham is a city in the U.S. state of North Carolina. It is the county seat of Durham CountyGR6 and is the fourth-largest city in the state by population. . Both schools have over 11,000 students (not exactly small, but not the largest either), cost around $30,000 (including tuition For tuition fees in the United Kingdom, see .

Tuition means instruction, teaching or a fee charged for educational instruction especially at a formal institution of learning or by a private tutor usually in the form of one-to-one tuition.
, room and board) and have notable science and pre-reed programs.

"She's sold on Cornell Cornell

named after New York State Veterinary College at Cornell University, NY, USA.


Cornell alternative-month accelerated lambing system
enables each ewe to lamb three times in every 2 years.
, but I'm pushing other interests," says her mother, Joyce. "Support is a big issue with me. I want to know that they're concerned about her." Ithaca's cold weather and Cornell's geographic isolation are also issues. Physical comfort and location are two key factors that are often not given enough consideration when choosing a college.

Ultimately, where a student chooses to attend college--social and academic factors and personal goals considered will result from a gut feeling gut feeling Intuition, visceral sensation . "I think it takes only three things for someone to succeed in college: average intelligence, good study skills and motivation," says LaVeist. "If a child is motivated mo·ti·vate  
tr.v. mo·ti·vat·ed, mo·ti·vat·ing, mo·ti·vates
To provide with an incentive; move to action; impel.



mo
 to learn, they'll succeed."

HOW WE CRUNCHED THE NUMBERS

In order to come up with the BLACK ENTERPRISE/DAYSTAR TOP 50 COLLEGES for African Americans, DayStar Research CEO Dr. Thomas LaVeist screened more than 3,000 colleges and universities for at least one of two characteristics. First, accredited four-year institutions with an African American student enrollment of at least 1.5%. Second, well-known colleges that don't meet the first criteria but would be of significant interest to African American students. The result was a pool of 987 colleges and universities in the U.S.

This universe of schools was then grouped by a modified version of the classification developed by the Carnegie Foundation for the Advancement of Teaching. The classifications are based upon the size of the student body, national reputation and whether the majority of its students are drawn from across the nation or from a particular region. The five groupings used for the purposes of this study are:

NATIONAL UNIVERSITIES--large, nationally known schools with active research programs. These schools tend to draw students from across the country.

NATIONAL LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGES nationally known small colleges primarily with a teaching mission; these schools also tend to draw students from across the country.

REGIONAL UNIVERSITIES--large to midsize universities with more modest research programs than the nationals; these schools draw their students mainly from within their region of the country.

REGIONAL LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGES small colleges that draw their students primarily from within their state or region of the country.

HISTORICALLY BLACK COLLEGES AND UNIVERSITIES -- DayStar modified the Carnegie categories to analyze HBCUs separately from other colleges and universities because of the high proportion of African American students.

DayStar then compiled a list of 1,077 African American professionals in higher education, including college presidents, faculty members and admissions administrators employed by the 987 schools in the study. Each was asked to rate each school within the classification of their institution on the following scale: Strongly recommended (5 points); Recommended (4 points); Neutral/no opinion (3 points); Not recommended (2 points); Strongly not recommended (1 point).

They were asked to rate the schools they had some knowledge of on their academic and social environments for black students. Of the 1,077 questionnaires sent to participants, 506 (or 46.9%) responded with a completed survey providing usable USable is a special idea contest to transfer US American ideas into practice in Germany. USable is initiated by the German Körber-Stiftung (foundation Körber). It is doted with 150,000 Euro and awarded every two years.  data.

The actual rating was computed according to a weighted and multiplied mul·ti·ply 1  
v. mul·ti·plied, mul·ti·ply·ing, mul·ti·plies

v.tr.
1. To increase the amount, number, or degree of.

2. Mathematics To perform multiplication on.
 model that gave assigned as·sign  
tr.v. as·signed, as·sign·ing, as·signs
1. To set apart for a particular purpose; designate: assigned a day for the inspection.

2.
 values to four measures: the average academic rating from the survey, average social rating, the percent of black undergraduates in the student body for the 1996/1997 academic year and the percent of black students in the graduating class of the same academic year.

In computing computing - computer  the scores, HBCUs were individually weight-adjusted to compensate for their overwhelming advantage on the measure of proportion of African Americans in the student body, which routinely exceeds 95%. (The weights and assigned values used in our study are the proprietary information of DayStar Research).

The result is the BLACK ENTERPRISE/DAYSTAR TOP 50 COLLEGES --an index of the 50 schools with the best scores, on a scale of 0-5,000, for each of the 987 schools.
                                                Average    Average
                                                Academic   Social
                                  1998-99       Score      Score
          Name                    DayStar[TM]   from       from
Ranking   Location                Rating        Survey     Survey

   1      Spelman College               4,144       4.85      4.78
          Atlanta, GA
   2      Morehouse College             4,106       4.75      4.79
          Atlanta, GA
   3      Florida A&M
          University                    4,046       4.65      4.73
          Tallahassee, FL
   4      Clark Atlanta
          University                    3,959       4.58      4.61
          Atlanta, GA
   5      Howard University             3,957       4.67      4.58
          Washington, DC
   6      Xavier University             3,951       4.65      4.57
          New Orleans, LA
   7      Hampton University            3,915       4.56      4.48
          Hampton, VA
   8      Tuskegee University           3,915       4.53      4.52
          Tuskegee, AL
   9      North Carolina
          A&T Univ.                     3,893       4.50      4.56
          Greensboro, NC
  10      Stanford University           3,842       4.79      4.16
          Palo Alto, CA
  11      Georgetown University         3,839       4.75      4.33
          Washington, DC
  12      Oberlin College               3,822       4.86      4.15
          Oberlin, OH
  13      Swarthmore College            3,815       4.82      3.89
          Swarthmore, PA
  14      Vassar College                3,782       4.78      4.00
          Poughkeepsie, NY
  15      Columbia University           3,757       4.67      4.50
          New York, NY
  16      Emory University              3,752       4.61      4.17
          Atlanta, GA
  17      Amherst College               3,717       4.90      3.67
          Amherst, MA
  18      Johnson C. Smith
          University                    3,708       4.15      4.45
          Charlotte, NC
  19      University of
          North Carolina                3,699       4.50      4.06
          Chapel Hill, NC
  20      Duke University               3,685       4.67      3.88
          Durham, NC
  21      Morgan State
          University                    3,667       4.17      4.41
          Baltimore, MD
  22      Wesleyan University           3,664       4.44      4.38
          Middletown, CT
  23      Fisk University               3,650       4.28      4.20
          Nashville, TN
  24      Tennessee State
          University                    3,649       4.17      4.32
          Nashville, TN
  25      Bryn Mawr College             3,620       4.67      3.75
          Bryn Mawr, PA
  26      Florida State
          University                    3,610       4.19      4.38
          Tallahassee, FL
  27      Bethune-Cookman
          College                       3,600       4.18      4.20
          Daytona Beach, FL
  28      Harvard University            3,592       4.75      3.75
          Cambridge, MA
  29      Johns Hopkins                 3,591       4.50      3.82
          University
          Baltimore, MD
  30      Univ. of Southern
          California                    3,587       4.28      4.32
          Los Angeles, CA
  31      North Carolina
          Central Univ.                 3,585       4.09      4.23
          Durham, NC
  32      Morris Brown College          3,574       3.97      4.33
          Atlanta, GA
  33      Southern University           3,570       4.09      4.29
          New Orleans, LA
  34      University of
          Pennsylvania                  3,564       4.53      4.00
          Philadelphia, PA
  35      Williams College              3,558       4.91      3.22
          Williamstown, MA
  36      George Washington
          University                    3,552       4.42      4.27
          Washington, DC
  37      Dillard University            3,551       4.34      4.24
          New Orleans, LA
  38      Jackson State
          University                    3,546       4.03      4.09
          Jackson, MS
  39      Grambling State
          University                    3,540       4.09      4.13
          Grambling, LA
  40      Wellesley College             3,533       4.82      3.90
          Wellesley, MA
  41      Yale University               3,529       4.62      3.69
          New Haven, CT
  42      Univ. of California
          Los Angeles                   3,527       4.35      4.00
          Los Angeles, CA
  43      New York University           3,504       4.42      4.18
          New York, NY
  44      Smith College                 3,500       4.82      3.70
          Northampton, MA
  45      Mass. Institute
          of Technology                 3,483       4.62      3.46
          Cambridge, MA
  46      Mount Holyoke
          College                       3,471       4.60      3.78
          South Hadley, MA
  47      Lincoln University            3,464       4.00      3.97
          Lincoln University,
          PA
  48      South Carolina
          State University              3,457       3.89      4.03
          Orangeburg, SC
  49      Alabama A&M
          University                    3,453       3.91      4.03
          Normal, AL
  50      Cornell University            3,435       4.47      3.41
          Ithaca, NY

          1996-97               1996-97          1996-97
          Tuition     1996-97   Student          Bachelor
          In (Out)    Room      Population       Degrees
Ranking   State       & Board   (Black/Total)    (Black/Total)

   1         $9,000    $6,560    1,863/1,961          454/469
                                         95%            96.8%
   2          9,254     6,582    2,860/2,889          507/508
                                         99%            99.8%
   3          1,863     3,178   9,069/10,306      1,242/1,463
           ($7,108)                      88%            84.9%
   4          9,650     5,730    5,099/5,311          522/525
                                         96%            99.4%
   5          8,725     3,192   9,402/10,332      1,153/1,333
                                         91%            86.5%
   6          8,500     4,442    3,117/3,463          432/444
                                         90%            97.3%
   7         10,076     4,442    5,069/6,035          806/841
                                         84%            95.8%
   8          9,060     4,610    2,852/3,100          487/526
                                         92%            92.6%
   9          1,680     4,600    6,914/7,947        957/1,068
           ($6,405)                      87%            89.6%
  10         22,110     7,767     800/16,003        132/1,719
                                          5%             7.7%
  11         22,248     8,120     757/12,618         85/1,593
                                          6%             5.3%
  12         23,174     6,238      231/2,892           40/651
                                          8%             6.1%
  13         23,020     7,500       81/1,353           21/332
                                          6%             6.3%
  14         22,670     6,628      141/2,346           42/563
                                          6%             7.5%
  15         23,244     7,492   1,161/19,302         81/1,385
                                          6%             5.8%
  16         21,870     7,100   1,131/11,308        130/1,437
                                         12%               9%
  17         23,730     6,280      114/1,623           26/398
                                          7%             6.5%
  18          8,959     3,846    1,384/1,398          169/169
                                         99%             100%
  19          2,224     4,500   2,200/24,439        322/3,620
          ($11,210)                       9%             8.9%
  20         23,900     6,980     806/11,512        129/1,560
                                          7%             8.3%
  21          3,706     5,296    5,655/6,016          663/705
           ($8,810)                      94%              94%
  22         23,280     6,030      227/3,244           64/715
                                          7%               9%
  23          8,000     4,950        870/879          150/150
                                         99%             100%
  24          2,208     4,050    5,502/8,464          560/794
           ($7,134)                      65%            70.5%
  25         21,860     7,870       91/1,821           13/243
                                          5%             5.3%
  26          2,085     4,706   3,016/30,155        414/5,279
          ($8, 740)                      10%             7.8%
  27          8,047     5,142    2,234/2,402          209/230
                                         93%            90.8%
  28         21,342     7,514   1,481/24,687        110/1,803
                                          6%             6.1%
  29         22,680     7,675   1,104/15,765         45/1,005
                                          7%             4.5%
  30         19,516     7,080   1,678/27,971        215/3,476
                                          6%               6%
  31       1,969.50     6,749    4,611/5,555          605/669
            ($9,097                      83%            90.4%
               .50)                                   155/163
  32          8,998     5,490    1,982/2,065            95.9%
                                         96%          918/955
  33          2,028     1,795   9,737/10,359            96.1%
           ($6,998)                       93%       105/2,499
  34         25,254     7,730   1,329/22,148             4.2%
                                          6%           34/509
  35         21,910     6,140      123/2,055             6.7%
                                          6%         64/1,235
  36         20,890     7,620   1,574/19,670             5.2%
                                          8%          230/236
  37          8,500     4,463    1,531/1,562            97.5%
           ($9,000)                      98%          627/644
  38          2,628     2,774    5,934/6,313            97.4%
             (1,344                      94%          826/855
              +$112                                     96.6%
            per hr)                                    35/610
  39          2,208     2,232    6,460/6,800             5.7%
          ($12,469)                      95%         86/1,291
  40         22,114     6,990      135/2,257             6.7%
                                          6%        253/5,644
  41         30,830     7,050     654/10,893             4.5%
                                          6%        248/3,233
  42          3,863     7,050   2,083/34,713             7.7%
          ($13,437)                       6%           15/692
  43         22,586     8,414   2,508/35,835             2.2%
  44         21,680     7,560      128/3,189         43/1,223
                                          4%             3.5%
  45         24,050     6,750      398/9,960           16/474
                                          4%             3.4%
  46         23,200     6,820       76/1,896          229/240
                                          4%            95.4%
  47          4,180     4,000    1,429/1,553          679/699
           ($6,490)                      92%            97.1%
  48          2,914     3,056    4,594/4,993          490/589
           ($3,248)                      92%            83.2%
  49          2,312     2,678    4,104/5,400         76/1,923
           ($4,152)                      76%             4.0%
  50       endowed:     7,055     475/11,865
             22,874
              9,814                       4%
          ($18,804)

           Admissions Office
           Phone Number
Ranking    Web Address           Notable Academic Programs

   1       1-800-982-2411        Business, Psychology,
           www.spelman.edu       Biology, Political Science,
                                 English
   2       1-800-851-1254        Psychology, English, Political
           www.morehouse.edu     Science, Biology, Economics
   3       1-850-599-3796        Business Administration,
           www.famu.edu          Engineering, Sociology
   4       1-404-880-8784        Business, Biology, Psychology,
           www.cau.edu           Communications, Education
   5       1-202-806-2700        Biology, Psychology, Pharmacy,
           www.howard.edu        Communications
   6       1-504-483-7388        Biology, Chemistry, Business,
           www.xula.edu          Psychology, Political Science
   7       1-757-727-7328        Business, Biology, Psychology,
           www.hamptonu.edu      Political Science
   8       1-334-727-8500        Engineering, Business, Biology,
           www.tusk.edu          Political Science, Education
   9       1-336-334-7946        Engineering, Business, Nursing
           www.ncat.edu          Administration, Education
   10      1-650-723-2091        Biology, Economics, Psychology,
           www.stanford.edu      English, Political Science
   11      1-202-687-3600        International Relations, Business
           www.georgetown.edu    Administration, Political Science
   12      1-440-775-8411        English, History, Music, Biology,
           www.oberlin.edu       Psychology
   13      1-610-328-8300        Biology, Economics, Anthropology,
           www.swarthmore.edu    English, Political Science
   14      1-914-437-7300        English, Psychology, Art History,
           www.vassar.edu        Political Science, History
   15      1-212-854-2522        English, History, Economics,
           www.columbia.edu      Political Science, Psychology
   16      1-404-727-6036        Biology, Psychology, Business
           www.emory.edu         Administration, Political Science
   17      1-413-542-2328        English, Psychology, Political
           www.amherst.edu       Science, Economics, History
   18      1-704-378-1010        Business Administration, Social
           www.jcsu.edu          Work, Communications
   19      1-919-966-3621        Biology, Psychology, Sociology,
           www.unc.edu           Journalism, Business
                                 Administration
   20      1-919-684-3214        Biology, English, Psychology,
           www.duke.edu          History, Economics
   21      1-443-319-3000        Business Administration,
           www.morgan.edu        Writing, Engineering,
                                 Telecommunications
   22      1-860-685-3000        Business Administration, Area
           www.wesleyan.edu      & Ethnic Studies,
                                 Political Studies
   23      1-800-443-3475        Biology, Business, Psychology,
           www.fisk.edu          Political Science, English
   24      1-615-963-5101        History, Political Science,
           www.tnstate.edu       Psychology, Economics
   25      1-610-526-5152        History, Political Science,
           www.brynmawr.edu      English, Psychology, Economics
   26      1-850-255-1401        Business Administration,
           www.fsu.edu           Education, Nursing, Criminal
                                 Justice
   27      1-850-644-6200        Business Administration,
           www.bethune.          Education, Criminal Justice
           cookman.edu
   28      1-617-495-1551        Economics, Biology, Political
           www.harvard.edu       Science, Biochemistry
   29      1-410-516-81 71       International Relations,
           www.jhu.edu           Medicine, Writing, Music,
                                 Bioengineering
   30      1-213-740-8899        Film Studies, Engineering,
           www.usc.edu           Business Administration
   31      1-919-560-6066        Political Science, Criminal
           www.nccu.edu          Justice, Nursing, Business
                                 Administration
   32      1-404-220-0152        Criminal Justice
           www.morrisbrown.
           edu
   33      1-504-771-2430        Agricultural Sciences,
           www.subr.edu          Business Administration
   34      1-215-898-7507        Finance, Business Administration,
           www.upenn.edu         History, Nursing, Communications
   35      1-413-597-2211        History, Biology, English,
           www.williams.edu      Economics, Political Science
   36      1-202-687-3600        Business Administration,
           www.gwu.edu           International Relations,
                                 Health Sciences
   37      1-504-286-4670        Business, Public Health,
           www.dillard.edu       Education, Sociology
   38      1-601-968-2100        Biology, Computer Science,
           www.jsums.edu         Criminal Justice, Business
   39      1-318-274-2527        Criminal Justice, Nursing,
           www.gram.edu          Communications
   40      1-781-283-2270        Economics, Political Science,
           www.wellesley.edu     English, Biology, Psychology
   41      1-203-432-9300        History, Economics, English,
           www.yale.edu          Political Science, Biological
                                 Sciences
   42      1-213-825-3101        Psychology, Political Science,
           www.ucla.edu          History, Sociology
   43      1-212-998-2575        Film Studies, Performing Arts
           www.nyu.edu
   44      1-41 3-585-2500       Political Science, Psychology,
           www.smith.edu         English, Economics
   45      1-61 7-253-4791       Engineering, Biology, Computer
           www.mit.edu           Science, Mathematics, Economics
   46      1-413-538-2023        English, Biology, International
           www.mtholyoke.edu     Relations, Psychology
   47      1-610-932-8300        English, Journalism, Social Work
           www.lincoln.edu
   48      1-803-536-8970        Biology, Engineering Technology
           www.scsu.edu          & Mathematics, Life Sciences
   49      1-256-851-5245        Agricultural Sciences
           www.aamu.edu
   50      1-607-255-5241        Engineering, Agricultural
           www.cornell.edu       Studies, Biology, Business
                                 History

TOP 5 REGIONAL LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGES(*)
                                                         DayStar
Ranking   Name (Location)                                Rating

1         State University of New                        2,179
          York-Old Westbury
2         Ramapo College (Mahwah, NJ)                    2,176
3         University of Houston-Downtown                 2,125
          (Houston, TX)
4         Marymount College (New York, NY)               2,120
5         Mercy College (Dobbs Ferry, NY)                2,114
TOP 5 REGIONAL UNIVERSITIES(*)
                                                        DayStar
Ranking   Name (Location)                                Rating

1         College of William and Mary                    2,303
          (Williamsburg, VA)
2         University of Dayton (Dayton, OH)              2,286
3         City University of New York                    2,214
          (New York, NY)
4         DePaul University (Chicago, IL)                2,188
5         California State University                    2,188
          (Long Beach, CA)
TOP 5 NATIONAL LIBERAL ARTS COLLEGES(*)
                                                         DayStar
Ranking   Name (Location)                                Rating

1         Oberlin College (Oberlin, OH)                  3,822
2         Swarthmore College (Swarthmore, PA)            3,815
3         Vassar College (Poughkeepsie, NY)              3,782
4         Amherst College (Amherst, NY)                  3,717
5         Wesleyan University (Middletown, CT)           3,664


(*) Excludes historically black colleges and universities
TOP 5 NATIONAL UNIVERSITIES(*)
                                                         DayStar
Ranking   Name (Location)                                Rating

1         Stanford University (Palo Alto, CA)            3,842
2         Georgetown University (Washington, DC)         3,839
3         Columbia University (New York, NY)             3,757
4         Emory University (Atlanta, GA)                 3,752
5         University of North Carolina                   3,699
          (Chapel Hill, NC)


(*) Excludes historically black toiles and Universities

BLACK ENTERPRISE/ DAYSTAR TOP 50 COLLEGES FOR AFRICAN AMERICANS

HONORABLE MENTIONS

Here are 14 additional colleges and universities, along with their admissions office phone numbers and Web sites, that did not make the cut but have a score above or around 3,400.
Brown University
Providence, RI
401-863-2378
www.brown.edu

Davidson University
Davidson, NC
800-768-0380
www.davidson.edu

University of Maryland
College Park, MD
301-314-8385
www.testudo.umd.edu

University of Michigan
Ann Arbor, MI
734-764-7433
www.umich.edu

Middlebury College
Middlebury, VT
802-443-3000
www.middlebury.edu

North Carolina
State University
Raleigh, NC
919-515-2434
www.ncsu.edu

Ohio State University
Athens, Ohio
740-593-4100
www.ohio.edu

Prairie View A&M
University
Prairie, TX
409-857-2626
www.pvamu.edu

Princeton University
Princeton, NJ
609-258-3060
www.princeton.edu

Rutgers University
New Brunswick, NJ
732-932-1766
www.rutgers.edu

Shaw University
Raleigh, NC
919-546-8275
www.shawuniversity.edu

Temple University
Philadelphia, PA
215-204-7200
www.temple.edu

University of Virginia
Charlottesville, VA
804-982-3200
www.virginia.edu

Wilberforce University
Wilberforce, OH
800-367-8568
www.wilberforce.edu


--additional reporting by Keisha Anderson Anderson, river, Canada
Anderson, river, c.465 mi (750 km) long, rising in several lakes in N central Northwest Territories, Canada. It meanders north and west before receiving the Carnwath River and flowing north to Liverpool Bay, an arm of the Arctic
, Kevin Anderson, Tomika DePriest and Kellye Garrett
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Author:Whigham-Desir, Marjorie
Publication:Black Enterprise
Article Type:Directory
Date:Jan 1, 1999
Words:6061
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