| Black Collegian News & Views After Dillard Graduation, Students Scatter Again
By Amber Wilson, Black College Wire
 |
|
Photo credit: Shawn Chollette
"It was important that we finish. We started here and we wanted to
finish here," one graduate said. Some 354 seniors were in the class. |
As of May, 32 of the new Dillard University graduates had been accepted to
graduate schools, while 57 were going directly into the workplace and an
undetermined number planned to enroll in professional schools, according to
Dewain Lee, interim assistant dean for the office of career services and
education enhancement options.
Rebecca Roussell, a mass communications major with a focus on print
journalism and broadcast, was heading to St. Louis to complete a 13-week
internship at the St. Louis Post-Dispatch. The Marrero, La., native said she
would eventually attend graduate school, but not in the near future.
Roussell said she wasn't going to return to Dillard initially but was
thankful and happy that she did. "I wasn't feeling the whole hotel thing, but I
love it," she said of Dillard's temporary quarters in the Hilton Riverside
hotel. "Dillard instills in you that you can do anything you put your mind to,"
Roussell said.
Gary Butler of Baton Rouge, La., a political science major, said he would
attend graduate school at Southern Methodist University in Dallas or Tulane
University in New Orleans. He planned to pursue political science, but also
explore a subject for which he developed a passion in the summer of his junior
year while completing an internship. He said he would work toward a master's in
sports administration.
Butler said he was passionate about education, excited to work toward his
master's, and eager to be back at Dillard for graduation.
"Over the last six months I realized there's no place like home. I missed
Dillard," he said.
Kenneth Hughlon of Kansas City double-majored in political science and
African world studies and planned to attend graduate school at the University of
Missouri - Kansas City. He plans to become a prosecuting attorney.
"We're the first class to graduate post-Katrina," he said. Hughlon said he
has learned about responsibility and a work ethic, about quality and about time
management during his four years at Dillard. "The past six months have taught me
to keep my eye on the prize," he said.
Aislyn Lipford, a mass communications major focusing on public relations,
said she was taking a break from school. The Memphis-born senior said, "I don't
feel like I'm mentally prepared for graduate school. I want to take some time to
prepare for the GRE so that I can do well and receive as many scholarships as I
can."
Lipford said she had learned a lot over the past six months and offered this
advice to undergraduates: "Take every opportunity you can get. When
opportunities arise, take them. Look for opportunities, they won't find you.
Remember that you drive your opportunities.
"The class of 2006 has been through so much, both good and bad," Lipford
said. Katrina was the icing on the cake. We couldn't let a little floodwater
stop us. It was important that we finish. We started here and we wanted to
finish here."
Amber Wilson is a sophomore mass communications major at
Dillard University.
Posted July 3, 2006
|