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00:00:00 - Introduction

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well today is Tuesday, June 18, 2013. My name is Hermann Trojanowski.

Segment Synopsis: Interview introduction.

00:00:24 - Background

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, let's get started by my asking you about your background: about where you were born and when, and that sort of thing.

Segment Synopsis: Scott briefly describes her background.

00:00:53 - Greensboro in the 1950s and 1960s

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Partial Transcript: HT: And what was it like growing up in Greensboro in the 1950s and 1960s?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes some of her involvement with the 1960s counterculture, including being a "flower child".

00:02:06 - High school

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Partial Transcript: HT: Where did you go to high school?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes her experience attending Dudley High School, which includes listing her family who attended Dudley, and what her favorite subjects were.

00:03:37 - Decision to attend Woman's College

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Partial Transcript: HT: I know you attended Woman's College, when it was still Woman's College. You started in 19- I guess you came in the fall of 1960. Is that correct?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes her decision to attend Woman's College, including not liking Bennett College, Woman's College being cheaper, and being influenced by the counterculture movement.

00:05:22 - Transition from high school to college

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, tell me about your transition from high school to college. What was that like?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes the difficulties that she had moving from high school to college, including academics. She also describes what it was like to move to a predominantly white school.

00:08:29 - First days on campus

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, tell me about your first days on campus. What was that life in meeting your roommates and-?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes her first days on campus, including meeting her roommate and being housed in an all-black section of the dorm. She also describes being driven around to college campuses by her father.

00:11:10 - Dorm life (part 1)

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Partial Transcript: HT: Now you mentioned a few minutes ago about living on campus in a separate area. Which dorm was that; do you recall?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes dorm life, including living in Coit Hall, getting to know her roommates, and constant studying.

00:13:10 - Diane Oliver

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Partial Transcript: FS: And so I eventually roomed with Diane Oliver [Class of 1964] who was my roommate for the remainder of the time that we were here.

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes Diane Oliver, who had been one of her roommates in Coit Hall. Scott and Trojanowski discuss Oliver's life before her death in a motorcycle accident.

00:14:28 - Dorm life (part 2)

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Partial Transcript: HT: Now was she your roommate, you said, the entire rest of -

Segment Synopsis: Scott continues to describe living in the dorms, including the black students having their own bathrooms.

00:16:33 - Dining Hall

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, what did you think of the dining hall food? Do you have any recollection of that?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes her memories of the Dining Hall and food on campus, including remembering having much better food than the local black colleges. She also describes gaining weight and having a tooth problem.

00:21:15 - Visiting home

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Partial Transcript: HT: Now did you go home quite often during that first year or so?

Segment Synopsis: Scott briefly describes how often she would visit her family's home while she attended Woman's College.

00:21:49 - Social life

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, we've already touched on this a little bit, but do you have any other recollections of what social life was like for you the four years you were at Woman's College?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes not having too much of a social life on campus due to not having many social things to do on campus.

00:23:44 - Discrimination (Part 1)

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Partial Transcript: FS: You know, during the sixties, that year was a very- I guess it was a pretty exciting year because it was the year of the sit-in movements...

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes being discriminated against in a drugstore on Tate Street, and feeling discrimination strongly for the first time.

00:27:23 - Sit-in Movement memories

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Partial Transcript: HT: Let me backtrack a minute because you mentioned the Sit-ins, which is the Greensboro Sit-ins down at Woolworths in February 1960. You were still in high school at the time. Do you have any memories of that movement?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes her memories of the Greensboro Sit-in movement, including knowing several of the participants.

00:30:07 - Sports at Woman's College

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Partial Transcript: HT: If we backtrack to Woman's College days: Did you get involved at all in extracurricular activities, intramural sports, or theater, music performances, and things like that?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes taking a physical education course, and nearly failing due to not being able to swim. Scott also mentions learning to play golf and tennis.

00:32:31 - Campus traditions

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Partial Transcript: HT: And what about college or campus traditions? Do you have any recollections of Rat Day?

Segment Synopsis: Scott discusses not remembering much about campus traditions.

00:33:45 - Woman's College becoming UNCG

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, let's see. You were here during the time that Woman's College became UNCG. Do you have any memories of that time, what the feeling was like on campus, because -?

Segment Synopsis: Scott and Trojanowski discuss Woman's College becoming coeducational and being renamed The University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

00:36:03 - Experience at UNC Chapel Hill

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Partial Transcript: FS: I had, I think, been to the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill maybe, for summer school, and I loved it.

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes enjoying attending UNC Chapel Hill for summer school, especially the men being on campus. Scott also describes not considering transferring to UNC Chapel hill from Woman's College.

00:37:16 - Discrimination (part 2)

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, I think you've already covered this a little bit about- I was going to ask you. Did you ever feel discriminated against while you were at Woman's College?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes not recalling any discrimination on campus.

00:37:52 - Memories of professors (part 1)

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, let me ask you a few questions about your courses that you took on campus, and the professors, and that sort of thing.

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes majoring in Sociology, and recalls several of her favorite professors.

00:39:37 - Majoring in Sociology

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Partial Transcript: HT: What made you decide to major in sociology?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes taking a Sociology class and then deciding to major in Sociology instead of English.

00:40:17 - Memories of professors (part 2)

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Partial Transcript: HT: I'm going to mention a few sort of prominent professors on campus during that time : Randall Jarrell, were you familiar with him?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes her memories (or lack thereof), of professors at Woman's College, including Randall Jarrell, Richard Bardolph, and Amy Charles.

00:41:59 - Political atmosphere in the 1960s

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Partial Transcript: HT: I think we already covered some of this about the 1960s. Do you recall what the political atmosphere was like on campus in the early 1960s when you were here?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes a lack of political involvment among students in the 1960s. Scott also recalls the assassination of John F. Kennedy.

00:45:04 - Memories of administrators

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, what do you recall about the chancellors while you were here?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes not recalling many of the administrators at Woman's College.

00:46:31 - Memories of professors (part 3)

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, tell me something about - you mentioned this a little bit earlier about the professors who made an impression on you while you were here.

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes not having a relationship with many of her professors.

00:48:09 - Lack of mentoring at Woman's College

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Partial Transcript: HT: Right, and I think that goes back to there was no mentoring program set up for the black students who were coming in, when they really needed some mentoring because this was such a-.

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes a lack of any mentoring she or any of the other black students received at Woman's College.

00:52:52 - Career after graduation

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, after you graduated in 1964, what did you do next?

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes her career in education and employment counseling after she graduated from Woman's College.

01:03:16 - Thoughts on UNCG's impact

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, I think you've already mentioned that you really have not been involved with the college very much since you left in 1964.

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes her thoughts about the affects attending Woman's College had on her life, including a good education, and learning about the counterculture movement. She also describes missing some college experiences.

01:08:16 - Siblings attending colleges

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Partial Transcript: HT: Thoughts about your time here, and how it changed your life, and that sort of thing.

Segment Synopsis: Scott describes the colleges that her siblings attended, especially A&T. Scott also describes one of her sisters not attending colleges.

01:11:04 - Conclusion

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Partial Transcript: HT: Well, thank you so much for the interview.

Segment Synopsis: Interview conclusion.