Link Regina Jollivette Frazier

To guide the Links as the group turned forty years old, the historic Nashville Assembly chose the Vice President, Link Regina Jollivette Frazier as the Ninth National President.  Link Frazier, the daughter of Link Fran Chambers, is the first Heir-O-Link to fill this position.

President Frazier’s meteor-like career in Links began with her induction into the Greater Miami Chapter in 1970.  She became Journalist of her Chapter the same year and was elected chapter secretary in 1974. Six years after her induction she was elected to the Executive Council as Member-at-Large. In rapid succession she became Southern Area Director and then National Vice President. Sixteen years after joining the organization she was elected National President.

Soon after graduating from Howard University, Link Frazier married. Her husband, Ronald Eugene Frazier, is an Architect and Urban Planner whose independent firm is one of the best known in this field. The Fraziers have three children Ronald II, is a business major at Howard University and Robert Christopher and Rozalynne Suzanne attend schools in Miami.

President Frazier is a lifelong resident of Miami, Florida. She attended elementary and secondary schools in Miami and is a graduate of Howard University in Washington, D.C., where she earned the Bachelor of Science degree in Pharmacy.  She is a Registered Pharmacist and Consultant Pharmacist in Florida and in D.C.  After graduation from Howard she was employed in Washington for a few years, first as a pharmacist in the largest drug store chain in the East, and later as the Chief Pharmacist with the National Association of Retired Teachers and the American Association of Retired Persons Drug Service.

Returning to Miami, she served for a few months as a volunteer coordinator in the Economic Opportunity Program, Inc., of the city.  She joined the staff of the University of Miami Hospitals and Clinics in 1970 as senior pharmacist and in 1973 became Director of Pharmacy for the university hospitals and clinics. She continues in that position.

In 1983, Link Frazier received the Master of Business Administration degree from the University of Miami.

President Frazier has also served as a Preceptor at the College of Pharmacy of the University of Florida, and as a Clinical Field Instructor at the Florida A. and M. University College of Pharmacy in Tallahassee, Florida.

Link Frazier is national parliamentarian for the Association of Black Hospital Pharmacists.  She holds membership in four other pharmacy-related groups—American Society of Hospital Pharmacists, National Pharmaceutical Association, the Pharmacy Advisory Committee, Shared Purchasing Program—the Hospital Consortium, Inc., and the Florida Pharmaceutical Association.  She serves on the advisory Committee of the Florida/Georgia Cancer Information Service and is a member of the Women’s Chamber of Commerce of South Florida, Inc. and the Miami Forum. 

Other community services include the Board of Trustees of the Greater Miami United Way, Council of Presidents, American Association of University Women, the League of Women Voters, the Board of Directors of The Girl Scout Council of Tropical Florida, Executive Board of the New World School of the Arts, Board of Directors of the National Coalition on Black Voter Participation, Inc., and the Orange Bowl Committee.  She is a Life Member of YWCA of Greater Miami and Dade County, Inc. and a member of the Board of Directors.  In 1973 she served as a member of the Planning Committee of the Florida Governor’s Conference on Libraries and Public Information Services, and from 1977 to 1988 served on the Metropolitian Dade County Zoning Appeals Board.  From 1982 to 1988 she was Board Chairman.

Among other groups in which she holds membership and/or office are the Carats, Inc., Zonta International, Leadership Miami, Just Us, Jack and Jill of America and Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority.

President Frazier has received many honors recognizing her civic and community services in varied ways.  She was cited as one of Ebony Magazine’s One Hundred Most Influential Black Americans from 1987 to 1990, and in 1988, as one of Dollars and Sense Magazine’s selection of America’s Top 100 Black Business and Professional Women.  A few other honors earned by this brilliant young woman are the Sarah A. Blocker Meritorious Community Service Award from Florida Memorial College; Alpha Phi Alpha, Beta Lambda Chapter’s Distinguished Community Service Award; salute to Leadership Award, from the Agricultural Investment Fund, Inc.; Trail Blazer Award of the Women’s Committee of 100; Women in Communication, Community Headliner Award; the Bronze Medallion of The National Conference of Christians and Jews; and the Leadership Award of the Antidefamation League.

In the summer of 1986, very early in her term of office,  President Frazier scheduled open house at the Links National Headquarters for the Auxiliaries of each of three major conventions meeting in Washington that summer.  The Alphabettes, Quetts and Archousai, many of whom were also Links toured the building with their families.

As an indication of Links continuing support of the United Negro College Fund (UNCF), President Frazier served on the UNCF Board of Directors throughout her term.

President Frazier led Links to make the historic pledge of one million dollars to the NAACP Legal Defense and Educational Fund (LDEF).  The Miami Assembly voted a Grants-in-Aid of at least $100,000 every other year up to a million dollars.  President Frazier served as an Honorary Chair of the 1989 LDEF Equal Justice Dinner in New York City.

President Frazier represented the organization in the NAACP Silent March on Washington.  She joined the Black Women’s Agenda Symposium of National Presidents in Atlanta, Georgia, convened (by Past President Dolly Adams) to develop strategies to support the 1990 Civil Rights Restoration legislation.

She participated in the AAUW Council of Presidents and met with the president of the National Council of Women of the United States to explore joint project development.  She was one of fifty influential leaders attending the legislative briefing co-sponsored by the Congressional Black Caucus and the Democratic National Committee Black Caucus/Bethune-DuBois Fund, and was a guest at a reception in Washington, D.C., sponsored by the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities.

President Frazier’s administration was characterized by bold, new and visionary challenges for Links to grow and change.  She made significant changes in the traditional Assembly program format and pushed the international character of the group.  Two Links chapters were established outside continental U.S.A.  In 1990, President Frazier and Program Coordinator Anne Pruitt journeyed to Zambia at the invitation of President Kenneth Kaunda to confer with groups of women in these countries about program efforts with which Links might cooperate.

In one of the profiles prepared by the Greater Miami Chapter for a nomination, her chapter listed President Frazier’s special talents as, among other, “leadership and organizational skills” and “public skills.”  In the four years of her term, President Frazier’s dynamic, visionary and creative actions more than validated her chapter’s insightful citations.

 

 

 


 
Past Presidents

Link Sarah Strickland Scott
1st National President
1957-1961
Link Margaret Hawkins
2nd National President
1957-1961
Link Pauline Weeden Maloney
3rd National President
1957-1961
Link Vivian J. Beamon
4th National President
1962-1966
Link Helen Gray Edmonds
5th National President
1970-1974
Link Pauline Ellison
6th National President
1974-1978
Link Julia Brogdon Purnell
7th National President
1978-1982
Link Dolly Desselle Adams
8th National President
1982-1986
Link Regina Jollivette Frazier
9th National President
1986-1990
Link Marion Elizabeth Schultz Sutherland
10th National President
1990-1994
Link Patricia Russell-McCloud
11th National President
1994-1998
Link Barbara Dixon Simpkins
12th National President
1998-2002

The Links, Incorporated
1200 Massachusetts Ave., NW
Washington, DC 20005
202-842-8686
www.linksinc.org

The Links, Incorporated is a not-for-profit organization of more than 10,000 women of color, committed to enhancing the quality of life in our communities