HBCU Rankings 2020: Top Black Colleges

This U.S. News ranking measures the quality of the undergraduate education at historically black colleges and universities. These HBCUs were compared only with one another for this ranking. To be on the list, a school must be currently listed as part of the U.S. Department of Education’s Historically Black Colleges and Universities registry.

The Higher Education Act of 1965 defines an HBCU as “any historically black college or university that was established prior to 1964, whose principal mission was, and is, the education of black Americans, and that is accredited by a nationally recognized accrediting agency or association determined by the Secretary (of Education) to be a reliable authority as to the quality of training offered or is, according to such an agency or association, making reasonable progress toward accreditation.”

To qualify for the U.S. News ranking, an HBCU also must be an undergraduate baccalaureate-granting institution that enrolls primarily first-year, first-time students and must be a school that is currently part of the 2019 Best Colleges rankings.

Spelman College

Spelman College is a private institution that was founded in 1881. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 2,171, its setting is urban, and the campus size is 39 acres. It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar. Spelman College’s ranking in the 2020 edition of Best Colleges is National Liberal Arts Colleges, #57. Its tuition and fees are $29,972.

Howard University

Howard University is a private institution that was founded in 1867. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 6,243, its setting is urban, and the campus size is 256 acres. It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar. Howard University’s ranking in the 2020 edition of Best Colleges is National Universities, #104. Its tuition and fees are $27,206.

Xavier University of Louisiana

Xavier University of Louisiana is a private institution that was founded in 1915. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 2,568, its setting is urban, and the campus size is 63 acres. It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar. Xavier University of Louisiana’s ranking in the 2020 edition of Best Colleges is Regional Universities South, #17. Its tuition and fees are $25,006.

Hampton University

Hampton University is a private institution that was founded in 1868. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 3,672, its setting is urban, and the campus size is 314 acres. It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar. Hampton University’s ranking in the 2020 edition of Best Colleges is National Universities, #218. Its tuition and fees are $28,024.

Morehouse College

Morehouse College is a private institution that was founded in 1867. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 2,206, its setting is urban, and the campus size is 66 acres. It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar. Morehouse College’s ranking in the 2020 edition of Best Colleges is National Liberal Arts Colleges, #154. Its tuition and fees are $27,576.

North Carolina A&T State University

North Carolina A&T State University is a public institution that was founded in 1891. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 10,629, its setting is urban, and the campus size is 800 acres. It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar. North Carolina A&T State University’s ranking in the 2020 edition of Best Colleges is National Universities, #281. Its in-state tuition and fees are $6,657; out-of-state tuition and fees are $20,167.

Florida A&M University

Florida A&M University is a public institution that was founded in 1887. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 8,137, its setting is city, and the campus size is 422 acres. It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar. Florida A&M University’s ranking in the 2020 edition of Best Colleges is National Universities, #254. Its in-state tuition and fees are $5,785; out-of-state tuition and fees are $17,725.

Tuskegee University

Tuskegee University is a private institution that was founded in 1881. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 2,553, its setting is rural, and the campus size is 5,000 acres. It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar. Tuskegee University’s ranking in the 2020 edition of Best Colleges is Regional Universities South, #25. Its comprehensive cost is $28,860 (2018-19).

Claflin University

Claflin University is a private institution that was founded in 1869. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 2,080, its setting is city, and the campus size is 46 acres. It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar. Claflin University’s ranking in the 2020 edition of Best Colleges is Regional Colleges South, #9. Its tuition and fees are $16,722.

Fisk University

Fisk University is a private institution that was founded in 1866. It has a total undergraduate enrollment of 743, its setting is urban, and the campus size is 47 acres. It utilizes a semester-based academic calendar. Fisk University’s ranking in the 2020 edition of Best Colleges is National Liberal Arts Colleges, #164-#215. Its tuition and fees are $21,480.

See Full List

SEE FULL LIST

Former CSU Sorority Sisters Showed Out For Tau Beta Sigma’s Founders Day

Even though we helped celebrate Tau Beta Sigma’s Founders Day yesterday, we can look back and remember the sorority sisters who dominated Facebook’s newsfeed that day.

Giving us nostalgia from our college days, former members of Tau Beta Sigma, Eta Eta chapter at Central State University dusted the cobwebs out on the day before today. The Ladies of TBS had participated in the ITB Challenge and showed out given the opportunity to stroll again.

Some of the women haven’t strolled in years because they’re old heads now, but there’s plenty of videos posted on Facebook to look back at and enjoy. Many CSU alums gave a lot of respect to TBS and didn’t miss out on the incredible amount of time and effort they put into the band, their events, and projects.

Pictured is CSU graduate Beatrice Baker.

Tau Beta Sigma National Honorary Band Sorority, Inc. was founded March 26, 1946, providing service to collegiate bands, encouraging the advancement of women in the band profession, and promoting and enriching an appreciation of band music through recognition, leadership development, and education of its members. The Sorority is presently active on more than 125 campuses and since 1946, over 38,000 band students have devoted their efforts to strengthening their band through group and individual service projects. Its motto is “Tau Beta Sigma for Greater Bands.”

Eta Eta chapter at Central State University was founded on November 18, 1984, which is the 175th chapter of Tau Beta Sigma. They continue to grow, serve their band, and their Sorority.

Let’s look at all of those who showed out yesterday.

Report: HBCU Enrollment Declines With Second Lowest Number In 17 Years

Our HBCUs are in danger. In recent years, many historically black institutions have dealt with issues keeping their enrollments predominantly black, as issues with finances and status continue to build. According to the U.S. Department of Education, there are currently 101 historically black colleges in the United States serving more than 228,000 students. Between 2018-2019, HBCUs had the second-lowest enrollment in 17 years.

“It was a melting pot of high intelligence and backgrounds,” said Darrell Dial, a molecular genomics scientist to NBC News about his experience at South Carolina State University‚ which he entered in 1987. “This black diversity made a great playground for great debate and banter. It was truly iron sharpening iron for us all. I wouldn’t be the man I am if it weren’t for South Carolina State.”

According to the National Center for Educational Statistics, more than 6,000 fewer students attended the 101 black colleges and universities in the U.S. during the 2018-19 school year. The 291,767 total was down from the 298,134 in the previous year and was the lowest total since 2001 when there were 289,985 students at historically black colleges.

The legacy of HBCUs came at a time where African Americans were not allowed into mainstream colleges due to discrimination and Jim Crow laws. Cheyney University, founded in 1837 as Cheyney State College, was the first historically black college. Today, it is in danger of shutting its doors forever in financial ruin having lost 38% of its student body in 2018. Enrollment at Bethune-Cookman College in Daytona Beach, Florida, dropped 20%. University President Brent Chrite sent a letter to alumni on Jan. 27 that told of its precarious situation.

“2020 will be a pivotal year in history of B-CU,” Chrite wrote. “It will be the year our beloved university prepared to close its doors, or it will be the year we turned a corner and began moving toward an exciting future.”

This post was written by Dana Givens, a writer at Black Enterprise, where it was originally published. It is published here with permission.

Why Losing Commencement At This Dallas HBCU Is A Very Big Deal

The sorrow in the voice of Paul Quinn College senior Jennifer Fletcher was heavy and resigned: “I’m packing. I’m packing my things to go home.”

The 21-year-old Dallas student and I talked just before she piled her belongings into the car over the weekend and, with sister and fellow Paul Quinn senior Jazzmun Norman, headed home to Memphis — and an uncertain future.

The coronavirus scare has thrown kids off campuses coast to coast, but nowhere is the abrupt exile more painful and potentially devastating than for Paul Quinn students.

Jennifer, a business management major, ended the awful week feeling overwhelmed, stressed and trying her best to tamp down her anger. “It’s just too much to take in right now,” she said.

Trying to navigate her coursework online from her family’s home, rather than alongside her Paul Quinn classmates, will be a tall order. “I love my family, but I just don’t want to get distracted,” she said.

READ FULL @ DALLAS MORNING NEWS

Central State University Launches New Podcast

In the words of Central State University, “Looking for new content while you’re stuck at home? Check out CSUs NEW podcast: THERE’S MORE TO CSU!”

That’s right, Marauders. In the midst of this quarantine craziness, you can now take some time to unwind and relax while listening to this content on all podcast platforms.

In the first episode, which was uploaded on March 6, Host Jahan Culbreath takes a deep dive into CSU embracing its agriculture traditions from Land Grant to Hemp research.

Expect him to continue to follow the buzz and jump into exciting conversations surrounding the campus and the community at large.

Make sure you hit that subscribe button!

TMCF Applause Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s Plan To Allocate $1.5 Billion In Emergency Funding For HBCUs And MSIs

Thurgood Marshall College Fund (TMCF), the nation’s largest organization exclusively representing the Black College Community, recently applauded Speaker Nancy Pelosi’s plan that would allocate $1.5 Billion in emergency Title III and Title V Aid to Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs), Predominantly Black Institutions (PBIs) and other Minority Serving Institutions (MSIs) amid the coronavirus outbreak.

In a statement, TMCF said that the announced Senate bill last week, which failed to advance, included “some helpful regulatory and payment relief for institutions, but simply does not do enough to provide financial relief for schools.”

“The combination of an injection of desperately needed emergency aid, and the loosening of restrictions on both new and previously appropriated Title III funds will allow schools to both recover some of their financial losses and give them the flexibility to best serve students in this uncertain time,” the statement reads.

In these times of uncertainty, TMCF said that they “strongly encourage” opposing political parties to find common ground through comprising in order to properly fund the country’s 100-plus HBCUs and the students that these “critically important” institutions serve.

WATCH: Coronavirus Couldn’t Stop These Alpha Kappa Alpha Linesisters From Empowering A Sister Through Chemotherapy

COVID-19, Coronavirus changed the world instantly, but so will this video of a few ladies of Alpha Kappa Alpha Sorority, Inc., showering their linesister with love as she battles chemotherapy.

Alpha Kappa Alpha (AKA) is the first sorority of the “divine nine,” Black greek-letter, organizations which have selective membership intake processes. The Divine Nine fraternities and sororities include: Fraternities: Alpha Phi Alpha, Kappa Alpha Psi, Phi Beta Sigma, Iota Phi Theta and Omega Psi Phi Fraternity; Sororities: Delta Sigma Theta, Sigma Gamma Rho and Zeta Phi Beta. The term “linesister” or “linebrother” is given to the individuals who are accepted and experience the membership intake process the same year+semester, which is historically known for being a process that bonds the initiates for life. Much like marriage, where vows include “through sickness and in health,” linesisters and linebrothers grow to be extensions of family.

Shannon Nicole Thompson shared a video of sisterhood and social distancing at its finest:

“In the midst of this quarantine craziness, my mom’s linesisters found a way to show their support, make her smile and keep her fighting! She has been having a rough couple of days – the side effects from her chemo medication are kicking in, plus the fluid that has been forming around her heart and lungs have made it hard for her to breathe. Her linesisters had the most beautiful idea to come over and sing to her to lift her spirits – and of course they maintained social distancing… because Coronavirus. Although its a strange time in the world right now, not being able to hug and gather with loved ones the way you normally would, perhaps self-quarantining and social distancing is allowing space for creativity in how we show up for those we love the most. I am so grateful for the happiness and love that the Fabulous 15 brought to my mom today. This is what our wonderful sisterhood is about, and you ladies have shown up in the most incredible way. THANK YOU SORORS! Stacy Chandler Franklin Lee Franklin Keya Fulton Tiffany Callaway Ferrell Tiffany Brown Brittany Ivery Cook Erica Smith Yvette Manns Linda M. Hearns Valerie Randolph Rita H Parker Rachael D. Henderson #AlphaKappaAlpha #Sisterhood #fcukcancer #QuarantineChronicles #Godsgotablessing #withMimisnameonit #FightLikeAGirl #Shegotthis #BossedUp #Watchherwin #WatchGodWork”

Founded in 1908, AKA “has flourished into a globally-impactful organization of nearly 300,000 college-trained members, bound by the bonds of sisterhood and empowered by a commitment to servant-leadership that is both domestic and international in its scope.

As Alpha Kappa Alpha has grown, it has maintained its focus in two key arenas: the lifelong personal and professional development of each of its members; and galvanizing its membership into an organization of respected power and influence, consistently at the forefront of effective advocacy and social change that results in equality and equity for all citizens of the world,” shares the organization.

Humanity reigns. Sending prayers and love to this lady of Alpha Kappa Alpha to make a speedy and stable recovery!

—A woman of Delta Sigma Theta, Sorority, Inc.

Sens. Booker, Jones Urge $1.5 Billion In Support For HBCUs, MSIs Amid Coronavirus Crisis

Senators Cory Booker (D-N.J.) and Doug Jones (D-AL) on Thursday pressed for $1.5 billion in emergency funding to help historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) and other minority-serving institutions (MSIs) respond to the coronavirus pandemic.

The senators join leaders of HBCUs, the United Negro College Fund (UNCF) and the Thurgood Marshall College Fund (TMCF), who earlier this week also lobbied Congress for a one-time allocation of $1.5 billion to help HBCUs and MSIs during the coronavirus crisis. Leaders of the country’s 105 HBCUs and the UNCF and the TMCF said that the costs of operating during the pandemic threaten their future survival.

In the past weeks, several of these under-resourced institutions have covered expenses for students from low-income families who have had to leave campus and go back home. They have also had to make a shift to online learning so students’ academics don’t suffer during the stoppage of in-person classes in an effort to avoid the spread of the coronavirus. This has meant additional investment in expensive technological infrastructure as well as Wi-Fi hotspots for students without access to the internet at home. As it is, many HBCUs and MSIs struggle financially because they have smaller or no endowments, lower levels of federal funding and relatively fewer alumni donations.

Booker and Jones wrote a letter to Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY), Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer (D-N.Y.) and Senate appropriators to include the $1.5 billion in emergency funding for HBCUs and MSIs in the Senate’s third supplemental appropriations package —  under Title III, Part A and B, Title V and Title VII of the Higher Education Act —  in response to COVID-19, the respiratory illness caused by the coronavirus.

“Title III and V and VII institutions are a refuge for the communities of students that they serve, and in these uncertain times they are needed now more than ever,” the senators said in their letter. “Assuring an increase in funding for Title III and V will allow these schools to continue operating without fear of going bankrupt or having to raise tuition next year.”

Read more here.

Enrollment Declines Threaten Future Of HBCUs, Disheartening Alumni

Darrell Dial entered South Carolina State University in 1987 as a “country boy,” a bit unsure of himself, and graduated with a degree in biology four years later as a man ready to take on the world.

He attributes his development to his experience at the historically black university in Orangeburg, South Carolina — the curriculum but mostly the reassuring, nurturing environment.

“It was a melting pot of high intelligence and backgrounds,” said Dial, 51, a molecular genomics scientist who lives in Atlanta. “This black diversity made a great playground for great debate and banter. It was truly iron sharpening iron for us all. I wouldn’t be the man I am if it weren’t for South Carolina State.”

Dial’s experience and sentiments mirror thousands of graduates of historically black colleges and universities at a time when HBCUs are experiencing an alarming drop in enrollment, to the second-lowest rate last year in 17 years, according to a new report.

According to the National Center for Educational Statistics, more than 6,000 fewer students attended the 101 black colleges and universities in the U.S. during the 2018-19 school year. The 291,767 total was down from the 298,134 in the previous year, and was the lowest total since 2001, when there were 289,985 students at historically black colleges.

HBCUs provided black students an opportunity for a higher education when mainstream colleges were segregated. Cheyney University, founded in 1837 as Cheyney State College, was the first historically black college. Today, it is in financial disrepair and on the verge of collapse, having lost 38 percent of its student body in 2018. Enrollment at Bethune-Cookman College in Daytona Beach, Florida, dropped 20 percent, and its president, Brent Chrite, sent a letter to alumni on Jan. 27 that told of its precarious situation.

“2020 will be a pivotal year in history of B-CU,” Chrite wrote. “It will be the year our beloved university prepared to close its doors, or it will be the year we turned a corner and began moving toward an exciting future.”

The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Colleges has required that BC-U wipe out its $8 million operating deficit before submitting its re-accreditation application this month. If accreditation is revoked, B-CU would lose access to most of its more than $7 million in federal funding.

“We cannot survive as a university without it,” Chrite wrote.

Bethune-Cookman’s plight is one of several cases of HBCUs in survival mode.

Retired Army colonel Ronnie Bagley.
Retired Army colonel Ronnie Bagley.Courtesy Ronnie Bagley

“There is a distinct possibility that a number of HBCUs could cease to exist in 20 years or so,” said Ronnie Bagley, a retired Army colonel who graduated from Norfolk State University in 1983. “If that were to occur, many low income, first generation students will lose out on an opportunity for a college education.

“That’s scary because HBCUs have been the bedrock of producing some of the most successful and influential contributors in all facets of society, including business, government, military, arts and entertainment. You name it.”

The NCES study does not explain the drop in HBCU enrollment, but there are indications of multiple factors:

  • HBCUs lost $50 million when the Department of Education made it more difficult to acquire the PLUS Loan that many schools relied on, according to The Edvocate, which researches educational trends, issues and futures.
  • HBCU retention rates—keeping students in school year after year—are lower than predominantly white institutions. A U.S. News study indicates Spelman College leads HBCUs with an 88 percent retention rate, but many other schools drop as low as 50 percent because of financial issues and schools’ inadequate inducements for students to continue their education.
  • The explosive appeal of online colleges like DeVry and the University of Phoenix has hit HBCUs hard, according to The Edvocate. HBCUs had been considered a prime place for challenged or “underdog” students, but online options are trending because they are less expensive. Compounding matters, most HBCUs have not implemented thorough online classes or degree programs.
  • Investment in some campuses and facilities, like at Norfolk State and North Carolina A&T, has been impressive. But the lack of contemporary technology and building upkeep at many HBCUs — like at Tennessee State, where enrollment has dipped for 10 straight years — has turned away black students.

Added Bagley: “In many cases predominantly white institutions are looking to become more diverse by offering minorities scholarships. While I wanted my children to follow in my footsteps and attend an HBCU, preferably my alma mater, the HBCUs we visited couldn’t offer the kind of money the University of Kentucky did.”

Read more here.

Trump Announces Temporary Suspension Of Federal Student Loan Payments Due To Coronavirus

President Donald Trump recently announced a temporary suspension of federal student loan payments amid the coronavirus outbreak during a press briefing.

“We’ve temporarily waived all interest on federally held student loans,” Trump said during a Coronavirus Task Force press conference Friday at the White House, according to Fox News. “They’ll be very happy to hear that and I’ve instructed them to take that action immediately.”

He added that “Betsy Devos directed federal lenders to allow borrowers to suspend their student loans and loan payments without penalty for at least the next 60 days, and if we need more we’ll extend that period of time.”

“Borrowers should contact their lenders, but we’ve given them very strong instructions,” Trump said. “That’s a big thing, that’s going to make a lot of students very happy.”

How B-CU Was Able To Get $17 Million Of Florida’s New Budget

DAYTONA BEACH — Lawmakers and leaders at Bethune-Cookman University on Friday basked in the glow of news that the private school, on the edge of surviving for the past couple of years, would be getting $17 million, including $13 million of that in new, recurring money from the state

That state budget, passed by the House and Senate Thursday, includes plans to spend $93.2 billion on running the government, proving new money for affordable housing, teachers’ pay and utility projects. Locally, the biggest story, though, was the embrace of Florida’s private historically black colleges.

In all, B-CU, Edward Waters College and Florida Memorial University will be getting a $33 million injection annually in recurring funds.

“This funding commitment should convey to the community, parents, alumni, current and future students that we as a state government are committed to the success of Bethune-Cookman University and our HBCUs,” said Sen. Randolph Bracy, D-Orlando, one of a host of lawmakers who helped shepherd a large portion of the money — providing gap funding to the three schools — into the budget.

That money aims to close the gaps students face in attempting to pay for college. More than 90% of B-CU’s students qualify for Pell Grants and many receive other kinds of assistance for tuition, books and housing, but they are also coming from families who cannot afford to provide any assistance, said Brent Chrite, the university president.

“This is a historic and unprecedented occasion,” said Chrite, whose team will be sending a report to the school’s accrediting body, the Southern Association of Colleges and School’s Commission on College, which had placed the school on probation in 2018. Last month, Chrite had said he was attempting to close an $8 million deficit he said was necessary to meet the accrediting requirements.

Five philanthropic Volusia County families had each contributed $50,000 or more, while one of those donors, the influential home building magnate Mori Hosseini, lent his political clout to the cause.

Rep. Elizabeth Fetterhoff, R-DeLand, sponsored the bill in the House. B-CU’s main campus is in her district.

“I’ve met with these students here and I realize how important these dollars are to keep feeling like they have security in their education and being able to graduate on time,” Fetterhoff said.

Retired Judge Belvin Perry, who chairs B-CU’s Board of Trustees, said convincing House and Senate leadership, as well as Gov. Ron DeSantis, of the worthiness of funding the state’s HBCUs involved many hands.

“We worked this thing from top to bottom,” Perry said. “This was a team effort and one of the most important elements … were our students.

″(Some of our) students went to Tallahassee and they made an impression on legislators. They saw the product that Bethune-Cookman was producing,” Perry said.

Chrite, the university president, said Perry himself was a big part of landing the money.

“He has spent more time in the capital than is either fair or reasonable for a board chair,” Chrite said. “This is what stewardship and governance and leadership looks like. … Our fight has been for the survival and the well-being of this institution and this community and the students we serve and I am blessed and pleased and have a partner in all our Board of Trustees.

Read more here.

Andrew Gillum’s Hotel Incident Uncovers Personal Battle With Depression And Alcoholism

New information and photos have surfaced from the hotel room where Andrew Gillum was allegedly with “a known male escort.”

Last Friday, the politician, husband, father of two, and FAMU alumnus was in a Miami Beach hotel with two gentlemen when emergency responders were summoned. Tallahassee Democrat reported, “emergency responders were summoned to revive one of the men(not Gillum), who apparently sustained a drug overdose. Three plastic bags thought to contain meth amphetamine were found in the room.”

In the event following that Friday—where the politician was said to be celebrating a wedding—Gillum announced that he will no longer be living a public life, and instead will be seeking treatment for alcoholism and depression:

“This has been a wake-up call for me,” Gillum said in a brief statement issued via e-mail. “Since my race for governor ended, I fell into a depression that has led to alcohol abuse.”

We desperately hope Gillum receives the rehabilitation and mental health attention he needs as depression nor alcoholism are illnesses and aren’t anything to take lightly. We are rooting for him to make a solid and sound recovery.

Plastic baggies of suspected crystal meth, empty beer bottles and prescription pills are seen scattered among trash and soiled bedding in the shocking images obtained exclusively by DailyMail.com...

Gillum, a married dad-of-three who narrowly missed out on becoming Florida’s first black governor, was too ‘inebriated’ to tell cops what went down when they arrived at Miami’s Mondrian Hotel early last Friday

‘At this time the incident is not being investigated as a criminal matter,’ said a spokesman for the Miami Beach Police Department. Read the original story shared by Daily Mail.”

Morgan State President On The Coronavirus: ‘Stay Positive, Stay Informed, And Stay Safe’

On Thursday, HBCU Morgan State University President Dr. David Wilson offered additional insight into recent decisions in response to COVID-19 and the safety of the MSU community by stating that the black university is “navigating a new normal against” the disease, and “It is a health crisis that is impacting our lives in every way imaginable. As the positive cases of COVID-19 in Maryland continue to escalate, we will maintain our foremost responsibility here at Morgan, which is to ensure the safety and well-being of our students, faculty, and staff.”

03.28.11 BALTIMORE, MD- Dr. David Wilson, President of Morgan State University. Portraits on campus for Influential Marylanders. (The Daily Record/Maximilian Franz).

Wilson said, “The COVID-19 pandemic is pervasive and is rapidly involving. And though at this time, there have been no confirmed cases at Morgan. The university must continue to implement campus-wide measures that are consisted with the directives and guidance from federal and state governments, and from public health officials. To that end, we have enacted a number of measures to help prevent the spread of COVID-19 on our campus. Some of these measures include, developing a pandemic disease preparation plan in advance of any COVID-19 incidents on our campus.”

You can watch the entire video below.

Edward Waters Adds Former Two-Sport Star For Palatka High School To The Program

While the attention this year will be on the $4 million Nathaniel Glover Community Field and Stadium on campus at HBCU Edward Waters College, a talented football player with some “upside” got his shot to play on the program as a walk-on.

Mitchell McKinnon, a 6-foot-5, 200-pound quarterback coming out of Palatka High School, will resume his football career at EWC, enrolling at the black college earlier this year. And it’s predicted that big days are ahead of him.

PHS coach Willie Fells said, “They’re going to play him as a walk-on. They encouraged him to come.”

In his only full-time varsity season for the Panthers he passed for almost 1,000 yards in seven games in 2018, completing 56 of 100 passes for 979 yards and 11 touchdowns with only two interceptions, per Palatka Daily News.

Fells said, “They (EWC) showed him what they could offer. He had some things he had to get in line, which he has done and now he’s there. I think they see the athleticism as an upside. He only really played one year of football for us. I wish we’d had a little more time with him. When (college) coaches saw him in 2018, they liked his upside but just couldn’t take the chance on him.”

McKinnon was a three-time all-county basketball player during his time at PHS.

‘We Shall Overcome’: This Is The Perfect Time To Embrace The Words Of HBCU Grad MLK

The video on Bernice King’s Twitter features her father Martin Luther King Jr. giving his incredible speech at Southern Methodist University on March 17, 1966. You can see remarkable photos of him throughout the short clip.

https://twitter.com/berniceking/status/1240713252713066496?s=21

“We shall overcome,” she captioned the video, leaving space for her followers to respond, giving them an opportunity to be still, and trust the process. The tape from her official account is exactly what we need to hear right now amid the Wuhan coronavirus pandemic.

Martin graduated from HBCU Morehouse College.

“Thanks for sharing your fathers words Bernice,” a Twitter user commented.

Amen and amen

American Baptist College President Kevin W. Cosby shared the video on his Twitter account, saying that Martin’s speech “infuses hope into the hearts of those in his day seeking justice,” and “let his voice infuse hope in your heart in our day.”

Today’s the perfect day to embrace the wise words of Martin, who insisted that “we shall overcome” at a time of racial tension between white and black people in the country.

There’s no better time than now to love one another and be of good cheer, knowing that there’s a purpose for all things, not to be afraid.

This too shall pass.

Two Campus Police Officers Placed On Leave Following Forceful Arrest Of HBCU Student

Two campus police officers at an historically black university in North Carolina were placed on leave after a video of the violent arrest of a college student went viral.

The incident occurred Wednesday, March 18 on the campus of North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University in Greensboro. Sophomore Verdant Julius and a group of friends were at McCain Residence Hall, a dormitory, to help each other move out after NCAT announced it was temporarily closing due to the COVID-19 outbreak.

According to an account written by Mantryll Williams, one of Julius’ friends, the group was asked to show their student identification cards to gain entry. After showing the cards, one of them was turned away because she didn’t live in the residence hall. 

What should have been a mundane encounter became tense after Julius, who is president of the class of 2022, asked why his friend was asked to leave.

“Hearing that his friend who was there to assist him was being asked to leave, Verdant Julius asked the campus security guard and police officer for an explanation,” Williams wrote. “The officer responded to this request by saying, ‘If you take one step closer I am going to have you arrested for obstruction of an investigation.’ This was the first time the officer informed Verdant Julius and the other two students that an investigation was in progress.”

Williams filmed the arrest and posted the footage on his Twitter page. In the video, Julius calmly asks one of his friends to take his keys and wallet as two officers — one white, one Black — cuff him.

“If you resist, I’m going to mace you,” the Black officer said repeatedly.

“You’re honestly ridiculous,” Julius responded. 

The officers grabbed Julius by his neck and slammed him into a wall before wrestling him to the ground. The video ends with Julius pinned to the ground as one of his friends urges him to relax. Julius was charged with resist, delay or obstruct of a public officer and trespassing, per The Winston-Salem Journal. Atlanta Black Star reached out to Julius for comment, but did not hear back. He later confirmed he was safe via his personal Twitter page. 

“Thank you so much! Thank you all so much for being supportive & checking in,” he tweeted. “I honestly do not know how to feel right now about the incident, but I will be okay.”

Williams’ video has garnered more than 1.5 million views since it was posted on early Wednesday morning. Many viewers, including some NCAT students, were angered by how Julius was treated.

“Verdant is the most selfless person I know. He’s always fighting for what he believes in and does it with pride and excellence,” wrote one student. “Knowing the backstory and wondering why the hell our campus policeman have to be this way baffles me. I don’t feel safe.”

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“Disgusting, I hope NCAT addresses this because the campus police have failed not only the legacy of the university, but it’s black students,” wrote one person. 

“I read the backstory & this is too much! Baby boy wasn’t even resisting and was clearly planning to cooperate by asking his friend to take his stuff and was met with ‘if you resist I’m going to mace you’ and then met with aggressive grabbing,” said another viewer. “Who wouldn’t react to that??”

On Wednesday, NCAT announced the officers were removed from duty while the incident was being investigated.

“University administrators are evaluating the matter in an effort to reach an appropriate resolution,” the university said in a statement. “Further, we have met with the individual student, as well as Student Government Association leadership, to understand their concerns. Be assured that the issue of campus safety is one of our top priorities and maintaining that safe environment requires the cooperation and understanding of every member of our community.”

Williams started a petition on Julius’ behalf with three demands: he wants charges against Julius dropped; a statement condemning Julius’ treatment; and the establishment of a police review committee to oversee hiring and complaints. The officers’ names have not been released.

Atlanta Black Star contacted the campus police department, but did not receive a response.

This post originally appeared on Atlanta Black Star.