SC State University Leaders Scramble to Submit Mandated Report

WTLX

South Carolina State University’s Interim Board of Trustees had a special meeting Wednesday afternoon to put the finishing touches on a state mandated report.

The report is the first step school leaders must take in order to request state funds for next year’s budget. It’s a taks they have to do every year, but amid the school’s recent financial issues, there’s a bit more pressure.

Board members looked over the lengthy document that included enrollment, debts, revenue and projections for the upcoming year.

Interim President Dr. W. Franklin Evans said faculty and staff have been working overnight on the needed documents.

He said that he was made aware of formatting requirements and additional necessary information Tuesday.

During the meeting, board members dismissed several employees so that they could continue gathering information needed for the report.

The documents were due to legislators before 4:30 p.m. Wednesday. The legislators will look over the report and ask for any additional information if necessary.

The report included things like:

  • student enrollment in recent years
  • graduation rates
  • tuition and fees per semester
  • tuition waivers
  • scholarships and grants
  • out of state veterans’ reimbursements
  • appropriations’ history
  • PELL grant information
  • outstanding debts
  • facilities and maintenance costs
  • technology costs
  • employee data

The report was all to complement projected needs for fiscal year 2016-2017.

University officials will meet with and present the report to legislators of the House Ways and Means Higher Education Budget Subcommittee on Tuesday in Columbia.

Read more here.

NSU Announces Changes in Women’s Basketball Program

Norfolk State Newsroom

Norfolk State University Director of Athletics Marty L. Miller announced Wednesday afternoon that Spartan head women’s basketball coach Debra Clark has been reassigned within the department, effective immediately.

Larry Vickers, associate head coach of the NSU men’s program, will assume the role of interim head women’s coach for the remainder of the season.

“I want to thank coach Clark for her commitment and service to the women’s basketball program,” Miller said. “But I felt that now was the time to make a change to move the program in a different direction.

“Coach Vickers has served as a coach with our basketball program for eight seasons. He is very familiar not only with the men’s basketball players, but the women’s team, as well. This will give us some continuity with the student-athletes in order to complete the season.”

The Spartan women’s basketball team is 0-16 on the year, 0-6 in the MEAC heading into this Saturday’s home game against South Carolina State. NSU has lost 17 games in a row dating to last season’s MEAC tournament semifinals.

Clark was in her seventh season leading the Spartans. Her record at NSU was 58-129.

Read more here.

Poisoned Water in Flint, Failing Schools in Detroit: How 1 Law Is Hurting Mich.

The Root

Gov. Rick Snyder is abusing the Emergency Financial Manager Act, to the state’s peril.


 

Republican Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder is in hot and highly contaminated water. Residents in Flint, Mich., have been drinking, bathing in and cooking with contaminated water for over a year, and all signs indicate that Snyder has known about it since Spring of 2015.

To make matters worse, on Wednesday morning, teachers in the Detroit Public School system staged a massive “sick-out,” shutting down over 88 schools. The city’s schools are crumbling, the buildings have rats and mold, there are classes that have 40 or more students in them, and the system is in a mountain of debt. How did these situations get so bad? How has no one been held accountable before now?

It all goes back to the day democracy ended in the state of Michigan, when the Emergency Manager Act was passed in 2012. The Flint water crisis and the problems in Detroit public schools didn’t just start in the second week of January 2016. Republicans will blame local mayors (in this case Democrats), and Democrats will blame the governor (a Republican), but to be fair, many of these are long-term, systemic infrastructure and budgeting problems that go back many decades and are beyond the power of any single government entity. However, what can’t be disputed is Snyder’s desire to gut democracy and replace elected accountable officials with his political friends and cronies, which has brought these crises to the tipping point.

All of this began in 2011 when Snyder first took office as a Tea Party darling vowing to shrink government and make Michigan more business friendly. He decided that the best way to do this was to zap an old law with gamma rays and turn it into a monster that he could smash public institutions with. The Emergency Financial Manager Act, as it is commonly referred to, was passed in 1990, ostensibly to rescue small Michigan cities and school systems from financial ruin. If a city owed creditors too much money, or failed to make payroll, or school systems were on the brink of going bankrupt after third period, it could trigger a state takeover of the municipality. If the governor’s board and the local government couldn’t come to an agreement to settle debts, the state would appoint a financial manager with the power to clean things up over the course of 18 months.

This was meant to be a temporary fix, only used in emergencies when all other options failed. Snyder saw a chance to pounce. He first tried to pass a hulked-up version of the bill in 2012, but voters repealed it by referendum. So he employed some legislative gymnastics to pass the bill without public approval, with the backing of the Republican-controlled Michigan State House. The result? Under the new law the governor had broad powers to declare almost any municipal situation “a crisis” and consequently appoint an emergency financial manager to take over.

These new managers had the power to remove elected officials, suspend pay, cut pensions, throw out union contracts (but not banking contracts, of course) and suspend local government as long as it was under the guise of “fiscal responsibility.” Since 2012, Snyder has become the Oprah of emergency-manager appointers, with Flint getting a financial manager and Detroit getting a financial manager and Highland Park getting a financial manager.

Every time public school students look under their crumbling desks, they’re getting a brand-spanking-new financial manager to “clean up their schools.” Every time Flint residents turn on the tap and it looks like well water from Little House on the Prairie, they can thank their financial manager. Out of the 25 times that emergency financial managers have been appointed in Michigan since 1990, Rick Snyder has appointed 15 of them, in less than six years in office. How is he getting away with this?

Read more here.

Lawyer, XU Working to End Driving Under the Influence

XULA Newsroom 

Veteran Orleans and Jefferson Parish prosecutor, David Abdullah, and Xavier University of Louisiana have entered into a formal partnership, whose mission is to prevent driving under the influence (DUI) among college students in the Greater New Orleans region.

 
Abdullah, now in private practice as a partner at New Orleans-based law firm Peiffer, Rosca, Wolf, Abdullah, Carr & Kane, APLC, possesses 15 years of experience prosecuting and defending DWI offenders. Xavier University, listed as one of the nation’s top colleges in the 2016 Princeton Review, has a longstanding commitment to making students aware of the risks posed by driving under the influence of drugs or alcohol.

 
According to Abdullah, “I have seen countless lives and futures destroyed by drunk driving, and the common denominator is always the same — a bad decision. Checkpoints and other law enforcement measures deal with the problem downstream. Xavier University and I want to go upstream, to positively impact the decision-making process of college students. Drinking and driving is a choice — the wrong choice. We want college students to make the right choice.”

 
Abdullah is speaking to Xavier students in early February during a campus-wide program about Mardi Gras safety. In addition to programming from Xavier’s campus police, the university also requires all students to learn about personal safety and the hazards of DUI during freshman orientation.

 
“It’s important to remember that college students are adults, not children,” said Deon Ridgell, Assistant Dean of Student Life at Xavier University. “Lecturing students doesn’t work, and threat-based language sets the wrong tone. We don’t want to tell students what to do. Rather, we want to help guide them to make the right decisions on their own.”

 
Ridgell also said, “It’s easier and easier to make the right choices, particularly with services like Uber operating here in Orleans Parish. A recent study conducted in a partnership between Uber and Mothers Against Drunk Driving showed a meaningful decrease in alcohol-related crashes among drivers under 30 following the launch of UberX ridesharing in particular markets. The message here is unmistakable: When young people are made aware of what the right choices are, more often than not, they’ll make the right choices.”

 
Data continue to show how prevalent alcohol consumption and driving is among college-aged youth. More than 1,300 college students are killed each year around the country in alcohol-related traffic accidents. And, according to a recent study, 25 percent of U.S. college students reported drinking and driving in the last month.

 

Read more here.

Virginia Union Alum Ben Wallace Cries as Pistons Retire His Jersey

44328Ben Wallace, who was a criminal justice major at Virginia Union University cried days ago as the Detroit Pistons retired his jersey. At Virginia Union, he averaged 13.4 points per game and 10 rebounds per game. He also led his team to the Division 2 final four and a 28-3 record.

The Detroit Pistons four-time all-star and one time champion, 2004, was honored days ago for his magnificent career with the Detroit Pistons.

According to ESPN, Wallace said,


“Where I came from and some of the trial and tribulations I went through, I wouldn’t change it for the world,” said Wallace, who was accompanied by his wife, their son and daughter. “Y’all motivated me on nights when I didn’t have anything left.”


 

In the video above, Wallace said, “I want to thank for the Pistons organization for not just settling for me but getting a group of guys who fought hard night in and night out, who encouraged me an and fought to win an NBA Championship.”

The Buzz salutes HBCU grad, Ben Wallace, on a terrific career.

NSU Student Athlete Wakes Up From Coma After Being Found Unresponsive in Dorm

According to News 10 WAVY, “The mom of a hospitalized Norfolk State University basketball player told 10 On Your Side that her daughter is making a miraculous recovery.”

Amber Brown, a junior basketball player and psychology major at Norfolk State University is making a tremendous recovery according to the various sources closest to The Buzz. Amber Brown has been a rebound machine in the past. She crashed the boards for 13 rebounds against Delaware State on March 9th, 2015.

Amber Brown’s mom told News 10 WAVY:

“She was very ill, and God saw it to bring her through,” said Amber’s mom, Coretta Brown. “And so now we are at a whole other stage.”

Brown, 20, was found unresponsive in her dorm room on New Year’s Day. She suffered a stroke, seizures, and brain swelling. Doctors placed her in a medically induced coma, and expected a long road ahead.

“She just started opening her eyes,” Coretta said. “And when she opened her eyes, I was just like, ‘thank you, God, thank you, God.’ I said ‘girl, I missed those eyes! I missed you so much, I’m so glad you’re here.’”

However, last week a miracle happened. The family that thought once about “pulling the plug,” is now grateful to have Amber among them. Her recovery is steady but still critical.

According to ESPN, “The hashtag #PrayForAmber has grown on Twitter, and a Supporting Amber Facebook page gives updates on her progress. Amber is able to breathe on her own at times but still needs a ventilator for assistance. A temperature resulting from pneumonia has continued to decline, and she has been able to sit up in a cardiac chair minus the breathing tubes for short periods of time, forcing her lungs to get stronger.”

Central State’s Alphas Have Their Own Day to be Honored

WILBERFORCE—On a sunny, and very cold day the community joined together along with current Central State students, alumni, and family and friends at the Sunken Garden for the annual MLK march to the Xenia City Hall building.

The Delta Xi Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha, the organizers and host of the annual march to the Greene County Courthouse in Xenia dating back over two decades to help establish civil rights leader Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.’s birthday as a national holiday, was also honored with their own day titled “Delta Xi Chapter Day” by Mayor of the city of Xenia Marsha J. Bayless, who also is a CSU alum.

Since the 1980s, the Delta Xi Chapter has planned and organized the student-led rally, which typically takes about an hour. Mayor Bayless said over the years the fraternity “has been consistent with the legacy of Dr. King,” and “that has included participation by citizens in the community at large and participation by students in our public schools and universities to complement their high quality, challenging academic programs with an enlightened social activity.”

“To be honored by the Mayor of Xenia Marsha J. Bayless is a great accomplishment for the [Delta Xi] Chapter in particular, and in general for Central State,” said CSU alum Tevin L. Cameron, who also is a member of Alpha Phi Alpha. “Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity have been doing this annual march for many years.”

“We want to continue to honor and recognize the importance of the legacy of our late great brother, Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.”

“It’s a great privilege to be honored by the Mayor of Xenia and we are beyond humbled,” said graduating senior Darius Lang, the current president of the Chapter on campus.

“And whether rain, shine, sleet, or snow—we will continue this annual march as long as God allows,” Land said.

More on HBCUBuzz.com: In Honor of MLK, a Former Mr. CSU Tells Students to ‘Dream Again’

List of Organizations Accepting Monetary Donations for Flint & Bottled Water, Michigan

Flint Water Fund

The city’s water supply is contaminated with toxic levels of lead, and residents are unable to drink the water that comes through their taps.

Gov. Rick Snyder has declared a state of emergency in Flint and brought in the National Guard to help deliver water to residents.

In the meantime, there are several organizations accepting monetary donations and bottled water:

Flint Water Fund
Flint Water Fund

Flint Water Fund is accepting donations to help purchase water filters and bottled water.

 

Flint Child Health & Development Fund

Flint Child Health & Development Fund

Flint Child Health & Development Fund will “support the delivery of critical public health, medical, and community-based services and interventions” to help children in the city who were exposed to lead in the drinking water, according to its website.

 

Catholic Charities of Genesee County

Catholic Charities of Genesee County

Catholic Charities of Genesee County is accepting water filters, bottled water, and donations.

The American Red Cross

The American Red Cross

The American Red Cross has volunteers distributing water testing kits, water filters and bottled water at several locations.

Samuel L. Jackson Expelled from Morehouse in 60s for Holding MLK Sr. Hostage

Watch the Yard

It turns out that the real life Samuel L Jackson is just as bad a** as all the characters he plays.

In 1969, actor Samuel L Jackson was expelled from historically black Morehouse College for locking board members in a building for two days in protest of the school’s curriculum and governance. Included in this group of people who were held hostage was Martin Luther King Jr.’s very own father, Martin Luther King Sr.

In 1966, during the height of the civil rights movement, Jackson enrolled at the historically black Morehouse College in Atlanta, the alma mater of Martin Luther King Jr. In 1968, when Martin Luther King Jr. was assassinated, Kings body was brought to Atlanta to lie in state at Spelman College, the historically black woman’s school adjacent to Morehouse. Jackson attended King’s funeral as one of the ushers and then flew to Memphis to join an equal rights protest march that radicalized him and changed the way he thought. “I was angry about the assassination, but I wasn’t shocked by it. I knew that change was going to take something different – not sit-ins, not peaceful coexistence,” he stated in an interview with Parade about his reactions to King’s death.

In 1969, as mentioned before, he and a group of radical Morehouse students held the college’s board of trustees hostage, demanding that changes be made in the curriculum of the school and stating that they wanted more blacks on the governing board of the institution. read more

UAPB’s Farmer Impresses on ‘American Idol’

The Commercial

One can tell on first sight that 25-year-old Daniel Farmer isn’t from around these parts, or at least took a trip away from these parts fairly recently. He’s wearing Timberlands and a floppy hat, not completely unlike Pharrell Williams’ now famous Vivienne Westwood headwear.

Farmer is amicable and charismatic in conversation, as if he’s been trained, deliberating over answers, responding in a measured enthusiastic tone. This all makes sense for Farmer. He’s gotten the golden ticket to “American Idol’s” Hollywood auditions.

Farmer was five minutes late to the interview.

“Just when I was about to head over, I was basically mobbed,” he said. “People congratulating me, all that.”

Moments later, that was corroborated as a young woman approached him.

“Congratulations Daniel,” she said.

“What’s up girl? Thank you.”

“It’s been crazy,” he said, while sniffing out an empty classroom at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, where he is a student. “The community here is amazing. It’s like family.”

Farmer is originally from Memphis and received a scholarship to the university to study theater and music. In August he took a trip to Little Rock to audition for “American Idol’s” open call.

The process is convoluted to say the least. Auditions were filmed in August with Farmer receiving an invite to Hollywood. In November, Farmer traveled to Hollywood for further auditions, the results of which are classified.

“I can’t tell you about the results of it. I can only talk about my experience in Los Angeles,” he said through a wide grin.

Draw conclusions as you will.

Farmer’s Little Rock audition aired on Jan. 7 and showed the gregarious Memphian getting a disproportionate amount of screen time — the highlight of the Little Rock auditions.

“I love Jen. She’s sexy. I’m just going to look into her eyes and sing to her,” he said into the camera.

It cuts away to show him slow-motion dancing, surrounded by other contestants of the show. Does every contestant get to dance surrounded by others? Do they take turns?

During his performance to Keith Urban, Jennifer Lopez and Harry Connick Jr., Farmer drops out of the song.

“Come on baby,” he yelps before finishing D’Angelo’s “How Does it Feel.”

Subtitled text reveals J. Lo’s whisper to Harry Connick Jr.

“You know to me, funny and sexy go together,” she said. “There’s a confidence to both.”

“Keep it together, Daniel,” he said, recalling the scene. “That’s all I was thinking.”

Farmer is an entertainer. One can see the influence the theater has had on his body language and composure, so at the end of the day, what is it but acting?

“It was strategized,” he said. “There were so many contestants, so many kids and they all want to make it to Hollywood. I had to stand out.”

Farmer said that contestants are only granted access to the celebrity judges after three days of auditioning with non-celebrity producers and talent agents.

“They saw on a bio I had to give them that I was an actor,” he said. “They asked me to do a few shoots with them, a commercial in Little Rock, some other on-camera work.”

From that point on, his strategizing paid off.

“Hollywood was amazing,” he said. “I want to move there after school is over. I met Ryan Seacrest, told him he’s got some nice hair. The producers were asking us to do a lot of stuff — put our hands in the Chinese Theater’s handprints.”

Whether or not Farmer advances to the live audience round, we don’t yet know, but Farmer is a musician and views his stint on “American Idol” only as a step in his growth as an artist.

“I love R&B, but I love pop,” he said. “I don’t want to be a one-dimensional type of artist.”

He cites Bruno Mars, Christina Aguilera, Brandy and, of course, D’Angelo as some of his influences — an artist indeed treading the line between pop and a deeper rhythm-and-blues sensibility.

Farmer’s mother, Judith, speaks as only a proud mother could.

“Daniel’s been singing since he was about 3,” she said. “I saw the talent early. He has a twin brother and I used to practice voice with them, since they were too young to take lessons.”

She, like Daniel, voiced her gratitude toward UAPB, highlighting its faculty and familial atmosphere.

“Dr. Michael Bates, the professor and music director at UAPB, has been tremendously helpful with his education and scholarship,” she said.

Read more here. 

Harvard Traveled to Play Basketball at Howard for Higher Learning

Washington Post

They played a basketball game at Burr Gymnasium on the Howard campus Saturday afternoon, a rare January nonconference game, but one that had special meaning to both schools, both teams and to both coaches.

Harvard won a competitive battle, 69-61, but the 40 minutes of basketball was the climax of a process that began years ago.

John Feinstein is a sports columnist for The Washington Post and also provides commentary for the Golf Channel and National Public Radio.

“It just made so much sense given what the two schools stand for,” Harvard Coach Tommy Amaker said just before his team practiced on Friday afternoon.

“When I was a kid growing up in this area, the academic respect Howard had in the African American community was off the charts. People always called it, ‘the Harvard of the HBUCs’ [historically black universities and colleges]. So, when Kevin got the Howard job, I thought it made sense for us to play one another: HU vs. HU. Harvard north vs. Harvard south.”

Kevin is Kevin Nickelberry, who is in his sixth season at Howard. He took the job, at least in part because Amaker — whom Nickelberry had grown up playing against in the Washington area — encouraged him to do it.

“I called Tommy when I had a chance to get the job because he had been at Harvard for a couple of years and was starting to have some success,” Nickleberry said Friday afternoon. “I wanted to know: can you win at an academic school where you’re competing against schools that take a lot of JUCOs and transfers?

“He was honest. He said, ‘Look, I can get in the door most places just by saying, ‘I’m from Harvard.’ Then the rest is up to me. He told me, within the African American community, Howard should have the same kind of respect — but it would take time.”

Nickleberry, who at 51 is six months older than Amaker, took the job. The irony was that not only was Howard doing poorly on the basketball court at the time, its players were doing poorly in the classroom. The school was on probation because it had fallen below minimum average scores in the Academic Progress Rate minimums, the NCAA’s annual measurement of whether college athletes are meeting academic benchmarks.

“That was the first thing I had to straighten out,” Nickleberry said. “That just can’t happen at a place like Howard. The administration said to me, ‘You’ve got nine sophomores. Make sure they all graduate. Then start to worry about winning.’ ”

Nickelberry did that. Howard lost 20-plus games each of his first four seasons, extending its string of 20-loss seasons to six. During that time, Howard played a guarantee game at Harvard to add a few dollars to his budget. That was when Amaker started talking about coming to D.C. to play at Howard.

“Not yet,” Nickelberry said. “I want to play you down here when we can compete with you.”

That time finally came on Saturday. It began though, with Nickleberry’s successful recruitment of James Daniel III out of Phoebus High School in Hampton, an area Nickleberry knows well because he spent four years coaching at Hampton.

“There were bigger schools recruiting him,” Nickleberry said. “He’s only 5-11 but he definitely could have gone to VCU or Richmond or a place like that and he would have played. But I said to him, ‘Look, do you want to be Batman or Robin?’ Fortunately for me, he decided he wanted to be Batman.”

Holy turnaround. Daniel is averaging 28.5 points per game to lead the country in scoring, though he missed Saturday’s game with an elbow injury. The Bison, after going 16-16 a year ago — their first non-losing season since 2002 — are 8-10, including a 2-1 start in Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference play. That’s despite a rash of injuries including Daniel, as well as second-leading scorer James Miller being sidelined with a broken hand.

Read more here.

Let’s Celebrate MLK Day by Honoring King’s Dream

Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. was born January 15th, 1929. As many already know, he was a graduate of Morehouse College in 1948. He also graduated from Crozer Theological Seminary, now Colgate Rochester Crozer Divinity School (CRCDS) in 1951. I am proud to live in the legacy of King as a student at CRCDS—just as Morehouse men should also be.

King’s birthday should inspire us to go out into the world and change a society that still looks the same as the dark days of the Civil Rights movement. As we prepare for magnificent words of King’s legacy, harmonious choirs singing in response to King’s legacy, and the triumphant reliving of King’s speeches as a response to honoring his legacy let us remember this one thing—we have to continue to fight.

Let’s not damage the King legacy like Liberty University plans to do by inviting Donald Trump to speak on MLK Day.

According to Yahoo News, “Mark Hine, the senior vice president for student affairs at Liberty University, said the school always holds a convocation on Martin Luther King Jr. Day, and it usually includes a video to honor his memory. I think this one was picked to afford Mr. Trump the opportunity to, among other things, honor Dr. King. It wasn’t like we said, ‘Let’s go find someone who would be anti-Martin Luther King.’ ”

Hine also told Yahoo News, “I don’t know that absolutely everything Trump would say aligns with Martin Luther King, but I don’t see him in any way as being the total opposite.”

However, Trump is the exact opposite of what King stood for. King died marching with sanitation workers who fought for fair wages and Trump wants to keep minimum wage stagnant. Trump wants to build a wall between these yet to be United States and Mexico, King would be fighting with undocumented immigrants. Trump has time and time again spewed out anti-Muslim hate rhetoric, King would have said that all people should have a chance at upward mobility despite their different faith backgrounds. Please don’t live the King legacy by supporting anti-King rhetoric.

King saw the world as a clergyman, so the question must be: how many clergy woman and men across this country are tirelessly working for social justice rather than being impediments of social justice?

I am excited to incorporate the #BlackLivesMatter movement in my Master’s thesis at CRCDS. However, how many seminaries and divinity schools are teaching social justice in the classroom?

Spend these days ahead protesting against police brutality because nearly 500 Black and Brown citizens were killed last year by the police, according to The Counted by The Guardian.

King said in his “I Have a Dream” speech, “There are those who are asking the devotees of civil rights, ‘When will you be satisfied?’ We can never be satisfied as long as the Negro is the victim of the unspeakable horrors of police brutality.” We’ve got to march against police brutality with groups like Dream Defenders to defend that dream!

Poverty is still a terrible problem today because wages are stagnant and the cost of living keeps rising. Let’s defend King’s dream.

The African-American can get elected to the White House but in the same country is having a tough time being employed and can be a victim of violence from the people who are supposed to give our nation a sense of domestic tranquility. Let’s defend King’s dream.

No one understands Transgender and Queer lives and we look at their lives as if they are minimal to those who we think fit the scale of “normality”. Let’s defend King’s dream.

If we could sum up King’s magnificent life in one quote we must dwell on these words from his “I Have a Dream” speech, he said, “So, we’ve come here today to dramatize a shameful condition in a sense we’ve come to our nation’s capital to cash a check.”

That “check” is still bouncing and we have to defend King’s dream!

FAMU Remains Mum on Cosby’s $100,000 Scholarship, Honorary Degree

Tallahassee Democrat

Several universities have rescinded honorary degrees in light of allegations

Griggs Hall at American Baptist College: Did You Know?

American Baptist College Newsroom

Did you know that Sutton Elbert Griggs (1872-1933), for whom Griggs Hall is named, was a social activist, a college president, a novelist, as well as a prominent minister in his day?. He actively participated in protests against police brutality, Jim Crow laws, streetcar segregation, and inadequate educational facilities throughout his lifetime. He is best known for his novel, Imperium in Imperio (1899), a utopian work that envisioned a separate African-American state within the United States. Sutton Griggs was the first president of ABC, elected by the National Baptist Convention to serve from 1925 -1926. You can find out more about Sutton Elbert Griggs by clicking these links:

Sutton E. Griggs in the Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture

Sutton Elbert Griggs at  the Texas State Historical Association 

“Sutton E. Griggs and the African American Literary Tradition of Pamphleteering” (a University of Maryland dissertation)

CSU President Jackson-Hammond Garners $2M in Federal Funding for STEAM Initiatives

Central State University Newsroom

Central State University President Dr. Cynthia Jackson-Hammond has secured $2M in funding from the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources Conservation Service to support the development of a well-qualified and diverse College of Science and Engineering student applicant pool.

The funding spans four years and will provide academic scholarships and expanded experiences to eligible students majoring in science, technology, engineering, agriculture and mathematics. (STEAM).

The intent is to develop a highly qualified agriculture/engineering applicant pool to provide NRCS and USDA a future workforce of underrepresented talent through the integration of disciplines that apply engineering science and technology to agricultural production, conservation, and processing.

The funding supports three major projects: 1) scholarships for eligible undergraduate students engaged in agriculture/engineering science disciplines; 2) pre-college outreach pipeline programs to support the goal of producing students with integrated knowledge and experiences; and 3) participation of students, faculty and staff at conferences and experiential learning events that support agricultural sustainability, natural resources conservation and agricultural production. In addition to academic support, students will be able to engage in USDA/NRCS federal internships and contribute to the replenishment of the workforce in those agencies.

The funding will also support a more robust recruitment of middle and high school students to the University’s Seed to Bloom program to provide innovative teaching and learning activities that lead to increase interest in STEAM disciplines.  Additionally, a summer residential program specifically for high school pre-college students is being designed to encourage and engender interest in Agricultural innovations.

Faculty and staff from across various disciplines are engaging in program development and the Office of Sponsored Program serves as the monitoring office for the grant.

Spelman Alumna Featured in The Chicago Defender

Commissioner Sherina Maye Edwards, a Spelman alumna and also a member of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc., was featured on the online edition of The Chicago Defender in a piece titled: “Energy Commissioner Sherina Maye Edwards, A Refreshing Color of Change.” In the article, Edwards talks about the energy field, mentors and Spelman College, and STEM.

In 2013, Edwards was appointed by Illinois Governor Pat Quinn to a five year term on the Illinois Commerce Commission.

Edwards was the youngest commissioner ever appointed at 29.

Here are some of the things discussed in the interview below.

Growing up, on the guidance of her teacher Edwards says her love was dance and that her teacher had taught her about the art of dance and about being a Black woman and how to be successful:

“The executive director of my dance center was fabulous. She was actually an AKA from Dartmouth. She taught so much, not just about the art of dance, but about being a Black woman and how to be successful. I learned a lot from her. Her name was Vanessa Baird-Streeter.

There have been a lot of mentors in between, especially at Spelman.”

Edwards earned her degree in Psychology, cum lade, and her law degree from Howard University School of Law. Later, the prestigious international law firm Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP came knocking at Edward’s door with an offer:

“It was an offer I could not turn down. I moved here and practiced law for about five years. One day, I was in my office and got a phone call from the governor’s chief of staff. He said there’s a position open and the governor thought I would be a good fit. At that time, I wasn’t familiar with the position and didn’t have a desire to work for the government.”

Read more here.