Tuskegee Announces Formation Of ‘Tuskegee Sports Network’

tuskegee-750x400The Tuskegee University athletic department announced the formation of the Tuskegee Sports Network beginning in the fall of 2015.

The network can seen and heard, on a variety of platforms during the football season including web audio, video and radio. The network was formed with WTLS 106.5 FM/1300 AM, River Region Sports, Tallassee TV and Net AL. The network will allow fans and alumni across the world to keep up with Golden Tigers football this fall. The broadcasts can also be heard on your mobile devices by using the Tune-In app.

“This gives us an opportunity to market our football program and the university,” Tuskegee athletic director Curtis Campbell said. “It also gives us a chance to provide a service to our fans and alums that enjoy Tuskegee football. We want to take advantage of each and every opportunity to market our brand, and this is one avenue to make that happen.”

All 10 regular season games will be a part of the Tuskegee Sports Network, beginning with the opening game against Clark Atlanta University at Cleve L. Abbott Memorial Alumni Stadium. All of the platforms of the network will be housed on one site for easier access to all fans, and will be accessed by going to the official site of Tuskegee athletics.

“It’s a privilege to partner with prestigious Tuskegee University,” Michael Butler, president of Michael Butler Broadcasting, said. “This is a championship athletic program with a fan base that is far-reaching. We’re excited to provide this service to the Golden Tiger nation.”

The station is no stranger to Tuskegee football as they have broadcast the homecoming contests in the past, with veteran broadcasters Butler and Graham Dunn (president of River Region Sports) providing all of the action. The duo will be back this season to provide all of the action for 10 regular season games.

“We are excited about the opportunity to partner up River Region Sports and WTLS,” Travis Jarome, Tuskegee Sports Information Director said. “This is an opportunity for our fans to not only hear Tuskegee football on the web and radio, but to also be able to watch games that they are unable to attend. We are excited about the future of the Tuskegee Sports Network.”

The opening contest against Clark Atlanta University will be heard on WTLS, as well as seen via the web, on September 5.

Wale Teams Up With First Lady Michelle Obama To Promote Higher Education

The former student at Robert Morris and historically black Virginia State University, which were both on football scholarships, Wale, a D.C. native and nationally known rapper, will perform a concert “as part of First Lady Michelle Obama’s 2015 Beating the Odds Summit” on Thursday, July 23 to promote education. (He also transferred to historically black Bowie State University to “pursue his rap career”, Wale eventually dropped out due to academic reasons.)

Terrence J, host of E! News, and also a graduate of historically black North Carolina A&T State University, will moderate a panel discussion, according to REVOLT. The event will focus on transitioning students from high school to college recognizing 130 college-bound students from “special needs”, and “under-served” experiences.

Photo: Vibe

From REVOLT:

“I’m beyond honored and grateful to be involved in the First Lady’s “Reach Higher” initiative and to have the opportunity to sit down with her, as well as perform for the kids of D.C. I believe that the youth are the first step in creating a better country, so to be involved in a program that aims to enrich their lives is truly the greatest reward,” Wale said in a statement provided to REVOLT. “Having grown up in Washington, D.C., being invited to the White House by the First Lady is a dream come true. Thank you to Mrs. Obama and her entire staff for this opportunity.”

From a statement from the Press Office, the “event will focus on sharing tools and strategies students can use to successfully transition to college and the resources they will need to complete the next level of their education,” and that the students being recognized are students who have, “overcome substantial obstacles to persist through high school and make it to college.”

Recently Wale, who said that the opportunity to be partners with Michelle Obama, and the White House is like “a dream come true”, was named to the HBCU Top 30 Under 30 list by the Buzz because of the impact he has had in music in just a short period of time, and the positive influence he has on historically black college campuses from Howard to PVAMU.

Wale is the only invited musical performer at the upcoming event, according to BET News.

“Having grown up in Washington, D.C., being invited to the White House by the First Lady is a dream come true,” Wale said.

He added: “Thank you to Mrs. Obama and her entire staff for this opportunity.”

Tommy G. Meade Jr. is the Editor-in-Chief at HBCU Buzz. Follow him on Twitter.

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Obama Discusses Criminal Justice Reform During NAACP National Convention

More than 3,000, including many from Northwest Philadelphia, filled the Pennsylvania Convention Center’s ballroom Tuesday, July 14. There, he said he would focus on three places to implement criminal justice reform: the community, the courtroom and the cell block.

First, the president drew spontaneous applause when he said that best place to stop one from going to jail “was to begin before it starts.” After outlining the need for education, jobs and employment and early interventions, he said the judicial system has its part to play. He, again, drew applause when he noted that there should be fair sentencing and probation practices that fit the crime.

“We should not tolerate issues in prison in any civilized country,” Obama said.

He listed things like overcrowding, gang activity, solitary confinement, rape and even jokes about sexual assault “should not be part of our culture” and should be deemed “unacceptable.” Rather, he said, the prison system should recognize that prisoners will eventually leave jail and should gain the resources while there to be employable and contributing members of society. So, Obama said he supported “ban the box” to enable ex-offenders to get job interviews, and then the president garnered a scattered standing ovation when he said all prisoners should be allowed to vote after serving their time.

Among those who were pleased with the president’s speech was Abu Edwards, of Germantown, a Wilberforce University graduate. Edwards previously volunteered for the president’s 2012 re-election campaign after graduating college.

“I love everything in President Obama’s speech,” Edwards said. “He talked about changing the whole criminal justice system and reallocating the resources. When I heard him say what that $80 billion could be used for — universal pre-kindergarten, doubling teacher’s salaries — then I knew this is something that has to be done.

“I believe that instead of focusing on the federal level where Democrats and Republicans do not seem to be able to work together, it will be up to the local and state Democrats to lead the way to pass municipal and state laws first. If we can do it at that level, then eventually it could become the law for the country,” Edwards said.

Pauline Bostic, who has been a 40-year member of the NAACP Branch 2219 in Mid-Manhattan, said she felt this was one of the president’s strongest speeches. She said it “was like flipping on the light switch” to illuminate the crisis and the solution.

“President Obama is a brilliant man,” Bostic said. “He has an analytical mind. You can tell that he thought this through from every conceivable angle. This is something that is really going to make a difference for black folks and I believe that it can be done.”  Continued…

SC State University to Close 9 Buildings to Save Money

scstate

ORANGEBURG, S.C. (AP) — South Carolina State University’s interim president says the school is shutting down nine aging buildings to save money.

The Times and Democrat of Orangeburg reports (http://bit.ly/1fan7DC ) that Franklin Evans told trustees Thursday that all the buildings are heated by an old, inefficient boiler system and some have other problems.

The buildings include four dorms and the I .P. Stanback Museum and Planetarium. Evans says all the items in the museum will be moved to a different building.

University officials say the university could save up to $1.7 million a year closing the buildings.

Trustees said Thursday they have also changed Evans’ title from “acting president” to “interim president” as a vote of confidence in the job he is doing.

Phylicia Rashad To Speak at Tuskegee University Class of 2015 Summer Commencement

55acfd3f02305.imageAn award-winning actress and educator, Phylicia Rashad, will address the Tuskegee University Class of 2015 during this year’s summer commencement, Friday, July 31.

The ceremony will be held at 10 a.m. CST in Tuskegee University Chapel. Rashad portrayed Claire Huxtable on “The Cosby Show”, a popular TV character whose appeal has earned her numerous honors and awards for more than two decades.

While television was a catalyst in the rise of Rashad’s career, she has also been a force on the stage, appearing both on and off-Broadway, often in projects that showcase her musical talent such as “Jelly’s Last Jam, “Into The Woods,” “Dreamgirls,” and “The Wiz”. She also has earned several accolades as a dramatic actress and director. She performed Violet Weston in “August Osage County”, Big Mama in Tennessee Williams’ “Cat on a Hot Tin Roof, Aunt Ester in August Wilson’s “Gem Of The Ocean,”(Tony Award nomination) and Queen Britannia in Shakespeare’s “Cymbeline” at Lincoln Center.

Rashad received both the Drama Desk and the Tony Award for Best Actress in a Play for her riveting performance as Lena Younger in the Broadway revival of Lorraine Hansberry’s “A Raisin In The Sun.” She appeared in Tyler Perry’s “Good Deeds”, and starred in Perry’s highly acclaimed film version of Ntozake Shange’s “For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow Is Enuf.”

George Cooper, Head of White House HBCU Office, Dies

tumblr_inline_nrrfbqJxq21tr2007_540The White House on Sunday announced the death of George Cooper, executive director of the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities. In his career, Cooper was on the faculty of several historically black colleges, and was president of one, South Carolina State University. He was named to the post in 2013, amid concerns that the White House had moved too slowly to fill the position after John Silvanus Wilson Jr. departed to become president of Morehouse College.

“George’s passing is a great loss for my administration, the HBCU and higher education communities, and for everyone that knew him,” said the statement from President Obama.

Savannah State University Gets ‘Green Light’ For $20.5M Building Projects

Savannah State Newsroom 

SAVANNAH – Savannah State University (SSU) has been approved for funding for a two College of Sciences and Technology (COST) buildings. The $20.5 million project received a green light for its second installment by the Georgia state legislature in their latest session.

The project consists of two related portions. The university purchased property on Livingston Avenue where a new marine sciences laboratory facility will be constructed. The property was formerly a banquet hall known as the Italian Club. The existing building is slated for removal.

The acreage includes deep-water access, which will allow marine sciences faulty and students to depart and return at any time, with ship-based research and instruction not dictated by tidal schedules. The building will provide approximately 17,000 square feet of new space with state of the art amenities.

Carol Pride, Ph.D., chair of the department of marine and environmental sciences, notes that the expansion is much needed to facilitate the growing program. The new building is slated to include laboratories for dolphin survey, necropsy, fish ecology, environmental toxicology, ocean acidification, coastal biophysics, instrumentation, and more.

It will also allow the research being done by professors, postdoctoral investigators and current SSU students to be housed in one place with dedicated, long-term lab set-ups. Additionally, the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) has an office on campus. The new plan includes a suite of offices and instructional facilities in the new building to support NOAA’s mission.

On the main campus, there will be a new two-story, 30,000 square foot building to house engineering technology and chemistry laboratories. The building will be comprised of labs and faculty space.

Civil engineering technology will gain labs for surveying, construction materials, solids structures and fluids. Electrical engineering technology will have learning space for digital systems, electronics, and power systems.

The chemistry program will also be expanded and included in this new building. The planned site is near Drew Griffith and Kennedy Fine Arts building.

Current projections expect groundbreaking to be sometime in early 2016.

Established in 1890, Savannah State University is the oldest public historically black college or university in Georgia and the oldest institution of higher learning in the city of Savannah. The university’s 4,900 students select majors from 27 undergraduate and five graduate programs in three colleges — Liberal Arts and Social Sciences, Business Administration and Sciences and Technology — and the School of Teacher Education.

Media Inquiries: email Loretta Heyward at heywardl@savannahstate.edu or call her at: (912) 358-3049

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Alabama State LB Berry Makes STATS Watch List

Alabama State’s Kourtney Berry has been named to the 2015 STATS FCS Preseason Defensive Player of the Year Watch List.

Berry was named to the All-Southwestern Athletic Conference first team as both a freshman and sophomore.

Article Image
Kourtney Berry pictured. (Photo: SWAC)

He was also the SWAC’s newcomer of the year in 2013 and a third-team All-American in 2014.

Berry is known as a sideline-to-sideline tackler who has had as many as 20 stops in a game. His 128 tackles in 2014 led the conference and his 105 in 2013 were the second-most.

Berry was able to combined for 25 tackles for loss in his first two seasons.

via SWAC.org

PVAMU Student-Athlete Named Miss Puerto Rico 2015

BIRMINGHAM, Ala. – Prairie View A&M University bowler, Destiny Velez, was named Miss Puerto Rico 2015 Saturday, July 11th in San Juan, Puerto Rico. Velez becomes the first student-athlete in Southwestern Athletic Conference history to compete for a Miss America title.

The freshman from Hurst, Texas, entered PVAMU with 13 years of competitive bowling experience. During her first collegiate bowling season, Velez bowled a career-high game of 206 during the SWAC Round Up.

Article Image
Destiny Velez pictured. (Photo: SWAC)

The Panthers went on to win their third consecutive SWAC championship. With a 2015 regular season record of 18-6, the Panthers grabbed a second place conference standing.

“Miss America represents the highest ideals. She is a real combination of beauty, grace and intelligence, artistic and refined. She is a type which the American Girl might well emulate.” Those words were spoken by Atlantic City Chamber of Commerce President Frederick Hickman more than 75 years ago, and they still ring true today. Miss America is a role model to young and old alike and a spokesperson, using her title to educate millions of Americans on an issue of importance to herself and society at large.

Destiny-Velez_t580

Today, Miss America travels approximately 20,000 miles a month, changing her location every 18 to 36 hours. She tours the nation reaching out to support her ideals, committed to helping others. Miss America is more than just a title. She is a woman who reflects a tradition of style, sophistication and service.

Preliminary nights for the Miss America 2016 competition will be September 8th through September 10th. The final competition will air Sunday, September 13 at 8 p.m. CST, live on ABC. For more information, visit missamerica.org.

via SWAC.org

UDC Announces Historic Agreement With University of Havana

The University of Havana or UH (in Spanish, Universidad de La Habana) is a university located in the Vedado district of Havana, Cuba. Founded on January 5, 1728, the University of Havana is the oldest university in Cuba, and one of the first to be founded in the Americas.

Upon returning from a week-long academic exchange visit to Cuba, Interim University President James E. Lyons has announced the recent signing of a Memorandum of Understanding between the University of the District of Columbia (UDC) and the University of Havana, indicating that both institutions desire “to establish collaborative relations between the two universities to promote friendship and to cooperate in a mutually beneficial association.”

The University of Havana located in the Vedado district of Havana, Cuba.

The agreement with the only public university in the nation’s capital was adopted by Lyons and Havana University Rector, Gustavo Jose Cobreiro-Suarez, and preceded by approximately one week Wednesday’s announcement by President Barack Obama that the United States and Cuba have agreed to open embassies in each other’s capitals and re-establish diplomatic relations for the first time in half a century.

Lyons describes the University of Havana, founded in 1728, as the island nation’s premiere scholastic institution and one of the first to be founded in the Americas.  He says the two universities have agreed to develop an exchange program among their academic and administrative staffs; researchers; visiting scholars; and graduate and undergraduate students.  He says collaborations are expected to begin in January, 2016.

“The initial areas of agreement will be between UDC’s David A. Clarke School of Law and the Law College at Havana University, where Fidel Castro attended law school more than 70 years ago,” says Lyons. “It was a privilege to spend several days at the law school, where we were briefed by the faculty on the Cuban constitution and statutory laws, their judicial system and several other substantive areas.”

Head over to HBCU Lifestyle to read more.

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Obama Pushes Reform and Becomes First Sitting President to Visit Prison

The NY Times

They opened the door to Cell 123, and President Obama stared inside. In the space of 9 feet by 10 feet, he saw three bunks, a toilet with no seat, a night table with books, a small sink, prison clothes on a hook, some metal cabinets and the life he might have had.

In becoming the first occupant of his high office to visit a federal correctional facility, Mr. Obama could not help reflecting on what might have been. After all, as a young man, he smoked marijuana and tried cocaine. But he did not end up with a prison term lasting decades like some of the men who have occupied Cell 123.

As it turns out, Mr. Obama noted, there is a fine line between president and prisoner. “There but for the grace of God,” he said somberly after his tour. “And that, I think, is something that we all have to think about.”

In visiting the El Reno prison, Mr. Obama went where no president ever had before, both literally and perhaps even figuratively, hoping to build support for a bipartisan overhaul of America’s criminal justice system. While his predecessors worked to toughen life for criminals, Mr. Obama wants to make their conditions better.

What was once politically unthinkable has become a bipartisan venture. Mr. Obama is making common cause with Republicans and Democrats who have come to the conclusion that the United States has given excessive sentences to many nonviolent offenders at an enormous moral and financial cost. This week, Mr. Obama commuted the sentences of 46 such prisoners and gave a speech calling for legislation revamping sentencing rules by the end of the year.

He came to the Federal Correctional Institution El Reno, about 30 miles west of Oklahoma City, for a firsthand look at what he is focused on. Accompanied by aides, correctional officials and a phalanx of Secret Service agents, Mr. Obama passed through multiple layers of metal gates and fences topped by concertina wire gleaming in the Oklahoma sun to enter the facility and talk with some of the nonviolent drug offenders who he argues should not be serving such long sentences. read more

Morgan State and Verizon Announce Partnership to Expose Black Males to STEM

Executives from Morgan State University and the Verizon Wireless Foundation announced a new partnership Tuesday in Baltimore aimed at exposing minority males to STEM via HBCU campuses.

The Minority Male Makers Program—which will be housed on the campuses of Morgan State University, North Carolina A&T State University, Jackson State University and Kentucky State University—pulls rising Black and brown seventh- and eighth-grade students from the communities surrounding the campuses into an immersive STEM training program on campus.

To Rose Kirk, president of the Verizon Foundation, an HBCU partnership made sense.

“We knew that we wanted a relationship with historically Black colleges and universities because it’s important that these kids are in an environment where they can see themselves and they can see success and they can see potential, and historically Black colleges and universities bring that and some,” said Kirk. “Not that you couldn’t see the same thing at a college that didn’t particularly serve this segment, but I think there’s something to be said when you are working alongside of other kids and coaches and mentors who look a lot like you. It gives you that sense of confidence, it gives you that sense of purpose, it helps you to understand what your full potential could be, so that’s why we chose [these schools].”

“These institutions, these HBCUs, we are [roughly] 100 in number, but there are only 14 engineering schools,” said Dr. David A. Wilson, president of Morgan State University. “And those 14 engineering schools are a small fraction of the 400 engineering schools in the country [and] are producing one-third of African-American engineering graduates.”

Head over to Diverse Education to read more.

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Central State Removes Bill Cosby’s Name From Sign

Central State University officials confirmed Friday that they have covered up Bill Cosby’s name on a campus sign in front of the Camille O. and William H Cosby Mass Communications Center.

“The university took an interim step to cover a sign bearing Cosby’s name amid the recent information that has come to light,” said Edwina Blackwell Clark, a spokeswoman for the university.

Cosby name removed from CSU sign

Cosby’s name does still remain on a separate sign inside the campus’ main entrance.

A final decision regarding the future of Cosby’s name on the campus could be made as soon as September, when the university’s trustees hold their next meeting.

Head over to The Dayton Daily News to read more.

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What Do You Think About Howard’s New Logo?

Howard University officials unveiled a  new logo for the school Thursday, a head-on, ominous-looking bison that the school’s president hopes conveys the idea of strength.

For the past 40 years, their bison logo was the same as that used by the Buffalo Bills and the school’s president, Wayne A.I. Frederick said, they wanted to design and copyright a logo just for Howard.

When people see the charging bison, Frederick said he hopes they think of strength and pride, pride in the school’s past and its contributions to U.S. history.

The symbolic change comes at time when the school, one of the country’s elite historically black universities, founded in 1867 and graduating many doctors, lawyers and researchers each year, has had lingering financial problems.

Howard’s old logo looked a lot like the Buffalo Bills’ logo. (John McDonnell/The Washington Post)

Two years ago, 75 jobs were eliminated, and last year, 200 more  were cut. In the spring, the university dropped an additional 84 staff positions, explaining that the reduction was “necessary to ensure the long-term financial stability” of the school.

Last month, Moody’s Investors Service cut Howard’s credit rating for the third time in three years, to a level signifying “substantial credit risk,” citing ongoing losses from the hospital and the university, and noting that it is relying in part on a line of credit from the bank for its cash flow.

The private university receives substantial federal funding, more than $200 million a year.

Frederick, who was named Howard’s 17th president in July — he had been serving in an interim capacity since the fall of 2013 — said that there are many measures of strength beyond finances, and that the school will be building on those, with the addition of quality faculty and an incoming freshman class that he expects to be the school’s largest in 15 years.

“There’s a lot of interest in a Howard education,” he said. “These are high-achieving students.”

“Getting a new symbol is exciting. It is the visual evidence of our Bison spirit and pride,” Shelley Davis, interim athletic director, said in a news release. “The new logo represents a fresh opportunity for our student-athletes to rally around the values that make Howard University great.”

Head over to The Washington Post to read more.

NACWAA Names Dillard Athletic Director “2015 Administrator of the Year”

(Kansas City, Mo.) Dillard University’s Director of Athletics Dr. Kiki Baker Barnes has been selected as the 2015 Administrator of the Year by the National Association of Collegiate Women Athletics Administrators (NACWAA). “I am humbled by this honor,” said Barnes. “I also appreciate my colleagues who nominated me and the opportunity that Dillard University has given me to serve and lead the athletics department.”

As Athletic Director (AD) at Dillard University, Barnes has distinguished herself as an outstanding professional, community servant and mentor.  She assumed the leadership role in Dillard’s athletic department in 2006.  She is currently the President of the Gulf Coast Athletic Conference (GCAC) and also serves on the National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics’ (NAIA) Athletic Directors Association Board of Directors and is chair for the NAIA’s Conduct and Ethics Committee.

“Dr. Barnes is not just a leader at Dillard,” said Dr. Walter Kimbrough, President of Dillard University.  “She is a leader for our conference and for athletics nationally.  Her energy and initiative have been great, and we are proud of her accomplishments.”

Within the last school year, Barnes has been selected as one of Girl Scout Louisiana East’s 2014 Women of Distinction, along with Gayle Benson, Mionne LaShe Gooch and Sally-Ann Roberts.  Barnes was named one of New Orleans Magazine’s “People to Watch Class of 2014” and GCAC AD of the Year twice, most recently in the 2013-14 school year.

“This award is not only about the influence that women have in athletics, but their impact in the community as well,” said Barnes.  “I have strived to be a servant leader.  My hope is that Dillard students and the entire NAIA will reap the benefits of my efforts,” Barnes added.  “To receive this honor going into my 10th year as the Athletic Director at Dillard University, which is synonymous with the 10th year anniversary of Hurricane Katrina, makes this award even special to me.”

Recent initiatives by Barnes and her staff include launching a new logo and website as well as iPhone and Android applications for the Dillard University athletics department.

The NACWAA is the premier leadership organization that empowers, develops, assists, celebrates, affirms, involves and honors women working in college sports and beyond.  NACWAA takes a proactive role in advancing women into positions of influence and powerfully shapes the landscape of women leaders.

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Iota Founder John D. Slade On The Wonderful Life of Founder Albert “Bus” Hicks

I have long considered the fact that quite a few of the Iota founders are still living among us today to be one of our greatest treasures – the ability to post on the wall of founders John D. Slade and Lonnie Spruill, Jr. on Facebook in the age of the Internet, and get a response is, to me, entirely awesome because the other four Black fraternities recognized by the National Pan-Hellenic Council are unable to do so. But on June 30, 2015, Albert “Bus” Hicks, one of twelve founders of Iota Phi Theta, passed away and entered Alpha Iota Omega Chapter leaving behind a great legacy – painted in brown and gold.

He was eighty-one.

In his book Iota Phi Theta: The Founding & Ascendancy – from the perspective of a founder of Iota about how one of the fastest growing Black fraternities in the country originally was conceived on the campus of Morgan State College, now known as Morgan State University just “within view of the memorial statue of Frederick Douglass” on the footsteps of Hurt Gymnasium in 1963 – John D. Slade writes about “Bus”, his time at Morgan, his activism during the civil rights movement, and the role he had played in the founding of the fraternity.

Slade writes:

Albert L. Hicks, Jr. “Bus” was born in Baltimore, August 25, 1934 to Albert L. Hicks, Sr. and Madge Downridge during the midst of the great depression. Hunger and poverty were growing on both sides of the Atlantic. There were more than four and a half million unemployed in the United States and demonstrations were held in major cities. Food was handed out to people in bread lines and soup kitchens. Yet despite the economic conditions, Albert “Bus” Hicks and his family lived fairly well in Baltimore.


Nearly seventy-five years before the election of the first Black president of the United States, and only seventy-seven years after the Dred Scott v. Sandford decision, Slade depicts the life of “Bus” growing up in Baltimore, and in a country that historically struggled with race relations:

At the time of “Bus” birth in 1934, fifty-two percent of blacks in Northern and Border States were on relief, compared with about twelve percent of whites. Blacks wanted work, but the American Federation of Labor’s organization rejected a resolution introduced by A. Phillip Randolph to end discrimination. The organization stated that no discrimination existed in the union. In Chicago, Arthur Mitchell became the first black Democrat of the 20th Century to be elected to Congress. In Washington, DC, an anti-lynch bill failed, as Roosevelt did not support it. In that year, American troops were withdrawn from Haiti.

Intrigued with history, Slade observes, “Bus” walked Morgan’s campus with a determination and confidence that was extremely natural, and pleasing:

He entered Morgan State College in 1956 and majored in History. “Bus” quickly became one of the most popular men on campus. He was well liked by other men because of his enthusiasm and daring. He was fun loving and always ready to party. The women were attracted to him because he was handsome, generous, and masculine.

Slade also writes about how he and “Bus” at one point of time had roomed together:

I had seen “Bus” Hicks as he drove his red convertible up and down the streets of East Baltimore. He was a few years older than I was and I wished I could be part of his well-dressed-guys, escorting the good-looking girls. We became associates when I moved into my first apartment right after I graduated from high school, and he was looking for a place to stay after one of his many separations from his wife.

[…]

“Bus” shared the rent with me in an apartment located a few blocks away from what is now the Iota Phi Theta National Headquarters Building, also known as Founders Hall. There we were in the small apartment. I was eighteen years old and brooding over the breakup with my high school sweetheart. While Albert “Bus” Hicks, a college man, was agonizing over his conflicts with his wife. Despite the state of both of our lovelorn minds, we talked a great deal about the racist society we had to navigate. The brutal murder of Emmett Till had caused us to ponder our own fate as we looked to the future. “Bus” Hicks could not predict the future, but he was determined that he was going to do what he could to bring about positive change for his people.

On what made him unique and really cut from a different cloth from the rest of his peers, Slade tells us why this nontraditional student, “Bus”, was still around in ’63 to see the founding of the fraternity:

It was his popularity, the stormy love affair between him and his bride, the subsequent divorce, and the fact that he always held down a job, were the reasons for his prolonged stay at Morgan and still being around in 1963 to be a founder of Iota Phi Theta.

On his activism during the turbulent 60s’ Slade writes:

Upon the arrival of the decade of the sixties, “Bus” was more than ready for the challenge in the field of civil rights. Having a keen interest in history he was also aware of history in the making as he focused in on: President Eisenhower’s signing of the bill authorizing judges to appoint referees to aid blacks to register and vote in federal elections – The “sit-in” era starting at a Woolworth lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina.

[…]

“Bus” Hicks participated in the civil rights struggle one way or another throughout the ’60s. Today he feels that Black Americans have not done a good job in motivating and pushing the younger people following them. A mistake he does not intend to make with his son Albert L. Hicks, III. Perhaps, too, this is why he was a founder of Iota Phi Theta.

In Iota, it is known that when the fraternity was only a small organization of like-minded individuals, the name commonly used to refer to the fraternity was “I Felt a Thigh”, which “Bus” most likely had something to do with. Slade writes:

Although it cannot be confirmed, it is likely that “Bus” may have had the initial idea for naming the Fraternity. He recalls telling Charles Briscoe to go to the library and get the Greek lettering closet to “I Felt a Thigh”. Knowing “Bus”, his humor, his appreciation of the female anatomy and his general “bodaciousness” at that time, it is probably factual.

Slade’s Iota Phi Theta: The Founding & Ascendancy is a remarkable read if you are a brother wanting to know better the twelve founders of Iota Phi Theta who challenged the traditional four Black fraternities at the time when many black students at colleges, in particular historically Black colleges, were fed up with being “second-class” citizens in the United States. Rest in peace, Bro. Albert “Bus” Hicks, Jr.