Obama to Speak to Benedict College Leaders

Greenville Online 

President Barack Obama is scheduled to visit South Carolina today for the first time since winning the presidency, holding a town hall at a private historically black college to address young leaders about expanding opportunities in their communities.

The president is scheduled to arrive at Columbia Metropolitan Airport around noon where he will be greeted by Gov. Nikki Haley and then travel to the campus of Benedict College in downtown Columbia for the town hall.

“The President will speak with young leaders about how they are working to expand opportunity in their own communities, and discuss how we can work together to ensure that young people have the tools they need to compete in a global economy and that all Americans benefit from our economic resurgence,” the White House said in a statement.

Read more here.

TSU Advances for the First Time Since 2009

After a season with more ups than downs, the Tennessee State University Women’s basketball team dominated Morehead State in the first round of the Ohio Valley Conference tournament to push their winning streak to eight games.

TSU (16-12, 12-4 OVC) entered the tournament with the best conference record in the East division, and the fourth best record overall, earning them the number three seed in the conference tournament.

The Lady Tigers have been standing behind their tough defense, in addition to making high percentage shots, which helped them to overcome three straight losses against conference foes.

In the game against the Eagles, TSU shot 30% from the field and 44% from behind the arch in the first half. This low shooting performance would set TSU back, as they went into half down three points.

The Lady Tigers would bounce back however, behind the leadership of senior guard Rachael Allen and second team OVC member Chelsea Hudson who would put TSU on top 59-58 midway through the second half, and never let up.

Hudson and Allen both scored 20 a piece for the Lady Tigers as they turned the second half into a trouncing of the MSU team, and would go on to win by 15 points.

This win pits TSU against a the strong number two seed, South Illinois University- Edwardsville, to determine who goes to the OVC Championship game.

28-Year-Old Creates App that Lets You Take Back Text Messages

Black Enterprise

There have been ongoing programs and initiatives set in place to close the STEM gender gap. Men dominate the field, and black women in particular are few and far in between the numbers. But things are changing, and young women like Maci Peterson make us very optimistic about the future.

Maci is the brainiac behind On Second Thought. The cleverly named innovation is an app that lets you take back text messages before the content is delivered to the receiving party. This app is a prayer answered to every college student who’s accidentally hit “send” to their moms and not their BFFs after a late Friday night/early Saturday morning.

BlackEnterprise.com caught up with the young innovator and former Spelman student to get all the details behind On Second Thought, her marketing and financing strategy for the new business, and how we can attract more girls of color to STEM. Read on.

So tell us exactly how On Second Thought works, and share some of the app’s cool features.

On Second Thought is very easy to use. After downloading the app from the Google Play Store, you go to the app’s settings, set On Second Thought as your default SMS app and determine the length of your “grace period”—up to 60 seconds. The “grace period” is the amount of time you have to swipe left and Ost (recall) a message after hitting “send.”

Another feature in development is “curfew.” It’s for those nights on the town when you know you might have a bit too much to drink. Just go to your On Second Thought settings, determine the time you’d like your “curfew” to start, and all messages you try to send after that time will be held until the next morning. Once the “curfew” expires, you can look back and see which messages you still want to send, and which ones you’re thankful didn’t go through.

How is On Second Thought performing?

We currently have over 4,200 users, expected to reach 5,000 very soon.

Read more here. 

UVI Play Portrays St. Croix Native and Activist Hubert Harrison

University of the Virgin Islands Newsroom

St. Croix native Hubert Harrison is widely considered a leader in the movement for equality and justice for African Americans during the early 20th century.  Harrison worked closely with W.E.B. Du Bois, Marcus Garvey, and other activists, but never received the acclaim or notoriety as those leaders.

His story will now be told in a new play “Hubert Harrison,” written and directed by David Edgecombe, UVI associate professor of Communication.

The play will take place at 8 p.m. on Friday, March 20 and Saturday, March 21, and 7 p.m. on Sunday, March 22, at the University of the Virgin Islands Little Theater on the St. Thomas campus.  On St. Croix, the play will be staged at 7 p.m. on Saturday, March 28, at the Savage Theater on the former Good Hope School campus, as part of UVI’s first Literary Festival and Book Fair.

Read more here.

Gold Nuggets’ Gathright Selected All-GCAC Again

XULA Newsroom

Repeat selection Whitney Gathright is Xavier University of Louisiana’s lone representative on the 2014-15 All-Gulf Coast Athletic Conference women’s basketball team.
Gathright, a 5-foot-4 junior guard from New Orleans and a graduate of John Curtis Christian School, leads the Gold Nuggets in a slew of statistical categories, including scoring (13.1 points per game), assists (111), steals (59), free-throw percentage (.785) and 3-point field goal percentage (.418).

Gathright also has climbed steadily up several XU career lists. She is the Gold Nuggets’ all-time leader in 3-point accuracy (.386), second in free-throw percentage (.769), fifth in made 3-pointers (110) and seventh in made free throws (269). She is 25th with 895 career points and will take aim at becoming the 20th Gold Nugget to reach 1,000.

If Gathright maintains her team scoring lead, she’ll become the fourth Gold Nugget to lead the team in scoring as a sophomore and junior. The others were Kay Williams (1978-79 and 1979-80), Henrietta Mitchell (1987-88 and 1988-89) and Jarryn Cleaves (2004-05 and 2006-07).

The All-GCAC women’s and men’s teams were announced Thursday at a GCAC team luncheon at the Crowne Plaza New Orleans Airport hotel in suburban Kenner, La. The GCAC Tournament will begin Friday in New Orleans.

The Gold Nuggets (16-14), the defending champion and winner of four of the past five GCAC tourneys, are seeded second. They’ll play seventh-seeded Tougaloo (4-22) at 5 p.m. at Dillard’s Dent Hall in the opening round.

Read more here.

North Carolina Central Closes Strong

North Carolina Central State University (NCCU) had strong contributions to close the season against rivals North Carolina A&T yesterday. Jordan Parks had 21 points, 13 rebounds and 2 blocks, Anthony McDonald had 16 points, and Nimrod Hilliard had 17 points and 12 assists. NCCU beat A&T 69-58.

Everything was falling for NCCU, they shot better than 50% from the field.

NCCU finishes 16-0 in MEAC play and 24-6 overall. This is the first time in school history that a men’s basketball team has completed the regular season undefeated in conference play.

It seems that NCCU will head to the tourney with a chip on their shoulder. All eyes are on the Eagles as they strive to soar further for a MEAC Championship and to be the nation’s cinderella team.

Stay tuned to The Buzz for the latest on North Carolina Central’s tourney bid, other HBCU Sports, and news.

 

Corporation Exploits Black Spending Dollars at HBCU Basketball Tournament

Atlanta Black Star 

The C.I.A.A. Basketball Tournament, featuring schools from 11 historically Black colleges, attracts tens of thousands of “fans” to Charlotte and brings in $30 million in revenue, the city says. Wonder if it includes the blatant, unexplained price-gouging of the Ritz Carlton.

Visitors to the luxury hotel’s lobby and lounge during the tournament were astounded when they noticed a 15 percent “CIAA service charge” to all checks.

“We thought, ‘That’s interesting,’” said Patrice Wright to Charlotte’s WBTV. She said she and her husband who enjoyed sweet potato fries and two drinks each. When the bill came, it included a charge of $10.20 for “CIAA service charge” in addition to the price of the items and sales tax. “We have frequented the establishment several times and never had any surcharge that was associated with any organization that was in town.”

This “Black tax” is the kind of systemic racism that plagues the Black community across the country and shows up incrementally on occasions where African-Americans are gathered in large numbers. It is powered by the pervasive notion that Black people don’t tip—or tip in accepted percentages. So in comes the “CIAA service charge,” which supports the racist view at the expense of paying Black consumers.

The television station contacted the Ritz-Carlton about the strange “CIAA service charge.”

In an email to WBTV, the hotel said: “Due to the size of the CIAA event, we instituted a modest 15% service charge for our lobby beverage servers, on whom the event places significant demands throughout the weekend.”

Charlotte hosts the ACC Tournament, NASCAR events and other major conventions. Wright said she’s never incurred an extra service charge specific to those events. “Is there an ACC championship surcharge?” she asked. “Is there a Speed Street surcharge? Is there a Belk Bowl surcharge?”

The station asked the Ritz Carlton those questions. The Ritz Carlton did not respond.

Read more here.

5 Reasons You Should Attend An HBCU

Choosing a college can be a tough decision. It’s hard to consider all the pros and cons when picking your school of choice. If HBCUs are on your list of possible colleges, and even if they aren’t, here are a few reasons why you should consider HBCU’s as a school of choice:

1. The Faculty Care

At most institutions of higher learning, students become numbers. Teachers don’t care to know their pupils on a first name basis or how they’re doing in their courses. At HBCUs, students have an opportunity to get more assistance from professors and faculty. Professors and staff are willing to go the extra mile to make sure you make the best academic decisions and to perform well in your studies.

2. Some of the greats have attended HBCUs

HBCUs are responsible for educating well respected and prominent people (see 37 notable HBCU alumni.) Celebrities, politicians, activists, TV personalities, actors, and many others have received their education from HBCUs.

3. ‘The Life’

When attending an HBCU, students get to experience some major fun outside of academics. Clubs and organizations, Homecomings, Spring Fests, and other campus happenings are always highlights of the HBCU experience. Participation in extracurricular activities at an HBCU is like no other because It allows you as the student to enjoy exciting and traditional activities. 

4. Sense of pride

HBCU’s are rich with history. The legacies that HBCU’s carry, makes you as a student want to add on to the lineage of your HBCUs’ reputation. Attending an HBCU is about so much more than you as an individual, it’s about continuing to carry out the excellence that the school already carries.

5. Networking 

Attending an HBCU gives you an opportunity to meet people who have similar goals to yours, but in in a smaller setting. This allows the relationship to become stronger and gives you ample time to develop your networking skills.

VICCC & CSAP to Host ‘Race & Reparations: VI Perspectives’ Forum

University of the Virgin Islands Newsroom

The public is invited to the “Race and Reparations: VI Perspectives” forum from 5:30 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Wednesday, March 18, in the Great Hall on the Albert A. Sheen Campus on St. Croix. The event is hosted by UVI’s Virgin Islands Caribbean Cultural Center (VICCC), which is nestled within the College of Liberal Arts and Social Sciences (CLASS), and the Center for Spirituality and Professionalism. The forum is being held to commemorate of UVI’s Charter Week and VI History Month.   

The panelist are Attorney Cardinal Mill, Attorney Genevieve Whitaker, NebKaRa Herishetapheru and Dr. Chenzira Davis Kahina.

The United Nations has designated Jan. 1, 2015 to Dec. 31, 2024 as the International Decade for People of African Descent. This forum is part of the CLASS’ and VICCC’s launch of the United Nations’ designation.

Use this link to read and share details provided on Facebook or visit the VICCC Facebook page at https://www.facebook.com/vicaribbean.culture

Read more here.

 

Michael Brown’s Family Announces Plans To Pursue Wrongful Death Lawsuit

Huffington Post

The family of Michael Brown will file a civil lawsuit against the city of Ferguson, Missouri, and former Ferguson Police Officer Darren Wilson, an attorney for the family announced Thursday.

The news comes just one day after the U.S. Department of Justice officially announced its decision not to file federal charges against Wilson for fatally shooting Brown last July.

In a press conference, family attorney Anthony Gray expressed the family’s disappointment in the Justice Department’s decision and announced the next legal actions they plan to take.

“We are officially formulating a civil case that we anticipate will be filed very shortly on behalf of the family,” Gray said. “We plan to demonstrate in a court of law that Wilson’s choice to use deadly force was unreasonable and unnecessary.”

Brown’s parents, Lesley McSpadden and Michael Brown Sr., attended the conference but did not make any comments. However, their frustration with the department’s decision is widely shared by many local officials, residents and protesters — some of whom took to the streets Wednesday evening to demonstrate their outrage.

The criticism was further fueled by a scathing report released by the Justice Department, also on Wednesday. The report revealed that the city of Ferguson had engaged in unconstitutional patrolling practices that routinely discriminated against African-Americans. It also disclosed emails proving racial bias on behalf of Ferguson police officials.

“[It] really just confirms what many of us already knew and what has been experienced by many African-Americans here in the St. Louis region for quite some time,” St. Louis Alderman Antonio French told HuffPost Live on Wednesday, referring to the report.

Read more.

Tuskegee University President Takes Progressive Path

Diverse Education 

What in the world is a W.E.B. Du Bois scholar doing sitting atop the university that Booker T. Washington helped to create?

It’s a question that Dr. Brian L. Johnson has been hearing since he took the helm of Tuskegee University last June as the school’s seventh president.

“­There were always two traditions within the African-American community. Both Du Bois and Washington were working in concert, no matter what the perceived differences were,” Johnson says, as he glances at a full-length portrait of Washington that adorns his office wall. “­They were still alive at the same time, grinding it out and addressing the needs of the people.”

Johnson, who has authored and edited seven books, including two on Du Bois, has great admiration for these two towering Black intellectuals who — despite their public feuds about the best techniques for improving the plight of Blacks in the years after slavery — managed to find time to sometimes collaborate, even as they worked to secure their individual legacies in the annals of American history.

“It’s not an either/or; it’s not a binary opposition,” Johnson says, adding that the two rivals corresponded with each other across the years and even had dinner in 1903 when Du Bois taught a summer course at Tuskegee. “We tend to fictionalize and think they just fought each other.”

Unconventional choice

To some, Johnson may have appeared the unconventional choice to become president of the private, historically Black university founded in 1881 after Reconstruction.

An expert in 17th to 19th century American literature, he did not have the academic expertise in the STEM fields, which has traditionally set Tuskegee apart from other HBCUs. And unlike many of his predecessors, he was just 40 years old when he was unanimously tapped by the school’s Board of Trustees to lead the rural Alabama institution.

“You hear people say, ‘I’ve been in higher education for 30 years,’ but it could be that you’ve had the same experience 30 times,” says Johnson, who scoffs at the idea that he’s too young to preside over a $147 million annual operation with an endowment of about $118 million.

“I have diversity in my portfolio. I’ve done a budget module; I’ve been a liaison for accreditation. I’ve handled fiscal budgets,” he says, as he points to the five pillars of his administration: strategic priorities, first-year goals, revenue-generating and budget-impact decisions, new university-wide initiatives, as well as plans to launch a capital campaign in the near future.

It’s a job that Johnson, who was raised by a single mother in the tough inner city of Durham, North Carolina, in the 1980s, says he’s been looking to assume since his days as an undergraduate at Johnson C. Smith University.

“The calling is progressive,” says Johnson, who had first aspired to be an eighth-grade English teacher before he was encouraged to consider higher education. “And then when you have presidents say, ‘You can be a college president. You have the elements,’ and you realize that it is possible.”

After earning a master’s degree in English from the University of Wisconsin–Madison, Johnson headed to the University of South Carolina, where he was the first African-American male in the school’s history to be awarded a Ph.D. in American literature in 2003. One of his first jobs after receiving his master’s was coordinating the Ronald McNair program on campus.

“I’ve always held both roles simultaneously,” he says of his career, in which he’s held appointments as both a teacher and administrator at Gordon College, Claflin University and Johnson C. Smith University.

Ambitious, he secured several coveted fellowships, including one sponsored by the American Council on Education that took him to the Lilly Family School of Philanthropy at Indiana University-Purdue University Indianapolis.

Prior to his arrival at Tuskegee, Johnson was the interim vice president for strategic planning and institutional effectiveness and assistant provost/assistant vice president for academic affairs at Austin Peay State University in Clarksville, Tennessee.

Read more here.

Norfolk State Student Shot With BB Gun

An anonymous Norfolk State University (NSU) student wants to be heard correctly. The student was assaulted with a BB gun. Upset with the fact that a news outlet misreported her incident, the student reached out to The Buzz to tell her story.

On February 25th the female student was heading to lunch on NSU’s campus. While in her car directly across from Babbette Smith South, (an all-male freshman dorm) she heard a “pop” thinking she could’ve ran over something.

Once parked and out of the car, she heard the pops several more times and then felt a pain in her right buttocks. She soon realized that she had been shot by what she deemed to be a group of shooters because she could hear multiple people laughing and joking about the situation from where the shots came from. The group then proceeded to throw a bottle of urine at her which did not hit her. WTKR reported that she in fact was hit with the bottle, even though the victim has “repeatedly” said that she wasn’t.

Norfolk City Police arrived to the scene and they deemed the incident a university matter. The case was then handed it over to NSU police , no action was taken to lock the dorm down so that the weapon could be confiscated properly.

Their search was conducted while students were free to come in and out of the dormitory. The victim stated “They did not lock the building down at all or notify students to stay away from the area. Rather, I watched as people were able to leave the building while they searched the dorm. Because of no building or campus lockdown I am sure the shooter(s) escaped. Campus police didn’t find the weapon. Those students at this very moment still have that BB Gun.”

The incident which happened last Wednesday has received local media attention but the victim said the school has done little to nothing about the shooting. “I was never followed up with after the fact. On Monday I had to call campus police and ask why I hadn’t been. I was told by campus police that the detective on my case was busy ‘tending to other cases’. Quite frankly, I don’t know what could’ve been more important than such a violent attack.“

She stated “I don’t even have a case number.”

According to the victim, NSU campus has a zero tolerance policy for bullying and BB guns. She stated that the first time she received any follow up information was Tuesday March 3rd. “That is nearly a week later!” The student says NSU failed to report the incident in the daily crime log for six days. NSU chief of police Theodore Price, recently released this statement Tuesday, March 3rd:

“The BB gun case remains under investigation. A report of the incident was taken, however, it was not included in the daily log. This was an error on our part, and lessons learned from this experience are that we must ensure that all staff are aware of the Clery Act reporting requirements as well as our responsibility to provide timely communication to the university community in emergency situations. Key personnel will begin meeting tomorrow to review our emergency policies and procedures. Norfolk State University is committed to creating a safe and inviting atmosphere for all students, faculty, staff and guests.”

When asked in an interview with HBCU Buzz, why she chose to remain anonymous the victim stated,

“I want my voice to be heard but I don’t want my identity to be associated with it. I don’t want this to this to hinder me for applying for graduate school, I don’t want my peers to mistreat me or administration to mistreat me.”

Mississippi HBCU Alumni Lobby For More Funding

(MPB Online) Alumni from three historically black universities in the state have teamed up with members of the black caucus to lobby for more funding. The coalition is called Mississippi HBU Triangle. Their list of concerns include money for new dorms at Mississippi Valley, faculty and staff housing at Alcorn and 2 million dollars for Jackson State’s School of Public Health. Democrat Gregory Holloway, Vice Chair of the House University and Colleges Committee says, they want funding cut from Alcorn in 2001 restored.

“Funding was cut back in 2001 and also cut from Mississippi State University. But, that funding has been restored to Mississippi State University, and we still have not fully restored the funding to to Alcorn State University.” said Holloway.

The group met with leaders of both the house and senate appropriations committees. Republican Herb Frierson chairs the house side. He says they can fund some of the requests in this year’s budget, but not all of them.

[quote_center]”From the house, we feel like we can do something at Valley, at least bare minimum fix one of the dormitories this year, possibly both of them. We can start looking at some faculty housing things. What we’re going to propose there, is that we get that into the next bond plan. I think we’re going to be able to do one or two more of these things, I just don’t want to single them out.” said Frierson.[/quote_center]

The Mississippi HBU Triangle is also seeking a 5 percent pay increase for faculty and staff.

This article Originally appeared on MPB Online

Afiya Fredericks, Howard University Professor Returns to Woodson Jr. H.S. to Mentor Students

(V.I. Source Publications) – After lecturing at the University of the Virgin Islands (UVI) recently, Howard University Professor Afiya Fredericks stopped over at the John H. Woodson Junior High School, her alma mater, to share with students her experiences and journey towards earning a Ph.D. In her presentation, Dr. Fredericks outlined the steps she had taken to become successful and encouraged the junior high school students to follow closely in her footsteps.

During a lengthy question and answer session, she fielded enquiries about financial aid for her schooling, her diet, the car she drives and if she ever was a contestant in a beauty pageant. Asked about the relationship she has with students who were older than she is, the young Developmental Psychology professor said, “I give them the respect they deserve, and they also give me respect.”

Fredericks went on to extoll the benefits of a prudent living that has brought her to the present junction in life. She credited her mother, Myrtle Fredericks, who was sitting in the classroom, for cementing well-balanced values and virtues in her during her formative years. Her mother, a retired John H. Woodson Jr. High social studies teacher, was recruited back to the classroom to fill a critical post. Fredericks said her mother told her not to be lured by name brand clothing, fancy gizmos and fast food, and that she was never encouraged to participate in pageants. Read Full

Cuba Gooding Takes Legal Action to Protect HBCUs In Florida

(Atlanta Daily World) By Donald James – Cuba Gooding Sr., long-time lead vocalist of the Grammy-nominated R&B ensemble, The Main Ingredient, and Father of Academy Award winner Cuba Gooding Jr., thought it was a great idea to hold two benefit concerts in Orlando late last year during the annual Florida Classic Weekend – a historic and annual college football game between Bethune-Cookman University and Florida A&M University – to raise needed money for the two historically black colleges. Both schools agreed.

Gooding is accusing executives of The Dr. Phillips Center (who took over the day-to-day operations of The Bob Carr Theater) of multiple mistakes and failure of its obligations as a venue, most glaringly, to offer viable opportunities for people to purchase tickets to the benefit concerts, via Internet or the venue’s box-office.

In a gesture to correct its many wrongs, Dr. Phillips’ executives, according to Gooding, offered to donate $1,000 to each of the two black universities, to which Gooding, said, “No Way!.” He finds the offer insulting, not only to himself and his family, but to the two schools as well. Gooding said, “If Dr. Phillips Center had good intentions to help the two black schools, the venue would not have made so many unprofessional mistakes, blunders, and oversights.” Read Full Atlanta Daily World

Howard University Named Peace Corps’ 2015 Top Producer of Volunteers

(Howard University) Howard University has been named the Peace Corps’ 2015 top producer of volunteers among Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) for the fourth consecutive year.

“When Howard students and alumni travel to other countries as Peace Corp volunteers, they represent Howard’s long history of leadership in cultivating understanding through education and service,” said Howard University President Wayne A.I. Frederick. “They return with a greater understanding of the world around them, which helps them to excel in their careers and fields of study.”

Howard made history in the previous year’s rankings as the first-ever HBCU to appear on the agency’s national list of top volunteer-producing colleges and universities. The University has maintained its foothold and was ranked No. 24 this year among medium-sized schools.  With 13 alumni currently serving as Peace Corps volunteers, the total number of Howard alumni to have served has risen to 221.  Howard is also the fourth-highest producer of Peace Corps volunteers in the District of Columbia.

[quote_box_center]The Peace Corps provides an indispensable opportunity for young people out of college to put their unique skills to work making a difference for communities around the world,” Peace Corps Director Carrie Hessler-Radelet said. “Volunteers make lasting change by living and working at the grassroots level in their communities of service and using their talents to tackle some of the most critical challenges in international development.[/quote_box_center]

Download a complete list of this year’s rankings, please visit http://www.peacecorps.gov/media/statsfacts/tc2015/

This article originally appeared on Howard University’s Website