Tina Turner is making headlines around the globe for gracing the cover of Vogue Germany. This is the first time the 73-year-old grande dame of rock and R&B has graced a cover for the storied magazine franchise.
For the April 2013 issue of the international imprint, the “legendary singer is seen rocking her signature honey blonde-highlighted hair, a silky navy blouse and what appears to be a black skirt for Vogue’s German edition, which was shot by Claudia Knoepfel and Stefan Indlekofer and styled by Nicola Knels,” writes Julee Wilson of The Huffington Post.
Turner is being praised for looking fierce on the cover, as is Vogue Germany itself for selecting a mature woman as a positive innovation. “It’s kind of a surprising choice for VogueGermany, which generally prefers young starlets and models-of-the-moment for its cover features–but it’s a welcome one,” opines Hayley Phelan of Fashionista.com.
Langston University is a land grant historically Black institution of higher learning.
The Oklahoma Senate on Tuesday passed a measure that would allow Oklahoma State University to offer accounting courses at its Tulsa campus, something currently reserved for Langston University.
Senate Bill 59, by Sen. Brian Crain, now heads to the House after securing approval by a vote of 36-10.
Currently, only Langston is allowed to offer courses in accounting, sociology and psychology in Tulsa, said Crain, R-Tulsa.
Many students take a bus to Oklahoma State University in Stillwater to take the accounting courses rather than take them from Langston University in Tulsa, Crain said.
The Senate also passed Senate Bill 58, also by Crain, that makes it optional rather than mandatory that Langston offer courses in Tulsa.
Sen. James Halligan, R-Stillwater, said the situation has been a long-standing issue in Tulsa and needs to move forward toward a resolution. Halligan is the former president of Oklahoma State University.
The measures passed despite criticism from Sen. Jabar Shumate, D-Tulsa, who said the measures run afoul of an agreement the state made with the Office of Civil Rights with the U.S. Department of Education regarding Langston University following a complaint that was filed.
Shumate said he was concerned that the measures could jeopardize federal funding to other higher education institutions in the state.
Likewise, Langston University President Kent J. Smith, Jr. said neither measure was favorable to Langston.
He said the university has no intention of not offering courses in Tulsa.
If OSU in Tulsa offers accounting, it will create a very serious problem, Smith said.
A man charged in the hazing death of a Florida A&M drum major is going to plead guilty and cooperate with prosecutors, his attorney said Friday.
Caleb Jackson, 23, Jackson was arrested and charged with felony hazing resulting in the death of FAMU drum major Robert Champion.
Caleb Jackson will plead guilty to felony hazing and manslaughter as soon as April, attorney Chuck Hobbs said at a hearing at the Orange County Courthouse.
Jackson currently is being held in the Leon County Jail for violating his probation.
“He has two hopes, the first being able to help the state with respect to understanding and getting a clearer picture of what happened the night Robert Champion died,” Hobbs said. “He is hopeful that he can play some small part in bringing closure to the family.”
Hobbs said no promises or guarantees have been made by prosecutors regarding Jackson’s cooperation.
“It would be his hope that by cooperating, such would bode well when it comes time for his sentencing,” Hobbs said.
Jhamerius Darshawn Mack, 20, of Raymond is charged with two felony counts of cyberstalking and is jailed at the Hinds County Adult Detention Center. / Special to The Clarion-Ledger
A 20-year-old Raymond man is charged with two counts of felony cyberstalking for allegedly threatening Jackson State University President Carolyn Meyers via social media, officials said today.
Jhamerius Darshawn Mack of Raymond, who investigators say is not a JSU student, is jailed at the Hinds County Detention Center at Raymond, JSU spokesman Eric Stringfellow said today. He confirmed that the threats were made against Meyers, named JSU’s first female chief in December 2010.
JSU’s Department of Public Safety said today that Mack’s arrest March 5 stemmed “from tips received about threatening statements posted on social media sites.” JSU officials said in a news release that the FBI, Hinds County District Attorney’s office and the Mississippi Attorney General’s office assisted with the investigation.
The threat was “bodily harm via a Facebook post,” Stringfellow said.
Mack’s Facebook page says that he is a 2013 pre-dentistry graduate of Hinds Community College. The last postings on the page are for March 4, the day before his arrest.
Hinds County Assistant District Attorney Jamie McBride said his agency is familiar with the JSU investigation, and that charges against Mack will be brought by prosecutors for consideration before a Hinds County grand jury..
In a news release, JSU Department of Public Safety officials would not release additional details citing the ongoing investigation.
Stringfellow said that security at the Administrative Tower on campus, which houses Meyers’ office, had been upgraded before the Christmas holidays, but that it had nothing to do with threats against her.
“Everyone must sign in,” he said. “It’s just a change in policy. There is a security guard assigned to the building, and he is stationed there.”
Louis Farrakhan is the leader of the largely African-American religious movement the Nation of Islam.
The national leader of the Nation of Islam, The Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan, will address the university community during a three-day visit, March 20-22. Invited by the Tuskegee University Muslim Student Association and the Black Belt Deliberative Dialogue, the leader’s visit is part of an ongoing series of addresses at HBCU campuses.
In addition to meeting with students and faculty, he will speak to Tuskegee University about education, the need for Historically Black Colleges and Universities, and his plan to improve the economic conditions of black Americans. There will also be a viewing of the film, “World Friendship Tour,” a documentary about the leader’s post-Million Man March visits to Muslim nations. Afterward, there will be a question and answer session with Farrakhan.
A former musician and entertainer, the minister became a follower of Elijah Muhammad in 1955 and has been the leader of the Nation of Islam since the late 1970s. He is best known for leading the Million Man March on Washington in 1995 and the Million Family March in 2000. In 1979, he founded The Final Call, an internationally circulated newspaper that reports on the activities and interests of the religious organization. He is also the author of “A Torchlight for America,” a book which applied the guiding principles of justice and good will to the problems perplexing America.
Tuskegee University is an independent and state-related institution of higher education. Its programs serve a student body that is coeducational as well as racially, ethnically and religiously diverse.
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Rep. Clyburn is the Assistant Democratic Leader, the number three Democrat in the House of Representatives.
When it was established in 1998, the James E. Clyburn University Transportation Center in Orangeburg, South Carolina was supposed to be a major hub for transportation, education, and research in the country. It was also a chance for Rep. Jim Clyburn—an alumnus of South Carolina State University, where the center is housed—to restore “a unique mission” to his alma mater, according to an op-ed he wrote in the Charleston Post & Courier in 2010.
Clyburn, who is the third most powerful Democrat in the House, secured the initial funding and a federal designation for the center created in his name.
Despite the center’s creation in 1998, construction did not begin until 2010. And since then, only one building has gone up. Four others remain unfinished. Some $24 million has been spent, and yet no transportation research is taking place.
The center also lost its funding eligibility because “federal officials were not pleased with SCSU’s performance,” according to a 2011 report by the South Carolina legislative audit council. That audit found various reasons for the construction delays—some of them bordering on the absurd, such as that the university did not verify that it owned the land it planned to build on. Questions were also raised about the use of funds for travel expenses.
But the congressman thinks the problem is political.
“The facility and the school have become victims of vicious manufactured attacks by political partisans,” Clyburn said in a statement provided to Whispers, though he declined to share who those partisans might be.
For years, the center was plagued by an unsubstantiated rumor—and no one seems to be sure where it started—that $50 million had gone missing, a rumor the legislative audit council sought to put to rest in its report.
“But it still comes up in stories,” John Rosenthall, the university’s vice president of research and economic development, told Whispers with a sigh.
Langston University will celebrate its 116th Founders Day Tuesday, March 12 in Langston, Oklahoma. The event will take place at 11:00 a.m. in I.W. Young Auditorium.
The Honorable Rick Brinkley (R), who is currently serving as a member of the Oklahoma Senate, will be the guest speaker.
Celebrating 116 years of rich tradition and developing leaders from a diverse student body through excellent teaching, research, community service and public and private sector partnerships, the university will also commemorate the inauguration of Dr. Kent J. Smith, Jr. on March 14, the university’s 16th president.
Founded as Oklahoma’s only historically black college or university (HBCU), Langston University is dedicated to enhancing the intellectual, social and economic condition of the students it serves by affording them excellent teaching, research and services programs and opportunities.
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Provost Larry Robinson has served as interim president ever since James H. Ammons resigned in July.
Florida A&M University’s search for a new president will be shifting into high gear next week. It’s possible at least one finalist for the position will be on campus for an official visit late next week.
The presidential search committee, made up mostly of members of the Board of Trustees, is meeting next Monday and Tuesday at FAMU’s law school in Orlando.
No deadline for applying to be FAMU’s next president has been established. According to FAMU officials, the search will remain open until a new president has been hired.
Trustee Dr. Spurgeon McWilliams, vice-chair of the search committee, said the late notice of next week’s meetings in Orlando will prevent him from attending. He has been part of several presidential searches at FAMU, and actually cast the decisive seventh vote in 2007 when trustees decided 7-6 to hire James H. Ammons, who resigned in July. Provost Larry Robinson has served as interim president.
Source.
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David J. Johns graduated with honors from Columbia University in 2004 with a triple major in English, Creative Writing and African American Studies.
David J. Johns, the former senior education policy advisor to the Senate Committee on Health, Education, Labor and Pensions (HELP), has been appointed as the executive director of the White House Initiative on Educational Excellence for African Americans.
As executive director, Johns will work with federal agencies and with communities to identify the best practices to improve black student achievement.
“David’s expertise will be critical in helping to address the academic challenges that many African American students face, and I am delighted to have him on our team,” said U.S. Education Secretary Arne Duncan. “His wealth of knowledge and passion will help the Department move forward in its quest to ensure that all children are college and career ready.”
The Atlanta Chapter of Clark Atlanta Alumni Association will host a ‘Employment Opportunity and Business Expo’ Saturday, March 16, 2013 from 11:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m. in Atlanta, Georgia.
Located in the CAU Student Center, Multi-Purpose Room, the event is created to connect employers with qualified candidates and business owners with educated consumers.
The Spheromak Fusion Reactor at Florida A&M University’s Center for Plasma Science and Technology
Florida A&M University’s Center for Plasma Science and Technology in Tallahassee, Florida isn’t focused on collecting solar power, but making it. In July 2012 the Center’s fusion reactor reached the first phase toward duplicating what happens on the surface of the Sun.
FAMU’s fusion reactor is locked behind three doors in a large dust-free, clutter-free garage. About the size of an office cubicle, the squat aluminum cylinder topped with a copper tower is far from intimidating. Its potential, on the other hand, is downright scary. The little guy named Spheromak is on a role having reached the first phase – called first plasma – toward generating an extreme amount of energy last summer. But what does that mean and why is that exciting?
“That means basically that the vacuum is working to a certain extent. That means that the capacitor banks are firing. That’s that the electron gun is properly firing and getting the Plasma in the chamber. So I’d say we’re probably half way to getting the Spheromak Plasma now. But we know the machine is capable of doing that,” says the Center’s Director, Dr. Charles Weatherford.
In other words, all systems are a go. Partially. There are still some hurdles to cross and Dr. Weatherford projects a year before they reach the second phase when the plasma takes the right shape of a Spheromak sphere – that’s what the machine is named after.
“A phenomenon occurs in these machines called magnetic reconnection. That’s where you get, basically, spontaneous lightning bolts inside the machine. And what is does is it sorta depleting the spheromatic shape of the Plasma,” says Weatherford.
Jairus Rayshawn Dantzler, 18, has been arrested for an alleged sexual assault on the campus of Paine College in Augusta Georgia.
Dantzler face multiple charges, including rape, burglary, and obstruction of a law enforcement officer.
“As we move the campus from campus safety to a campus police department, we’ll further strengthen our abilities to deter people from coming on campus and taking up things that they’er not supposed to be taking up,” said Brandon Brown, vice president of institutional advancement at Pain College.
Senior guard Olivia Allen (Kildeer, Ill.) had nine points during the Lady Pirates 51-30 win over North Carolina Central at the HU Convocation Center.
The Hampton University women’s basketball team closed out the 2012-13 regular season with its 16th straight win on Monday, beating North Carolina Central 51-30 at the HU Convocation Center.
The Lady Pirates (25-5, 16-0 MEAC) went unbeaten in the MEAC for the first time in program history and became the first MEAC team to run the table in conference play since Coppin State in 2006-07.
Hampton also went 11-0 at home this season.
The three-time defending champion will be the No. 1 seed in the 2013 MEAC Tournament, which will be held Monday through Saturday at the Norfolk Scope Arena.
Question: Why Bennett College: How has Bennett help you toward the work you do today and the people you interact with daily?
Answer: Attending Bennett really helped me become more tolerant when it comes to certain situations I am faced to deal with.
Question: At your website you mentioned how your parents didn’t allow you to watch TV: Did this help or hinder you, and should more people especially in the black community, adopt this practice for their child’s own success?
Answer: Yes more people especially in the black community because it takes away from study time. When you watch too much TV it takes away your ability to think for yourself especially at a young age. You’re so focused on what these characters are doing on these shows every single week you start to become consumed with their roles without even noticing it.
Question:How did Tameka Raymond change your life?
Answer: She told me what I needed to do to get where I wanted be, she told me it wouldn’t be easy at all but if I really wanted it to push forward and do it.
“Beauty is in the eye of the beholder.” — Eny Oh
Eny Oh fashion
Question: You wanted to be a lawyer and now you’re elsewhere, so what’s your take on focusing on what you want to do for the world rather than what you want to be?
Answer: I realized becoming a lawyer wasn’t what I was passionate about. Beauty and Fashion are my passions so I choose to go in that route without thinking twice about it. It wasn’t an easy choice but I couldn’t be happier with my choice.
Question:Looking for any HBCU students to intern?
Answer: I’m always looking for interns. To apply to become an intern please visit www.beholderel.com, click on about us and then click on the internship tab.
Eny Oh is a graduate of Bennett College, a small, private, historically Black liberal arts college for women. For further information, contact Oh at:
Texas Southern University President Dr. John M. Rudley is leading the NCAA’s Advisory Group that is assisting with academic challenges that impact Limited Resource Institutions (LRI). The formation of this advisory group represents a collaborative and proactive effort between HBCU institutions and the NCAA to serve as a conduit to communicate issues and concerns that may impact LRIs collectively within the Academic Performance Program (APP).
Specifically, this group serves in an advisory capacity to the Committee on Academic Performance (CAP) on policy-related issues. The rationale for the formation of this group is based on an in-depth examination of APR trends indicating that a higher proportion of Historically Black Colleges and universities (HBCU) and other LRI teams are subject to APP penalties.
Rudley has been leading the charge to get the attention of NCAA to let them know that “one size doesn’t fit all,” as it relates to resources, infractions, sanctions, etc. Rudley is pleased to have the opportunity to lead and work with this group.
“The goal of increasing the graduation and completion rates for student athletes is strongly supported by every college president. The issue is how quickly can institutions with limited resources, such as the HBCUs, add the infrastructure critical to making the improvements in Academic Performance Rate (APR),“ said Rudley.
To date, the advisory group has provided recommendations to the CAP based on concerns that limited-resource institutions are at a disadvantage due to the amount of resources available to make academic changes to increase the APR. The transition recommendation allows limited-resource institutions – teams in the bottom 15 percent of all Division I member institutions in resources – more time to make meaningful change for academically underperforming teams. The LRI would have until 2016 to implement the APR minimum score of 930. This is an additional two years longer than the original NCAA proposal. The other recommendations support the ongoing APR improvement of limited-resource institutions and facilitate working towards meeting the established benchmark of a score of 930 for all teams.
In collaborative meetings with chancellors and presidents from Historically Black Colleges, several additional issues are under discussion, including an update on the proposed changes to the APP penalty structure, discussion regarding the funding and use of the NCAA Division I Academic Performance Program Supplemental Support Funds, and the creation of an advisory group to the Committee on Academic Performance, that will be composed of chancellors, presidents, faculty athletics representatives and others.
TSU’s current APR:
15 of 16 athletic teams at TSU will have scores that exceed 930 highlighted by 7 teams that will have scores in excess of 950, with 8 sports over 970.
Since the 2008-09 academic year, Texas Southern University has gradually seen scores for 15 of its sponsored sports improve significantly. Overall for the 2011-2012 academic year, the program has a combined APR score of 967.
Central State University President Cynthia Jackson-Hammond was officially installed as the eighth person and the first woman to lead the historically black school in its 126 years during an inauguration ceremony Thursday.
Jackson-Hammond, who has held the university’s top office since July 1, was presented the presidential medallion during the ceremony, which drew about 850 students, staff, faculty, alumni and other supporters. Her ceremony was timed to correspond with the university’s Charter Day celebration.
Speakers at the event asked those attending to pledge their support for Jackson-Hammond’s vision for the school’s future.
“You are truly the right person for these times and the right person for this university,” said former President John Garland, a 1971 alumnus who led the university for 15 years before retiring in June.
“A new president speaks to the renewal of an institution,” he said. “We are getting better. We are becoming stronger. And we are being more focused on academic excellence.”
Jackson-Hammond’s former colleagues who attended the ceremony praised her style, grace, social and leadership skills and “intolerance for mediocrity.” Her career in higher education date back to 1987, and most recently she was a lead consultant for H&H Educational Consultants and provost at Coppin State University in Baltimore.
Since taking over as president, Jackson-Hammond — who was just named one of 25 leading women in higher education nationwide by Diverse: Issues in Higher Education — has worked to establish a new culture on campus around the tenants of service, protocol and civility.
She also established six “compelling priorities” for the university: to provide a quality academic experience for students; recruit those who are academically and financially prepared for college; improve retention rates; reduce students’ time to degree; produce graduates who have the knowledge, skills and dispositions for advanced studies or professional careers; and operate in an efficient and effective manner. Read FULL