Clark Atlanta University School of Business Team wins first place in competition

college-photo_2588.For the second consecutive year, a team of students from the Clark Atlanta University (CAU) School of Business has won first place and a $5,000 cash prize in the Institute for Supply Management’s (ISM) Annual Black Executives in Supply Management Summit’s Case Competition, held Feb. 7 in New Orleans.

The team participants were Stephen Tolbert, Erica Devieux and David Motongo, all second-year students in the master’s degree program in supply chain management. The team was challenged to provide a network optimization solution and recommendations for a complex, real-life European company network. The students were coached by Dr. Marcia Daley, assistant professor in the Decision Science Department at CAU, with support from assistant professor Su Gao.

Dr. Charles Moses, interim dean of the School of Business, said, “We are delighted about the success our students continue to achieve in national competitions such as those presented by the Institute for Supply Management. These outcomes demonstrate the quality of the classroom and out-of-classroom experiences and opportunities we provide, equipping them to compete on a national and international level for careers on the global stage.”

About Institute for Supply Management™ (ISM)

ISM is the first supply management institute in the world. Founded in 1915, ISM exists to lead and serve the supply management profession and is a highly influential and respected association in the global marketplace. By executing and extending its mission through education, research, standards of excellence and information dissemination — including the renowned monthly ISM Report On Business® — ISM maintains a strong global influence among individuals and organizations.

About Clark Atlanta University’s School of Business

The School of Business at CAU awarded its first bachelor’s degree in 1931. Its graduate program was founded in 1946. The School was one of the first Historically Black Colleges and Universities (HBCUs) in the nation to have its undergraduate and graduate business programs accredited by the Association to Advance Collegiate Schools of Business International (AACSB). It continues to produce one of the largest classes of African-American MBAs in the world, while its undergraduate program is one of the top 10 percent producers of African-American business professionals in the nation.

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Allen University annouces “The Big Read” project

TheBigReadCelebration2013Allen University has received a National Endowment for the Arts, The Big Read Grant.  The Big Read is a program of the National Endowment for the Arts designed to revitalize the role of literature in American culture and to encourage citizens to read for pleasure and enlightenment.

Allen University’s The Big Read project Pulling in the Horizon: Celebrating Zora Neale Hurston’s novel Their Eyes Were Watching God will be presenting over 31 enlightening and entertaining events throughout Columbia, Sumter and the Lowcountry.  The core of each event is to address, in innovative ways, our nation’s literacy crisis.  Each Big Read project must last approximately one month, and Allen University has chosen the month of March as its The Big Read month.  Starting March 1st, a series of public events will unfold in the form of panel discussions, author readings, theatrical readings, film screenings, arts-based workshops for children, teens and adults, musical performances, and much more.

The campus wide Big Read at Allen University will include a total of 9 events, the rural library consortium Big Read will include 23 events, and there will be 6 community based events. Events will range from reading discussion groups to public events and will be held in varied locations to include schools, libraries, museums, public buildings, public spaces and senior citizens centers. As an effective way to engage children, teens, adults and senior citizens intellectually, emotionally, and creatively, we will focus on the themes that are woven throughout the book. Events will include the writing and presenting of poems; the creating of visual arts pieces; the writing of letters to specific characters in the book; the hosting of trivia games; the presenting of lively music jam sessions; discussions of faith; exploration of natural disasters and its impact on marginalized communities; innovative lead discussions centering on childhood literacy; and even the sharing of food via a good old fashioned southern barbecue.  Key note speakers will include the 2011 National Book Winner in Poetry, Nikky Finney and 2009 Emmy Award Winner, Kwame Dawes. Each of the targeted audiences and communities will gain a greater understanding of the Hurston’s mastery of language, folklore, and the history of black autonomy in the post-Civil War South. Allen University recognizes the extraordinary importance and value of reading and improving the literacy of children, teens, and adults.

Allen University’s effort to improve literacy will provide for a diverse range of activities and events that will encourage a spectrum of our citizens to read Zora Neale Hurston’s Their Eyes Were Watching God and be engaged in other Big Read activities.

Allen University, recognized as the first university in South Carolina founded by African Americans for the education of African Americans, is also the first university named after an African American and created out of the AME Church’s desire to educate newly freed slaves to ensure a well-trained clergy.

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Laurence Alexander Nominated to Become Next UAPB Chancellor

OLYMPUS DIGITAL CAMERA Laurence B. Alexander has been nominated by University of Arkansas System President Donald Bobbitt to become the next chancellor of the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff.

Alexander is the associate dean of the graduate school and director of the Office of Minority Programs at the University of Florida, and was one of four finalists from a nationwide search.

Calvin Johnson has served as interim chancellor since April of last year. According to a UA system news release, Bobbitt will make his recommendation at a special meeting of the UA board of trustees that will be conducted by phone later this week.

If approved, Alexander is expected to begin his new duties on July 1.

“I’m pleased to nominate Dr. Laurence Alexander, who I believe has the right combination of experience and enthusiasm to help shape a positive, successful future for UAPB,” Bobbitt said in the release. “Dr. Alexander understands the important role that UAPB plays in the higher education portfolio of our state and in the Pine Bluff community. It’s a university that has grown and developed throughout the past two decades, and I am excited about the leadership Dr. Alexander will provide to help the campus and its students, faculty and staff achieve at the highest levels. While we know there will be challenges ahead, I look forward to working with Dr. Alexander to ensure a successful future for UAPB.” read more…

Two Year Old Baby Born With HIV Is Cured, Scientist Call it a ‘Game-Changer’

Discovery Provides Clues for Potentially Eliminating HIV Infection in Other Children

Editor’s note: NIH issued this news release this afternoon about findings announced at the2013 Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections (CROI) which began today in Atlanta, Georgia. The session at which the investigators will be reporting their findings in detail will be webcast via the CROI website Exit Disclaimer on Monday, March 4, 2013. A two-year-old child born with HIV infection and treated with antiretroviral drugs beginning in the first days of life no longer has detectable levels of virus using conventional testing despite not taking HIV medication for 10 months, according to findings presented today at the Conference on Retroviruses and Opportunistic Infections Exit Disclaimer (CROI) in Atlanta.

This is the first well-documented case of an HIV-infected child who appears to have been functionally cured of HIV infection—that is, without detectable levels of virus and no signs of disease in the absence of antiretroviral therapy.

Further research is needed to understand whether the experience of the child can be replicated in clinical trials involving other HIV-exposed children, according to the investigators.

The case study was presented at the CROI meeting by Deborah Persaud, M.D., associate professor of infectious diseases at the Johns Hopkins Children’s Center in Baltimore, and Katherine Luzuriaga, M.D., professor of pediatrics and molecular medicine at the University of Massachusetts Medical School in Worcester. These two pediatric HIV experts led the analysis of the case. The National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases (NIAID) and the Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development (NICHD), both components of the National Institutes of Health, provided funding that supported the work of Drs. Persaud and Luzuriaga and other investigators involved in the analysis of the case.

“Despite the fact that research has given us the tools to prevent mother-to-child transmission of HIV, many infants are unfortunately still born infected. With this case, it appears we may have not only a positive outcome for the particular child, but also a promising lead for additional research toward curing other children,” said NIAID Director Anthony S. Fauci, M.D.

In July 2010, the child was born prematurely in Mississippi at 35 weeks, to an HIV-infected mother who had received neither antiretroviral medication nor prenatal care.

Because of the high risk of exposure to HIV, the infant was started at 30 hours of age on liquid antiretroviral treatment consisting of a combination of three anti-HIV drugs: zidovudine, lamivudine, and nevirapine. The newborn’s HIV infection was confirmed through two blood samples obtained on the second day of life and analyzed through highly sensitive polymerase chain reaction (PCR) testing. PCR tests conducted on separate occasions that indicate the presence of HIV in an exposed infant are considered to have confirmed the diagnosis of infection.

The baby was discharged from the hospital at 1 week of age and placed on liquid antiretroviral therapy consisting of combination zidovudine, lamivudine and co-formulated lopinavir-ritonavir. This drug combination is a standard regimen for treating HIV-infected infants in the United States.

Additional plasma viral load tests performed on blood from the baby over the first three weeks of life again indicated HIV infection. However, by Day 29, the infant’s viral load had fallen to less than 50 copies of HIV per milliliter of blood (copies/mL).

The baby remained on the prescribed antiretroviral treatment regimen until 18 months of age (January 2012), when treatment was discontinued for reasons that are unclear. However, when the child was again seen by medical professionals in the fall of 2012, blood samples revealed undetectable HIV levels (less than 20 copies/mL) and no HIV-specific antibodies. Using ultrasensitive viral RNA and DNA tests, the researchers found extremely low viral levels.

Today, the child continues to thrive without antiretroviral therapy and has no identifiable levels of HIV in the body using standard assays.  The child is under the medical care of Hannah Gay, M.D., a pediatric HIV specialist at the University of Mississippi Medical Center in Jackson. Researchers will continue to follow the case.

“This case suggests that providing antiretroviral therapy within the very first few days of life to infants infected with HIV through their mothers via pregnancy or delivery may prevent HIV from establishing a reservoir, or hiding place, in their bodies and, therefore, achieve a cure for those children,” said Dr. Persaud.

NIAID and NICHD provided funding that supported the collaborating investigators involved in the analysis of the HIV-infected child through the International Maternal Pediatric Adolescent AIDS Clinical Trials Network’s (IMPAACT) cooperative agreement grant AI066832. Analysis was also performed by Tae-Wook Chun, Ph.D., a lead investigator in NIAID’s Laboratory of Immunoregulation in Bethesda, Md. The Foundation for AIDS Research Exit Disclaimer (amfAR) also contributed funding.

For more information about NIAID’s HIV/AIDS cure research, see the NIAID HIV/AIDS Web portal.

For more information on these findings, read the session abstract Exit Disclaimer on the CROI website

Drummer for country music star Kellie Pickler, Tennessee State among injured in Kentucky crash

The drummer for country music star Kellie Pickler was in serious condition Sunday as one of five people hospitalized in two crashes that happened within minutes at the same spot on Interstate 65 in central Kentucky and killed six.

Pickler’s manager, Larry Fitzgerald, said 36-year-old Gregg Lohman of Goodlettsville, Tennessee, suffered serious injuries in the wreck Saturday. He remained in serious condition Sunday at University of Louisville Hospital.

Kentucky State Police Master Trooper Norm Chaffins said Lohman, who also works as a music instructor at Tennessee State University, had head and neck injuries after a four-vehicle wreck in the southbound lanes. It happened about 15 minutes after a fiery crash involving a tractor-trailer and an SUV on the northbound side of the highway.

On her Facebook page, Pickler said Lohman wasn’t just a drummer, “he is family.”

“I believe in the miracles and the power of prayer, so it would mean the world to me, my band and Gregg’s family if you would please keep him in your prayers,” Pickler wrote. “Thank y’all so much.”

Six people from rural Wisconsin were killed when the tractor-trailer rear-ended their Ford Expedition at about 11:13 a.m. EST Saturday in the northbound lanes near Glendale, Kentucky.

Killed were 62-year-old driver James Gollnow and his wife, 62-year-old Barbara Gollnow; 92-year-old friend Marion Champnise; 18-year-old Sarina Gollnow, relationship unknown; and foster children 10-year-old Gabriel Zumig and 8-year-old Soledad Smith.

Two other foster children survived and were taken to area hospitals. Police identified them as Hope Hoth, 15, who was transported to a hospital in Lexington with burns and a broken spine; and Aidian Ejnik, 12, who was taken to Kosair Children’s Hospital in Louisville with cuts to the back of his head.

State Police said the family was returning to Wisconsin from a vacation to Orlando, Florida.

Chaffins said the tractor-trailer was following too closely to the SUV to stop before the collision. The Expedition was “totally engulfed in flames. It was totally destroyed by the fire,” he said, adding, “It’s just a charred mess.” Distracted driving is among the causes being investigated.

Chaffins said despite snow flurries, weather was not a factor in Saturday’s crashes. The driver was identified as 47-year-old Ibrahim Fetic of Troy, Michigan. Police were looking at his driving logs and collected a blood sample.

The two crashes shut down the busy stretch of highway for about five hours. Referenced

Challenge: Change the perception of sport

sportsprogram copySport administration is a quickly growing industry, offering careers in professional sports, collegiate sports, sport event management, coaching and even operations. It was identified as a professional field in the 1960s and 1970s when the first degree program started at Ohio University in the 1960s. Prior to that, working in sports — other than being an athlete — was not really a profession for which someone would get educated, trained and gain experience before starting. People used business degrees to do jobs such as marketing and sales. Other jobs were hobbies that might have “accidentally” became careers.

Grambling State University was the first historically black college/university to develop a masters program in sports administration. There are about 190 graduate programs in the United States and about six such programs in Louisiana. Grambling State’s is the only HBCU in the state with an undergraduate degree and a graduate program.

A single HBCU with one of these programs isn’t enough to significantly diversify this $435 billion profession. Area universities, including Grambling State as well Louisiana Tech and the University of Louisiana at Monroe, have great athletics programs where students interested in sport administration can gain valuable experiences while assisting with administration, business, event management, marketing or sales. Each of these departments can be more diverse — if we make a concerted effort to make it happen. read more…

Bowie State University Bulldogs Capture CIAA 2013 Championship

13156_10151330504126045_118347656_nByron Westmorland had a huge night in leading Bowie State to the CIAA championship.

The senior forward scored a career-high 38 points including 26 points in the second half to outduel Livingstone’s Mark Thomas and help Bowie State break open a tight game for an 85-74 victory over Livingstone in the CIAA finals at Time Warner Cable Arena on Saturday. The Bulldogs (16-13 overall) won their second championship, including the first under Head Coach Darrell Brooks, after entering the tournament as the No. 4 Northern Division seed. The latest title comes 10 years and one day after the Bulldogs claimed their first CIAA crown in 2003.

With the victory, the Bulldogs received the conference’s automatic bid in the NCAA Division II Tournament. The Blue Bears (22-6 overall) are anticipating an at-large bid after reaching the title game as the No. 6 ranked team in the Atlantic Region. The top eight teams in the region will advance to the tournament.

Junior Carlos Smith Adds 11 Points and Seven Rebounds
“I’m so proud of my team, especially my five seniors,” Brooks said. “They’ve worked hard. We’ve had a lot of adversity this year and all through it, they stuck together and we got a great reward for it.”

However, the Blue Bears missed out on that elusive first league championship after winning their first Southern Division title and coming into the tournament as the division’s top seed. The Blue Bears can blame Westmoreland, the tournament MVP, for that.

The Bulldogs’ star sparked a late run which clinched the title for the Bulldogs. Down 53-51 with 14:42 left, the Bulldogs outscored the Blue Bears 34-21 with Westmoreland scoring 18 points during the spurt. The Bulldogs’ finish was similar to Friday’s semifinal against Winston-Salem State when they went on a late surge to reach the championship game.

The Bulldogs withstood an outstanding effort by Thomas of the Blue Bears, a talented guard who scored a career-high 34 points before fouling out late. Thomas kept the Blue Bears in the game by scoring 18 points in the second half. His layup on a drive cut the Blue Bears’ deficit to 75-67. But Westmoreland completed a three-point play of his own for a 78-67 lead with 2:05 left that wrapped up the game for the Bulldogs, who outscored the Blue Bears 42-33 in the second half.

Westmorland finished the night making 13 of 19 shots which ranged from jumpers to layups in transition which resulted in three-point plays at times. He also made 10 of 15 free throws in addition to getting six rebounds and four steals.

Westmorland got support from his inside players. Junior forward Carlos Smith had 11 points and seven rebounds and senior forward Najee White contributed 10 points. Senior forward Dameatric Scott had seven rebounds and five assists. Senior guard Bryan Wilson also helped out on the boards, grabbing six to go along with eight points. The inside play complemented Westmoreland as the Bulldogs scored 46 points in the paint and 16 second-chance points.

“[The] game was kind of what we expected,” Brooks said. “It was a war. We thought it was going to be a very physical game. We thought that the team that did the best job defending and on the backboards would be the team that would probably win the game and fortunately, it was us.”

Najee White Contributes 10 Points

As a team, the Bulldogs shot 56 percent. Meanwhile, the Blue Bears shot 38 percent.

Other than Thomas, the Blue Bears struggled from the floor. Thomas was 11 of 21 from the floor and 9 of 13 from the free-throw line in addition to three steals. Darnell Turner added 11 points but he was the only other double figure scorer. Anthony Welch scored nine points on 3 of 4 three-point shooting.

The Bowie State big men impacted the contest from the start by limiting the Blue Bears to one shot and getting inside for easy baskets. A dunk by Smith off a missed layup lifted the Bulldogs to an early 15-7 lead.

Led by Thomas, the Blue Bears came back to pull within 22-19. The Blue Bears led 26-24 on his three-point play. Read Full

Meagan Good & Devon Franklin at Morehouse: Walmart’s Black Love & Relationships Panel

Over the weekend, Meagan and Devon continued to share their advice and experience with love during Walmart’s  “Black Love and Relationships” panel held on Morehouse campus in Atlanta.  The couple, along with Stellar award-winner Bishop Paul S. Morton and his wife of 36 years, Pastor Morton, provoked a really intimate and educational conversation about finding and sustaining love.

During the discussion, the couples were asked to share advice to those who want to be married, and each person gave some really good advice for men and women:

Read interview here

Jumpstart! J-FAD Program at Howard University

jumpstart copyJumpstart DC – Howard University is hosting JFAD, a one-day educational program promoting language, literacy, and social skills among Head Start and Pre-K children on April 12 from 9 a.m. – 12 p.m.

The JFAD interest meeting tonight at 7 p.m. in Blackburn room 142. Committed individuals interested in providing a great learning experience for these children and gaining a self-rewarding experience in the process are encouraged to attend. All volunteers are eligible to receive RSVP points upon completion of volunteering at the event. Be ready to hear about the  event, its purpose, and what you can do to help Washington’s preschool children.

Beverages and refreshments will be served.    The JFad team will see all of you there!

Email : jumpstartday13@gmail.com  for more information

How ’bout giving your alma mater some of that CIAA money

Jon Strayhorn/Media Arts CollectiveMany of the restaurants, bars, nightclubs, and ballrooms in Uptown are rented out for parties while the CIAA Tournament is in town.
Jon Strayhorn/Media Arts Collective
Many of the restaurants, bars, nightclubs, and ballrooms in Uptown are rented out for parties while the CIAA Tournament is in town.

“Is that really how we want to go out?” writes former American football running back Barry Saunders on HBCU alumni who give less to their alma mater. Check out his account here at the Buzz.

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In an episode of “Sanford and Son,” Fred’s famously free-spending friend Grip Madlock bursts into the room with a bottle of what he calls “the good stuff: Cold Duck” and proclaims, “Have no fear, Big Money Grip is here.”

I suspect many Charlotte-area hoteliers and restaurateurs, among other businesses, are this week expressing a similarly joyous sentiment with the annual arrival of the CIAA Basketball Tournament.

Downtown hotels that have jacked up their rates just for the occasion and bars serving top-shelf hootch are going to see their bottom lines nudged into the black by the green from thousands of black college alumni.

Yet, at the same time, their perennially underfunded and under-endowed historically black colleges and universities back home are struggling.

Don’t get me wrong, now. I love me some CIAA tournament. It provides great basketball and gives alumni a yearly chance to convene, jump clean and be seen.

Then why do I say this should be the tournament’s last year for a while, and that all of you Eagles, Falcons, Bears, Tigers et al. should stay home next year?

Because your beloved alma maters need that moolah more than Charlotte or the Marriott, Hilton and Grey Goose corporations do. Instead of pumping up their profits, why not pump up your alma maters’ endowments and scholarship funds?

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Bethune-Cookman first HBCU to sign agreement with SBA

Bethune-Cookman is the first of 59 historically Black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in the Southeast to enter into an agreement with the Small Business administration to promote small, minority-owned businesses, according to Butts.

Participants at the SBA signing included (left to right) Dr. Weldon Blake, chair of B-CU’s School of Business; Hiram Powell, B-CU Provost; Aubrey Long, dean of the School of Business; Cassius Butts, SBA regional administrator; B-CU Interim President Dr. Edison Jackson and Wilfredo Gonzalez, SBA’s district director.(PHOTO COURTESY OF B-CU)
Participants at the SBA signing included (left to right) Dr. Weldon Blake, chair of B-CU’s School of Business; Hiram Powell, B-CU Provost; Aubrey Long, dean of the School of Business; Cassius Butts, SBA regional administrator; B-CU Interim President Dr. Edison Jackson and Wilfredo Gonzalez, SBA’s district director.
(PHOTO COURTESY OF B-CU)

Dr. Weldon Blake, B-CU’s Business Department chair, was instrumental in coordinating the SAM.

Butts said HBCUs and their faculty serve as the foundation for strong and thriving communities.

“This partnership will foster young entrepreneurship, especially in minority communities,” Butts noted.

Jackson said the partnership with SBA is a milestone for B-CU.

“With the signing of this agreement, B-CU will be able to help the community that surrounds our campus, but more importantly, give our students the tools and resources they need to become successful entrepreneurs,” he explained.

Read more here.

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Keeping HBCU football Classics alive

Tuskegee University is America's oldest black college marching band.
Tuskegee University is America’s oldest black college marching band.

Historically black college football classics are three-day extravaganzas, where the HBCU community congregates in the name of football, common culture, music and, most important, tradition.

Similar to a bowl game, outside of the stadium there are parades, tailgating and barbecuing with stereos blasting along with elaborate step shows.

When Beyoncé was still part of Destiny’s Child, she performed at a Classic. In fact, a plethora of multiplatinum hip-hop and R&B artists — such as A Tribe Called Quest, LL Cool J and Stephanie Mills — made HBCU Classics the place to be.

“It’s an experience you only get at an HBCU, where the excitement over halftime [battles] between marching bands rival the actual game,” says Aaron Polley, a Washington Redskins drum line musician who is a former Hampton University band member and has played at several Urban League Classics.

Time will tell if HBCU Classics will become a casualty of inevitable social evolution or remain a cultural phenomenon for generations to come. Football was the first draw for the Classics, and with the loss of talented players to other high-profile schools, attendance is dwindling.

In 1968, Morgan State upset Grambling State during the first historically black college football game in New York City, which drew more than 60,000 frenzied fans to Yankee Stadium.

The immensely talented teams, Grambling’s growing national reputation and the mythical persona of its head coach, Eddie Robinson, coupled with the flamboyant marching band competition, inspired the other 103 HBCUs to embrace the cultural philosophy of big-stage football, academic excellence and artistic prowess that defines today’s HBCU Classics.

In the golden days of HBCU Classic football games — from the late 1960s through the late ’90s — stadiums jam-packed with students, faculty and fans were the norm.

But the journey to respectability was anything but easy for Grambling’s Robinson, who, during his 57-year career, became the coach with the most wins in NCAA Division I history, sending more than 200 players to the NFL.

Read more at ESPN.

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ASU Alumna Recognized at Black Engineer of the Year Awards

Recently recognized at the Black Engineer of the Year Awards, alumna Dornesia Ward (‘08) credits ASU with igniting her passion to pursue a career in technology.
Recently recognized at the Black Engineer of the Year Awards, alumna Dornesia Ward (‘08) credits ASU with igniting her passion to pursue a career in technology.

Each year the Black Engineer of the Year (BEYA) Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics (STEM) Conference recognizes the leaders and innovators in the STEM fields.

Among those recognized at this year’s BEYA Conference, which was held Feb. 7-9 in Washington D.C., was ASU alumna Dornesia Ward.

Ward, an IT specialist with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, was honored as a 2012 BEYA STEM Modern Day Technology Leader.

“To be recognized for what I do is motivation to continue to do more than what is expected,” Ward said.

The Birmingham native hopes that her award will inspire a new generation to pursue careers as  STEM professionals.

“The STEM fields do not have a lot of minority participation, so hopefully my recognition, along with others who were recognized at the BEYA STEM Conference, will motivate and stimulate the interests of minorities and women to explore educational and career options in STEM fields.”

Ward came to ASU in 2004 at age 16; she graduated summa cum laude in 2008 with a Bachelor of Science degree in computer science, and she earned a master’s degree in information systems management from Walden University in 2011.

Read more here.

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Diddy teams up with actor Mark Wahlberg in new business venture

Former Howard University student, record producer, and renaissance man Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs took over Twitter last night when he announced a joint business venture with comrade Mark Wahlberg.

Thousands of users tuned in during Diddy’s buzzing news and congratulated him on his new endeavor called AQUAhydrate, a Southern California-based fitness and wellness water brand.

“As a brand architect, I am incredibly passionate and equally committed to every aspect of the businesses that I get involved with,” Diddy said in a press release. “Partnering with AQUAhydrate and Mark is an incredible opportunity for me and I am looking forward to making history in the process. It’s important for me to be part of something that drives me and is constantly pushing the boundaries, and that’s what AQUAhydrate does. Together, we’re going to take AQUAhydrate to the next level.”

Because of his long history of achievement and paying it forward, we at the Buzz would like to congratulate Diddy on his new-found success.

Read more here at Premium Ultra.

About AQUAhydrate
AQUAhydrate, Inc. is a Southern California-based health and fitness water brand founded on innovative technology and science. It is this powerful synergy between alkalinity, electrolytes and minerals which fuels ultimate hydration, balance and performance, and which has made AQUAhydrate the water of choice for myriad health/fitness authorities, athletes, and celebrity endorsers. For further info on AQUAhydrate check out www.aquahydrate.com. Find them on Facebook and Twitter.
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Alcorn State to Honor the Legacy of Medgar Wiley Evers ’52

Alcorn State University invites you to join us in honoring the courage, leadership, and dedication of a fellow Mississippian and Alcorn State graduate: Medgar Wiley Evers.

Medgar Evers was a civil rights activist who organized voter-registration efforts, demonstrations and boycotts of companies that practiced discrimination.
Medgar Evers was a civil rights activist who organized voter-registration efforts, demonstrations and boycotts of companies that practiced discrimination.

It was at Alcorn State University where Evers first became involved in civil rights activism. In his memory, ASU has established The Medgar Wiley Evers Heritage Village, a revolutionary student housing community, to enrich the living and learning experience at Alcorn State for years to come. Today, this endeavor lacks one final feature. But you can help complete it. And in doing so, you will also help support civil rights education, the arts, and tourism in our community.

A statue of Evers, commissioned by an acclaimed sculptor, is planned for the Lorman campus. It will feature an account of Evers’ most notable achievements and contributions to civil rights.

By giving to this campaign, you will help establish the newest highlight on the Mississippi Civil Rights Trail and the Mississippi Blues Trail, increasing tourism and civil rights education in our community as numerous visitors stop in Lorman, Mississippi, to learn about Evers’ legacy and alma mater.

Help us Honor the Legacy today. To become part of Honoring the Legacy, click here.

We thank you for embracing this worthy cause to salute the life of one of Mississippi’s most deserving sons and support the values his memory represents.

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Arkansas-Pine Bluff’s Terron Armstead sets O-line record in 40-yard dash

http://youtu.be/ApG87AwaFW4

INDIANAPOLIS — It’s been said that any play in which an offensive lineman has to run 40 yards in a straight line in probably a bad idea, but that doesn’t stop the NFL’s evaluators from studying just how well the big men run the 40-yard dash at the scouting combine. This year, those NFL guys got a real treat, as Arkansas-Pine Bluff tackle Terron Armstead set a recent combine record with an unofficial 4.65 40-yard dash. His official time, announced later, was 4.71, but this still exceeded the previous mark since 2006 of 4.84, set by Allen Barbre in 2007.

Amstead just beat out Oklahoma’s Lane Johnson, who ran an official 4.72, and whose stock has been rising steadily since he impressed everybody at the Senior Bowl. While Armstead is NFL Draft Scout’s 10th-rated offensive tackle, Johnson is third behind Texas A&Ms Luke Joeckel and Eric Fisher of Central Michigan. Fisher ran a 5.05 40 and Joeckel’s was even higher, but don’t expect that to affect their draft stock. More than with other positions, NFL teams will go back to the tape with offensive linemen for the real story.

Armstead does have an interesting story, though. The 6-foot-5, 306-pound small-school star, who played well enough at the East-West Shrine Game to perk up further interest, and earn an invitation to the Senior Bowl as an injury replacement.

Read more here.

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