HBCU Digest

HBCU News, Commentary and Information

Florida Archive

Friday

17

May 2013

0

COMMENTS

Thursday

16

May 2013

0

COMMENTS

FAMU Opens National Alumni Convention with ‘Unified Purpose’ as Key Theme

Written by , Posted in Alumni, Florida, Florida A&M University, Leadership

The Florida A&M University National Alumni Convention began today in Fort Lauderdale, with the theme of ‘Transitioning into a New Era with Unified Purpose.’ Among the items for discussion between Rattler graduates and leadership, new changes in administration and athletics, an introduction to the new director of the Marching 100, and a town hall meeting to discuss the future direction of FAMU. From the release:

“We are excited that the Florida Region along with the Broward County Chapter will serve as our hosts,” said Gregory Clark, 1st Vice President for the FAMU-NAA and Convention Chairman. “We invite the entire FAMU community to come and meet the officers of FAMU National Alumni Association, the current university administration and fellowship with Rattlers from across the country. It is imperative that we get involved and play an integral role in the future of the National Alumni Association and our illustrious university.”

 

Tuesday

14

May 2013

1

COMMENTS

HBCUs to Welcome More Than 150 Brazilian Students in Exchange Program This Fall

Written by , Posted in Alcorn State University, Delaware, Delaware State University, Dillard University, Fisk University, Florida, Florida A&M University, Georgia, Hampton University, Howard University, Jackson State University, Lincoln University (Pa.), Louisiana, Maryland, Mississippi, Morehouse College, North Carolina, North Carolina A&T State University, Pennsylvania, Savannah State University, South Carolina, South Carolina State University, Spelman College, Tennessee, Tennessee State University, University of the District of Columbia, Virginia, Virginia State University, Xavier University of Louisiana

A partnership between the United States and Brazil will bring more than 150 Brazilian college students to the United States this fall to study at historically black colleges and universities.

The partnership is a part of the HBCU-Brazil Alliance, a program created to increase the number of minority graduates and professionals in the industries of science, technology, engineering and mathematics, while exposing  Afro-Brazilian students and faculty to successful research, economic development and social advancement within a context of historical and systemic racism and discrimination.

The Alliance is an arm of the US-Brazil Joint Action Plan on Racial Equality, developed by the White House Initiative on Historically Black Colleges and Universities and managed in partnership with the Brazilian Federal Agency for Support and Evaluation of Graduate Education (CAPES’).

‘This partnership is just one example of the Alliance’s commitment to diversity, cultural sensitivity and to providing a world-class education to an eager pool of student talent from throughout Brazil,” said Dr. T. Joan Robinson, Chair of the HBCU-Brazil Alliance and Provost and Vice-President of Academic Affairs at Morgan State University. “We are honored to represent and build upon the collaborative interests of the United States through international engagement and academic support.”

More than 20 HBCUs will welcome Brazilian exchange students for a one-year exchange program. Students will live on campus and study in a variety of undergraduate degree programs with a S.T.E.M. focus, with all tuition, fees and room and board covered by the Brazilian government. The program’s goal is to eventually welcome 1,000 Brazilian students to HBCU campuses. Participating HBCUs include:

  • Alcorn State University
  • Delaware State University
  • Dillard University
  • Fisk University
  • Florida A&M University
  • Hampton University
  • Howard University
  • Jackson State University
  • Johnson C. Smith University
  • Lincoln University
  • Morehouse College
  • Morgan State University
  • North Carolina A&T State University
  • Savannah State University
  • South Carolina State University
  • Southern University
  • Spelman College
  • Tennessee State University
  • University of the District of Columbia
  • Virginia State University
  • Xavier University of Louisiana

Wednesday

8

May 2013

0

COMMENTS

Monday

6

May 2013

0

COMMENTS

Bethune-Cookman’s Joshua Williams Overcomes Homelessness On Way to Graduation

Written by , Posted in Bethune-Cookman University, Florida, Students

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Nigel Cook – News Journal

The Daytona Beach News-Journal today profiles Joshua Williams, a graduating senior at Bethune-Cookman University who spent the majority of his years in Daytona as a homeless student. The Journal chronicles much of his time spending nights on friends’ couches, in lobbies and walking streets, all in an effort to avoid returning to his native Miami, and to move toward the goal of a college degree.

“He would leave the secure surroundings of the Bethune-Cookman University campus and head across the International Speedway Boulevard bridge and walk, sometimes all night. In the early morning hours, he would sneak into the lobby at the Bronson Hall dorm and sleep a few hours on a couch as if he lived there.”

“I would go down to the beach sometimes,” he recalled. “Sometimes I would just take any direction and get lost and try to find my way back — I would just walk.”

Thursday

25

April 2013

0

COMMENTS

FAMU School of Business Earns Full Accreditation

Written by , Posted in Academics, Florida, Florida A&M University

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Florida A&M University yesterday announced the granting of full accreditation for its School of Business and Industry by the Accreditation Council of Business Schools and Programs (ACBSP). They join more than 20 two-year and four-year historically black colleges nationwide to be accredited by the organization, which measures and grants accreditation to business schools and programs with high competency in business education.

“This is great news for the School of Business which has always been one of our signature programs,” said Interim President Larry Robinson.  “We are really excited about this opportunity to be associated with the Accreditation Council of Business Schools and Programs.  This clearly shows that we have programs that meet specialized academic standards, which embrace the virtues of teaching excellence and ensure our students have the essentials to excel.  FAMU has always had an outstanding business school, this accreditation adds another layer of validation.”

Friday

19

April 2013

0

COMMENTS

Ta’Ronce Stowes Becomes First FAMU Law Student to Clerk for FLA Supreme Court

Written by , Posted in Florida, Florida A&M University, Students

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Just days after the Florida A&M University College of Law was lauded for a state bar exam passage rate exceeding 80 percent, third-year law student Ta’Ronce Stowes has become the first student from the university’s program to clerk for the Florida Supreme Court.

Stowes, a Severn, MD native, will clerk for the Honorable Justice James E.C. Perry starting in August.

“The main reasons why I chose to attend the FAMU College of Law are twofold,” Stowes explained.  “The legislative mission to increase diversity within the profession reflects the consistent notion that being submerged in ethnically diverse atmospheres throughout my life has shaped me into the culturally competent individual that I am today.”

Tuesday

16

April 2013

1

COMMENTS

Bethune-Cookman and the Strange Case of Harold Love III

Written by , Posted in Bethune-Cookman University, Florida, Sports

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NFLDraftZone.com last week reported on twisting and turning case of Harold Love III, a Bethune-Cookman senior defensive tackle seeking a career in the NFL. According to the piece, Love III was denied the chance to showcase his skill at the university’s pro day, a denial allegedly caused for many reasons, but among them, a clash with BCU head football coach Brian Jenkins over Love III telling a recruit that Wildcat coaches often misrepresent playing opportunities with the program.

Bethune-Cookman today responded to the article, which despite having its fair share of inaccuracies, such as listing Lynn Thompson as the university’s president, made the rounds with prominent sports outlets. The statement, from BCU Athletic Director Lynn Thompson:

“Our student-athlete handbook states ‘Student-athletes are highly visible representatives of the university and are expected to uphold the values and responsibilities of the institution while meeting all requirements set forth by the MEAC, NCAA, B-CU and the B-CU intercollegiate athletics program.’

The university reserves the right to prohibit, reduce and otherwise sanction the participation of any student-athlete who falls short of or compromises any of these standards.

The student-athlete was a repeat offender of university and team policies. He was and is fully aware of those policies and understands our stance and subsequent disciplinary actions imposed on him. In addition to the sanctions imposed by the university, which limit him to only academic related activities, the department of athletics also imposed additional penalties. While we have imposed these sanctions on him we also stand with him and will continue to provide the resources which will support him in his ultimate quest to graduate from our institution this spring.

Is there a possibility that Love III had a run-in with Brian Jenkins? Anything’s possible when athletic egos collide. But BCU would not go on record with Love III’s repeated violation of team policies, which likely are also university conduct violations, if there was no backing of their claim.

If Love III repeatedly violated any team or university policies, then he doesn’t get to broker the university’s backing of his professional ambitions, through the media or otherwise.

BCU will make no more comments on the matter, and is right to close the books on what appears as a last reach for the NFL from a player whose immaturity and entitlement may have botched his best chances. He should be thankful that the university remains committed to his earning a degree, and inevitably, his opportunity to have pro days everyday for 40 hours a week.

Tuesday

16

April 2013

0

COMMENTS

Friday

12

April 2013

0

COMMENTS

FAMU Reconciles Athletic Budget for 2013

Written by , Posted in Florida, Florida A&M University, Leadership, Sports

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Amidst a sea of headlines surrounding Florida A&M University postponing its presidential search until 2014, some good news also came out of the two-day meeting of its Board of Trustees. The FAMU athletic department, which has run an annual average debt of close to $1 million for the last several years, has a plan to finance athletic scholarships for the upcoming academic year through investment revenues.

According to the Tallahassee Democrat, the university will allocate more than $2 million from its investment earnings to fund the program, which was expected to double its debt this year after a dip in enrollment was projected to reduce revenue from student fees. From the report:

“We wanted to stop the bleeding,” (Chair of the Board’s Budget and Finance Committee Rufus) Montgomery said. “Before you jump into solving the big problem you have to deal with the annual one.

“Why do we spend so much time on this?” he added. “It’s our brand. I’d submit that a winning program does as much as anything we can do.”

Tuesday

9

April 2013

1

COMMENTS

Events and Expansion Help HBCUs Stretch Borders, Grow Brand

Written by , Posted in Alcorn State University, Bethune-Cookman University, Dillard University, Editorial, Florida, Louisiana, Mississippi, Paul Quinn College, Texas

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Bethune-Cookman University will soon host its inaugural women’s football clinic, giving women who actively support the MEAC football champs a chance to see football through the lens of strategy and execution, and in the process, knocking down a lot of gender-based sports stereotypes on both sides.

This kind of outreach is part of a classic trend at HBCUs finding innovative ways to grow brand and buy-in among campus constituents. While some HBCU leaders desperately search for ways to grow awareness among neutral or non-supporters, other black colleges, like BCU, are working hard to make sure their home bases remain committed.

If black colleges are to thrive against the growing appeal of online and community colleges and ramped-up recruitment efforts from predominantly white colleges, events and satellite academic programming are going to be at the heart of the renaissance. HBCUs are in the business of providing to black communities opportunities and exposure they otherwise would not have, and some HBCUs are accelerating the reconsideration of cultural and learning outreach.

Paul Quinn College in Dallas has been on an outreach blitz over the last several months, introducing new campus service learning initiatives to blend with cultural and fundraising programs that build awareness. The Tigers hosted students from Abilene Christian College in a social demonstration against poverty and food deserts. The experiment pushed racial, economic and cultural notions to the side in an effort to show community solidarity and empathy for residents of South Dallas who live the experiment on a daily basis.

Thursday, the school will host some of Dallas’ most esteemed chefs in it’s ‘A Community Cooks’ fundraiser, an event bringing the city’s culinary talent to a big cookout on the college’s ‘WE Over ME Farm’ to raise money for development and fresh food options in the region.

Alcorn State University recently announced campus expansion into the Vicksburg Mall, an innovative outreach efforts to reach potential college students, continuing learners and potential corporate partners with one dynamic planting of the Braves’ flag. The move to bolster recruitment and develop opportunities accompanies the university’s upcoming national diversity conference, a first among HBCUs, to examine cultural and social strategies to build the HBCU brand among racial and ethnic communities.

Dillard University last week capped a massive week of festivals dedicated to health, music and culture. On a recent episode of Digest Radio, Dillard President Walter Kimbrough said that the festivals are part of the HBCU responsibility to bring affordable learning and social opportunities to communities which want them, but often can’t reach them.

Nearly every HBCU has outreach opportunities which build upon new and existing visions of a better campus and better communities, but these in particular get to the heart of what is needed in their surrounding cities and towns, and to the core of their institutional strengths. BCU is a football champion, why not build the Wildcat fanbase to higher levels of acumen and frenzy?

Paul Quinn is in the middle of a food desert. Why not leverage what it yields from its organic farm in support of what citizens need around them?

Alcorn is growing its academic footprint in a state that is big on colleges, but low on opportunities at the secondary level for many students to realize college as a real option. Why not go to the places where students and parents spend all of their time, and why not make more than just African-Americans feel welcome?

New Orleans is a hot bed for arts and athletics. Why wouldn’t Dillard provide opportunities for citizens to be exposed to different sports and cultures beyond events at the Superdome and the Essence Music Festival?

HBCUs make a difference in communities when they move beyond the walls of the campus. And it’s that difference which will help make black college culture more vibrant and more necessary for advancement in the years to come.

Friday

29

March 2013

0

COMMENTS

FAMU Asks For Libel Suit From Former Marching 100 Member To Be Thrown Out

Written by , Posted in Florida, Florida A&M University, Legal

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Attorneys for Florida A&M University yesterday asked a judge to dismiss a libel suit against the university stemming from the hazing death of Marching 100 drum major Robert Champion. The suit, filed by former band member Keon Hollis, alleges that he has suffered emotional distress after being falsely identified as one of the FAMU students dismissed from the university in connection with the November 2011 hazing ritual that killed Champion. From the Associated Press:

Hollis, a friend of Champion’s, was beaten by band members the same night that Champion died. In his lawsuit, Hollis says he suffered humiliation and emotional distress because of the article.

But FAMU contends Hollis is fortunate he wasn’t expelled. The university also questions any emotional distress by noting he has talked about the incident on national television.

Read more here: http://www.miamiherald.com/2013/03/28/3311791/famu-wants-hazing-related-libel.html#storylink=cpy