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https://northcarolinahistory.org/encyclopedia/shaw-university/
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North Carolina History
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[ "Jane Shaw Stroup", "https://northcarolinahistory.org/author/jane-stroup/#author" ]
2016-03-07T01:12:14-05:00
From its beginning in 1865, Shaw University has been a forerunner in starting educational programs among historically black colleges, and in 1960, it served as the birthplace of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) during the Civil Rights Movement.
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North Carolina History -
https://northcarolinahistory.org/encyclopedia/shaw-university/
From its beginning in 1865, Shaw University has been a forerunner in starting educational programs among historically black colleges. It was also the birthplace of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) in 1960. According to historian Henry L. Swint, the Northern teacher came South on the heels of the Union soldier. Approximately six months after the Civil War ended and under the direction of Henry Martin Tupper, a former Union soldier, Shaw University began as The Raleigh Institute; its sole purpose was to teach theology. A year later women started attending the school. In 1870, its name changed to Shaw Collegiate Institute and in 1875 to Shaw University. (The school was named for Elijah Shaw, a benefactor, and received other financial support from the American Home Baptist Mission.) The school started adding new programs as time went on. By the early 1880s, the school added a medical school, and by the early 1890s, the charter law school class and pharmacy class had graduated from Shaw University. In many ways, Shaw University has been an institutional pioneer. Among historically black colleges and universities, it was the first among them to be established, to enroll African American women, and to be devoted exclusively to college work. It was also the birthplace of SNCC. An alumna and former valedictorian (1927), Ella Baker started SNCC, as sociologist Aldon D. Morris writes, to “coordinate the local movements in which students were already immersed” in the Southern Leadership Conference. The “Southwide Student Leadership Conference on Non-violent Resistance to Segregation” was announced, and Shaw University provided accommodations and the SCLC provided $800 for expenses. On Easter weekend in 1960, students decided to remain independent from the various civil rights agencies—NAACP, SCLC, and CORE—and establish SNCC. Many Shaw alumni have been instrumental in starting other North Carolina black colleges, including Elizabeth City State University, Fayetteville State University, and North Carolina Central University. In the fall of 2022, Shaw University had 924 students. The most popular majors at Shaw University include accounting; parks, recreation, and leisure studies; and criminal justice.
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https://library.uab.edu/locations/archives/uab-history
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UAB History
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Libraries at UAB, The University of Alabama at Birmingham
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1960s View images from the 1960s. 1960: The world's first clinical use of a commercially made fiberoptic endoscope for observing the inside on an organ or cavity was used at University Hospital. The endoscope was developed by Dr. Basil I. Hirschowitz. February 1960: Frank E. and Margaret Cameron Spain gave $500,000 for the construction of new rehabilitation center. May 1960: Progress Notes, the student yearbook for the Medical College of Alabama, was first published at the cost of $7.50 per copy. Fourth year student Myron A. Levine was editor of the yearbook. July 1, 1960: Dr. Joseph F. Volker began a one-year leave-of-absence to direct the Arizona Medical School Study. Dr. Arthur H. Wuehrmann served as acting dean of the dental school during Volker's absence. September 10, 1960: Birmingham faculty member James F. Hatcher, Jr., director of Town and Gown Theatre, directed the annual Miss America pageant in Atlantic City, New Jersey. Miss Michigan Nancy Fleming was selected Miss America for 1961. September 1960: Three medical-social fraternities, Phi Beta Pi (Sigma chapter), Nu Sigma Nu (Beta Phi chapter), and Phi Chi (Iota chapter), formed the first inter-fraternity council at the Medical Center. October 2, 1960: Fort Mortimer H. Jordan Alabama National Guard 109th Evacuation Hospital Armory was dedicated at the Medical Center. October 9, 1960: The Psychiatric Clinic was dedicated. December 9, 1960: The Health Sciences Research Building was dedicated. April 1961: A fund-raising goal of $850,000 was met for the expansion of the engineering programs at the Birmingham Extension Center, with a majority of the funds being provided by Birmingham businesses. President Frank A. Rose had kicked off the public portion of the drive in late November of 1960. April 30, 1961: Children's Hospital was dedicated adjacent to the Medical Center. October 1961: The Psychiatric Clinic was named in honor of Medical Center benefactors Joseph S. and Bertha Pizitz Smolian. 1961: The Roberts & Son Building was purchased for use as the outpatient clinic of University Hospital. July 1962: The Medical Center Apartments opened. July 1962: Spain Rehabilitation groundbreaking ceremony was held. July 1962: Eye Foundation Hospital groundbreaking ceremony was held. August 9, 1962: Groundbreaking was held for the Engineering Building. September 1, 1962: Dr. Joseph F. Volker became second vice president for Health Affairs. September 1, 1962: Dr. S. Richardson Hill, Jr., became dean of the Medical College of Alabama. September 1, 1962: Dr. Charles A. McCallum, Jr., became second dean of the School of Dentistry. 1962: Dr. W. Paul Brann was named assistant to the vice president for Health Affairs. 1962: The University Hospital School of Nursing Residence opened. 1962: University Computer Center organized with Homer C. Jemison as director. 1962: The General Clinical Research Center was established at the Medical Center with a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH). Dr. Clifton K. Meador was named as the center's first director. 1962: Drs. Wayne H. and Sara C. Finley received a grant from the National Institutes of Health (NIH) to establish a cytogenetics laboratory at the Medical Center. 1962: Dr. Lincoln Roy Manson-Hing became chair of the Department of Oral Roentgenology (later Dental Radiology) and Dr. Gilbert J. Parfitt became chair of the Department of Periodontics, both in the School of Dentistry. Dr. Manson-Hing was a native of British Guiana [Guyana] and Dr. Parfitt was a native of England. They were the first international faculty named as chairs of academic departments at the Medical Center in Birmingham. January 9, 1963: The Birmingham chapter of the American Association of University Professors was organized in a meeting at the Medical Center. Dr. Leland C. Clark was elected first president. June 11, 1963: Vivian J. Malone and James A. Hood became the first African American students of The University of Alabama. Although Malone and Hood enrolled at the main campus in Tuscaloosa, they were the first African American students admitted to the University, its medical center in Birmingham, or its extension division programs throughout the state. June 21, 1963: The University Hospital and Medical Center Heliport opened when a helicopter operated by the National Guard landed in a field between South 15th and 16th Streets, just a few blocks from the hospital complex. September 15, 1963: Victims of the bombing of the Sixteenth Street Church were brought to the Hillman Emergency Clinic at University Hospital. Fifteen people received treatment at the hospital and autopsies were done on the bodies of the four young victims of the bombing. September 1963: Luther Lawler became the first African American to register for classes at the Birmingham Extension Center when he enrolled in the master’s program in education. September 1963: The Medical College Faculty Council approved a request that all facilities in the Medical and Dental Basic Science Building be available to all students and employees without regard to race. October 2, 1963: Joseph S. and Bertha Pizitz Smolian gave their home to the Medical Center for use as a cultural center. October 9, 1963: In a letter to Vice President Joseph F. Volker, African American employees in the university’s Medical and Dental Basic Science Building formally requested desegregation of the building’s cafeteria and facilities. October 1963: Computer Research Laboratory opened in the former Life of Georgia Insurance Building. December 31, 1963: The independent Eye Foundation Hospital was opened following dedication ceremonies on December 8, 1963. 1963: Extramural grants and contracts at the Medical Center totaled $3,888,514. 1963: Engineering students were first able to complete all four years of classes at the Birmingham Extension Center. 1963: University Hospital and Hillman Clinic was renamed The University of Alabama Hospitals and Clinics. 1963: The medical school's Division of Continuing Medical Education first offered continuing education courses to Alabama physicians. February 1, 1964: The separate Hillman Emergency and University Emergency Clinics were merged to form one combined University Hospital Emergency Clinic. March 3, 1964: Dr. Tinsley R. Harrison delivered the first Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Witches and Doctors." April 3, 1964: The Dental Education and Research Building was dedicated. April 25-26, 1964: The Spain Rehabilitation Center was dedicated. Dr. William C. Fleming was the center's first director. May 27, 1964: The first Medical Student Research Day was held preceding the Honors Convocation of the Medical College of Alabama. Thomas C. Smitherman won first prize for his paper “Distribution of Sucrose-C14 in Thyroid Tissue.” Dr. James A. Pittman, Jr., was his faculty sponsor. June 1964: University Hospital Outpatient Services Building opened in the renovated Roberts & Son Building. July 2, 1964: President Lyndon B. Johnson signed the Civil Rights Act of 1964, which prohibited segregation in any facilities receiving federal funds from the Hill-Burton Act. July 25, 1964: Samuel Earle G. Hobbs was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. September 8, 1964: The entering class of eight students in the medical technology program at University Hospital included one African American, Wilma Ann Barnes. She was the first African American enrolled in any programs in the Medical Center. October 24, 1964: Drs. Tinsley R. Harrison and Champ Lyons were named Distinguished Professors by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees, the first such designations given to a member of the Alabama faculty. October 1964: At the start of the academic year, 44 African American students were enrolled at the Birmingham Extension Center. 1964: First classes were held in the new Engineering Building adjacent to the Birmingham Extension Center. 1964: Dr. James T. Montgomery became the first African American physician to be granted staff privileges at University Hospital and the first African American to receive a faculty appointment in the medical school. 1964: Joseph S. and Bertha Pizitz Smolian donated the Cole House to the Medical Center for use as Friendship House. 1964: The Alabama Journal of Medical Sciences began publication with Dr. Emmett B. Carmichael as editor. 1964: A gift from Fay Fletcher Kerner made possible the first endowed chair at the Medical Center, the Fay Fletcher Kerner Chair of Surgery. 1964: The Medical Rehabilitation Research and Training Center was established with Dr. William C. Fleming as director. January 3, 1965: Effective on this date, the Civil Rights Act of 1964 prohibited segregation in any healthcare facility receiving Federal funds April 25, 1965: The process of desegregating University Hospital was reported as 100 percent complete. April 27, 1965: Dr. Champ Lyons delivered the second Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Some Surgical Aspects of the Stroke Problem." May 30, 1965: Vivian J. Malone received a B. S. degree in Commerce and Business Administration from the University of Alabama during commencement ceremonies in Tuscaloosa. She was the first African American to graduate from any of the schools in of the University of Alabama System. May 30, 1965: John L. Duncan became the first student to graduate from the Birmingham-based engineering program. He received a Bachelor of Science degree at graduation ceremonies held on the university campus in Tuscaloosa. May 1965: The U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare toured University Hospital and found it in compliance with the Civil Rights Act of 1964. July 18, 1965: The former University Hospital School of Nursing Residence was rededicated as the Roy R. Kracke Clinical Services Building. July 30, 1965: VA Hospital Research Annex Wing groundbreaking was held. August 1965: University of Alabama Medical Center Foundation was created as a non-profit corporation. October 23, 1965: Daniel T. McCall, Jr., was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. September 7, 1965: Barbara Walker became the first African American student in the University Hospital School of Nursing, the hospital-based diploma program. September 1965: Sarah Louise Fisher became the first African American student in The University of Alabama School of Nursing, then located on the campus in Tuscaloosa. 1965: Extramural grants and awards at the Medical Center totaled $4,445,900. 1965: Dr. Joseph F. Volker assigned responsibility for research and grants administration to Dr. John B. Dunbar and for graduate studies to Dr. Samuel B. Barker. 1965: Dr. Clifton O. Dummett of the Tuskegee Veterans Administration Hospital received a clinical appointment in the School of Dentistry, becoming the first African American member of the school's faculty. February 1966: Dr. Joseph F. Volker, Arthur Garikes, E. Todd Wheeler, and Dr. George W. Campbell produced the Expansion and Land Utilization Study-UAB. April 27, 1966: Dr. Joseph F. Volker delivered the third Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "The Way of an Administrator." July 1966: Dr. John W. Kirklin was appointed chair of the Department of Surgery and surgeon-in-chief of University Hospital. August 21, 1966: North Wing of University Hospital was dedicated. September 15, 1966: The Birmingham Extension Center programs were elevated to the four-year College of General Studies, which remained as a branch of The University of Alabama. The College of General Studies was organized similarly to a modified liberal arts college and had seven divisions: allied health sciences, business, education, engineering, humanities, natural sciences and mathematics, and social sciences. Dr. George W. Campbell was named first dean of the new College. November 1966: President Frank A. Rose designated all university operations in Birmingham as the "University of Alabama in Birmingham," a degree-granting branch of the University of Alabama campus in Tuscaloosa. Dr. Joseph F. Volker was named vice president for Birmingham Affairs, an office given administrative oversight of the newly combined Medical Center and the College of General Studies. Dr. Volker reported directly to the president in Tuscaloosa. November 9, 1966: The Health Sciences Research Building was rededicated as the Lyons-Harrison Research Building. November 13, 1966: Dr. Frank A. Rose announced plans to move the University of Alabama School of Nursing from Tuscaloosa to the UAB Medical Center. December 1966: Senator Lister Hill announced original grant funding for the Alabama Regional Medical Program. 1966: The University Hospital School of Nursing, a diploma program, admitted its last class. The class graduated in 1969 and the school was eliminated. 1966: The Alabama legislature commissioned the firm of Booz, Allen, and Hamilton to study the expansion of medical education in Alabama. 1966: The Medical Center Men’s Chorus established for students, faculty, and staff. Dr. Henry H. Hoffman was director of the new choir. 1966: Robert W. Holters was named interim administrator and later administrator of University Hospital. 1966: The Division of Allied Health Sciences, comprised of University Hospital's paramedical training programs, was established in the College of General Studies. 1966: Laboratory of Medical Genetics was established under the direction of Drs. Wayne H. and Sara C. Finley. 1966: School of Health Services Administration was established with Matthew F. McNulty, Jr., as dean. 1966: Richard Charles Dale and Samuel William Sullivan, Jr., became the first African American students of the Medical College of Alabama. 1966: Center for Hospital Continuing Education was established. It was later renamed the Center for Health Services Continuing Education. Dr. Richard G. Allen served as the first director of the center. 1966: The Medical Center had a budget of $32,000,000 and a payroll of over $15,000,000 for its 3,200 employees. 1966: The catalog for the fall term of the newly established College of General Studies included 47 full-time faculty, 14 of whom are female. At least a dozen of the faculty were “Tuscaloosa Campus Faculty” who regularly traveled to and from Tuscaloosa to teach in Birmingham. 1966: Cardiovascular Research and Training Center established with grant from the National Heart Institute. Dr. T. Joseph Reeves served as the center's first director. March 18, 1967: Dr. Thomas E. Hunt delivered the fourth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "The Tricky Business of Teaching." May 1967: The Appalachian Regional Commission awarded UAB a grant to establish a Regional Technical Institute for Health Occupations. June 23, 1967: The Committee on Optometry, a joint state legislative committee chaired by Representative Hugh D. Merrill, found there was “a need for a school of optometry to be located in the State of Alabama” and recommended that it be placed “at an existing state university." July 1967: A groundbreaking was held for the Center for Developmental and Learning Disorders. August 18, 1967: Jeremiah E. Abbott received the first master’s degree for graduate work completed in the Birmingham engineering program of the College of General Studies. Like all other Birmingham students, Abbott received his degree during commencement ceremonies on the university campus in Tuscaloosa. August 1967: The University of Alabama School of Nursing was moved from the Tuscaloosa campus to the Medical Center in Birmingham. Dr. Florence A. Hixson, founding dean, remained in that position following the move. September 1967: UAB Advisory Board was established. September 22, 1967: The Veterans Administration Research Wing was dedicated. October 26, 1967: The student newspaper, Kaleidoscope, was first published. Patrick Cather was the first editor and Melinda Hidle, who gave the paper its name, served as co-editor. 1967: The Myocardial Infarction Research Unit, later renamed the Specialized Center for Research in Ischemic Heart Disease, was established. Dr. Harold T. Dodge was the first director. 1967: Dr. John W. Kirklin, chair of the Department of Surgery, initiated the Surgeon’s Assistant Program, the first formalized education program in the United States to train surgeon's assistants. Dr. Alan R. Dimick was the program’s first director. 1967: Dr. Margarita P. Medina received a faculty appointment as associate professor of Mathematics, the first female international appointed to the full-time faculty of the College of General Studies. Dr. Medina was from Cuba. 1967: The Alabama legislature granted its first direct appropriation ($1.1 million) to the College of General Studies. 1967: A Faculty Women's Club of UAB was organized as a campus-wide organization that combined other such campus clubs (medical, dental, etc.). Mrs. K. Lemone Yeilding elected as the club's first president. March 6, 1968: Rust Research Center groundbreaking was held. March 29, 1968: Dr. Samuel B. Barker delivered the fifth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Perspectives." May 8, 1968: Dr. Arnold G. Diethelm successfully performed the Medical Center's first kidney transplant. June 23, 1968: The first public exhibit of work by art students in the College of General Studies opened in the Central Bank Building [currently the UAB Administration Building]. Martha Johnson and Barbara Tapla were the art class instructors. June 1968: Barbara Walker Mitchell became the first African American graduate of the University Hospital School of Nursing. June 1968: The Medical Center and the VA Hospital were authorized to share programs and facilities under Public Law 89-785. July 30, 1968: Symbolic groundbreaking was held for Medical Center Library, School of Nursing, and Basic Health Sciences buildings. July 1968: Dr. Herschell Lee Hamilton received a clinical appointment in the Department of Surgery and became the first African American board-certified general surgeon at University Hospital. October 1968: Enrollment in the College of General Studies totaled 3,378 students, including business administration (591), allied health sciences (104), education (574), engineering (408), humanities (215), natural sciences & mathematics (341), and social sciences (316). October 1968: For the fall term, history faculty member Dr. Jack D. L. Holmes offered a course in African American history. November 1, 1968: Dr. S. Richardson Hill, Jr., became vice president for Health Affairs. November 1968: Dr. Clifton K. Meador became dean of the Medical College of Alabama. 1968: U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development announced final approval of a 45-block expansion program for UAB and grants totaling over $11.4 million for the project. 1968: Dr. Joseph F. Volker was named executive vice president of UAB. 1968: The entering class size of the Medical College of Alabama was increased to 85. 1968: Dr. W. Paul Brann was named first vice president for Fiscal Affairs. 1968: The Regional Maxillofacial Prosthetics Treatment and Training Center was established with Dr. Dwight J. Castleberry as first director. 1968: The Alabama Ballet, formerly known as the Alabama State Ballet, became an affiliate of UAB. James F. Hatcher, Jr., was appointed as the administrator for the ballet program in addition to his duties as director of Town and Gown Theatre. 1968: Alabama Transplant Center was created in the Medical Center and served as the clinical center for all transplant activities at UAB. January 28, 1969: Dr. Frank A. Rose announced his resignation as president of The University of Alabama. February 1969: Sarah Louise Fisher became the first African American graduate of the School of Nursing. March 27, 1969: Dr. Howard L. Holley delivered the sixth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "...And Gladly Teach." March 1969: Delois Skipwith became the first African American faculty member in the School of Nursing and the first tenure-track African American faculty member at UAB. March 1969: The Center for Urban Affairs was established with Dr. John B. Dunbar as the first director. April 1, 1969: Dr. Keith D. Blayney became director of the School of Health Services Administration. April 1969: Alabama Act 91, passed by the state legislature during a special session on education, appropriated funding for a new School of Optometry at UAB. April 21, 1969: The Center for Developmental and Learning Disorders was dedicated. May 18, 1969: The Occupational Rehabilitation Center was dedicated at 1616 6th Avenue South. May 1969: Gloria S. Goldstein (later Gloria Goldstein Howton) was named as the first director of Public Affairs with oversight into the university's public relations efforts. June 1, 1969: Imogene L. Baswell received a bachelor's degree in engineering, the first female graduate of the engineering program in Birmingham. June 1, 1969: Effective on this date, the number 934 became the prefix for all campus telephone numbers. June 5, 1969: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees approved a plan “to provide for a system in which a separate President will be elected for each of the three campuses of the University with each President reporting to the Board of Trustees.” The new three-campus system, a plan which was to be effective September 5, 1969, was announced publicly eleven days later. June 16, 1969: Governor Albert P. Brewer announced the establishment of The University of Alabama System comprised of autonomous campuses in Tuscaloosa (UA), Birmingham (UAB), and Huntsville (UAH). The University of Alabama in Birmingham (UAB) became one of the three universities in the new three-campus system. June 16, 1969: Dr. Joseph F. Volker was named first president of UAB. June 25, 1969: Governor Albert P. Brewer announced $5 million in bond funds for College of General Studies construction. July 1969: MIST (Medical Information Service via Telephone) was created at the UAB Medical Center. August 29, 1969: Governor Albert P. Brewer signed an act appropriating $50,000 for the development of a School of Community and Allied Health Resources at UAB. August 1969: Dr. Henry B. Peters was named the first dean of the School of Optometry, the first optometry school in the nation to be integrated into an academic medical center. August 1969: Medical Center Annex, formerly the Cullom Apartments, was demolished to build the Kahler Plaza Hotel. September 1, 1969: Dr. Henry B. Peters arrived on campus as the first dean of the new School of Optometry. September 1, 1969: The Division of Engineering became solely responsible to the UAB College of General Studies and ceased being a jointly administered program with the University of Alabama. September 5, 1969: Dr. Joseph F. Volker assumed the office as the first president of the newly autonomous University of Alabama in Birmingham (UAB). September 12, 1969: Alabama Act 1054, the Skidmore Bill, officially changed the name of the Medical College of Alabama to The University of Alabama School of Medicine. September 27, 1969: The first eight students began classes in the new School of Optometry. September 1969: Intramural athletic teams were organized by Dr. James Sharman. October 15, 1969: A student protest in support of the Vietnam Moratorium was held in front of Tidwell Hall, the College of General Studies Building. 1969: For the first academic term of the newly independent UAB, the College of General Studies had eight full-time faculty members with international backgrounds. Three were natives of Cuba, the others were natives of Canada, England, Poland, South Africa, and Wales. There were also three international faculty with part-time appointments, one was from Spain and two were from India. 1969: For the first academic term of the newly independent UAB, the medical school at UAB had at least forty-one full-time faculty members with international backgrounds and thirteen part-time or clinical faculty members with international backgrounds. The full-time faculty hailed from twenty-six countries, the part-time from nine. 1969: For the first academic term of the newly independent UAB, the dental school at UAB had at least twenty-three clinical or basic science faculty with international backgrounds. These faculty members hailed from nineteen countries. 1969: Rev. Abraham L. Woods, Jr., a pioneer in the Civil Rights movement, became an adjunct (part-time) instructor in the UAB history department. 1969: Regional Technical Institute for Health Occupations was established. 1969: Dr. Keith D. Blayney was named administrator of University Hospital. 1969: Ellen Gregg Ingalls Award was established for excellence in classroom teaching. Dr. Hubert H. Harper, associate professor of English, was the first Ingalls recipient. 1969: Dr. T. Joseph Reeves was named chair of the Department of Medicine. 1969: University Hospital General Services Building opened at 1809 5th Avenue South. 1969: UAB’s first yearbook, the Annual Report, was published with Kay Haslam serving as editor. The Annual Report was focused more toward the College of General Studies since the dental, medical and nursing schools already had their own discrete yearbooks. 1969: The Woodward House atop Red Mountain was acquired by the university as the official residence for the UAB president. 1969: Rust Research Center, which housed the university's computer center, opened. 1969: Active extramural grants and contracts for the newly independent UAB totaled $18,190,620. 1970s View images from the 1970s. January 30, 1970: A groundbreaking ceremony was held for a new three-building campus for the College of General Studies. This ceremony heralded a campus expansion westward from the Medical Center footprint. January 1970: UAB received acceptance as a National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA) school. February 11, 1970: The first meeting was held for the newly elected senate of the College of General Studies. The 39-member College Senate included elected faculty, staff, and students as well as administrators appointed by the dean. February 19, 1970: Golf, the first intercollegiate sports team at UAB, opened its initial season in a match with Tulane University. February 1970: Richard W. Jackson appointed first director of security at UAB. March 26, 1970: Dr. Sidney B. Finn delivered the seventh Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "In Pursuit of the Elusive." March 1970: Because of the completion of the new exit ramp to the interstate, the City of Birmingham eliminated parallel parking along Eighth Avenue South [University Boulevard]. March 1970: The Greater Birmingham Alliance to Stop Pollution (GASP) held its first meeting with over 50 attendees. The group was headquartered at UAB in the Baptist Student Union building at 807 South 20th Street [Cullom Apartments]. Dr. Marshall Brewer, a surgery resident, was first president and Henry H. Stebbins, Jr., was executive director of GASP. April 16-17, 1970: Officials with the US Dept of Health, Education and Welfare toured UAB to review the university’s compliance with Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964. While HEW made a few suggestions for administrative improvements, the university was noted for its progress. April 1970: South Wing of University Hospital opened. May 1, 1970: Dr. Samuel B. Barker became first dean of the newly established UAB Graduate School. May 8, 1970: Several hundred students and faculty members held a protest in front of the College of General Studies Building in sympathy for Kent State. May 16, 1970: The first social sorority, Alpha Sigma Tau, was formally established at UAB as Beta Zeta chapter. May 17, 1970: The Ellen Gregg Ingalls Eye Research Institute was dedicated adjoining the Eye Foundation Hospital. June 7, 1970: In a commencement ceremony held at the Birmingham Municipal Auditorium, UAB awarded its first degrees as an autonomous university. At this first graduation, 478 students received degress from the new university. Dr. Joseph F. Volker, UAB president, received the first honorary degree. Ronald T. Acton received a Ph.D. in Microbiology, becoming the first person to receive a degree from UAB. Ellen Clyde Cook received a degree in Microbiology, the first master's degree awarded. The first bachelor's degree was awarded to Charlene Powell Ackerson from the School of Nursing. June 7, 1970: Richard Charles Dale and Samuel William Sullivan, Jr., became the first African American graduates of the School of Medicine. June 14, 1970: The Psychiatric Day Treatment Center was dedicated. June 14, 1970: Comprehensive Community Mental Health Center established in the Department of Psychiatry. June 30, 1970: Dr. Florence A. Hixson retired as first dean of the School of Nursing. July 1, 1970: Dr. Marie L. O'Koren became the second dean of the School of Nursing. July 1, 1970: Ground was broken for the Diabetes Research and Education Hospital. July 1, 1970: Dr. Paul H. Spence became librarian of the College of General Studies. July 13, 1970: Faculty member James F. Hatcher, Jr., and the Alabama Ballet, then an administrative unit of UAB, left for a five-week tour of Europe where the company performed "Repertory 1970" in Italy, France, Switzerland, Spain, and the United Kingdom. July 1970: Dr. John B. Dunbar became the first vice president for Student and Community Affairs. July 1970: A groundbreaking ceremony was held for the Physical Sciences Building. August 29, 1970: UAB’s second commencement ceremony was held in the Exhibition Hall at the Birmingham Municipal Auditorium for 173 graduates, including 59 who received advanced degrees. September 1970: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees held the first board meeting at the newly independent UAB. The Board approved a $91 million system-wide budget for the three universities, over $53.7 million (59%) of the total budget was for UAB. The Board also approved the recommendation of President Joseph F. Volker that UAB’s school colors would be green and gold. September 1970: The first three African American students matriculated in the School of Dentistry. September 1970: Total student enrollment for the fall term in all schools for the second year of classes of the new UAB was 6,629, with 2,724 females. September 1970: Dean Henry B. Peters announced the appointment of the first academic faculty for the one-year old School of Optometry. The inaugural faculty were Drs. Steven S. Bates, Benjamin V. Graham, Thomas S. Greenspon, Kenton E. Kerr, Randall T. Jose, Dolphus B. Mitchell, Clyde W. Oyster, John R. Pierce, Kenneth A. Polse, William R. Rosenblum, and Ellen Shizuko Takahashi. October 13, 1970: An organizational meeting was held for the Black Affairs Committee of the Student Government Association (SGA). The SGA president had appointed Helen Thedford as chair of the new committee at the start of the fall term. October 1970: Jean-Paul Sartre’s “No Exit” was performed by UAB students, the first time that students had taken complete responsibility for a theatrical production. Speech and Theatre faculty member Dr. Ward Haarbauer directed the production at the Clark Memorial Theatre; the show opened October 30. December 1970: The first Ph.D. program, biology, was approved for the College of General Studies. 1970: Dr. J. Durwood Bradley was named full-time chief-of-staff at University Hospital. 1970: A master's degree in Business Administration was initiated in the Division of Business, the first graduate program to begin in the College of General Studies. 1970: The UAB Burn Center was established with Dr. Alan R. Dimick as director. 1970: During the fall term, the Student Government Association (SGA) opened the "Nothin' But," a coffee shop located in the basement of the Engineering Building. The SGA operated the coffee shop until it was closed in the winter of 1972. 1970: The Graduate Student Association was chartered. 1970: The Afro-American Association was approved as an official student organization. Prince C. Chambliss, Jr., was the group's first president. 1970: The UAB student theatre group began in the fall as a means to offer students, faculty, and staff the opportunity to work in performance and technical capacities. It 1972 it would officially be renamed as UAB Commedia. 1970: Dr. John R. Durant established the Cancer Research and Training Center, later designated as the UAB Comprehensive Cancer Center. 1970: The Regional Technical Institute for Health Occupations opened. January 15, 1971: Dr. Keith D. Blayney became dean of the School of Community and Allied Health Resources. January 15, 1971: James E. Moon became administrator of University Hospital. March 8, 1971: Dr. Walter B. Frommeyer delivered the eighth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "A Physician's Prayer." March 11, 1971: The Center for Developmental and Learning Disorders was named in honor of former Alabama governor Chauncey Sparks. April 14, 1971: A National Honor Society chapter was first organized at the College of General Studies. May 14, 1971: The 55-member UAB Chorus presented its first public performance in the auditorium of the Engineering Building. Roy Wood was choral director. May 16, 1971: Eastern Annex of Ullman High School was rededicated as the Bell Building in honor of George C. Bell, the former principal of the Ullman High School. May 29, 1971: John T. Oliver, Jr., was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. He was the first trustee elected following the establishment of UAB and the three-campus University of Alabama System. May 1971: A groundbreaking ceremony was held for a classroom for the humanities (Humanities Building) and a library (Sterne Library). May 1971: Bracie Watson, Jr., a senior in health physics and a biology major, became the first African American elected president of the UAB student government association. June 5, 1971: Dr. Bengt E. Gustafson, a noted scientist from Sweden, received the honorary Doctor of Science degree, the second honorary degree awarded by UAB. Dr. Gustafson had a long-standing association with the medical and dental schools at UAB. June 1971: Six students received their Bachelor of Science degrees in Physiological Optics becoming the first graduates of the School of Optometry. August 1, 1971: Effective on this date, the College of General Studies was reorganized as University College, an academic entity consisting of four academic schools: Arts and Sciences, Business, Education, and Engineering. Dr. George W. Campbell was named as the interim Vice President for University College. August 4, 1971: Dr. Frederick W. Conner was named interim dean of the new School of Arts and Sciences; the school was abolished two years later. August 1971: The former Ullman High School was rededicated as UAB's Ullman Building, a facility comprised by the original 1901 school building and the school's 1955 addition. August 1971: Geraldine W. Bell became the first African American member of the faculty of the University College Library (later the Mervyn H. Sterne Library), receiving the appointment of instructor and reference bibliographer. September 1, 1971: Ballet House opened in the renovated Second Presbyterian Church building on 10th Avenue South. September 1, 1971: Stevan Grebel became first director of UAB's ballet program; his wife, Melanie Mihalic Grebel, became assistant to the director. September 18, 1971: Dr. Fain A. Guthrie became first dean of the School of Education after serving as interim dean for one month. September 1971: Dr. Jerry D. Young became first dean of the School of Business. October 6, 1971: The Rebel and Sophie Zeigler Medical Research Building was dedicated. October 19, 1971: The Lister Hill Library of the Health Sciences was dedicated and named in honor of Alabama's long-time former Senator Lister Hill. October 19, 1971: Sarah Cole Brown, who had served as chief librarian since 1955, became first director of the new Lister Hill Library of the Health Sciences. November 19, 1971: Kemmons Wilson, founder and chairman of the Board of Holiday Inns, presented the first Carri-Don Lecture in the School of Business. The school's first endowed lectureship had been established earlier in the year with a donation from Don and Carrie Marshall of Birmingham. December 1971: Dr. Joseph Appleton was named first dean of the School of Engineering after having served as interim dean since August. 1971: UAB's central administrative offices opened in the 7-11 Building. 1971: UAB was accredited as an independent institution of higher education by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools (SACS). February 1972: Pi Kappa Alpha was chartered as the first social fraternity at UAB. The local Eta Xi chapter had been established as a social club in 1970. April 8, 1972: Yetta G. Samford, Jr., was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. April 17, 1972: Dr. Charles A. McCallum, Jr., delivered the ninth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "The Challenge of Service." June 4, 1972: Virginia Baxley, long-time registrar of the medical school, became the first female awarded an honorary degree by UAB. She received the honorary Master of Arts degree. June 4, 1972: Walter Jackson received a BS in General Engineering, becoming the first African American graduate of the School of Engineering. June 1972: UAB Regional Spinal Cord Injury Care System was established with Dr. John M. Miller, III, as director. August 1972: Dr. George W. Campbell was named first vice president for University College after serving as interim vice president since August of 1971. September 9, 1972: The Psychiatric Day Treatment Center was renamed in honor of benefactor William P. Engel. September 24, 1972: Dr. Dalton E. McFarland received appointment as UAB’s first “University Professor,” a position designed to cross all school and departmental lines. His faculty appointment was in the School of Business. September 1972: University Hospital Outpatient Services Clinic was closed. October 1972: Mercy Hospital opened. December 1, 1972: A symbolic groundbreaking was held for the School of Optometry Building. 1972: The Extension Library of Lister Hill Library of the Health Sciences opened in the Hillman Hospital building. 1972: Offices for the UAB Graduate School moved into a renovated building at 1016 South 15th Street. 1972: The UAB Center for Labor Education and Research was established. Dr. Higdon C. Roberts, Jr., was the center's founding director. 1972: Air Force ROTC first became available to undergraduate students through a cooperative program with Samford University. 1972: By vote of faculty and students, the UAB student theater was officially renamed as UAB Commedia. The first production of the newly renamed program was Martin Duberman’s play “In White America.” 1972: UAB Police Department formally organized. Thomas C. Seals became the first Chief of Police. 1972: Payroll for UAB's 6,000 employees topped $50 million. February 1973: A new university bookstore was opened after being moved from the basement of Tidwell Hall to a newly acquired facility at the corner of 15th Street and 8th Avenue South. March 7-8, 1973: The Diabetes Research and Education Building was dedicated in the Medical Center as the nation's first public, university-affiliated diabetes hospital. March 27, 1973: Dr. J. Garber Galbraith delivered the tenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Perspectives in Neurosurgery." April 1973: The UAB School of Business became the youngest business school in the nation to be accredited by the American Assembly of Collegiate Schools of Business. May 11, 1973: A tornado struck downtown Birmingham in the area of 6th Avenue North. While UAB was not in the storm's direct path, the university campus was affected by the Friday storm. A tree fell on a portion of the gymnasium at Ullman-Bell and several buildings had roof damage. May 20, 1973: Dedication ceremonies were held for a new University College campus containing University College Building No. 1, University College Building No. 2, University College Building No. 3, and the university's new library. June 4, 1973: Seven optometry students received the first O.D. degrees during UAB's commencement exercises; Neil M. Bleakley was the School's first doctoral graduate. June 7, 1973: The School of Arts and Sciences was disestablished and its three divisions were elevated to three separate academic schools: Humanities, Natural Sciences and Mathematics, and Social and Behavioral Sciences. June 7, 1973: Dr. Frederick W. Conner became first dean of the School of Humanities. June 7, 1973: Dr. Roger W. Hanson became first dean of the School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics. June 7, 1973: Dr. George E. Passey became first dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences. July 1, 1973: Dr. James A. Pittman, Jr., became dean of the School of Medicine. July 8, 1973: First patients were admitted to the Diabetes Research and Education Hospital. September 1, 1973: Charles G. Jamerson was appointed to the faculty of the School of Business as an assistant professor in the Center for Labor Education and Research, becoming the first African American faculty member of the business school. September 15, 1973: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees approved a resolution naming the University College Library as the Mervyn H. Sterne Library after the late Birmingham businessman and philanthropist Mervyn H. Sterne. A dedication ceremony would be held the following year. October 1973: The Division of Special Studies was established to coordinate non-credit courses, workshops, seminars, and conferences. Dr. Rudolph Davidson was named director. October 1973: Groundbreaking was held for the Physical Education Facility. November 1973: The Friday after Thanksgiving first became an official UAB holiday. December 7-9, 1973: The Diabetes Hospital was formally dedicated at UAB in two-day festivities at the medical center. The hospital, which occupied one floor of the Diabetes Research and Education Building, had opened for patients on the eighth of July. 1973: University of Alabama Hospitals and Clinics was renamed The University of Alabama Hospitals. 1973: The Diabetes Research and Training Center was established with Dr. William J. Reddy as first director. This research center was located within the School of Medicine. 1973: UAB became Birmingham's second largest employer. 1973: The University of Alabama Health Services Foundation was established and incorporated as a not-for-profit, professional corporation. 1973: Dr. David M. Witten became the first president of The University of Alabama Health Services Foundation. March 1974: Dr. Jerry D. Young became first vice president for Finance. March 1974: Dr. John B. Dunbar became first vice president for Administration. April 15, 1974: Dr. Elizabeth C. Crosby delivered the eleventh Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Our Curious Cortex." She was the first female lecturer. April 1974: A symbolic groundbreaking was held for the Lurleen B. Wallace Cancer Hospital. June 9, 1974: Catherine Steinmitz Amos received her O.D. degree becoming the School of Optometry's first female graduate. June 9, 1974: Jimmie Walker, Jr., and Wilson Wright, Jr., became the first African American graduates of the School of Dentistry. August 1, 1974: Groundbreaking was held for the Monday Morning Quarterback Tower. September 24, 1974: The Edward M. Holmes, Jr., Pavilion of the Spain Rehabilitation Center was dedicated. October 5, 1974: The Silver Anniversary Celebration of the UAB Town and Gown Theatre was the inaugural theatrical event held at the city’s new Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center. November 1974: Physical Education Facility opened. December 15, 1974: Patience Hodges Claybon became the first African American female graduate of the School of Medicine. 1974: The Veterans Administration Regional Medical Education Center established as one of only three such centers in the nation. Clyde G. Cox was the center's first director. 1974: Drs. Carl H. Miller and Conrad Merrill received full-time faculty appointments in the School of Nursing, the first male faculty members at the Birmingham nursing school. Dr. Miller was appointed professor of psychiatric nursing; Dr. Merrill was professor and the director of student services. 1974: University of Alabama Medical Center Foundation, a non-profit corporation, was renamed the UAB Medical and Educational Foundation. 1974: Dr. M. Gene Newport became second dean of the School of Business. February 19, 1975: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees approved plans for UAB to establish a non-commercial, educational FM radio station for the campus. February 1975: UAB celebrated Black History Week with a series of lectures, dances, and art shows. The weeklong celebration was sponsored by the University College Student Government Association. April 20, 1975: Mercy Hospital was renamed Cooper Green Hospital. June 4, 1975: A groundbreaking ceremony was held for the Roberts Annex, an addition to the Clark Memorial Theatre building. June 9, 1975: Arthur D. Shores, attorney and noted Civil Rights Activist, received an honorary Doctor of Humanities degree from UAB becoming the first African American to receive an honorary degree from the university. July 1975: UAB Residence Hall at 1600 9th Avenue South was named in honor of Hugh Denman, long-time director of the Birmingham Housing Authority. August 1975: School of Nursing received approval for the first nursing doctoral program in the Southeast. September 12, 1975: The School of Optometry Building was dedicated. September 17, 1975: Dr. John W. Kirklin delivered the twelfth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Training of Horses, Quarterbacks, Pilots, and Surgeons." October 24, 1975: The Reynolds Historical Library was rededicated within the Lister Hill Library of the Health Sciences. November 22, 1975: The UAB Circle of Omicron Delta Kappa national leadership honor society was chartered. Ninety-one members from across the UAB campus were initiated into ODK; Dr. Aaron L. Lamar, Jr., became the first faculty advisor. November 1975: The University Ambulatory Center was demolished in order to build East Base of University Hospital. November 1975: Medical Towers Building was acquired. 1975: The Alabama legislature appropriated funds for the purchase of approximately 45 blocks for UAB expansion. 1975: The entering class size of the School of Medicine was increased to 145. 1975: Aura, UAB’s student literary arts review, debuted with an issue published during the fall. 1975: UAB acquired the Medical Center Plaza Building and renamed it University College Building No. 4. 1975: Dr. John W. Kirklin became the second president of The University of Alabama Health Services Foundation. January 17, 1976: The Medical and Dental Basic Science Building and Dental Clinic was rededicated as the School of Dentistry Building. March 15, 1976: Dr. Thomas K. Hearn, Jr., became second dean of the School of Humanities. March 1976: Dr. Joseph F. Volker presented Hugh Denman of the Birmingham Housing Authority $8.8 million for the purchase of 45 blocks for UAB expansion. March 1976: Ground was broken for University College Building No. 5. April 1, 1976: Dr. William F. Bridgers was named to develop public health efforts at UAB. April 5, 1976: “An Evening with Truman Capote” was held in the Bell Auditorium on the UAB campus. June 1, 1976: The Ambulatory Dialysis Center opened at 516 South 20th Street. June 6, 1976: Janice G. Jackson became the first African American female to graduate from the School of Dentistry. June 16, 1976: Dr. Joseph F. Volker was named the first chancellor of the three-campus University of Alabama System. June 30, 1976: Dr. George W. Campbell, vice president for University College, was named acting president of UAB. July 1976: Dr. W. Paul Brann became second vice president for Administration. September 21, 1976: Dr. S. Richardson Hill, Jr., delivered the thirteenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Endocrinology Revisited." September 24, 1976: The UAB Report, the weekly faculty and staff newspaper, was first published. December 4, 1976: School of Community and Allied Health Resources was renamed the School of Public and Allied Health, Dr. Keith D. Blayney renamed as dean. December 5, 1976: WBHM-FM Radio broadcast for the first time as the 200th affiliated station of National Public Radio. Dr. Florence M. Monroe was the station's first general manager. 1976: The first UAB student handbook was issued. Later, in 1982, it would be renamed as Directions. 1976: The Center for Aging was established. 1976: Dr. Rosalie Andrews Scripa received an appointment as assistant professor of Engineering, the first female with a full-time faculty appointment in the engineering school. 1976: The UAB Jazz Ensemble was organized in the fall as a performing group open to UAB students, staff, and faculty. 1976: The entering class size of the School of Medicine was increased to 165. January 14, 1977: The Radiation Therapy and Tumor Institute was dedicated as Phase I of the Lurleen B. Wallace Memorial Hospital and Tumor Institute. February 1, 1977: Dr. S. Richardson Hill, Jr., became the second president of UAB. February 26, 1977: Dr. Edwin G. Waldrop, a member of the Class of 1946, was awarded the first Distinguished Alumnus Award by the University of Alabama School of Medicine Alumni Association. February 1977: UAB first celebrated Black History Month with a series of campus events, including lectures, film screenings, and dances. Poet Nikki Giovanni was one of the guest lecturers. The month-long celebration was co-sponsored by the University College Student Government Association and the Graduate Student Association. May 13, 1977: The Alabama Supreme Court held a session on the UAB campus for the first time. Three cases were heard by Chief Justice C. C. Torbert, Jr., and the other eight members of Alabama’s highest court. May 26, 1977: R. Lee Walthall became first vice president for Institutional Advancement and Legal Affairs. May 27, 1977: The UAB Mini Park was dedicated. May 1977: Dr. J. Dudley Pewitt became third vice president for Administration. June 14, 1977: Dr. S. Richardson Hill, Jr., announced that UCLA Coach Gene Bartow would become UAB's new Athletic Director and head coach of the Men's Basketball team. July 18, 1977: The Monday Morning Quarterback Tower was dedicated as Phase I of the Alabama Heart Hospital. August 1977: Fran Sharp Merrell became the first head coach of the new Women's Basketball team. September 1, 1977: Dr. Charles A. McCallum, Jr., became vice president for Health Affairs. September 26, 1977: Dr. Thomas N. James delivered the fourteenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Dobermans, Dalmatians, and Deaf Children." October 10, 1977: Engineering Building was renamed Cudworth Hall in honor of James R. Cudworth. October 1977: Basic Health Sciences Building was renamed Volker Hall in honor of UAB's first president. November 9, 1977: UAB joined the Sun Belt Conference. 1977: Sports Medicine Institute established as an official UAB center. Dr. Kurt M. W. Niemann was the first director. 1977: Drs. Leo M. Hall and James E. Myrick obtained the first license from UAB for manufacture and sale of an invention produced at the university. The reagent they developed was licensed to Calbiochem for US and international sales. 1977: Dr. Robert Glaze became first vice president for Research and Graduate Studies. 1977: The Multipurpose Arthritis Center, later renamed the Arthritis and Musculoskeletal Diseases Center, was created. 1977: Urological Rehabilitation and Research Center established at UAB with Dr. L. Keith Lloyd as director. 1977: World's first effective treatment for a viral disease, the deadly herpes simplex encephalitis, occurred at University Hospital. January 1, 1978: Dr. Leonard H. Robinson became third dean of the School of Dentistry. January 13, 1978: In a campus-wide election, students, faculty, and staff voted to name all intercollegiate athletic teams the UAB Blazers. January 20, 1978: UAB held a ceremony honoring the late Rev. Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., with a keynote address by Rev. Wyatt Tee Walker. Walker had served as chief-of-staff for King and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference. The event was held in the auditorium of the Engineering Building and was sponsored by the UAB group Students for Greater Awareness. The event was funded by the student government and graduate student associations. January 1978: Gladys McQueen, supervisor of keypunch services in the Central Computing Facility, was named UAB’s first “Employee of the Month.” At the time, McQueen had 24 years of service. January 1978: The UAB Symphony Orchestra established as the only college/community orchestra in the Birmingham metropolitan area. The faculty advisor was Dr. Sherrill Martin, department of Performing Arts. The orchestra's first performance was in April. January 1978: Patricia P. Farmer was named as first curator of Art Collections at UAB and as curator of the UAB Visual Arts Gallery. February 1, 1978: The Russell Ambulatory Center was dedicated. March 6, 1978: University College Building No. 5 opened. April 28, 1978: University College Building No. 5 was renamed in honor of Dr. George W. Campbell, vice president for University College. April 1978: Bill Herron hired as the first head coach of Men's Tennis, a team scheduled to begin competition during the 1979 calendar year. May 1978: Dr. John D. Jones became first vice president for Student Affairs. May 1978: Alabama native Harry "the Hat" Walker became the first head coach of the new Men's Baseball team. Games for the UAB Blazers were played at Birmingham's historic Rickwood Field since there were no on-campus facilities available. June 4, 1978: Terrence N. Ingraham received his O.D. degree becoming the first African American graduate of the School of Optometry. July 24, 1978: Upon the retirement of Sarah Cole Brown, Richard B. Fredericksen became second director of the Lister Hill Library of the Health Sciences. September 1, 1978: The UAB Police Department assumed “campus-wide responsibility for the enforcement of University parking rules and regulations.” September 15, 1978: Dr. James H. Woodward, Jr., became second dean of the School of Engineering. September 22, 1978: Dr. Marie L. O'Koren delivered the fifteenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Nursing: Past Realities and Future Imperatives." October 1, 1978: Dr. Thomas K. Hearn became second vice president for University College. October 27, 1978: The Center for Advanced Medical Studies (CAMS) was approved by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees as an official UAB Center. Later, the center was renamed in honor of Dr. James A. Pittman, Jr. October 1978: Dr. Joel P. Hearn, a post-graduate student in endodontics, composed the new UAB Fight Song. A committee comprised of students, faculty, and staff selected Dr. Hearn's song during a campus-wide competition. November 24, 1978: Before a crowd of over 14,800 at the Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center, the UAB men's basketball team competed in its first game, losing to Nebraska by a score of 55 to 64. November 29, 1978: The Women's Basketball team played its first game at the Birmingham-Jefferson Civic Center, losing to North Alabama by a score of 77 to 82. November 29, 1978: The School of Public and Allied Health was renamed the School of Community and Allied Health, Dr. Keith D. Blayney remained as dean. December 1, 1978: Drs. Kenneth J. Roozen and Blaine A. Brownell became associate deans and co-directors of the UAB Graduate School. 1978: UAB Ambassadors corps formed with 10 students and two alternates in order to provide student hosts at official university functions. Dr. Kathleen Faircloth was the faculty advisor for the new student group. 1978: Blazer cheerleading squad of 10 formed in the spring with John Slivka and Susan Rheuby as Head Cheerleaders. Deborath Sutherland was the first director of the cheer and dance teams. 1978: Ayda G. Nambayan received a full-time faculty appointment as assistant professor of nursing, the first international appointed to the nursing school faculty. Nambayan was from the Philippines. 1978: The Medical Education Building opened. 1978: Howard G. Hawk became the first UAB student named as a Truman Scholar. 1978: Susan Cook became the first head coach of the new Women's Volleyball team. 1978: The Nephrology Research and Training Center was established at UAB with Dr. Robert G. Luke as first director. 1978: Dr. Aaron L. Lamar, Jr., was named assistant vice president and dean of Student Affairs, becoming the first African American appointed to a senior administrative position at UAB. 1978: A pink dragon served as the first official mascot for the UAB Blazers. 1978: UAB Pain Treatment Center was formally established as an official center although the program had originated in the late 1960s. Dr. H. Ronald Vinik was the center's first director. 1978: Peter N. Derzis, Jr., became UAB's first Sports Information director. 1978: Lister Hill Library of the Health Sciences contained 188,000 volumes and 2,877 journal subscriptions. 1978: The Alabama Regional Organ and Tissue Center established. January 23, 1979: In a reception held in the Rust Research Center, Gladys McQueen was honored as UAB’s first “Employee of the Year.” She had been selected as the university’s first “Employee of the Month” the previous January. January 25-27, 1979: During basketball season, UAB celebrated its first Homecoming festivities. January 27, 1979: UAB gained full membership as an NCAA Division I athletics program. January 1979: The University of Alabama System Medical Education Program (UASMEP) was reaccredited by the national Liaison Committee on Medical Education (LCME). April 1979: The Division of Special Studies renamed UAB Special Studies. June 3, 1979: E. Karen King became the first African American female graduate of the School of Optometry. June 3, 1979: Kathleen G. Andreoli became the first graduate of the School of Nursing’s DSN program, which had been instituted in 1975. Andreoli completed degree requirements in March and was awarded her doctoral degree at the annual commencement ceremony. June 17, 1979: The Spain Heart Bed Tower, Margaret Cameron Spain Auditorium, Wallace Cancer Bed Tower, and East Base were dedicated as part of the "New U" celebrations. June 24, 1979: Lilly Henderson, a UAB senior in Counseling and Guidance (Education), was named Miss Wheelchair Alabama. June 1979: The original Jefferson Hospital building was renamed Jefferson Tower. July 1979: The former Lawrence Reynolds Library building was demolished in order to construct the Center for Advanced Medical Studies. September 12, 1979: Vision Science Research Center was dedicated as the only NEI funded center located in an optometry school. Dr. Terry L. Hickey was the center's first director. In 1996 the center received designation as a university-wide research center. October 12, 1979: UAB’s new heliport was dedicated on the western edge of campus. October 19, 1979: Dr. J. Claude Bennett delivered the sixteenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "The Bench and the Bedside." October 26, 1979: The John J. Sparkman Center for International Public Health Education was approved as an official center by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Dr. William F. Bridgers was the center's first director. In 2004 the center was renamed as the Sparkman Center for Global Health. October 26, 1979: Martha Simms Rambo and Thomas E. Rast were elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Rambo was the first women elected to the governing board of the three campus University of Alabama System. November 5, 1979: T. Massey Bedsole was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. 1979: Tim Hamer became the first head coach of the new Men's Soccer team. 1979: Center for Nursing Research was established. 1979: Dr. Carl E. Dukes completed an internal medicine residency program and service as the first African American selected as UAB's chief medical resident. 1979: Dr. James Rachels was named third dean of the School of Humanities after serving as interim since 1978. 1979: Jimmy Ballard became the first head coach of the new Men's Golf team. 1979: The Phoenix, a UAB yearbook chiefly focusing on University College, was first published. Steve Nixon, a junior management major, was editor of the first yearbook. 1979: Hugh Thomson became the inaugural head coach of the Women's Tennis team and the second head coach of the Men's Tennis team. 1979: The Muscular Dystrophy and Myasthenia Gravis Center established. 1979: President S. Richardson Hill, Jr., established the UAB President’s Council. Composed by community business and civic leaders, the council was charged with advising the president on matters related to the advancement of the university. 1979: UAB National Alumni Society was chartered. 1979: The Blue Cross/Blue Shield Building on South 20th Street was acquired and reopened as the Community Health Services Building. 1979: Active extramural grants and contracts at UAB totaled $47,471,028. 1979-1980: Beauregard T. Rooster became the official mascot for the UAB Blazers, the university's second mascot. 1980s View images from the 1980s. January 8, 1980: A groundbreaking ceremony was held for the Hulsey Center for Arts and Humanities. January 11, 1980: John J. Sparkman Center for International Public Health Education was dedicated. February 1980: Brenda Williams became the second head coach of Women's Volleyball. March 5-7, 1980: The Center for Advanced Medical Studies was dedicated. March 15, 1980: Dr. Milly E. Cowles became second dean of the School of Education. April 9, 1980: The Physical Education Facility was renamed in honor of former Alabama governor George C. Wallace. April 30, 1980: Twin Towers, a student residence hall, opened. June 11, 1980: The first meeting of the Tinsley R. Harrison Medical Student Society was held at UAB. Senior medical student J. Patrick Daugherty was the first to present a research paper before the new student organization. June 15, 1980: Dr. Lee R. Summerlin became interim dean of the School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics. September 1980: The Army ROTC program was initiated at UAB, one of 41 universities throughout the country to gain an Reserve Officers' Training Corps program. The UAB program began with 12 cadets. November 7, 1980: Dr. John R. Durant delivered the seventeenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "People I Have Known." 1980: The Pediatric Pulmonary Center was established. 1980: The Center for International Programs was established with Robert W. French as director. 1980: William M. Voigt became the first president of the UAB National Alumni Society. 1980: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees dropped the designation University of Alabama System Medical Education Program (UASMEP) for the system’s medical programs in Birmingham, Huntsville, and Tuscaloosa. In its place, the board recognized that the system had one medical school, The University of Alabama School of Medicine, which is located in Birmingham and which has programs at the Huntsville and Tuscaloosa campuses. 1980: The Occupational Health and Safety Educational Resource Center was created. 1980: The former Jefferson County Public Health Building was demolished. January 21, 1981: Alabama Congenital Heart Disease Diagnosis and Treatment Center was established with Dr. John W. Kirklin as director. January 21, 1981: The Cystic Fibrosis Research Center was established at UAB with Dr. Roy Curtiss III as first director. In 1986 the center was renamed in honor of Gregory Fleming James, the late son of Governor Fob James. January 31, 1981: During UAB's homecoming celebrations, David Bolus and Kay Ellis were chosen as the first “Mr. and Ms. UAB.” March 1981: The first International Conference on Differential Equations and Mathematical Physics was hosted at UAB by the Department of Mathematics, the founding entity for the conference. May 17, 1981: Joseph H. Woolf Family Practice Center was dedicated. May 29, 1981: UAB Department of Public Health was designated the School of Public Health by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Dr. William F. Bridgers became the new school's first dean. June 1981: Eight Avenue South was renamed University Boulevard. August 1, 1981: Avie Bridges became the second head coach of Women's Basketball. She came to UAB from Tulane University. September 8, 1981: The first bone marrow transplant at UAB was performed. Dr. Jon Gockerman was medical director of the program. September 27, 1981: The Baptist Student Center at UAB was dedicated. October 23, 1981: Dr. James A. Pittman, Jr., delivered the eighteenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Progress." October 30, 1981: Groundbreaking was held for the University Center. November 24, 1981: Dr. Robert B. Karp headed the University Hospital team that performed the first heart transplant at UAB. November 1981: UAB Small Business Development Center was established with Fred Myrick as first director. December 1, 1981: Dr. Robert Glaze became first vice president for Research and Institutional Advancement after having served as acting vice president since 1980. December 15, 1981: The Ambulatory Dialysis Home Training Center opened. 1981: Bob Norman became the second head coach of the Men's Soccer team. 1981: The entering class size of the School of Medicine was decreased to 150. 1981: Center for Communications Research was established with Dr. John W. Wittig as director. 1981: Dr. Paul Spence, director of the Mervyn H. Sterne Library, acquired the inventory of three bookstores in New York City, getting over 250,000 volumes for UAB's library collection. The acquisition included several 16th, 17th, and 18th century titles that were added to the library's collection of rare books. 1981: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees expanded from eight to fifteen members. 1981: Jim White became the third head coach of the Men's Tennis team, becoming the first African American named as a Blazer head coach. 1981: The University College Senate was superseded by the new University College Faculty Senate. February 2, 1982: UAB Synopsis was first published for the medical and dental staff of University Hospital; Dr. Richard McElvein was first editor. February 28, 1982: Men's Basketball team won their first Sun Belt Conference title in a championship tournament hosted by UAB and held in Birmingham. March 13, 1982: Men's Basketball team reached the round of 16 in the NCAA basketball playoffs. March 24, 1982: “Elizabeth,” a narrative film shot entirely on location in UAB’s Spain Rehabilitation Center, was broadcast nationally on the PBS network. March 25, 1982: "Ceremonies in Dark Old Men,” was the inaugural production held in the theater of the new Husley Center for the Arts. The Town and Gown Theatre production was sponsored by the United Negro College Fund and was held to honor of local businesswoman Minnie Gaston and local dentist Dr. John W. Nixon, an amateur actor who was also a member of the clinical faculty of the UAB dental school and a veteran civil rights activist. April 30, 1982: The Hulsey Center for Arts and Humanities officially opened. A poetry reading in the theater studio by Alan Perlis, chair of the English department, and by several UAB students was part of the opening ceremony for the new Center. April 1982: Charlie Badger became the second head coach for the Women's Tennis team. May 17, 1982: Wanda Hightower Jordan became the first UAB athlete to have a jersey retired. A member of the 1978-1982 Women's Basketball team, she had scored 2,854 career points and had gained 1,091 career rebounds. June 3, 1982: A groundbreaking was held for the Susan Mott Webb Nutrition Sciences Building. August 1, 1982: Dr. Thomas A. Bartlett became the second chancellor of the three-campus University of Alabama System. August 25, 1982: UAB alumna Barbara Crozier, Miss Wheelchair Alabama, was selected as the 1983 Miss Wheelchair, USA. August 1982: Dr. Joseph F. Volker, recently retired as chancellor of the three-campus University of Alabama System, returned to UAB as a distinguished professor. November 4, 1982: The Betty LeRoy Davis Outpatient Clinic was dedicated in University Hospital. The clinic was the first patient area in the hospital to be named for a registered nurse. Davis worked at UAB from 1965 until her retirement in 1981. November 10, 1982: William H. Mitchell, Jr., and Dr. Sandral Hullet were elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Dr. Hullet, who had earned a master’s degree from the UAB School of Public Health, became the first African American elected to the governing board of the three campus University of Alabama System. November 12, 1982: Dr. Max D. Cooper delivered the nineteenth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Of Mice, Men, and Chickens." 1982: The Alabama Legislature and the voters of Alabama approved a constitutional amendment increasing the membership on the University of Alabama Board of Trustees from eight to fifteen, with the aim to provide diversity and better representation on the governing board of the three campus University of Alabama System. Each Congressional district went from one member to two members; the district containing Tuscaloosa went from two members to three. The state constitution stipulates that the Tuscaloosa district have one more board member than other Congressional districts. 1982: Joe Davidson became the second head coach of the Men's Golf team. 1982: Tom Seals became the first head coach of the new Riflery team. He was the chief of the UAB Police department. 1982: Laboratory for Special Cancer Research opened at 550 South 11th Street. 1982: In the fall of 1982 Men's Volleyball was established as a new Blazer sport, with Tim Richards as the inaugural head coach. 1982: The newly revised campus-wide student guide, Directions, debuted. It replaced the formerly issued Student Handbook. 1982: By the end of the year, Sue Cranford had been hired as the third head coach of the Women's Tennis team, with her first season of coaching being 1983. Cranford had been a student athlete on the inaugural Blazer tennis team. February 1983: UAB discontinued its bone marrow transplant program after less than two years. March 26, 1983: Phyllis Pope, a pre-dentistry major from Olympia Field, Illinois, selected as the first Miss UAB. Twenty-two students participated in the university’s first pageant, an official preliminary to the Miss Alabama pageant. May 21, 1983: UAB held its first telephone student registration in a pilot program sponsored by the Office of Registration and Academic Records. June 5, 1983: Linda C. Lucas received a PhD in biomedical engineering, the first doctoral degree awarded by the School of Engineering. Junene R. Pearson received a BS in electrical engineering, becoming the first African American female graduate of the engineering school. June 1983: The UAB Critical Care Transport Service began. July 14, 1983: Aaron M. Aronov and Garry Neil Drummond were elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. August 1983: The UAB Conference Center was renamed the Carrie D. and Don V. Marshall Conference Center. September 10, 1983: Cleophus Thomas, Jr., and Frank H. Bromberg, Jr., were elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. October 13, 1983: Drs. Wayne H. and Sara C. Finley delivered the twentieth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "From the Roots to the Branches." October 18, 1983: Susan Mott Webb Nutrition Sciences Building was dedicated. October 1983: Dr. James Rachels became interim vice president for University College, he served until the end of the year. October 1983: The University Center opened. December 3, 1983: Oliver H. Delchamps, Jr., was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. December 10, 1983: Students, staff, and faculty in the arts and humanities held the first Madrigal Feaste in the newly opened University Center. The annual UAB holiday event would remain on the university calendar for many years. 1983: UAB ranked 24th out of 396 institutions in the amount of funding received for research from the National Institutes of Health. 1983: Dr. Peter V. O'Neil was named second dean of the School of Natural Sciences and Mathematics after having served as interim since 1982. 1983: Center for the Advancement of Developing Industries was established with Dr. James H. Woodward, Jr., as first director. 1983: School of Optometry became the only school of its kind in the nation to require students to pass the National Board Examinations to qualify for graduation. 1983: Don Young was named director of Financial Affairs and University Treasurer. 1983: The Rev. James T. Crutcher, formerly pastor of the Sixteenth Street Baptist Church, became the first African American named as a full-time chaplain at University Hospital. He served in that capacity until 1996. 1983: UAB Honors Program, an inter-disciplinary curriculum for undergraduate students, established with Dr. Ada W. Long as first director. 1983: Dr. Sara Ruiz de Molina was named acting dean of Special Studies. January 1, 1984: Dr. James H. Woodward, Jr., became third vice president for University College; he served until June 1989 when the office was renamed Academic Affairs. January 21, 1984: The Business and Engineering Complex was dedicated. February 3, 1984: Dr. Joaquin Aldrete led the team that performed the first liver transplant at University Hospital. The patient was a five-year old boy from Alabama. April 1984: Roy Kirkpatrick became the second Chief of Police. April 1984: UAB first hosted Greek Week for sororities and fraternities. Events were held on campus the week of April 23-27. June 3, 1984: Regina M. Benjamin of Daphne, Alabama, graduated from the medical school at UAB. In 2009 Dr. Benjamin would become the third Alabamian appointed as Surgeon-General of the United States. July 1984: The UAB Benevolent Fund was established. Dr. Virginia D. Gauld was selected as the first president of the Faculty and Staff Benevolent Fund Council, a 32-member group chosen to oversee UAB's charitable giving campaign. September 1, 1984: Lung Health Center was established at UAB with Dr. William C. Bailey as director. The center received approval of The University of Alabama Board of Trustees on December 4, 1986. September 1, 1984: Ken Letson became UAB's second Sports Information director. September 1, 1984: Dr. Blaine A. Brownell became second dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences. September 23, 1984: The Tinsley Harrison Tower was dedicated. November 9, 1984: Dr. Harriet P. Dustan delivered the twenty-first Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Alabama and The Golden Age of Medical Research." November 15, 1984: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees approved the change of UAB's name from the "University of Alabama in Birmingham" to the "University of Alabama at Birmingham." November 16, 1984: The Basic Health Science Education and Research Building was dedicated. 1984: Dr. Jay Goldman named third dean of the School of Engineering, succeeding Dr. Edmond Miller who had served as interim. 1984: Joann Beddow became the first head coach of the Women's Golf team. The new team was organized that year and began competition in the fall of 1985. 1984: The Phoenix, a magazine for the university community published by UAB journalism students, debuted in the winter. Brent H. Morgan was the magazine’s first editor. 1984: The first use in the United States of a color doppler echocardiograph for visualizing internal cardiac structures occurred at University Hospital. 1984: Najwa S. Bateh became the third president of the UAB National Alumni Society. Bateh was the Society's first female president and first president with an international background. 1984: Dr. Theodore M. Benditt named fourth dean of the School of Humanities. 1984: Dr. Anthony C. L. Barnard named dean and co-director of the Graduate School. January 1, 1985: Dr. Jerry W. Stephens became second director of the Mervyn H. Sterne Library. January 23, 1985: First baby was born as a result of the UAB In Vitro Fertilization (IVF) program. Dr. Kathryn Honea, IVF program director, attended the baby girl’s birth at the mother’s local hospital. April 15, 1985: UAB's first International Food Festival was held in the Mini Park. April 18, 1985: UAB's new baseball field was officially dedicated as the Jerry D. Young Memorial Field. April 25, 1985: The residence hall for nursing students at UAB was rededicated as Florence A. Hixson Hall. June 1, 1985: Dr. Sara Ruiz de Molina became second dean of Special Studies. June 2, 1985: Dr. J. Durwood Bradley, Jr., chief of staff at the hospital, became the first recipient of The President's Medal, given for distinguished service to UAB. June 10, 1985: Angela Tower, a dance student at UAB, was named Miss Alabama. She later went on to become the fourth runner up in the Miss America pageant in September in Atlantic City, New Jersey. June 27, 1985: Center for Health Risk Assessment and Disease Prevention was established. July 1, 1985: The university launched the first Capital Campaign with a goal of $25 million. July 1, 1985: William A. "Bill" Ivey became the third head coach of the Women's Basketball team, after having served as interim coach for the previous year. September 26, 1985: The Center for Telecommunications Education and Research was approved by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Drs. Warren T. Jones and David A. Conner were named as center co-directors. November 13, 1985: Diabetes Research and Education Building was rededicated as the Boshell Diabetes Research and Education Building. November 15, 1985: Dr. Leonard H. Robinson delivered the twenty-second Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Excellence Revisited: Prescription for The Future." November 24, 1985: Birmingham's Visitors and Information Center at UAB was dedicated at 1201 University Boulevard. December 5, 1985: The Center for Macromolecular Crystallography and the Sleep/Wake Disorders Center were approved by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Dr. Charles E. Bugg was named as first director of the crystallography center, and Dr. Virgil Wooten was founding director of the Sleep/Wake center. 1985: W. Grant Shingleton became UAB's third Sports Information director. 1985: UAB's former home of the Alabama Ballet became home to the new honors program and was renamed as the UAB Honors House. 1985: David L. Poehler became the head coach of Men's Tennis. 1985: Ken Cain became the head coach of the Men's Volleyball team. January 23, 1986: The University of Alabama Hospitals was renamed as The University of Alabama Hospital; but it remained more commonly known as "University Hospital." January 23, 1986: The Ben S. Weil Endowed Chair of Industrial Distribution was established in the School of Business. Weil was the first endowed chair at UAB outside of the medical center. February 28, 1986: The UAB student chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People (NAACP) received its charter. The chapter later went dormant but was reactivated during the fall of 2003. March 1986: Mac Logue became the third head coach of the Men's Golf team. Logue had been a student athlete member of the Blazer team. April 3, 1986: The Geriatric Education Center was approved by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Dr. Glenn H. Hughes was named as first director of the center. April 3, 1986: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees formally approved the UAB Epilepsy Center, which had been initiated in 1981. April 3, 1986: The Lister Hill Center for Health Policy and the Center for Nuclear Imaging Research were established by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Dr. William F. Bridgers was named first director of the Lister Hill Center. Dr. Gerald M. Pohost was named director of the nuclear imaging center. May 1986: UAB acquired the Mary Lewis Convalescent Home, a 45-bed facility. May 1986: Upon the retirement of Harry "the Hat" Walker, assistant coach Pete Rancont was named as the second head coach of Men's Baseball June 3, 1986: Cudworth Hall was renamed the UAB Continuing Education Center. June 7, 1986: The first five students graduated from the UAB Honors Program. June 26, 1986: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees approved the UAB Injury Control Research Center with Dr. P. Russ Fine as first director. July 1, 1986: Dr. Richard R. Ranney became the fourth dean of the School of Dentistry. August 1, 1986: Dr. Bradford W. Wild became second dean of the School of Optometry. September 1, 1986: Dr. Charles A. McCallum, Jr., vice president for Health Affairs, became acting president of UAB during the one-year sabbatical of President S. Richardson Hill, Jr. September 25, 1986: The Comprehensive Head Injury Center, which had been initiated at UAB in 1986, received approval by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Dr. Thomas J. Boll was later named as the center's first director. September 25, 1986: The Center for Reproductive Health and Genetics was approved by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Drs. Sara C. Finley and Hugh M. Shingleton were named co-directors of the center. September 25, 1986: Center for Interdisciplinary Research on Immunological Diseases, created in 1985 with funding from the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases, was formally approved by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Dr. J. Claude Bennett was the center's first director. October 15, 1986: International House was rededicated in honor of Joseph S. and Bertha Pizitz Smolian. November 14, 1986: Dr. Charles E. Butterworth, Jr., delivered the twenty-third Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "The Function of A University Professor." 1986: Antoinette “Toni” Nordan became curator of the UAB Visual Arts Gallery. 1986: Men's Volleyball and the Riflery teams were eliminated as team sports chiefly due to NCAA regulations for sports allowed per member institution. January 22, 1987: Parkinson's Disease Association Information and Referral Center, established in 1986, was approved by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Dr. James H. Halsey, Jr., served as the center's first director. February 18, 1987: The Neurobiology Research Center was established. April 2, 1987: Dr. Charles A. McCallum, Jr., became third president of UAB. April 2, 1987: Dr. Cordell Wynn and George S. Shirley were elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. April 13, 1987: The first International Festival was held at UAB. The event was sponsored by the International Student Association and association president Khalil Jarrar. April 1987: Mickey Pizitz Memorial Pool opened as an addition to Spain Rehabilitation Center. April 1987: Eugenia "Jeannie" Milling became the fourth head coach of the Women's Basketball team. June 2, 1987: School of Community and Allied Health was renamed the School of Health Related Professions, Dr. Keith D. Blayney remained as dean. June 17, 1987: The Center for Research in Oral Biology superseded the Institute of Dental Research. Dr. Henning Birkedal-Hansen was first director of the center. September 1, 1987: Effective on this date, all “indoor public areas” of the UAB Medical Center became smoke free. October 30, 1987: Dr. Dan W. Urry delivered the twenty-fourth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Of Molecules, Motion, Man, and Machines." October 1987: Mervyn H. Sterne Library was rededicated after the completion of a major expansion and renovation project. November 1, 1987: Dr. Rachel Z. Booth became third dean of the School of Nursing. December 4, 1987: The Center for Economic Education was approved by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Dr. Henry N. McCarl was named as the center's first director. December 1987: UAB South opened in an International Park office building. 1987: World's first genetically engineered mouse-human monoclonal antibody was used at University Hospital in the treatment of cancer. 1987: Dr. Clint Bruess was named third dean of the School of Education. 1987: Omar Alcaino became the fourth head coach of the Women's Tennis team. Alcaino, who had been a student athlete on the Blazer men's team, had previously served as the team's assistant and associate head coach. 1987: The movie, “The Verne Miller Story,” was released. Shot partially in Birmingham the previous year, some scenes had been filmed in UAB’s Woodward House. (This film was also called “Gangland”) 1987: UAB Hospice Program was established in University Hospital. 1987: Center for Reproductive Health and Genetics opened in renovated Byrd Building. 1987: The UAB Research Foundation was formed as a non-profit corporation with the mission to identify, assess, and market commercially viable technology developed at UAB. January 1988: In response to the growing AIDS epidemic, the 1917 Clinic was opened at UAB. The clinic, which took its name from the building’s street address in order to protect the confidentiality of patients, was founded and first directed by Dr. Michael S. Saag. February 5, 1988: The School of Humanities was renamed the School of Arts and Humanities; Dr. Theodore M. Benditt remained as dean. April 1, 1988: Dr. John R. Durant became vice president for Health Affairs, succeeding Dr. J. Durwood Bradley who had served as interim vice president since the previous July. April 1988: Dr. Robert Glaze became first vice president for Research Development. May 6, 1988: The Center for Management Study was established with Dr. M. Gene Newport as first center director. May 19, 1988: UAB Arena was dedicated. May 1988: Kellie J. Isbell and David K. Thomas became the second and third UAB students named as Truman Scholars. This was the first time in Alabama history that two students were selected from the same institution. May 1988: The Center for Neuroimmunology was established. June 5, 1988: UAB Commencement was held in the new UAB Arena, the first time a UAB graduation ceremony had been held on the university’s campus. UAB awarded degrees to 3,260 students. June 5, 1988: R. Kent Oestenstad received a PhD in Environmental Health Sciences, the first PhD awarded by the School of Public Health. Dr. Oestenstad then joined the school's faculty. June 27, 1988: The first heart-lung transplant in Alabama was performed at University Hospital by a team headed by Drs. James K. Kirklin and George L. Zorn, Jr. June 1988: Dr. Dick D. Briggs became acting president of The University of Alabama Health Services Foundation. August 1, 1988: UAB initiated an escort service through the UAB Police Department for any student, employee or visitor between the hours of 6:00 p.m. and midnight. September 1, 1988: Virginia L. Algermissen became third director of the Lister Hill Library of the Health Sciences. September 9, 1988: The William Gorgas Center for Geographic Medicine was established. October 14, 1988: The Doctors' Center Building was rededicated as the Paul S. Worrell Building. October 28, 1988: William “Jack” Edwards, III, was elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. November 18, 1988: Dr. Basil I. Hirschowitz selected as the twenty-fifth Distinguished Faculty Lecturer. His lecture was titled "Fiberoptics: Retrospect and Prospect." November 1988: UAB Travel Center opened in the Burleson Building. December 3, 1988: In their first home game in the new UAB Arena, the Men's Basketball team defeated Vanderbilt 76-69. December 6, 1988: In their first home game in the new UAB Arena, the Women's Basketball team defeated Southern University 66-64. December 9, 1988: The Center for AIDS Research was formally approved by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. Dr. Eric Hunter was the center's first director. December 9, 1988: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees formally accepted a gift from the BellSouth Foundation to help establish the Wallace R. Bunn endowed position in the School of Engineering at UAB. An endowed professorship was established from this gift in 1991. Bunn, who had retired in 1984, was the founding chairman and chief executive officer of the BellSouth Corporation. December 1988: Dr. Dick D. Briggs became the third president of The University of Alabama Health Services Foundation. December 1988: Upon the resignation of Dr. Thomas A. Bartlett, Samuel E. G. Hobbs was named interim chancellor of the three-campus University of Alabama System. Hobbs had previously served as a member of the Board of Trustees from 1964 until 1987. 1988: Regional Ectodermal Dysplasia Diagnosis and Treatment Center was established with Dr. J. Timothy Wright as director. 1988: Dr. Max D. Cooper, a professor of pediatrics and microbiology, was elected to membership in the National Academy of Sciences. He was the first UAB faculty member to be so honored. 1988: Dr. Terry L. Hickey named dean and co-director of the Graduate School. 1988: Tony Ianuzzi became the head coach of the Men's Tennis team. 1988: The UAB Office of Minority Business Development was established with George Perdue, Jr., as first director. January 28, 1989: ESPN televised the men’s home basketball game against UNC-Charlotte, the first national athletics broadcast from the UAB campus. UNC-Charlotte defeated the Blazers 86-72. February 4, 1989: UAB celebrated homecoming with the university's first homecoming parade. "Catch the Spirit" was the theme for the week's festivities. March 8, 1989: Dr. Juan M. Navia became acting dean of the School of Public Health. March 15, 1989: Dr. Kenneth J. Roozen became first vice president for University Affairs. March 15, 1989: Linda Flaherty-Goldsmith became University Treasurer. March 15, 1989: Dr. John M. Lyons became first vice president for Planning and Information Management. April 23, 1989: The first artificial heart used in Alabama was implanted at University Hospital as a temporary measure while the patient awaited a heart transplant. Dr. William L. Holman implanted the ventricular-assist device. April 27, 1989: UAB celebrated $100 million in active grants and contracts. June 4, 1989: The UAB Mace, designed by local artist Cordray Parker, was first used during the university’s commencement. Dr. Virginia D. Horns-Marsh carried the mace into the ceremony. It was commissioned by Dr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Barker. June 4, 1989: National Basketball Association (NBA) superstar Michael Jordan headlined a Slam Dunk Contest at the UAB Arena as a benefit for Big Brothers/Big Sisters of Greater Birmingham. Over 10,000 packed the arena to an over-capacity crowd. June 1989: Mike Dunphy became the fourth head coach of the Men's Golf team. He had been a student athlete member of the team. July 1, 1989: Dr. L. Clark Taylor, Jr., became administrator of University Hospital. July 1, 1989: UAB's Dr. J. Dudley Pewitt, vice president for Administration, became the president of the Sun Belt Conference; he served until the end of June 1990. September 1, 1989: Dr. Philip E. Austin became third chancellor of the three-campus University of Alabama System. His appointment had been announced in May. September 22, 1989: The Civitan International Research Center approved as an official UAB center by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. September 27, 1989: A groundbreaking ceremony was held for the Center for Psychiatric Medicine. October 1, 1989: The designation University College was replaced by the designation Academic Affairs, and Dr. Tennant S. McWilliams became interim vice president for Academic Affairs. October 5, 1989: Dr. George L. Zorn, Jr., headed the team that performed the state’s first lung transplant at University Hospital. The patient was from Arab, Alabama. October 13, 1989: The groundbreaking ceremony was held for the Civitan International Research Center. October 1989: Denise Picard, a junior business major, became the first female at UAB to be named as cadet battalion commander, the highest ranking cadet in the Army ROTC Program. November 16, 1989: Dr. Victor J. Matukas was named interim dean of the School of Dentistry. December 8, 1989: Center for Community Health Resources Development was approved by The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. 1989: The UAB National Alumni Society celebrated its 10th anniversary with a sold-out Homecoming Gala featuring music by the Tams, a group that had played the first ever Student Government Association-sponsored dance in 1967. 1989: Virginia G. Wadley became the fourth UAB student named as a Truman Scholar. 1989: Jose-Luis Jamarillo became the interim head coach of the Men's Soccer team. 1989: Alabama's first skin grafting procedure using laboratory-cultured skin for treatment of severe burns occurred at University Hospital. 1989: The Smolian House and the Friendship House were sold by UAB. 1988: Derek J. Tarr became the head coach of the Men's Tennis team. 1989: Dr. Harold M. Fullmer delivered the twenty-sixth Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "Dental Research from Antiquity to the Present." 1989: Active extramural grants and contracts at UAB totaled $105,571,876. 1989: Bea Clark became the fifth head coach of the Women's Tennis team. Clark had been a student athlete on the Blazer team. 1989: The UAB National Alumni Society chartered its first international chapter in the nation of Thailand. President Charles A. McCallum, Jr., was on hand in Bangkok to assist with the charter festivities. 1990s View images from the 1990s. January 1, 1990: Effective on this date, all buildings, grounds, offices, parking lots, and parking decks at UAB became smoke free. February 1990: Jean Vaughn became the sixth head coach of the Women's Tennis team. Vaughn had been a student athlete member of the team. April 1990: Dr. Juan M. Navia became second dean of the School of Public Health. May 30, 1990: Mick Payne became the third head coach of the Men's Soccer team. June 3, 1990: At the 20th annual commencement, UAB recognized the school’s 50,000th graduate, Michelle Hight who received a bachelor’s degree in marketing. At the ceremony, 3,338 degrees and certificates were awarded. June 5, 1990: Groundbreaking was held for the Bevill Biomedical Research Building. June 22, 1990: James D. Loftin and T. Michael Goodrich were elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. June 22, 1990: UAB Vaccine Center was established. Dr. Jerry R. McGhee served as the center's first director. August 1, 1990: Dr. Tennant S. McWilliams became third dean of the School of Social and Behavioral Sciences, succeeding Belinda McCarthy who had served as interim dean since June first. August 1, 1990: Dr. William A. Sibley became first vice president for Academic Affairs. September 1, 1990: Patrick J. Murphy became the third Chief of Police. September 1, 1990: Dr. Virginia D. Gauld became second vice president for Student Affairs. She was the first female vice president at UAB. October 1, 1990: UAB Campus Taxi began as a service to the UAB community. The service, which began with two vehicles, was available Monday through Friday at 40 predetermined locations around the campus. October 1990: Dr. John H. Walker became interim vice president for Administration. In 1992 he became interim vice president for Administration and Human Resources when the office was reorganized. November 2, 1990: The Gay/Lesbian Student Union was recognized as an official student organization by vote of the Student Government Association. The LGBT group was later reorganized and renamed as the Gay/Lesbian/Bisexual Alliance. November 9, 1990: Dr. Juan M. Navia delivered the twenty-seventh Distinguished Faculty Lecture, "On the Idea of a University: Personal Reflections." November 1990: UAB Blazers became one of the charter members of the new Great Midwest Conference. 1990: Alabama's first use of single-fiber arthroscope for monitoring the treatment of arthritis occurred at University Hospital. 1990: Dr. Victor J. Matukas was named fifth dean of the School of Dentistry after having served as interim dean since November 16, 1989. 1990: Laurie J. Skellie became the fifth UAB student named as a Truman Scholar. 1990: The first use of a monoclonal antibody to treat rheumatoid arthritis occurred at University Hospital. 1990: Diane Ohl-Picket became the second head coach of the Women's Golf team. Ohl-Picket had been a student athlete on the Blazer team. 1990: The first annual Step Show was held at UAB. 1990: UAB awarded its 50,000th degree. February 20, 1991: Twin Towers, a student residence, was renamed Camp Hall in honor of Ehney A. Camp, a former member of The University of Alabama Board of Trustees. February 1991: Pam Kaufman became the third head coach of the Women's Golf team. March 13, 1991: Dr. Charles A. McCallum, Jr., announced that UAB would field an NCAA Division III football team. Dr. Jim Hilyer, who had served as coach of the club team for its two seasons, was named head coach. May 2, 1991: UAB held a groundbreaking ceremony for a new Bertha and Joseph Smolian International House on 10th Avenue South. May 3, 1991: The University of Alabama Board of Trustees approved the Teaching and Learning Center. May 17, 1991: University Center was renamed and rededicated as the Hill University Center in honor of UAB's second president, Dr. S. Richardson Hill, Jr. May 22, 1991: Dr. Joan F. Lorden received the first Carolyn P. and Charles W. Ireland Prize for Scholarly Distinction and presented a lecture titled "Behavior: The Organizing Principle for the Nervous System." September 7, 1991: The UAB football team played its first intercollegiate football game, losing 28-0 to Millsaps College in Jackson, Mississippi. September 13, 1991: Peter L. Lowe and Maury D. Smith were elected to the University of Alabama Board of Trustees. September 13, 1991: Center for Psychiatric Medicine received approval from The University of Alabama Board of Trustees as an official UAB center. September 14, 1991: The UAB football team played its first home game at Legion Field but the Blazers lost 28-10 to Evangel College. John Woltersdorf kicked a 27-yard field goal to score UAB's first points; five minutes later running back Pat Green became the first player to score a touchdown for UAB. September 21, 1991: The UAB football team gained its first win with a 34-21 victory over Washington and Lee. October 9, 1991: The Bone Marrow Transplant Program was reactivated at UAB with Dr. William P. Vaughan as head. The program had been in operation briefly between 1981 and 1983. October 17, 1991: The West Pavilion of University Hospital was dedicated. October 1991: Richard Deason became interim General Manager of WBHM-FM Radio. December 8, 1991: The first UAB National Alumni Society Distinguished Alumnus Award was presented to Dr. Lawrence J. DeLucas during commencement exercises. Dr. DeLucas had earned five degrees from UAB. December 13, 1991: Alzheimer's Disease Center established. December 1991: UAB Clinic Inverness opened. December 1991: The street outside of UAB's Clark Memorial Theatre was renamed Hatcher Place in honor of James F. Hatcher, Jr., the founding director of the UAB Town and Gown Theatre. 1991: Dr. Kenneth J. Roozen became first vice president for Research and University Affairs, after the merger of the offices of research development and university affairs. 1
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https://www.instagram.com/thewgpearsoncenter/
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Instagram
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https://gastonlibrary.libguides.com/digital-gaston-county/family-histories
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Digital Gaston County, North Carolina
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LibGuides: Digital Gaston County, North Carolina: Family Histories
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https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/shaw-university-established/
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Dec. 1, 1865: Shaw University Established
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2022-07-22T18:40:15+00:00
Shaw University was established as a co-ed campus with support from private donors and the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands. It is the second oldest HBCU in the South.
en
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Zinn Education Project
https://www.zinnedproject.org/news/tdih/shaw-university-established/
On Dec. 1, 1865, Shaw University was established in Raleigh, North Carolina, as a co-ed campus with support from private donors and the Bureau of Refugees, Freedmen and Abandoned Lands. It is the second oldest Historically Black College and University (HBCU) in the South. While most HBCU’s at the time were preparing their students to be preachers and teachers, Shaw University sought to educate Black lawyers and doctors. According to the Shaw University website: The University was founded in 1865 by Henry Martin Tupper, a native of Monson, Massachusetts, a soldier in the Union Army during the Civil War, and a graduate of Amherst College and Newton Theological Seminary. Shaw boasts many “firsts”: the first college in the nation to offer a four-year medical program, the first historically Black college in the nation to open its doors to women, and the first historically Black college in North Carolina to be granted an “A” rating by the State Department of Public Instruction.
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https://jbhe.com/2023/09/early-shaw-university-dean-and-acting-president-honored-with-historical-marker/
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Early Shaw University Dean and Acting President Honored With Historical Marker
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2023-09-22T15:31:33+00:00
During a 50-year tenure at the educational institution, Nicholas Franklin Roberts (1849-1934) served as Shaw’s dean of faculty, dean of the School of Theology, vice president, and acting president from November 1893 to March 1894.
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The Journal of Blacks in Higher Education
https://jbhe.com/2023/09/early-shaw-university-dean-and-acting-president-honored-with-historical-marker/
Shaw University graduate and former Shaw University Divinity School Dean, Dr. Nicholas F. Roberts, was honored by the dedication and placement of a historical marker on the lawn of the Town Hall in Seaboard, North Carolina. Roberts was born in Seaboard in 1849. He worked on a farm during the day while studying at night to prepare for his academic pursuits. He enrolled at Shaw University — then Shaw Collegiate Institute — in 1871 and was a member of the institution’s first graduating class in 1878. Upon graduation from Shaw, Roberts was principal of the Peabody School in Warrenton for one session before accepting a position as a mathematics professor and head of the department of mathematics at his alma mater. During his tenure of over 50 years, he served as Shaw’s dean of faculty, dean of the School of Theology (where he earned his doctor of divinity degree), vice president, and Acting President from November 1893 to March 1894. This followed the death of Shaw founder Henry Martin Tupper, making Roberts the HBCU’s first African American president. Roberts’ great-grandson, Bobby Scott, a U.S. congressman who represents Virginia’s Third Congressional District, stated: “I am very grateful to the State of North Carolina and the town of Seaboard for this historical marker honoring my great-grandfather, Dr. Nicholas Franklin Roberts. He spent his life serving his community in a variety of capacities including as an educator, a pastor, a journalist, and an elected official. His life story is integral to African American history in the region.” The historical market reads: NICHOLAS ROBERTS 1849-1934 African American editor & pastor. Professor and administrator, Shaw Univ. Leader in state Baptist organizations. He lived in Seaboard until 1871.
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https://afamwilsonnc.com/tag/shaw-university/
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Black Wide-Awake
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[ "Lisa Y. Henderson" ]
2022-03-29T07:55:06-04:00
Posts about Shaw University written by Lisa Y. Henderson
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Black Wide-Awake
https://afamwilsonnc.com/tag/shaw-university/
Wilson Daily Times, 16 November 1946. —— Earnestine Ford died 10 November 1916 in Wilson. Per her death certificate, she was five months old; was born in Wilson to Curtis Ford of Dillon County, S.C., and Mamie Battle of Wayne County, N.C. Curtis Ford, 605 East Green Street, was informant. In the 1920 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Clarcy Williams, 50; roomer Curtis Ford, 37, house carpenter; nephew [sic] Mamie Ford, 24; and roomer Lias L., 4, and Quincey B. Ford, 2. [Mamie Battle Ford was the daughter of Clarissa Williams’ half-brother Richard Battle.] In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 407 Carroll, rented for $12/month, Curtis Ford, 52; sons Quincey, 20, and Harvey G., 19; wife Mayme, 42; son-in-law Liston Sellers, 22; daughter Leah, 22; and granddaughter Yvette Sellers, 2. In 1940, Quincey Ford registered for the World War II draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 23 October 1918 in Wilson; lived at 910 East Green Street; his contact was mother Mamye Ford; and he was employed by E.B. Pittman, 509 East Nash Street. In 1942, Harvey Gray Ford registered for the World War II draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 8 January 1921 in Wilson; lived at 910 East Green Street; his contact was mother Mamie Ford; and he was unemployed. His card is marked: “Dead Cancelled Feb. 19, 1943.” Harvey Gray Ford died 4 June 1942 in Falling Creek township, Lenoir County, North Carolina, “drowned no boat involved.” He was born 8 January 1921 in Wilson, N.C., to Curtis Ford of Dillon, S.C., and Mamie Battle of Wayne County, N.C.; was a student; and was single. Mamie Ford, 910 East Green Street, was informant. Mamie Battle Ford died 14 November 1946 at Mercy Hospital, Wilson. Per his death certificate, she was born 29 November 1892 in Wayne County to Richard Battle and Leah [Coley] Battle; was married to Curtis Ford; was engaged in teaching; and was buried in Rest Haven Cemetery. Quincy Ford died 2 December 1965 in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. Per his death certificate, he was born 23 October 1918 in North Carolina to Curtis Ford and Mamie Battle Ford; lived at 2037 Master Street, Philadelphia; was a machine operator; and was married to Helen Ford. New York Age, 20 January 1923. Fred M. Davis Jr. (1899-1949), like his younger brother William B. Davis, was a member of Phi Beta Sigma fraternity. —— In the 1900 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Fred M. Davis, 33, paper hanger; wife Diannon, 31; children Eva M., 6, Bertha E., 5, and Fred M., 17 months; plus mother Judith Davis, 50, laundress. In the 1910 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Fred M. Davis, 42, Baptist church minister; wife Dianah, 42; children Eva M., 16, Bertha, 15, Fred, 11, Ruth, 13, Addie L., 8, and William B., 5; and mother Jud., 60. In the 1920 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Fred M. Davis, 50, church preacher; [second] wife Minnie, 39; children Fred Jr., 20, Berthia, 22, school teacher; Addie, 18, and William B., 16; and mother Judie, 76. In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: at 621 East Green Street, Rev. Fred M. Davis, 73, minister; wife Minnie J., 59; [son-in-law] Dr. G.K. Butterfield, 35, dentist; [daughter] Addie L. Butterfield, 34; son William B. Davis, 32, high school teacher; daughter-in-law Hazel M. Davis, 30, teacher; grandson William B. Davis, 4 months; and son Fred M. Davis, 40, home interior decorator. In 1942, Fred Marshon Davis Jr. registered for the World War II draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 27 October 1899 in Wilson; resided at 621 East Green; his contact was Rev. Fred M. Davis; and he was self-employed. Fred M. Davis died 7 February 1949 at Mercy Hospital after being struck by a car while riding a bicycle. Per his death certificate, he was born 15 October 1900 in Wilson to Fred M. Davis Sr. and Diana Dunston; resided at 621 East Green; was single; and was employed as an interior decorator/wallpaper hanger. Addie Butterfield was informant. From the 1939 edition of the Shaw University Journal: Georgia Eugenia Cooke In the 1920 census of New Bern, Craven County, North Carolina: government mail clerk J.L. Cook, 33; wife Clara R., 29; and children Henderson, 9, Edwin, 8, Clara, 4, and Georgia, 2. In the 1930 census of Wilson, Wilson County: on Hadley Street, railroad mail clerk Jerry L. Cook, 43; wife Clara, 39, teacher; children Henderson, 20, Edwin D., 18, Clara G., 14, Georgia E., 12, Annie, 8, Jerry L., 6, and Eunice D., 4; sister Georgia E. Wyche, 48, teacher; and nieces Kathaline Wyche, 7, and Reba Whittington, 19. Georgia E. Cooke graduated from Wilson Colored High School in 1935. On 10 June 1940, Georgia Cooke, 22, daughter of Jerry L. Cooke and Clara R. Cooke, of Wilson, married George W. Gant, 24, of Greensboro, North Carolina, son of A.V. and Ada Gant. A.M.E. Zion minister R.A.G. Foster performed the ceremony in the presence of Henderson J. Cooke of Wilson, Joshua W. Levister of Raleigh and A.B. Moseley of Kinston. George and Georgia Cooke Gant’s son George Arlington Lee Gant was born in Wilson in 1941. Georgia Cooke Gant died 16 December 1970 in Greensboro, North Carolina. Per her death certificate, she was born 18 December 1917 to Jerre L. Cooke Sr. and Clara Goddette; resided in Sedalia, North Carolina; was married to George W. Gant; was a school teacher; and was buried at Rest Haven cemetery, Wilson. Lossie Dorothy Haskins In the 1920 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Robert Haskins, 37, bottling company laborer; wife Gertrude, 28; and children Mandy, 14; Elizabeth, 12; Estelle, 10; Robert, 7; Lossie, 5; Lawrence, 4; and Thomas, 1. In the 1930 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Robert Haskins, 44, insurance agent; wife Gertrude, 39; and children Mandy, 22, cook; Elizabeth, 20; Estell, 18; Robert, 17; Lossie, 14; Larence, 12; and Tommie, 10. Lossie Haskins graduated from Wilson Colored High School in 1935. In the 1940 census of Wilson, Wilson County: Robert Haskins, 55, drug company salesman; wife Gertrude, 48; and children Mandy, 36; Elizabeth, 33, cook; Estelle, 29, beauty shop cleaner; Robert D. Jr., 29, hotel kitchen worker; Lossie, 24, N.Y.A. stenographer; and Thomas, 20, barbershop shoeblack; plus granddaughter Delores, 15, and lodger Henry Whitehead, 21. Gracie Beatrice Swinney For more re Gracie Swinney, see here.
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https://americanfootballdatabase.fandom.com/wiki/Shaw_University
en
Shaw University
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2024-07-29T22:27:06+00:00
Shaw University, founded as Raleigh Institute, is a private liberal arts institution and historically black university (HBCU) in Raleigh, North Carolina, United States. Founded in 1865, it is the oldest HBCU in the Southern United States.[1] Shaw is affiliated with the General Baptist State...
en
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American Football Database
https://americanfootballdatabase.fandom.com/wiki/Shaw_University
Shaw University, founded as Raleigh Institute, is a private liberal arts institution and historically black university (HBCU) in Raleigh, North Carolina, United States. Founded in 1865, it is the oldest HBCU in the Southern United States.[1] Shaw is affiliated with the General Baptist State Convention of North Carolina and a member of the National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc. which supports the Shaw University Divinity School. Along with Howard University, Hampton University, Lincoln University, PA and Virginia Union University, Shaw was a co-founding member of the NCAA Division II's Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) Conference, the oldest African American athletic association in the U.S. The university has won CIAA championships in Football, Basketball (women's and mens), and Men's Tennis. The university won a 5-year grant with University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill to create a Partnership for the Elimination of Health Disparities for minorities, and a 7-year grant with Johns Hopkins University for Gerontological Research. In 2007, Shaw received $2.5 million from the National Science Foundation to support its Nanoscience and Nanotechnology program. In 2004, Shaw University received $1.1 million from the U.S. Department of Education to develop an Upward Bound Program. Academics[] Shaw is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, the Council on Social Work Education, and the American Psychological Association. The Divinity School is accredited by the Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada as its Kinesiotherapy and Sports Medicine program is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs, the Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education, and the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education. The university offers undergraduate degrees in natural science, business and accounting, religion and philosophy, and education and computer science and graduate programs in Divinity, Religious Education and Early Childhood Instruction. The College of Adult and Professional Education (CAPE) has centers in Greenville, Kannapolis, High Point, Rocky Mount, Ahoskie, Fayetteville, Durham, Wilmington, and Asheville. History[] Presidents[2] Dr. Henry Martin Tupper 1865–1893 First/Founder Dr. Charles Francis Meserve 1894–1919 Dr. Joseph Leishman Peacock 1920–1931 Dr. William Stuart Nelson 1931–1936 Dr. Robert Prentiss Daniel 1936–1950 Dr. William Russell Strassner 1951–1962 Dr. James Edward Cheek* 1963–1969 Dr. King Vergil Cheek* 1969–1971 Dr. J. Archie Hargraves 1971–1977 Dr. Stanley Hugh Smith 1978–1987 Dr. John Lucas* 1981–1987 Dr. Talbert O. Shaw 1988–2002 Dr. Clarence G. Newsome 2003–2009 Dr. Dorothy Cowser Yancy 2009–2010 Dr.Irma McClaurin 2010–2011 Dr.Dorothy Cowser Yancy-Interim president *Alumnus Founding to the 1960s[] The school was founded by the American Baptist Home Mission Society.[1] Rev. Dr. Henry Martin Tupper came south immediately after the end of the Civil War, establishing the Second Baptist Church of Raleigh (changed to Tabernacle Baptist Church in 1910, and now the Tupper Memorial Baptist Church.)[3] Later Tupper and his Bible study students constructed a two-story church, with one story for the church, and one for the Raleigh Institute, where he taught freedmen. By 1915, supported by the American Baptist Home Mission, the school had 291 students, evenly divided between men and women. It was renamed Shaw Collegiate Institute after Elijah Shaw, benefactor of Shaw Hall, the first building. In 1875, it became Shaw University. In 1873, Estey Hall was built, the first female dormitory in the U.S. on a coeducational campus. Leonard Medical School was founded in 1881 as the first four-year medical school in the South to train black doctors and pharmacists. The first medical school in the state to offer a four-year curriculum, it operated until 1918. Given their importance in United States educational history, both Estey and Leonard halls have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places. By 1900, more than 30,000 black teachers had been trained.[4] Shaw University has been called the mother of African-American colleges in North Carolina, as the founding presidents of North Carolina Central University, Elizabeth City State University, and Fayetteville State University were all Shaw alumni. The founder of Livingstone College studied at Shaw before transferring to Lincoln University. What became North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University was located on Shaw's campus during its first year. U.S. Civil Rights Movement[] The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) began at a conference held at Shaw University and led by Ella Baker in 1960. SNCC was created to coordinate activities among numerous civil rights groups, support civil rights leaders and publicize their activities. SNCC played a strong role in Freedom Summer and the voter registration drives in Mississippi during 1964 and 1965. 1980s to present[] By the mid-1980s, enrollment declined and the university was deeply in debt. President Talbert O. Shaw (1988–2003) (not related to the namesake) increased the student body from 1,600 to 2,700, restructured debt and created the Raleigh Business and Technology Center. In the 1990s, Shaw ran a successful capital campaign to renovate historic buildings and construct new campus facilities, including the Talbert O. Shaw Center for Teachers' Education. In 2005, SUDS received a 10-year accreditation from the Association for Theological Schools and began construction on the Center for Early Childhood Education, Research and Development. Another example of new directions is that the university is collaborating with the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill on a Partnership for the Elimination of Health Disparities Center. As noted by Dr. Daniel Howard, center co-director at Shaw University, establishing the research resources at Shaw, meant that "more African American college students can become health researchers, which is a definite plus when trying to eliminate disparities." [5] Shaw University is also a member of the Cooperating Raleigh Colleges (CRC) Program. This intercollegiate program is a consortium to pool resources of courses and programs, material, and professors for the sake of providing effective education to all the students. The participating colleges are Shaw University, North Carolina State University, Saint Augustine's College, Wake Technical Community College, Peace College, and Meredith College. Study of World War II service of black veterans[] Shaw University led a research study to investigate why no black veterans of WWII had been awarded the Medal of Honor. The study concluded that racial discrimination had contributed to the military's overlooking the contributions of black soldiers. The 272-page study recommended ten soldiers whose military records suggested they deserved the Medal of Honor. In January 1995, the team’s findings were sent to the U.S. Department of Defense. In April 1996, the department agreed that seven of the ten soldiers should be awarded the Medal of Honor. All ten had been awarded other medals during the war years. President Bill Clinton awarded the Medals of Honor on January 13, 1997. The department's decision in response to Shaw's study marked only the third time that the military re-evaluated military records to award the Medal of Honor. Only one of the seven nominees, 1st Lt. Vernon Baker of St. Maries, Idaho, was alive to receive his medal. Those who were awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously were: 1st Lt. Charles L. Thomas of Detroit, Michigan; Pvt. George Watson of Birmingham, Alabama; Staff Sgt. Edward A. Carter Jr. of Los Angeles, California; 1st Lt. John R. Fox of Boston, Massachusetts; Pfc. Willy F. James Jr. of Kansas City, Kansas; and Staff Sgt. Ruben Rivers of Tecumseh, Oklahoma.[6] Campus Life[] Athletics[] Shaw University is a member and co-founder of the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II's Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) Conference. Shaw University's Basketball team participates in the CIAA annual Basketball Tournament, which is the third most attended athletic event in collegiate sports after the Atlantic Coast Conference and Big East tournaments. Shaw fields 14 varsity athletic teams including teams in men's basketball, women's basketball, football, tennis, baseball, cheerleading, men's and women's track and field, volleyball, golf, and bowling. Extracurricular activities[] In 2002, Shaw University's men's basketball team won the CIAA championship. Also the lady's basketball team, won the 2008 CIAA championship. The football team, reestablished by Dr. Clarence G. Newsome in 2002, played at the Durham County Memorial Stadium in Durham, North Carolina through the 2008 season. In 2009, the team relocated their home games to Millbrook High School in Raleigh. The 2011 season will be played at Durham County Stadium.[7] It won the CIAA football championship in 2004, 2007, 2008, and 2010.[8] The football team has also made the Division II playoffs in 2007 and 2010. Also in 2011 both men's and women's teams won the CIAA Tournament making Shaw the last school since Norfolk State in 1975 to win the big three championships in the same year. Shaw's Lady Bears won the NCAA Division II Championship for the season 2011/2012. ivities=== There are several organizations and clubs on-campus, including The Shaw Players and Company, the Student Government Association, cheerleaders, intramural and extramural sports, sororities, fraternities, gospel and university choirs. The University also has jazz, pep, and concert bands as well as the COGs (Children of God) which represents a wide range of student activities that exist at Shaw University. The university's radio station, 88.9 FM or WSHA, is one of the popular jazz stations in the triangle. The university supports the Honda Quiz Bowl Team, the Shawensis Literary Club, the Shaw Men and Shaw Women Society, the Divine Nine, the Student North Carolina Association of Educators, the Pre-Alumni Council, and the Shaw Journal Campus Newspaper. These pre-professional organizations provide ways to enhance classroom activities while enjoying the camaraderie of fellow students. Shaw is great. Marching band[] Shaw's marching band better known as the "platinum sound" was reestablished in the Fall of 2002 along with the reestablishment of the football team. The band has grown from 80 members in 2002 to over 130 members. Shaw's marching band has participated in the Honda Battle of the Bands at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia. Also, several Shaw student-musicians played the sounds behind the 2002, Twentieth Century Fox motion picture, Drumline.[9] Campus Infastructure[] Shaw University consists of 32 buildings and nine additional campuses across the state of North Carolina. As of July 2011, Durham County Stadium will remain the home of the Shaw University Bears football team until construction plans towards building a new facility on Shaw Farm(a 40 acre lot donated to the university under James Cheek's administration on rock quarry rd. in Raleigh NC and the site of the National Alumni House) is completed and implemented. The main campus is located in the heart of downtown Raleigh. Five of the thirty-two buildings are national and state historic landmarks which are the Frazier House, Estey Hall, Tyler Hall, Leonard Hall, and the Rogers-Bagley-Daniels-Pegues House. The Campus has a memorial garden in the heart of the campus which is also the location of the tombs of the founder of Shaw University, Dr. Henry Martin Tupper and his wife Sarah and the University Belltower, that was erected in honor of those who came and left the institution, from its founding to its present. The Campus has Three Libraries, The James E. Cheek Library, The TOS Education Library, and the Divinity School Library, that houses over 210,000 volumes, 10,000 ebooks, and many other sources of scholarly and cultural literature as well as microforms, located throughout Shaw University(including cape sites). Also, the Raleigh Business and Technology Center is located on Shaw's campus. Planned in 1989, Shaw University city council officials and Saint Augustine's College in a joint effort built the current facility on Shaw's Campus. Both colleges use the center for classes and community programs. The Campus has four dorms, the Flemming-Kee Men's Dorm, the Dimple Newsome Dorm, Talbert O. Shaw Men's Dorm and the Talbert O. Shaw Women's Dorm. Other resources available on or adjacent to the campus are McDonald's, The Willie E. Gary Student Center which houses the Bear's Den (Game Room and Grill), and the Cyber Cafe'. Student organizations[] The university has a range of student organizations, including sororities and fraternities, and honor societies. Other organizations include the Shaw Men and Shaw Women Society (organizations that emphasize development of character),the social science club, Swing Phi Swing, the Shaw University National Alumni Association, the Freemasons and the Order of the Eastern Star, the Religion and Philosophy Club, Groove Phi Groove, Iota Alpha Omega Christian Fraternity, and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Tornados of April 15–17, 2011[] As a result of the massive destruction of the Mid-April 2011 Southern United States tornado outbreak, the university cancelled classes for the semester. As a result of the storm, two dormitories, the student union, and the roof of Estey hall were severely damaged.[10][11] There were minor injuries but no one was seriously hurt. Notable alumni[] Name Class year Notability References Dr. Richard Gene Arno founder of the National Christian Counselors Association Ella Baker 1927 leader of SNCC and civil rights activist Charlie Brandon Grey Cup champion and all-star CFL football player Angie Brooks 1949 former President of the United Nations General Assembly and Associate Justice to the National Supreme Court of Liberia Shirley Caesar 1984 pastor and gospel music artist Henry Plummer Cheatham 1883 Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from 1889 to 1893. James E. Cheek 1955 former President of Shaw University, President Emeritus of Howard University, 1983 recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Willie E. Gary 1971 multi-millionaire attorney and co-founder of the Black Family Channel Edward A. Johnson first African-American member of the New York state legislature when he was elected to the New York State Assembly in 1917. Lee Johnson 1975 President & CEO of Mechanics & Farmers Bank Lords of the Underground attended Hip-Hop Group that was founded in the early 1990s, when all three of its members were students attending Shaw University Luther Jordan 1997 former member of the North Carolina Senate from 1993 to 2002 Vernon Malone Democratic member of the North Carolina General Assembly, 14th Senate district, including constituents in Wake County Lee Monroe 1970 President of Voorhees College Peter Wedderick Moore first President of Elizabeth City Normal College, (now Elizabeth City State University) Shelia P. Moses author Ronald "Flip" Murray 2002 professional basketball player Eleanor Nunn, Ph.D. civil rights activist (one of founders of SNCC) and educator, North Carolina State University William L. Pollard 1967 President of the Medgar Evers College Dr. M. T. Pope 1886 prominent physician in Raleigh; ran for mayor in 1919. His home is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a museum Benjamin Arthur Quarles 1931 historian, administrator, scholar, educator, and writer. Dr. James E. Shepard 1894 founder and President of North Carolina Central University William Gaston Pearson 1886 educator and businessman, co-founder of Mechanics & Farmers Bank, an African-American Bank in Raleigh, North Carolina Ida Van Smith one of the first African American female pilots and flight instructors in the United States James "Bonecrusher" Smith 1975 first heavyweight boxing champion with a college degree Rita Walters currently serves on the Board of Library Commissioners for the Los Angeles Public Library Lucius Walker 1954 Baptist minister best known for his opposition to the United States embargo against Cuba [12] Col. James H. Young first African American to hold the rank of colonel in the United States of the volunteer regiment during the Spanish American War References[] Additional references[] Carter, Wilmoth A. Shaw's Universe: A Monument to Educational Innovation, Raleigh: Shaw University, 1973 Lincoln, C. Eric, The Black Church in the African American Experience, Durham: Duke University Press, 1990 [] Official website Official athletics website Shaw University Archives: History SNCC, 1960-1966: Six Years of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Template:Colleges and Universities affiliated with the American Baptist Churches USA Template:Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association navbox Template:Triangle, NC
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Pearson, WIlliam Gaston
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Durham County, North Carolina Genealogy Trails
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John W. Parker, Jr. M.D. Since his honorable discharge from army duty as specialist in gastrointestinal diseases at the Base Hospital at Camp Wadsworth, Doctor Parker has located at Greenville and now gives all his time to his specialty, in which he is one of the foremost authorities in South Carolina. Doctor Parker has practiced medicine in this state since graduating from the University of Maryland. He was born at Durham, North Carolina, April 16, 1880, a son of John W. and Jane (Lunsford) Parker of Durham. He grew up in the famous tobacco city, was educated in Rutherford College and the University of North Carolina, and did his work in preparation for the medical profession at the University of Maryland where he graduated in 1905. The first three years he practiced in Lee County, South Carolina, and from that time until 1914 at Williamston in Anderson County. He had become well established in his profession at Greenville when the World War came on, and he volunteered his services in the Medical Reserve Corps. Upon being taken into the National army he was assigned to duty as specialist in gastro-intestinal diseases at the Base Hospital at Camp Wadsworth, Spartanburg, and was on continuous duty there from January 3rd until September 8, 1918. Doctor Parker has specialized for a number of years in gastro-intestinal diseases, and his skill and success have brought him well deserved recognition from the medical profession. He has every advantage bestowed by experience, personal skill and complete facilities. These facilities in his fine suite of offices in the Wallace Building at Greenville include the latest Bellevue Model X-Ray machine of the Woppler Electric Company. Doctor Parker is a member of the County, State and American Medical Associations. He married Miss Andrina Anderson of Anderson County, a daughter of George W. and Narcissa (Nesbitt) Anderson. George W. Anderson was born in Greenville County, South Carolina, March 7, 1828. He was the son of John Anderson, a native of Ireland, who came to America with his parents, Thomas and Nancy (Ewing) Anderson, in his childhood and settled in Greenville, Greenville County, where he died in 1837. Of ten children living at the time of John Anderson's death, Major Anderson and his sister are the only ones surviving. Thomas and Nancy Anderson, the grandparents, spent the remainder of their lives in Greenville County, the latter living to be nearly 100 years old. The mother of Major Anderson was Mary Terry, who survived her husband a great many years, dying at the age of seventy. Four sons of John and Mary Anderson served in the Confederate army; James, John, David and George W. James died in 1863 from sickness contracted in the service; John was captured at the fall of Petersburg and died from the effects of his treatment on the boat while on his way to Charleston to be released; David survived the war and farmed in Alabama until his death in 1896. George W. was educated chiefly at the Cokesbury High School. He taught for one year in Alabama, but began a mercantile business in Laurens County, South Carolina, in 1851. For several years before the war he was a major in the state militia, commanding the upper squadron of the Tenth Regiment of cavalry. In the fall of 1863 he entered the army as a private in Company K, Seventh South Carolina Regiment of cavalry, commanded by Col. A. C. Haskell, and served with it to the close of the war. He was in the battles of Drewry's Bluff, and shortly afterward detailed as a courier for Gen. G. T. Beauregard, serving as such for some time, after which he returned to his command, and participated in the battle of the Crater. He was present at Lee's surrender at Appomattox. Major Anderson located in Williamston, South Carolina, in 1868. As a merchant after the war he was very successful. He was a very active and loyal churchman and at that time when prohibition was very unpopular, he took a strong stand in support of it and was instrumental in the publication of a prohibition paper. To the poor and needy he was unusually kind and generous. He was married February 21, 1860, to Miss Nancy Narcissa Nesbitt, who survived him nine years, and died November 27, 1901, leaving seven children, four sons and three daughters. Her maternal ancestry includes the notable Nesbitt family of Spartanburg County. She is a granddaughter of James Nesbitt and a great-granddaughter of Jonathan Nesbitt of Spartanburg County. Jonathan Nesbitt was a Revolutionary hero. At the battle of Cowpens the breech of his gun was shot off by enemy fire. He was participant in a number of other battles in North Carolina, and at his death was buried with military honors in old Nazareth Presbyterian Church in Spartanburg County. The Nesbitts were among the founders of this historic congregation. They had located in Upper South Carolina a number of years before the Revolutionary war and represented some of the finest of the Scotch-Irish stock in that vicinity. One of the prominent members of the family was Col. Wilson Nesbitt, who was a member of Congress in 1817-18, and had in this and otherwise a brilliant career. He married Miss Susan Tyler DuVal of Washington, District of Columbia, and he died at Montgomery, Alabama, to which place he had removed from Spartanburg County later in life. The two children of Doctor and Mrs. Parker are: Andrina Anderson Parker and John W. Parker, III. [History of South Carolina, Volume 3 Edited by Yates Snowden and Harry Gardner Cutler, 1920 – Transcribed by AFOFG] PEARSON, William Gaston, principal high school; born at Durham, N. C., 1859; son of George W. and Cynthia (Wilkins) Pearson; B.S., Shaw Univ., Raleigh, N. C, 1886, A.M., 1889; grad. Cornell Univ., 1903; married Minnie Sumner, of Charlotte, N. C, June 6, 1893. Began teaching in schools of Durham, 1890; principal City High School, since 1893; pres. Whetted Woodworking Co.; treas. Bull City Drug Co.; dir. Mechanics' and Farmers Bank; member firm of broom mfrs.; in real estate business and owns 22 tenement houses. Trustee National Religious Training School, Lincoln Hospital and School for Nurses, St. Joseph A. M. E. Church. Republican. Mason; managing sec. Royal Knights of King David; member Knights of Pythias. Club: Shakespearian Reading. Address: Box 404, Durham, N. C [Source: Who's who of the colored race: Volume 1; Edited by Frank Lincoln Mather; Publ. 1915; Transcribed for Genealogy Trails by Andrea Stawski Pack.]
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Please Scroll 1985 1986
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https://www.shaw.cuhk.edu.hk/en/content/college-history-and-chronology
1985 June Sir Run Run Shaw committed to make a generous donation of HK$110 million to the Chinese University of Hong Kong for establishing a fourth constituent college. October The University Council decided to name the proposed college Shaw College. Sir Run Run Shaw gave his consent to be Patron of Shaw College. The University also appointed Dr. Lee Quo-wei, Mr. Louis Page, Dr. Ann Tse-kai and Mr. Shen Hsi-jui as advisors. December The University set up the Ad hoc Group for the Planning of the New College. 1986 January Sir Run Run Shaw presented the donation to Sir Edward Youde, Chancellor of the Chinese University at a ceremony held on 28th January. The Ad hoc Group approved the conceptual design of Shaw College. February The University announced the establishment of Shaw College on 6th February. March Chaired by Professor Ma Lin, Vice-Chancellor of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, the Planning Committee of Shaw College was set up. The first meeting of the Committee was held. July The Hong Kong Legislative Council approved the amendments to the Chinese University of Hong Kong Ordinance on 30th July, thereby securing the legal status of Shaw College. August The Planning Committee formed the Board of Trustees of Shaw College for a term of one year. Professor Ma Lin became Chair of the Board. Professor Hsu Baysung was appointed Vice-Chair and Mr. Tsim Tak-lung Member and Secretary. November The Chinese version of The Chinese University of Hong Kong (Declaration of Shaw College) Ordinance was completed. 1987 January The foundation stone of Shaw College was laid on 12th January. Officiating at the ceremony were Sir Run Run Shaw, Patron of Shaw College, and Sir David Akers-Jones, Acting Governor of Hong Kong. February Professor Chen Char-nie of the Department of Psychiatry, Faculty of Medicine, was appointed the first Head of Shaw College. May Professor Yang Chen-ning, Distinguished Professor-At-Large of the Chinese University of Hong Kong, accepted the invitation to join Shaw College. June The Board of Trustees approved ‘xiude jiangxue’ as the college motto. A temporary office of Shaw College was set up at Teaching Block 1 of Chung Chi College. The College Assembly of Fellows was established. It was chaired by Professor Chen Char-nie, College Head. August The Board of Trustees was reformed in compliance with the written provision. This second term of the Board was three years. Dr. Fung Kwok-pui of the Department of Biochemistry, Faculty of Medicine, was appointed the first Dean of Students. September Professor Ma Lin was elected Chair of the Board of Trustees. 1988 March The Board of Trustees resolved to designate the 12th of January the Founder’s Day of Shaw College. The Board also approved the design of the college emblem and the college colour. August Dr. Herbert Pierson of the English Language Teaching Unit was appointed the first Dean of General Education. The first orientation camp was held. September The English College Handbook was published with the assistance of the University Press. It was the first publication of the College. October The Putonghua Club, English Society and Qigong Club were formed. They were the first batch of student organizations of Shaw College. 1989 January Four students went overseas through the University’s Office of International Student Exchange Programmes. They were the College’s first batch of exchange students. The College in return received an incoming exchange student from the USA. Students organized activities to celebrate the first Founder’s Day. The student journal Shaw Beat was published. March The first prize-presentation ceremony was held. Students of outstanding performance were awarded scholarships. Sir Run Run Shaw, Patron of Shaw College, officiated at the ceremony. August Professor Lin Sheng-shih composed the college song. The lyrics were written by Professor Chen Char-nie and Professor Lau Din-cheuk. September Student Hostel I was commissioned. The 580 hostel places were almost equally shared by male and female students. October Construction work of the college campus was completed. The administration building Wen Lan Tang was commissioned. The College moved its office to the new campus. The Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar Programme was launched. The first scholar was Professor Lee Yuan-Tseh, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1986. November The staff quarters Ya Qun Lodge was commissioned. The student dining hall was open for business. 1990 February A concert in celebration of the opening of Shaw College was held. Performed by the Hong Kong Chinese Orchestra, the event was jointly organized with Sir Run Run Shaw Hall. The college song was debuted. March A symposium in celebration of the opening of Shaw College was held at Cho Yiu Hall. The theme of the conference was ‘The Roles of Colleges in a University’. The symposium moderator was Professor L. B. Thrower, Emeritus Professor of Biology of the Chinese University of Hong Kong. The speakers were Professor D. H. Northcote of the University of Cambridge, Professor Robin W. Winks of Yale University, Professor Frederick G. T. Holliday of the University of Durham, and Professor Dean E. McHenry of the University of California, Santa Cruz. The Grand Opening of Shaw College was held on 3rd March. Officiating at the ceremony were Sir Run Run Shaw, Patron of Shaw College, and Sir David Wilson, Governor of Hong Kong. The Shaw College Student Union was established. The first executive committee of the Union was elected. May An exchange programme with Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in the USA was established. June The first graduation ceremony was held at Sir Run Run Shaw Hall. A dinner ball organized by the graduating students followed. July The Staff Association of Shaw College was established. August Dr. Yeung Hok-keung John of the Department of Pharmacology, Faculty of Medicine, succeeded Dr. Fung Kwok-pui as Dean of Students. Dr. Ching Pak-chung of the Department of Electronics, Faculty of Science, succeeded Dr. Yeung Hok-keung John as Warden of Student Hostel I. October The first swimming gala was held. November The first athletic meet was held. December The first batch of graduates of Shaw College, 64 in total, were granted degrees. 1991 January A tree planting ceremony was held during the Founder’s Day. Sir Run Run Shaw, Patron of Shaw College, and Mr. Teng Teng, Vice-Chair of the State Education Commission, officiated at the ceremony. July The Shaw College Alumni Association was established. 1992 September The 289-bed Student Hostel II was commissioned. October The Lecture Theatre was open for use. November The Student Union set up the Non-Residential Students’ Hall. 1993 May An exchange programme with University of Victoria, Canada was established. 1994 February Professor Chen Char-nie retired from the position of College Head. Professor Yeung Yue- man of the Department of Geography, Faculty of Social Science, was appointed College Head. May The exhibition gallery of the Lecture Theatre was open for use and the first art exhibition was held. 1995 January The Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar was translation theorist Dr. Eugene A. Nida. 1996 February The cultural event Tolo Lyrics - Cantonese Operatic Songs Concert was launched. April The Assembly of Fellows resolved to name the platform at which the college sign was situated Shaw Terrace. 1997 March A fund-raising committee was set up. The committee was chaired by Professor Choa Gerald Hugh, Vice-Chair of the Board of Trustees. December Trustee Mr. Lee Woo-sing made a generous donation to the College. In recognition of Mr. Lee’s benevolence, the self-learning centre was named Lee Woo Sing Self-Learning Resources Centre. 1998 January The Lee Shih Lun Tang made a generous donation to the College in memory of their late family members Mr. Lee Kuo-wei and Mr. Lee Mou for their enthusiastic support to the cause of education. In recognition of the family’s benevolence, Student Hostel I of Shaw College was named Kuo Mou Hall. An evening banquet was held to celebrate the tenth anniversary of Shaw College. A commemorative brochure Shaw College —The First Ten Years was published. An exchange programme with the University of Illinois in the USA was established. October Professor Yang Chen-ning spoke at the Tenth Anniversary Commemorative Lecture. 1999 January The Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar was mathematician Professor Yau Shing-tung. February The Yung family made a generous donation to the College in memory of Mr. Yung Fu Zung. In recognition of the family’s enthusiastic support to the cause of education, the College named the new multi-function hall Fu Zung Centre. Shaw Link, the newsletter of Shaw College, was launched. June Professor Yau Shing-tung accepted the college invitation to be Honorary Fellow. August Mr. Lee Woo-sing was appointed the Second Vice-Chair of the Board of Trustees. 2000 May A workshop for Shaw College students to produce a mural at the Shaw Terrace was organized by the Hong Kong Mural Society with a sponsorship from the Arts Development Council. September A generous donation of HK$1 million was received from the Shaw Foundation for the establishment of the Shaw Foundation Student Loans. December Trustee Mr. Lam Kin-chung made a generous donation to the College. In recognition of Mr. Lam’s benevolence, the computer centre of the College was named Lam Kin-chung Computer Centre. 2001 September The new wing of Student Hostel II was commissioned. 136 additional hostel places were provided. The newly-constructed basketball court, adjacent to Student Hostel II, was open for use. Construction cost of the court was sponsored by trustee Mr. Fung Siu-to Clement. 2002 January The Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar was computer scientist Professor Yao Chi-chih Andrew. The Chinese Medicinal Plants Garden of Shaw College was open to visitors. The garden was designated HERBSnSENSES after the name of a health product developed by GreaterChina Technology Limited, the company that generously sponsored the construction of the place. June The Shaw Prize Preparatory Committee was established, and a provisional secretariat was set up at Shaw College. October An exchange programme with Ritsumeikan Asia Pacific University in Japan was established. November The Mentorship Programme of Shaw College was launched. 2003 January The Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar was geographer Professor Chen Shu-peng. 2004 January Trustee Mr. Koo Shing-cheong Daniel made a generous donation to the College for the purpose of producing college publications. The commemorative brochure Shaw College Eighteen Years of Growth and Development was published. The Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar was Professor Zhong Nan-shan. Professor Zhong was an expert in thoracic medicine and respiratory disease. February Professor Yeung Yue-man retired from the position of College Head. Professor Ching Pak-chung of the Department of Electronic Engineering, Faculty of Engineering, was appointed College Head. Sir Run Run Shaw, Patron of Shaw College, made a generous donation of HK$1 million to the College to support the scholarship programme. September The first Shaw Prize Lecture in Astronomy was held at the Lecture Theatre. The lecture was delivered by Professor James Peebles, Shaw Laureate in Astronomy. ShawNet, the electronic newsletter of the College, was launched. 2005 January Dr. Tan Siu-lin Terrace, situated at the podium of Kuo Mou Hall, was inaugurated. Construction cost of the Terrace was sponsored by trustee Dr. Tan Siu-lin. Professor Yao Chi-chih Andrew, Distinguished Professor-at-Large of the Chinese University, joined Shaw College. September The Shaw Prize Lecture was held at the Lecture Theatre of Shaw College. The lecture was delivered by Professor Andrew Wiles, Shaw Laureate in Mathematical Sciences. 2006 January The College 20th Founder’s Day Celebration Ceremony was held in the Lecture Theatre. Dr. Anthony Neoh, SC was the Guest of Honour. The College 20th Anniversary Commemorative Volume was launched. 'Shaw Sights and Sounds', an exhibition of oil painting and poetry reading was held at the Exhibition Gallery of the Lecture Theatre with poems written by Professor Andrew Parkin, Senior College Tutor and translated by Professor Wong Kwok-pun Lawrence. The paintings were drawn by Mr. Chan Hang. February In appreciation of the generous donation of Mr. Che Yueh-chiao to support college development, the College named the exhibition gallery of the Lecture Theatre ‘Yueh Chiao Art Gallery’. March The Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar was Professor Charles Kao Kuen, Father of Optical Fiber Communications and former Vice-Chancellor of the Chinese University of Hong Kong. Formed by plaques engraved with graduates’ names, the Alumni Trail was unveiled. September The Shaw Prize Lecture in Astronomy was held at the Lecture Theatre. The lecture was delivered by Professor Saul Perlmutter, Professor Adam Riess and Professor Brian Schmidt, Shaw Laureates. 2007 April The Band Room was open for use. It is the first and only band room in the Chinese University of Hong Kong. September With the generous support of Mr. Lee Woo-sing, Vice-Chair of the Board of Trustees, the Lee Woo Sing Self-Learning Resource Centre was converted to become Lee Woo Sing Hong Kong History Resource Centre. Professor Ho Pui-yin, Department of History, was appointed Centre Director. Professor Robert J. Lefkowitz, Shaw Laureate in Life Sciences and Medicine, presented the Shaw Prize Lecture. 2008 February Professor Sung Jao-yiu Joseph, Associate Dean (General Affairs), Faculty of Medicine and Professor of Medicine and Therapeutics, succeeded Professor Ching Pak-chung as College Head. August Mr. Lee Woo-sing was appointed First Vice-Chair and Mr. Fung Siu-to Clement Second Vice-Chair of the Board of Trustees. Introduced by College Head, the college slogan ‘Excellence with a soul, Leadership with a heart’ echoed the college motto. September Shaw Laureates in Mathematical Sciences, Professor Vladimir Arnold and Professor Ludwig Faddeev presented the Shaw Prize Lecture. The College introduced a series of high table dinners. Speakers with unique life experiences were invited to share with students and teachers. The first speaker of the series was Mr. Ching Cheong. 2009 March The first Shaw College Alumni Day was held. It was officiated by Professor Sung Jao-yiu Joseph, College Head and Dr. Leung Yu-lung Dexter, President of Shaw College Alumni Association. April An exchange programme with the University of Seoul in South Korea was established. October Professor Frank H. Shu, Shaw Laureate in Astronomy, delivered the Shaw Prize Lecture. 2010 February Mr. Jeremy Hobbs, Executive Director of Oxfam International, was the Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar. July Professor Chan Chi-fai Andrew, professor of the Department of Marketing, Faculty of Business Administration, succeeded Professor Sung Jao-yiu Joseph as College Head. September Kick-off Ceremony for Silver Jubilee Celebration was held at the Inauguration Assembly. The ‘Thursday Dinners with Chi-fai’ series started. The Dinner was hosted by Professor Chan Chi-fai Andrew, College Head, for students, teachers and alumni to exchange on various topics. Professor David Julius, Shaw Laureate in Life Science and Medicine, presented the Shaw Prize Lecture. November The unveiling ceremony for the statue of Dr. Sun Yat-sen was held. The statue was donated by Dr. Sun Sui-fong Lily, granddaughter of Dr. Sun Yat-sen. 2011 January Mr. Wong Tung-shun Peter, Chief Executive Officer of the Hong Kong and Shanghai Banking Corporation Limited, was the Guest of Honour of the Silver Jubilee Celebration Ceremony. The Celebration Dinner was held on the same day at the Harbour Grand Hong Kong. Ceremony for the Naming of Yat-sen Hall and the Academic Seminar to Mark the Centenary of Xinhai Revolution were held in appreciation of the generous donation from Dr. Lam Kin-chung, Senior Advisor of the Board of Trustees, and Dr. Ho Hau-wong. Professor Harry Lewis of Harvard University was the Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar. April Sir Run Run Shaw, the College Patron and Mrs. Mona Shaw, made a magnanimous donation of HK$68 million (equivalent to 1,445,000 ordinary shares of Television Broadcasts Limited) to the College. An endowment fund was set up to support scholarships and bursaries for students. July The inaugural ‘World Youth Leaders Forum’ was held with the theme 'Re-shaping the Post-crisis World Order'. September Professor Ma Lin retired from the Board of Trustees after serving as the Chair of the Board for 25 years since the College was established in 1986. Mr. Fung Siu-to Clement succeeded Professor Ma Lin as Chair of the Board of Trustees. A Memorandum of Understanding on establishing the Li Dak Sum Academic Exchange Fund for Collaboration was signed between Ningbo University and the Chinese University of Hong Kong (CUHK) for students from Ningbo University and CUHK to take part in exchange programmes. November Mr. Fan Shi-Hoo Hamen, Honorary Treasurer, was concurrently appointed Second Vice-Chair of the Board of Trustees. 2012 September Professor Jane Luu and Professor David C. Jewitt, Shaw Laureates in Astronomy, presented the Shaw Prize Lecture. November The Honourable Mrs. Lam Cheng Yuet-ngor, Chief Secretary of Administration of the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region, delivered a guest lecture at College Assembly. 2013 March Professor Richard J. Davidson, Founder and Chair of the Center for Investigating Healthy Minds, University of Wisconsin-Madison, was the Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar. May Mr. Huen Wing-ming, Trustee, was conferred honorary fellowship by the University. September Professor Jeffrey C. Hall, Professor Michael Rosbach and Professor Michael W. Young, Shaw Laureates in Life Science and Medicine, presented the Shaw Prize Lecture. December The Opening Ceremony of Huen Wing Ming Building Multi-Purpose Learning Centre was held. The ceremony was officiated by Mr. Huen Wing-ming and his family members; Professor Sung Jao-yiu Joseph, Vice-Chancellor; Mr. Fung Siu-to Clement, Chair of Board of Trustees; Professor Chan Chi-fai Andrew, College Head; and Mr. Lo King-yeung, President of Executive Committee of Shaw College Student Union. 2014 January Sir Run Run Shaw, Patron, passed away at the age of 107. June With the support from The D.H. Chen Foundation that was set up by the family of College Trustee Dr. Chen Wai-wai, Vivien, a Retreat in Nepal at Tergar Osel Ling Monastery, Kathmandu was organized. August The Opening Ceremony for The Fong Yim Fun Art Gallery was held. Ms. Fong Yim-fun, Professor Sung Jao-yiu Joseph, Vice-Chancellor of the Chinese University and Professor Chan Chi-fai Andrew, Head of Shaw College officiated at the Ceremony. September Professor George Lusztig, Shaw Laureate in Mathematical Sciences 2014, presented the Shaw Prize Lecture. The College devoted its efforts in promoting environmental sustainability with the support of College Trustee Dr. Nelson Yu. The Aquaponics Project was launched in collaboration with Kuo Mou Hall through which students gained knowledge of water agriculture and pisciculture in the city. December Professor Andrew Ng, Chief Scientist of Baidu and Co-founder of Coursera, was the Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar. 2015 May Strategic partnership with the International Association of Facilitators Hong Kong Chapter was established. June Shaw College joined hands with the Centre for Asia Leadership Initiatives and the Asia Leadership Trek in offering the conference ‘Leading Change in the 21st Century’ and invited 30 leadership experts to share their knowledge and experience with local undergraduates. September Mr. William Borucki, Shaw Laureate in Astronomy presented the Shaw Prize Lecture. November The exhibition to celebrate the college 30th anniversary was launched. 2016 January The Cultural Integration Programme was launched. Shaw College and Shaw College Alumni Association co-organized ‘Follow the Green Brick Road: Glass Bottles Recycling Guinness World Record Challenge’ and successfully set a first Guinness World Record by recycling 1,147kg of glass bottles in one hour. The 30th anniversary banquet was held in Federal Cruise Banquet Centre in Kai Tak Cruise Terminal. The 30th Founder's Day Celebration Ceremony was held with Professor Chen Char-nie, Founding Head of the College, as the Guest of Honour. May A summer exchange programme with University of British Columbia was established. December With the staunch support of College Trustee Mr. Tsim Yiu-leung, Zhejiang Taizhou Internship and Leadership Programme was launched. 2017 January The 31st Founder’s Day Celebration Ceremony was held with Mr. Yau Chi-chiu, Commissioner of Correctional Services of HKSAR Government, as the Guest of Honour March Professor Monica S Lam, Professor of the Department of Computer Science of Stanford University, was the Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar. September Professor János Kollar and Professor Claire Voison, Shaw Laureate in Mathematical Sciences presented the Shaw Prize Lecture. 2018 September Dr. Jean-Loup Puget, Shaw Laureates in Astronomy presented the Shaw Prize Lecture. November The hall of fame for the Star of Shaw Award was unveiled. 2019 January The 33rd Founder’s Day Celebration Ceremony was held with Ven. Chang Lin as the Guest of Honour. March Dr. Lee Kai-fu, Chair and CEO of Sinovation Ventures was the Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar. September The College was honoured with The Facilitation Impact Award 2019 (Platimum), becoming the first organisation in Hong Kong to receive the highest award from the International Association of Facilitators (IAF). 2020 July Professor Leung Yiu-kin Freedom succeeded Professor Chan Chi-fai Andrew as College Head. September Professor Au Wing-tung Winton, Department of Psychology, was appointed Associate Head. Professor Chan King-ming of the School of Life Sciences and Mr. Ho Kwok-tai of the Physical Education Unit were appointed Senior College Tutors. 2021 January The 35th Founder’s Day Celebration Ceremony was held with Dr. Leung Yu-lung Dexter, Trustee and alumnus, as the Guest of Honour. March Professor Hui Shu-cheong David, Chairman of the Department of Medicine & Therapeutics and Stanley Ho Professor of Respiratory Medicine was the Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar. May Professor Alexander Beilinson and Professor David Kazhdan, Shaw Laureates in Mathematical Sciences 2020, presented the Shaw Prize Lecture in Mathematical Sciences. June Mr. Chan Wai-man Raymond, Member of the Board of Trustees, was conferred honorary fellowship by the University. August Dr. Pang Kam-moon of the Office of University General Education succeeded Professor Chan Wood-yee Woody as Warden of Kuo Mou Hall. 2022 January The 36th Founder's Day Celebration Ceremony was held with Ir Dr. Lam Hiu-fung Alan, Trustee and alumnus, as the Guest of Honour. March Professor Chu Shun-chi Donna of School of Journalism and Communication succeeded Dr. Pang Kam-moon as Warden of Kuo Mou Hall. August Professor Ma Lai-chong Joyce of Department of Social Work was appointed Senior College Tutor. September College participated in government’s “Renewable Energy Feed-in Tariff Scheme.” Dr. Paul A Negulescu and Professor Michael J Welsh, the two Shaw Laureates in Life Science and Medicine 2022, presented the Shaw Prize Lecture in Life Science and Medicine. 2023 January The 37th Founder's Day Celebration Ceremony was held with Ms. WONG Chi-shun Winnie, Trustee and alumna, as the Guest of Honour. April Professor CHAN Ying-yang Emily, Assistant Dean (External Affairs) of the Faculty of Medicine, was the Sir Run Run Shaw Distinguished Visiting Scholar. May Mr. CHENG Kam-chiu Stewart, Second Vice-Chair of the Board of Trustees, was conferred honorary fellowship by the University. Professor YAU Shing-tung, Honarary Fellow, was awarded The Shaw Prize in Mathematical Sciences 2023. August Professor CHAN Wan-yi Renee of the Department of Paediatrics and Dr. CHENG Man-chuen of the Department of Mathematics were appointed Associate Dean of Students. November Professor Vladimir Drinfeld and Professor YAU Shing-tung, the two Shaw Laureates in Mathematical Sciences 2023, presented the Shaw Prize Lecture in Mathematical Sciences. 2024 January The 38th Founder's Day Celebration Ceremony was held with Ms. AU Oi-chi Irene, alumna, as the Guest of Honour. March Dr. AU Ka-lun Allan of School of Journalism and Communication was appointed Warden of Student Hostel II.
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https://college.indiana.edu/student-portal/undergraduate-students/academic-honors/deans-list.html
en
Executive Dean's List: Academic Honors: Current Undergraduate Students: Student Portal: College of Arts + Sciences: Indiana University
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Executive dean's list
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https://assets.iu.edu/favicon.ico
College of Arts + Sciences
https://college.indiana.edu/student-portal/undergraduate-students/academic-honors/deans-list.html
Aalati,Aditi Reddy Abbaspour,Shermin Abbate,Eliana Abbett,Mars A Abdalla,Dania Abdullah,Nibira B Abel,Samantha M Abell,Grace M Abell,Nicole Elizabeth Abid,Layla Abrams,Aaron Joseph Abughofah,Hamza Acra,Kate Adam,Nicole Adam,Osman Ishag Adams,Cameron Adams,Corey Adams,Emma Adams,Emma Christine Adams,Grace Lynn Adams,Gracie Jo Adams,Hayley G Adams,Kara E Adams,Michael Levin Adelekan,Adebowale Emmanuel Adelfinsky,Daniel Alexander Adelfinsky,David Adem,Gabriella M Adeyiolu,Mercy O Adhikari,Aalok Adur,Ananya Afzal,Sohaib Agarwal,Anokhi Agarwal,Ria Agramonte,Mia J Ahaus,Lauren Mae Ahern,Aislinn A Ahmad,Arham Ahmad,Mateo Mitsuo Ahmad,Mizba Ahmadi Tabatabaee,Sina Ahmed,Fatima Yusuf Ahmed,Mariam Ahmed,Sufiyan Mannan Ajayi,Fiyinfoluwa D Aje,Liz Ake,Alexander J Aker,Daniel E Akgun,Sumeyye B Akhalaya,Luke Akiba,Hikaru Akin,Nicole Jolie Akinro,Boluwatife Oladipupo Akinro,Jimi Abimbola Akinterinwa,Steve Akinwekomi,Vivian Al-Fadhl,Sakina AL-Naemi,Saeed Al-Robaee,Zainab Noor Alarcon,Jacob Michael Alase-Makanjuola,Faheesat AlBasri,Riyadh Mohammad Albedair,Rioof Faisal Albers,Reagan E Albert,Brooke Elizabeth Albert,Juliette Aileen Albert,Olivia L Albright,Abby Aldhaheri,Mohammed Aldrich,Morgan Ruth Alexander,Elias Alfalahi,Eissa Aabed Eissa Algan,Erol Alkobi,Lynne Alla,Dakshitha Allan,Olivia A Allen,Alexis Allen,Ana Elizabeth Allen,Ava E Allen,Avrie Allen,Josie Michelle Allen,Patrick Brennan Allerellie,Lydia Alleva,Caroline F Allgeier,Sam Bennett Allman,Megan Almanza,Ana Lilia Almaraz,Jessica Paige Almaraz,Paola Itzel Almazrouei,Saif Almheiri,Rashed Mohamed Alpizar,Nicole Alqaisi,Malaak T Alremeithi,Jumaa Alsarhan,Ahmad Hesham Alsayedi,Abdulaziz Mtlaq Alsikafi,Kareem Muhammad Alsubhi,Abdulrahman Altman,Finley P Alvarez Hanson,Aurora Alvi,Anwita Alwael,Fawaz Alwine,Sydney Elise Ament,Matthias Aminou,Tayssir Amman,Alanah Drea Amos,Will Amsden-Michel,Eve Amstutz,Ema L Anand Chhabria,Shiv Andedo,Nomsa O Anderson,Andrew Robert Anderson,Brady CamdenLee Anderson,Charlotte Noel Anderson,Dylan James McCoy Anderson,Evan M Anderson,Gabe James Anderson,Gavin J Anderson,Hailey Anderson,Kersten Donna Anderson,Linnea Anderson,Marley Anderson,Mia Isabella Anderson,Miles T Anderson,Reagan E Anderson,Tyler Andre,Camryn Ann Andrews,Lee Andrews,Walker Anfenson,Elise Anferova,Maria Angilletta,Erica Angle,Ava Darlene Annan,Camille Ansari,Aida Ansert,Savannah L Antenucci,Valerie Grace Antinao,Newen F Antony,Sarah Preeti Anwar,Vonnia Anyaebunam,Zachary Charles Appleton,Beans Joseph Appman,Luke J Apsley,Ethan C Arafa,Farah E Aras,Esha Arauco,Hope A Araujo,Daniela Arbuckle,Arie Arciga,Maria Shadany Arens,Chloe Ray Arepally,Anish Arieta,Joseph Arinoso,Motolani Oreoluwa Armando,Alexis Armendariz Peavy,Aria Armendariz Peavy,Gabriel Armstrong II,Jack Lewis Armstrong,Ashley Brooke Armstrong,Haley M Arneson,Robert H Arnold,Ethan Aronoff,Josie Arroyo,Hannah Arterberry,Max J Thieme Arthur,Lilly Arvin,Gil Benjamin Arya,Satyavsh S Ashburn,Niko Calvin Asher,Ella Jane Asher,Hannah Asher,Natalie Ann Ashley,Emma Christian Askenazi,Sareena M Ast,Cadence Elisabeth Atassi,Diana Maryam Atcheson,Lauren Julie Athalye,Arjun Athar,Ahmed Atherton,Sadie P Atkinson,Lauren Attalla,Haidy Naeem Naseef Aulakh,Arashdeep Singh Ault,Zoie Grace Aung,Brendan Ausderau,Maddy Grace Austin-Duarte,Jayla Austin,Zach Tyler Avila,Daniel Aylward,Elizabeth A Ayres,Michael Jeffrey Azar,Chris Babbitt,Harley Babcock,Emerson Babcock,Lexington Elizabeth Backer,Ellie Baddekonda,Riya S. Badgley,Faith Marina Badh,Harleen Kaur Badreddine,Ranny Baer,Christopher Joseph Baerga,Joaquin Bagnall,Curtis Baharozian,Leah I Bahl,Sanya Bailey,Abby Bailey,Lauren Bell Bain,Gabriella Yasmine Eva Bair,Brooke Marie Bakemeyer,Faith Bakemeyer,Hope Baker,AJ Baker,Ariell Jaslynn Baker,Breanna Baker,Eryn Makenna Baker,Hijiri Baker,Lexi Baker,Marwa Neenah Baker,Matthew Mason Baker,Paydin Danielle Baker,Samantha Jessica Balaji,Ananya Baldwin,Kelly Balint,Audrey Ball,Aidan Ball,Kieran Christos Ballard,Jonah Ban,Chaoyu Banaschak,Heidi Ronsheim Bandyopadhyay,Parnasi Banet,Addyson Banker,Sullivan Haze Banks,Braxton Banks,Lexi J Banks,Savannah D Bao,Yichuan Barach,Dara Barada,Matthew Kiefer Barajas Villalpando,Jesus M Baran,Liv M Bardol,Norah Elizabeth Bardon,Zoe Bargeloh,Ava Barger,Brayden S Barker,Autumn Elise Barker,Remy Barkman,Whitley Kane Barksdale,Carlin E Barnes,Brett T Barnes,Emily Catherine Barnes,Trinity Abeja Barnett,Joshua D Barnett,Margaret Anne Barnhart,Trent Samuel Baron,Alexandra R Barr,Amya Barreras,Alexa Sofia Barriball,Audrey Grace Barron,Jessica Melanie Barron,Nadia N Bartak,Gabriella L Bartelman,Lauren Nicole Bartels,Natalie A Barth,Nora Proctor Bartlett,Wade Ladin Basile,Victoria L Batalon,Brenna Jocelyn Bates,Madeline C Batides,James Bauer,Ashlyn Baumann,David Mergen Baumgartner,Ashton N Bawilung,Elizabeth Baxter,Angela R Bayler,Rachel Elizabeth Bea,Brannan Beach,Joslyn R Beall,Kennedy S Beam,Colin James Bean,Tsehai Beard,Liza Jaclyn Beardmore,Annie Elizabeth Beaupre,Morgan A Beaver,Sylvia Louise Beck,Elijah Joseph Beck,Sarah Elizabeth Becker,Caleb Joseph Becker,Caroline Ashley Becker,Lauren Bedwell,Leah Christine Begg,Gillian Johnstone Behforouz,Stella Sweet Behringer,Mia Blue Bejna,Morgan A Belamkar,Ameya Vinayak Belansky,Mara Bell,Alyssa Renee Bell,Jules Rosalie Bell,Mallory Joyce Bell,Xian Li Bellucci,Ryan Joseph Benedek,Bianca Leah Benjamin,Gali Benjamin,Savannah Bennett,Aysha Sakura Bennett,Carly J Bennett,McKenzie Leigh Bennett,Oliver Benson,Ellie Paige Benvenutti,Ava Noelle Berck,Stephen Philip Myers Berdine,Mia Judith Berend,Zane Zehnder Berensztein,Sam Emilio Berger,Jessica Berjansky,Hunter B Berkemeier,Sydney Berman,Julia E Bernard,Hayden A Bernfeld,Katie Elaine Bernot,Noah Bernstein,Annie Elise Bernstein,Jillian Berry,Brock Berry,Shay Marie Berry,Sheridan Berzins,Dzintara M Betar IV,Michael George Bettencourt,Emma Lauren Betterly,Ari Suzanne Beverly,Aaliyah Beyer,Bridget K Beyer,Chuck Jefferson Bhardwaj,Aman Bhat,Hamdaan Ishrat Bhatt,Nirali Bianchi,Emilee G Biddle,Siera Biedermann,Grace Bierman,Isaac Biggins,Abigail J Biggs,Allysa Gail Biggs,Ella Marie Biggs,Garrett Billanti,Sofie Marie Billingsley,DeMisha Billue,Matthias Bilodeau,Miranda G Binderiya,Anar Binhowidy,Abdulrhman Abduulha Biniam,Essay Birkenbeul,Mia Z Bishop,Nicholas Bivens,Calvin Joseph Bjorkman,Margaret Blachut,Victoria Margaret Black,Samara Black,Samuel Edward Blackburn,Jillian Blacketor,Michael Blackwell,Claire Elizabeth Blackwell,Nathan Garrett Blad,Julia Clara Blader,Marty James Blalock,Ryann Ryann Bland,Dylan Bland,Joseph Todd Blanton,Elena Blanton,Megan Katherine Blasio,Phenzi A Blazek,Brie Grace Bleeke,Sam Bleszinski,Katie Blevins,Nicole E Blickenstaff-James,Amaya Rose Blish,Abigail Catherine Blosser,Leah Blouir,Brayden W Blum,Jordan Makayla Boardley,Molly R Bobb,Sylvia Bobilya,Donovan D Bode,Josh Theodore Boeke,Lauren Taylor Boessler,Rayna Kay Bogan,Zoe E Bogatov,Marinna Boichuk,Inesa Bolger,Declan Alan Bolin,Kennedy Dawn Bolticoff,Noah Michael Bond,Kendyl Bond,Zach Ryan Bondy,Brendan Bonilla,Diana Celina Bonnell,Ellsa Bonta,Brooke Taylor Bontrager,Abby Boobna,Sejal Booher,Alexi L Booher,Delilah Booher,Lauren M Boor,Nyla Briel Borchelt,Katlyn N Borden,Addie Michelle Borden,Estella Cassidy Boring,Stewart Borland,Reese Elizabeth Borland,Sara Borowski,Lucy Reagan Boschee,Ella Grace Bostrack,Abigail Grace Boswell,Tatum L Boudtchenko,Sasha Lyubov Bougher,Miles Xavier Boulos,Caren Boulton,William C Bourkland,Rachel Nicole Bourne,Jadan Ray Bouton,Connor Russell Bowden,Quinley C Bowens,Kaitlin B Bowerman,Reilly Bowers,Amanda Corinn Bowlen,Mackenzie Claire Bowling,Elizabeth N Bowling,Sophia Bowman,Leo Fischer Bowman,Molly Bowman,Rylie Bowser,Daysia Box,Elizabeth Boyer,Chase Boyer,Luke Robert Bozzelli-Levine,Nick A Bracey,Anna B Bracken,Jacob Brackney,Grace Elizabeth Bradley,Gabby Braga,Vitor B Brahaum,Wylah Brake,Kaitlyn Brake,Mia Brandeburg,Kendall Brandon,Amelia Branson,Kelli J Branson,Sami Brase,Bailey E Brashear,Tauren Lucas Bratton,Delia Carolyn Brauer,Noah M Brayton,Katera P Brechner,Will Breeden IV,Will Breeden-Ost,Glen Breeden,Ariel Michele Breitweiser,Jessica Renee Breivogel,Sydney L Brena Ochoa,Sebastian Brennan,Maggie Ann Brennan,Tessa Brewer,Chiara Brewster,Grace Brey,Maria R Breymeyer,Brooke Elizabeth Bridges,Blake Bridges,Carmen Bright,Kennedy Bright,Quinn D Bright,Simeon Amasa Brill,Elizabeth Brink,Sophia R Brinkley,Jayden A Britt,Elle Britton,Keeley A Broadstreet,Kaitlin Rose Broderick,Kara L Bronkella,Camryn Elizabeth Brookes,Vanessa E Brooks,Niko Brooks,Zachary R Brower,Ian Dermot Brown,Arianna Zoe Brown,Brookelyn AnnMarie Brown,Carson C Brown,Grace Elizabeth Brown,Jaleigh Brown,Jerry Brown,Jordan Nathan Brown,Kendyl N Brown,Kyleigh Elizabeth Brown,Lillian E Brown,Shelby J Brown,Shelby Olivia Brown,Simone-Mone't Brown,Zion H Brownewell,Hailey Morgan Bruce,Madison Jane Brumley,Graham Charles Brumme,Ian Brummet,Kyle Brunetti,Lilia Bruns,Josh R Bruns,Kennedi Bruns,Zoe Brunson,Isabella Bruss,Becca Bryan,Elie Grace Bryant,Katelyn Bryant,Lauren Bryant,Reanna Bryant,SaNiya Anae Brzycki,Krissy Marcie Buchanan,Brynne Caroline Buchanan,Morgan Buchanan,Sarah Linnae Bucher,Olivia Claire Buck,Mary G Buckler,Eli Buckley,Raylen T Budreau,Sophie Rose Buehler,Bella Rose Buelow,Shelby Buening,Annie Pauline Bui,Emma Bukhres,Yacine Bullington,Bryn Lee Bullock Jr,Colby Bunes,Rivkah Gavrila Bunting,Gabriella Burger,Leah Grace Burgess,Olivia Burgio,Ava Grace Burgis,Daphne I Burk,Abigail Judith Burk,Kai Joanne Burke,Lauren Helene Burkhart,Carter Daniel Burks,Dylan Burks,Jacquelyn Burleson,Alexis Burnell,Lia Genevieve Burroughs,Angie Burton,Beatrice Burton,Cora Elizabeth Burton,Jasmin Bush,Jessica Lane Bush,Mary G Bush,Megan Elyse Busnur,Amogh Bussey,Annabelle Butler,Fox Butler,Reagan O Butrum-Griffith,Morgan Butt,Sophia Butters,Corrisa Arshea Buuck,Corbin D Bynagari,Viha Byrd,Lucas Cabral,Brian Cabrera,Grace Cabrera,Sofia Sandra Cacchillo,Evelyn M Caceres,Francisco Jose Cahill,Kailee Cahill,Maggie Doran Cahn,Ava Cain,Bryce Allen Caldes,Jonathan Caldron,Anaye Callahan,Caleb Masterson Callahan,Riley Elizabeth Caluseriu,Lucia S Camilo,Marco Y. Camire,Samantha Camorlinga Abrego,Ana Campbell,Emily Campbell,Zach William Canas,Lucia Cannady,Mason P Cannon,Chloe Cannon,Evan A Cannon,Evan O Cannon,Kenneth J Cannon,Maclean Connor Cantrell,Julianna L Cao,Agnes Cao,Joanna Caplan,Lila Maeve Cappelli,Alexandra Caputo,Noah Cardenas Gonzalez,Paulina Cardona,Amy Cardona,Liana Cardona,Lizbeth Alicia Cardona,McKenna Carey,Jordan Carie,Emma Carlson,Natalie Carlson,Spencer W Carlucci,JJ J Carmack,Kady Joy Carpenter,Kenley Jean Carr,Alaina Carr,Sydney Mya Carretta,Annie Cambell Carrier,Ethan A Carrigan,Corie Lyn Carroll,Anna C Carter,Ava Louise Carter,Dora Carter,Margaret W Carter,Renee S Cartmel,Natalie Ruth Carvajal,Alexis Carver,Katharine Casana,Jasmine Cascini,Lily Grace Case,Emi Victoria Cashman,Haley Elizabeth Casiano,Lydia Casiano,Maria Renee Castillo,Cara Castro-Sauer,Lia Castro,Vanessa Elizabeth Catalano,Samantha Cathey,Max Thomas Catlin,Zoe F Caudill,Jack H Caudy,Megan Allene Caufield,Emily C Cavanagh,Hailey Cavinder,Leo W Cawood,Landon Cazares,Maya Cekic,Mehlika Cer,Mary Bawi Rem Cerauli,Ryan Christopher Cereja,Theodora Konig Cerminara,Raeanna Kay Cesaretti,William J Chaddon,Nolan J Chael,Avery Elizabeth Chaffee,Elyse Chafin,Ella Chaille,Claire Marie Chamberlain,Ella Nikole Champion,Elise Chan,Sophia E Chandak,Bhavesh Chandler,Jynesis J Chaney,Ava Chang,Boson Chang,Deven Chang,Dori Chanterny,Tiffany Chapman,Braden Chapman,Danny Patrick Chapman,Grace K Chapman,Sydney Charney,Alex Reid Chartier,Audrey Charvat,Audrey Chatpunnarangsee,Belle Chatterjea,Roudra Chatterjee,Radhika Chau,Amber Lilly Chaudhari,Sonia Chaudhary,Usmaan Rafique Chaudhry,Hira Chaudhry,Majid Muhammad Chauhan,Aahana Chaumell,Grace Elizabeth Chavez,Dariana Annet Chavez,Elena Chavez,Luis R Cheema,Jasleen Kaur Chen,Jerry Chen,Raymond Chen,Ruqi Cheng,Casey Cheng,Linsey Chestnut,Kristin Cheung,Sisney Childers,Clover Cathryn Childress,Olivia C Chilenski,Autumn Chilla,Neve R Chin,Par Mawi Chirumamilla,Praveen Cho,Amber Chobot,Dylan Michele Chochrek,Anna S Chodkiewicz,Jenna E Choe,Elizabeth Choe,Hyeongyu Choi,Irene Choi,Lauren Choi,Yebin Chor,Cassandra J Choros,Olivia Chou,Tiffany Chriske,Jilly G Christie,Ceilidh F Chuganee,Shiv Mohit Chung,Anthony Michael Chung,Hannah Church,Josh Marshall Cian,Simon P Cierpilowski,Noelle Cindric,Izzy Delight Ciscell,Owen T Clamme,Katie Elizabeth Clark,Abby Grace Clark,Addison A Clark,Avery Elizabeth Clark,Erin Clark,Jaden Clark,Jeremy Philip Charles Clark,Maddie Clarke,Kate Noel Clayborn,Myah Anne Claypoole,Liv Lynn Cleary,Addison L Cleary,Molly Clements,Liv Pearl Clemmer,Grace Clensy,Julian Matthew Clevenger,Haidyn Clifford,Marissa Anne Cline,Mary Kate Cline,Talli A Close,Josephine Iona Clouse,Landyn Noelle Clouse,Peyton Clousing,Dori Elizabeth Clukey,Rena Coats,Lexi Mackenzie Cobb,Andrew Walsh Cobb,Jordan A Cochran,Genna Elizabeth Coffey,Mckenna K Coggan,Madeleine A Cohen,Teagan McClellan Cohen,Tillie Y Cohoon,Gretta Colasante,Melissa Cole,Ariel Cole,Conner M Cole,Max Coleman-Hull,Evan Ross Coleman,Ally Noel Coleman,Claire Coleman,Quincy Jarrell Collett,Macie DeLane Collier,Molly G Collins Jr,Charlie Dontay Jamail Collins,James Patrick Collins,Rebecca Collur,Shivani Colvin,Sarah Elaine Coman,Sean Paul Combs,Trasan Alexander Comparet,Avery Conarty,David Kenneth Conjelko,Nicholas William Conklin,Lillian M Conkling,Alayna Grace Conley,Kayla Nicole Conn,Abbey Conner,Celeste Nicole Conner,Hailey M Conner,Isabelle Jean Connors,Sammy Jay Conrad,Lea Conrad,Lucia Marie Conrad,Nick Isaiah Cool,Maxwell Coonrod,Nora Coons,Mitchell R Cooper,Elizabeth Cooper,Hailee E Cooper,Lindsey Cooper,Wes Elijah Coots,Masey Claire Copp,Callie Cora,Aleena Nicole Corcoran,Leah Cordell,Isabella Matia Cordova,David A Cordray,Madeline Marie Corman,Kylee Emma Corneil,Morgan Corneil Catherine Cornejo,AnaCecilia Cornett,Margaret Grace Costello,Ryan P Cota,Grace A Cotignola,Gianna Cotto,Leocadio Joseph Couri,Mia Isabelle Cox,Brennan Johnny Cox,Jacob Cox,Kelsey Maria Cox,Raina Cox,Rose Kashmir Coy,Cameron Kenneth Coy,Faye Coy,Jackie Lu Cozzi,Olivia Craft,Carly Rita Craft,Lauren O Crafton,Isaiah Stewart Craig,Amelia G Crampton,Kennedy Grace Crane,Kieran Crayton,Alexandria Elizabeth Creamer,Kirby Thomas Creedon,Elizabeth Cretin,Harley Skye Crickmore,Olivia T Crim,Emma Kay Criswell,Jenna N Crockett,Jocelyn Cronin,Ruth M Cross,Jayden O Crosser,Gannon Crow,Thomas R Crowe,Joey Neal Crowe,Kendall Julene Crowley,Gressa Anne Crowley,Jackson Paul Cruz-Fernandez,Brianna Cruz,Ella Cruz,Kayden Cuai,Mercy Cuellar,Trinity Rose Culley,Logan S Culley,Zachary Duncan Culp,Madeline P Cummings,Ella G Cummings,Miranda Cunningham,Cam Cunningham,Emma Rose Cunningham,Lexi N Cunningham,Megan M Curley,Emma Curran-Munoz,Dorothy Ibon Curry,Mackenzie Rebecca Curtis,Annabelle Curtis,Kyla Rayne Cushing,Samantha D. Cushman,Adam Gabriel Cusick,Alex Christopher Cutka,Olivia Czarnecki,Emily Patricia Czarnetzki,Kaitlyn Kathleen D'Arco,John A Dag,Karin Dager,Brook Dai,Simone Simone Dale,Jordan Marie Daleke,Antonia Biehn Daleke,Truman August Daley-Young,Frank Damodaran,Vikram Daniel,George Michael Daniels,Max Scott Dann,Lindsey Dannelley,Claire Madison Dannels,Lucas Adam Dansker,Jake Danton,Isabel Dao,Nathan Dapp,Jimmy Darland,Owen Dashiell,Olivia Daugherty,Samuel Dave,Anushka David,Babara Oreoluwa Davidson,Ally N Davis,Brianna Latrice Davis,Chloe Catherine Davis,Gavin Emerson Davis,Haley I Davis,Jack Jameson Davis,Jakob Reed Davis,Joachim Davis,Lanae B Davis,Logan Elizabeth Davis,Makayla Lynn Davis,Mary Hinako Davis,Sarah Rose Davis,Trey Winston Day,Abby Leigh Day,Sarah Linette Daywalt,Tobey Amara de Four,Anna Kristine De Guzman,Rowena Marielle Cezar De los Santos,Lisbeth De Varona,Anna Rene De Young,Christine L Deabel,Annalee Dean,Cole James DeArmitt,Abby Lynn DeAscentis,Mara Kay Debello,Ashlyn DeBrunner,Kindahl F deCastro,Isabelle Marie Deckard,Bryce Anthony DeCristofaro,Sophie Brynne Deem,Isabell V Deer,Mary Jane Deeter,Austin Christopher Deetz,Lucy Dejarnett,Olivia B DeJesus,Cayden Delcotto,Madelyn G DeLillo,Macie Kwas DeLuca,Nicholas Marco Delumpa,Adam Thomas DeMattia,Mia Deming,Melissa DeMoss,Reagan Dempsey,Mikey William Denehie,Aiden William Deng,Fiona Dennehy,Kelsey Morgan Denney,Samantha Elizabeth Dentino,Ellen Deogracias,Raymond C DePalma,Alivia Derloshon,Maggie Kay Dermody,Charlie Deroche,Peri Derrick-Rowles,Marquelah Derrow,Wyatt Desai,Aria Desai,Henee U Desai,Suhani M DeSantis,Caterina Marie Devany,Xavier Robert Devarapalli,Joshua Yahweh Tennyson DeVault,Hadassah Devenney,Lucy Devenport,Nash Howell DeVille,Alaina Devine,Daylee Devine,Ian DeVries,Olivia Karen DeWael,Cole Joseph DeWael,Sophie Lorraine DeWald,Mallory Dewey,Katie Dewitt,Emily D Dgani,Leah Dhana,Caroline Ava Dial,Cora Diaz,Chloe Grace Diaz,Santiago D Dickelman,Evie Marie Dickinson,Kyle Allen Dickstein,Zach Dieffenbach,Charles Joseph Dierckman,Clare Dietrich,Lillian C Dill,Emily E Dills,Carter Wayne DiMaggio,Madison Diminich II,Gino Dimmack,Dorothy Dimond,Erika J Ding,Stephanie Diniz,Rafael Dinkha,Mary Diouf,Zainab Afaaf Dixon,Allie Dixon,Grace Elisabeth Dixon,Samuel Joseph Doan,Bryan C Dobbala,Sathvika Doby,Demetria Cherise Dodd,Lauren Elizabeth Dodevska,Ana Dodson,Cayley Zayanah Darice Doepker,Sam Eugene Dognaux,Zoe Dollosso,Dean Dominguez-Hernandez,Jennifer Domke,Emma D Donahue,Emma Jane Donald,Khloey Denise Donaldson,Kamari Donnahue,Kaleb Donnelly,Ally Donnowitz,Alexis Donovan,Ryan Dorf,Allison Dorsch,Lily R Doty,Julien Doub,William Isaac Dougan,Declan Lyle Dougherty,Caleb Dougherty,Kara Grace Dove,Lauren A Dowers,Paitynn N Downing,Isabel Downing,Lucie Christine Downs,Addyson Delaney Doyle,Nora R Drago,Alexandra Drake,Adeline Lexi Drane,Cami Draves,Dylan Dressing,Caroline B Drew,Olivia Drinkrow,Arden Elizabeth Anne Dross,Madi Grace Druhot,Tessa Drummond,Bee Du,Siyuan Dube,Aaryaa Dubois,Rachael N Dugan,Joseph Henry Dugan,Sadie Denise Dugger,Josephine Marie Duke,Jessica Leigh Dulay,Sukhraj Singh Dunac,Elisabeth Dunbar,Gage Russell Webb Duncan,Delaney J Duncan,Maycee Ann Dunigan,Graci Anne Dunn,Emma K Dunn,Jennifer A Dunn,Lily Durbin,Mackenzie Grace Durgin,Mimi Durnell,Hannah Durnil Wilkerson,Avery Lucille Dusek,Colin M Duval,Delaney Dyar,Alex Nicole Eades,Chloe Elizabeth Eads,Ella James Eaken,Laura Eakins,Ava Lynn Easley,Jayden Easterling,Caitlin J Easton,Carly Jo Eaton,Noah Maxwell Eaton,Peyton A Eberle,Gretchen Claire Ebner,Kennedy Morgann Eckerle,Luke Vincent Ecoff,Lily Eddington,Logan Marie Edwards,Abigail Edwards,Rebecca K Edwards,Serayah Angeline Edwards,Sydney Grace Edwards,Zoe Jane Effner,Caroline M Ehrhardt,Abbey Mae Ehrhart,Kane Eicher,Emma Eichorst,Jolie Eickleberry,Melinda Eidson,Jenna Maree Eifler,Benjamin Heider Elandassery,Gauri Deepak Eldridge,Emma Rose Eldridge,Maddie Agnes Elfers,Reagan Elie,Ricardy Eller,Gillian M Elliott,Emily Elliott,Waylon Blue Ellis,Cordelia P Ellis,Logan Ellsworth,Jade Winter Elmoghe,Fathia Mohamed Elo,Darby Elofson,Ryan Gregory Ely,Eric Ray Embry,Masden Grace Emerson,Laura L Eminger,Delaney Marie Emkow,Paige Enayeh,Omar Enciso,Nico Jonathan Engel,Audrey Eleanor Engers,Julia R England,Samantha Glen Englert,Aubrey H Englert,Mya Ann Enneking,Mason Sylvester Enzor,Caroline Epperson,River Erbse,Alec Stuart Erickson,Amelia Gemma Erlandson,Grace Erny,Alec Mitchell Esparza,Paola Espinoza,Liberty Leilani Estes,Grace Ettenberger,Morgan Eubank,Kyle Evans,Drew Michael Evans,Erin Paige Evans,Jocylon Evans,Lucas Even,JJ Jordan Everhart,Kailey Lynn Everse,Kendall Lauren Eversole,Carson Zachary Evert,Erin Royce Eviston,Ty J Fagg,Jeannie Marie Fahey,Mia Grace Fahey,Sarah Katherine Fahl,Amelia Lyn Fahmy,Marina Beth Fair,Ariel Benjamin Faith,Hadley B Falcon,Davis Michael Falkoff,Helene Wren Fallouh,Fares Faraher,Nathan Alexander Farler III,Anthony Edmund Farley,Zofia Farman,Esther Farouk,Pearly Gamal Farrand,Samantha Marie Farrell,Allison Farris,Tu'Shawn D Fary,Noel J Fascia,Luciana Favors,Gabby Noelle Fawcett,Loren Fawley,Aimee Marie Fawley,Vi Lauren Fears,Noa I Featherson,Lily J. Fedders,Miles Kendrick Fehr,Mattilyn R Fehrenbacher,Clark Aden Fehrenbacher,Teal Feigenbaum,Lucy Feiler,Lydia Grace Feiwell,Natalie Feldkamp,Kyle Alexander Feldman,Klayton J Felicijan,Jordan L Felix,Paige Christine Feller,Troy David Felts,Jane Frances Fendler,Audrey G Fenn,Micaela Marie Fenstermaker,Sydney Ferba,Ethan Ferguson,Chloe R Ferguson,Julianne Helena Ferguson,Lucy Ferguson,Margaret Ferkowicz,Maya Fernandez,Anna Fernandez,Ashley Fernandez,Margaret Leyi Ferrell,Alex Ferro,Kathryn Ferry,Madison Feschyn,Timothy Joseph Festa,Chloe Marie Fettig,Madison Kay Feuer,Jacob A Fickell,Luca E Fickett,Scarlet Plume Field,Daniel M Field,Ellie Catherine Figueiredo Vasques,Paula Filippelli,Salvatore Ronald Filoso,Anna Marie Findley,Stuart Walter Finley,Patrick E Finney,Mattie A Firestone,Rachel Simi Fischbacher,Mandy Fischer,Hannah Mary Fish,Bethelehem Dustin Fishback,Katherine Fishbone,Rachel Elise Fisher,Charlie Douglas Fisher,Rachel Scanlon Fitzgibbons,Natalie Fitzsimmons,Owen Jack Fizer,Holly Raeanne Flaherty,Brian Flavin,Audrey M Fledderman,Zoe Jeanette Fleitman,Lindsay G Fletcher,Sierra Jean Flick,Isabella Florea,Ioana Sheila Flores,Izzy Flores,Jeff Michael Flores,Jocelyn Flowers,Gryffin M Fluhr,Megan Fluhr,William Joseph Flynn,Lauren G Flynn,Tess Wittmann Fogle,Elise Foland-Romero,Sydney Marie Foley,Allegra Lynn Foley,Kendall Foley,Will Folkening,Hunter Follin,Kate Folz,Ellie Folz,Isabel Folz,Lauren J Ford,Beth Ann Ford,Eliza C Ford,Victoria Foreit,Sam Christopher Foreman,Ella Grace Foreman,Savanna M Forrest,Jack H Forsberg,Brynna F Forster,Jordan R Fort,Rayne Keyon Fortozo,James Fos,Jonas Caleb Foster,Amanda Kate Foster,Gianna Grace Foster,Heather N Fought,Annika K Foust,Bianca Paige Fouts,Drew B Fouts,Lilly Fowler,Aja Rashaad Fowler,Colin J Fowley,Lucy Olivia Fox,Emma Patricia Fox,Josie Lynn Fox,Mia Fox,Willow Audrey Fraizer,Gabby Marie Frank,Lauren E Franklin,Alyse Frawley,Clare M Frazer,Lilly Annabelle Frazier,Devin T Frecka,Taylor Frecker,Garrett L Frederickson,Laurie I Freeman,Cionna Noelle Freitag,Kat French,Merin Ilene Frey,Emily N Frey,Jenna N Frey,Lexi Frey,Sarah J Fricke,Kitt Friday,Emily Fridrich,Chloe Mae Ruth Friedman,Anna Friedman,Tal D Friedmann,Sydni Fritz,Allison Froehlke,Jordyn Frost,Jacob Garrett Frost,Madelyn Frost,Will R Frye,Savvanah Kayleigh Fu,Ang Fu,Jason Y Fuchs,Harold Fuellhart,Lindsey Lee Fuentes-Rohwer,Mateo M Fuhrman,Alyssa Nicole Fulk,Chloe Danielle Fuller,Isabella A Funk,Clara M Funkhouser,Aaron Lynn Furlong,Kylie Hannah Gable,Sydney A Gachko,Eva Gaddam,Kia Reddy Gadient,Katie Elisabeth Gaffney,I'Asia Gaidoo,Maya Gaied,Maria Gainda,Muskaan Gala,Aman Galante,Mia Nicole Gale,Greta Galin,Annie Elizabeth Gallagher,Declan Gallagher,Emily Kaitlyn Gallardo,Laura Sofia Gallarneau,Alyssa Ann Galle,Jack Ryan Gallinat,Hayden Walter Galovic,Kelstin M Galvanek,Emma Brighton Gambetta,Miguel Gan,Roy Gandhi,Aaryh Linus Gandhi,Yashvardhan Ganesan,Abinaya Gans,Anna Gaonkar,Nayana Garber,Corbin P Garcia,Andres Garcia,Emma Garcia,Jaime A Garcia,Kaley Renee Garcia,Lauren Garcia,Matthew Gardner,Madison Garino-Heisey,Pierce Garnai,Megan Eileen Garnes,Jimmy Garton,Kylie Jeanette Garvin,Taylor B Garzon,Yarden Gaston,Ana Maria Gasway,Caden R Gatchel,Ella Diane Gates,Aidan Elizabeth Gatpandan,Sharana Dhyana Gaughan,Josh Davis Gavin,Dan Wynn Gaynor,Kennedy Jean Gdowik,Grace Gearries,Delaney E Geers,Olivia Geller,Anna Florin George,Bela Anastasia George,Cailyn L George,Lauren Mackenzie George,Shay Michelle Rose Geraghty,Gertie Gerardot,Gene Gerber,Alexis G Gerstler,Hannah Gerstner,Luke M Gerth,Anna Geske,Samantha Marie Gest,Victoria Ghabril,Luke Ghisellini,Cristina M Giacalone,Sicilia N Giammetta,Natalia Gianaris,Abraham Gianesi,Valentina R Gibbens,Parker Gibbs,Ainsley Jin Gibson,Jaycie Gick,Sasha Gift,Owen M Gilcher,Derek Joseph Gildersleeve,Sabra M Gill,Alissa Gill,Avery Gill,Seerat Gill,Suki Gillespie,Garlynn Nigh Gillette,Corinne Emily Gilliland,Lyss K Gilmer,Ashley Ginoplos,Caden C Giordano,Sierra Gize,Nicholas Gladkov,Victoria C Glass,Jess Lynn Glassburn,Kehara Mareelyn Glasser,Megan Gluzman,Orli Gochtovtt Stine,Fiona Goddard,Alexis N Godsey,Zachary A Goebel,Michael S Goeglein,Carson James Goel,Vidya Goens,Kayleigh Lynn Goertzen,Erin Nicole Goldberg,Emma Goldberg,Mia Rose Golden,Cassie Golding,Luke J Golding,Skylar Rene Goldstein,Chase Goldstone,Ellie Borner Goldsworthy,Erica Lindsey Goletiani,Margaret Lamara Gomez,Ariana Alexis Gomez,Tayler Marie Gomez,Victoria S Gonya,Lauren Grace Gonzales,Jacob Roy Gonzalez Chavez,Liliana Gonzalez-Crisanto,Jocelyn Gonzalez,Jesus Gonzalez,Victoria Rose Good,Gretchen M Good,Langley Marin Good,Lindsey R Goode,Nolan Goodman,McKenzie Yvonne Goodman,Olivia Devon Goodman,Talia Goodpaster,Lydia Mae Goodrich,Anna B Goodwin,Isabel Gopikannan,Nandha Gordon,Abby Bree Gordon,Alexandra Gordon,Ellie Grace Gordon,Jake Gordon,Kyle John Gordon,Lexi Jade Gorman,Kyle Daniel Gormanous,David Goskowicz,Ryan M Gotoh,Arya Mimi Gotsch,John P 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Guinn,Katherine Rose Guler,Jessica Gulley,Olivia Paige Gullion,Erica Kay Gumm,Ravana Gummalla,Esha Gunn,Tegan Kalani Gunter,Megan Elizabeth Guo,Rachel Guo,Xuanjun Gupta,Anil Jai Gupta,Anjali Gupta,Arjun Gupta,Lina L Gupta,Sachin Gus,Andrew Gustafson,Anya Gustafson,Elsa Lloyd Guthrie,Morgan Gutman,Emily Elizabeth Gutt,Carter Guy,Maddie Guzman,Eva G Guzman,Gabi Gwartney,Aidan Irene Haag,Quincy Grace Haag,Tessa Rose Haas,Jess Alyn Haase-Flores,Emily Habash,Isabella Jiselle Habel,Zoe M Habib,Sajid Habig,Isabella Habig,Marin E Hackleman,Sarah Hackman,Ashton Carter Hackman,Hannah G Hadland,Lauren Hager,Maddy Lynn Haggin,Ethan Haghverdi,Raya Hahn,Rachel A Haiduc,Fabio G Haigh,Audrey Haine,Hillary C Hale,Gavin A Hale,Madeline Hale,Rowan James Haley,Madelyn Hall,April R Hall,Charlie Theodore Hall,Ciersten Aurelia Marie Hall,Emma Hall,Emmi Hall,Giancarlo G Hall,Gwen Aurora Hall,Hannah Elizabeth Hall,Imogen Mary Hall,Ivy Hall,Julia Halm,Alexandra Fiona Halpern,Jasmine Sienna Hamad,Malac S Hamill,Addisyn North Hamilton,Aidan Carter Hamm,Camille Marie Hammett,Boden Hammon,Joel A Hammond,Bee L Hamscher,Caden Han,Rena Yun Hancock,Ronan Sterling Hand,Nathaniel J Hand,Sophie Hanigan,Tierney Anne Hanley,Lizzie Nicole Hanna,Alexis Renee Hanna,Gabrielle A Hanna,Spencer Cole Hannahs,Grace Hannan,Violet Hannon,Nicole Theresa Hans,Lauren Olivia Hanson,Abigail Dawn Hanson,Tori Megan Hao,Sarah Keelzah Harari,Jack Aryeh Harbart,Zoe Harden,Emma E Hardwick,Anya Hardwick,Eli Robertson Hardy,Gillian Rhys Hargett,Erin Renee Harkness,Kiley Adele Harlan,Brody E Harley,Emily Cierra Haro,Liliana Harper,Emma Grace Harper,Isabelle Rose Harper,Lu Harper,Nevaeh Elise Harpster,Nina Harreld,Quentin Brese Harriman,Charles Franklin Harrington,Cathlynn Harris,Cassity Faye Harris,Jenna Claire Harshbarger,Annika Harshbarger,Sofie Hart,Jordan N Hart,Mary Jane Hartley,Carson D Hartley,Guinnevere Hartman,Andrew Todd Hartman,Thomas J Hartung,Breanna Renee Hartz,Olivia Marie Hasbrook,Tyler Matthew Haseltine,Nat D Hasenour,Michael Hassan,Lubabah Hastings,Isabel E Hatch,Lexy Hatcher,Julianne A Hatfield,Mason Henryli Hathaway,Grace Elizabeth Haught,Jack Ryan Haupt,Henry Haupt,Lily K Havens,Ana Coryn Hawes,Izzy Hawk,Lola Hawkins,Eli Rand Hawthorne,Margot Hayden,Matthew Padgett Hayden,Will Richard Hayes,Jake Alexander Haynes,Morgan Hays,Anika Sophie Hays,Carter Hays,Lilly Adeline He,Calina He,Jeff Head,Benjamin Thomas Headley,Kaylee Jean Heche,Hadley Hedegard,Virginia Rose Hedrick,Tessa Marie Heim,Morgan Elizabeth Hein,Kacie Jo Heineman,Madelyn Heintzman,Anna Aleah Heise,Matthew D Heisel,Tanner Paul Heiser,Ashlyn Brooke Heit,Liam Heldman,Julie A Helepa,Amelinda Hemmenway,Erin Henderson,Grace Henderson,Kendall Nicole Hendricks,Stede B Hendrickson,Mara Hennessey,Katherine M Henry,Kenna Henry,Nia Henry,Tyler Hensley,Ethan Barron Henson,Piper Isabella Heotis,Gavin Tyler Hepner,Remy Heppner,Ben Steven Hermann,Jacqueline M Hernandez-Villalobos,Sharina Elvira Hernandez,Eric Alejandro Hernandez,Eva L Hernandez,Mariana Hernandez,Shelia N Hernandez,Sorani D Hernandez,Tatum Julianne Herron,Amaya Rose Herron,Ella P Herwehe,Emma Lucille Hess,Avalin M Hess,Brianna Marie Hess,Britta E. Hess,Natalie Lynn Hester,Madigan Rhea Heyl,Greta Heyob,Dominick Owen Lennon Hicks,Benjamin Matthew Higby-Richardson,Bailey Jean Higley,Owen Erik Anthony Hildebrand,Elizabeth Delaney Hildenbrand,Alexa L Hile,Audrey L Hile,Lilly Marie Hilkowitz,Mia C Hill,Ellison Hill,Emily Hill,Grace Hill,Maddie Grace Hill,Reagan M Hille,Paige J Hillsman,Andrew Hilpisch,Bailee Rae Himebaugh,Austin Charles Himes,Emily A Hine,Carolyn E Hine,Corey Ann Hines,Madeline Ann Hitchcock,Zach Hite,Hannah Hitrik,Allie N Hittle,Rose Ho,Britney Q Hobson,Mary Lyda Hochgesang,Jeff Thomas Hocking,Eli P Hodges,Andrew F Hodges,Isaac Reid Hodges,Taylor Hodgin,Lila R Hodgman,Quinn Forsyth Hodgson,Jia Jia Hoener,Cambree Rose Hofer,Rhys Hoffman,Grace A Hoffman,Haley Ann Hoffman,Kaylee Hoffman,Maria Hoffman,Noah Hoffman,Rachael Hoffman,Rachel Hofmann,Faith Victoria Hogan,Jack Thomas Hogan,John Hoham,Benjamin Christoph Conrad Hohl,Kyle Holbrook,Ashlee Lynn Holder Jr,Mark Alan Holdread,Livi M Holdren,Emma E Holdsworth,Holly 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Hurd,Alexa R Hurley,Jillian M Husband,Maddie Ann Hussain,Leena Hutchins,Joshua T Hutchinson,Bradley D Hutchinson,Macy J Hutmacher,Morgan Noelle Hutner,Kate Chloe Huxford,Zara Hwang,Jaesang Hwang,Joanne Hyatt,Jack Lawrence Hyde,James C Hydyrova,Amangul M Hylla,Amelia E Hyman,Elyssa Meredith Hynes,Alexander Ice,Ashley E Igbasanmi,Adeleke Malik Igue,Ameer A Ileleji,Aiko T Immig,Austin Ingle Jr,Josh David Iqbal,Haaris Hassan Iqbal,Naail Irace,Alison E Irick,Andrew Robert Irk,Tegan Irmscher,Julia Isaias,Alexis Nicole Ison,Karley S Ison,Maggie Itnyre,Annetta May Ivan,Nicky Iyer,Sanjana Izadine,Mohamed Zakaria Jacko,Mary Grace J Jackson,Emma Jackson,Jai C Jackson,Joelle Eleanora Jackson,Joshua Allen Jackson,Luke Jackson,Sara Jane Jackson,Sophia Jacobs,Connor Lee Jacobs,Gwendolyn Jacobsen,Seth Howard Jacobson,Danielle Hope Jacobson,Lauren Iris James,Dalton M James,Emery James,Hannah E Jamora,Brynn Celeste Jamora,Kai Jancich,Max Henry Jann,Rocco A Janoski,Ryan D Janus,Lindsay J Jarchow,Abigail R Jarrett,Lillian G Jarrold,Gwendolyn Jasnic,Sofia Jauregui,Jessie I Jayawardana,Thavisha Ashvin Thomas Jefferies,Megan Jeffris,Isabelle Camas Jehle,John Jelinek,Peyton Jellison,Graham Allistair Jen,Alicia Jensen,Cate Elizabeth Jeong,Sayne Jepsen,Michelle Clarice Jewell,Allie M Jiao,Yulin Jiles,Jacob Christopher Jimenez,Alejandro Jobe,Bryce Johns,Allyson M Johnson-Hanners,Jada Michelle Johnson,Aaralyn K Johnson,Al C Johnson,Ani Johnson,Benjamin Johnson,Ellie Marie Johnson,Greta Lee Johnson,Katherine Johnson,Katie Johnson,Kyle Alexander Johnson,Madison L Johnson,Matthew J Johnson,Michael Johnson,Noeh B Johnson,Olivia R Johnson,Sae Jane Johnson,Sophia R Jonas,Alexa Rose Jones,Abby Nicole Jones,Allison Danielle Jones,Eleni Christina Jones,Ellie Talbot Jones,Gwyn Katherine Jones,Hope Jones,Kaitlyn Jones,Kendall Suzanne Jones,Lydia Jones,Monica Michell Jones,Nathan A Jones,Sierra A Jones,Sophia Elizabeth Jonio,Kaisee Nicole Jordan,Katrina Lee Jordan,Katy M Jordan,Natalie Ava Josenhans,Calvin Jothirajah,Pranav Jou,Jacqueline Jovanovic,Luka D Joyce,Eliza Joyce,Sarah Allison Julian,Grace Ann Jurkiewicz,Lily Katherine Kaar,Kelly Elizabeth Kaczur,Megan Renee Kaelin,Heather Marie Kafkes,Julia Rose Kahl,Morijah Kain,Enzo David Kaiser,Weston J Kaiserlian,Ava Sophia Kalani,Om Kallen,Kaylie Elizabeth Kallmeyer,Schuyler Kalluri,Rajiv D Kamensky,Becca Hannah Kamioner,Jane Kanatas,Mia P Kane,Brodie Albert Kaplan,Chloe I Kaplan,Mikayla Kappel,McKensie Lynn Kappen,Claire Marie Kappner,Anna K Karakash,Jennifer Karallas,Thalia Maria Kareski,Annabella Karg,Kurtis Karim,Aqsa Karimi,Pouyan Karr,Nena Loris Karsch,Makayla Kassens,Emma Katinsky,Hannah Rose Katkar,Arush Katz,Jacob Albert Katz,Jaime Katz,Natanya Ida Katzung,Kaitlyn Kaufman,Drew Kaufman,Lily A Kaufman,Victoria Lynne Kaufmann,Baelen Grace Kaufmann,Kyle Charles Kaur,Simran Kaur,Vishu Kayser,Ava J Keane,Gavin Q Keasey,Nick Alexander Keasling,Hayleigh Knowlton Keating,Riley P Keating,Sarah Kee,Kenzie Jade Keele,Graham 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Mathies,Regan Mathison,Mollie A Matoski,Bronwyn Matt,Katarina Matten,Jonathan Mattern,Lindsey Mattesich,Preston Matthias,Clayton Allen Mattox,Sam R Mattu,Krisha S Matuska,Caroline Matuska,Maddie Grace Matzen,Meredith Mauer,Natalie Elise Maurer,Alex James May,Adia Rose Mazero,Mia Ann Mazilu,Alexa Grace Mazitov,Askar A McAlear,Vasco Philippe Mcalister,Calypso McAllister,Baylee Nicole Mcallister,Olivia L McBride,Malia J McCabe,Jillian L McCann,Aaron Robert McClellan,Alaina Jo Mcclelland,Abby Mcclure,Correnn McClure,Matthew Gabriel Mccollam,Payton Alexis McConahay,Mackenzie McConnell,Nolan Edward Mccormack,Ren McCormick,Jenna Ann McCoy,Ella McCoy,Kathleen McCoy,Riley Marie McCrea,Samantha R Mccullough,Gracie Mcdaniel,Lindsay M McDaniel,Mira Kathrine McDaniel,Remi McDermott,Alyssa E McDermott,Cameron Alexander Mcelwain,Kira McEvoy,Alli Rose McFarland,Emma McGee,Aya McGinty,Keira McGowan,Shannon Marie McGuire,Brady McGuire,Evan McHale,John Emerson McKay,Gavin Michael McKay,Spencer McKibbin,Kaitlynn McKillip,Claire A McKim,Taylor Mckinney,Carah G McLauchlan,Elizabeth Suzanne Mclaughlin,Ally McLeish,Nathalie Marie McMahon,Colin McManus,Lucas James McMullen,Meggie Elizabeth McNamee,Caroline R McNerney,Madeleine Mcwilliams,Katlynn E Meade,Madison Meador,Marissa Meagher,Annemarie Rose Mecchia,Alexa Katherine Medina,Anahi Medland,Katie Meek,Hilary Mehringer,Riley Mehrzad,Omeed G Mehta,Darshan Mehta,Jessel Mejia,Vanessa Y Mekonnen,Naomi Mellinger,Sarah Mellon,Aylivia Melton,Sydney E Menconi,Francesca Mendelsohn,Evie Alice Mendez,Melisa Mendoza,Nevaeh Alexis Teresita Meneghini,Cecilia Menely,Samantha Mentzer,Josey Mercado,Ana Mercer,Allison Mercier,Alyssa Mernitz,Kendrick Judy Merriken,Katherine Merryman,Ava Mertz,Emily Christine Mervis,Gus Meschen,Madison Grace Messer,Emma Rose Messer,Hannah Messinger,Adam Messinger,Lindsay Paige Metrick,Andrew Thomas Mettel,Aidan James Meyer,Asha Meyer,Eliza R Meyer,Ryne D Micallef,Makenna Michaels,Desirae Michaels,Nick Michaelson,Emmy Samantha Mikesh,Josie Noelle Miles,Molly E Miller,Abigail E Miller,Andrew Miller,Blair M Miller,Cole Edward Miller,Haley Marie Miller,Ian Frederick Miller,Jake Charles Miller,John M Miller,Josie Leigh Miller,Kennedy Miller,Kylie Noel Miller,Mackenzie J Miller,Marcus Miller,MaryKathryn Miller,Matthew David Miller,Melanie Barbara Miller,Miranda Miller,Mya McKenna Miller,Paige Miller,Peter Miller,Preston Scott Miller,Rachel Miller,Seth Riley Miller,Shayne Christian Miller,Sydney Rebecca Miller,Taylor Nicole Milliken,William Mills,Ellison Kristine Mills,Grace Mills,Jessica Mills,Kaitlyn M Mills,Mason J Mills,Sam Donald Miner,Faith Kae Minic,Catherine Minor,Aleah Brianne Minton,Lydia Gabrielle Mintz,Zach Fred Minut,Andrei Luca Mirhosseini,Niki Mirza,Bahraam A Mischak,Maddie Mishra,Ritvik Mitchell,Abbi Renee Mitchell,Aubrey R Mitchell,Katherine K Mitchell,Lauren Fay Mitchell,Lucy Catherine Moberger,Emma M Moczek,Lukas Peter Moczek,Zoe Anna Moehn,Jacob Allan Mohamed,Haifa Khalfan Mohankumar,Meghana Mohrs,Adam Molldrem,Marco Jeffrey Moloci,Daniela Monger,Isabelle Monhaut,Beatrice Cicely Monnier,Caley Monroe,Ollie J Monroe,Spencer Montague,Teagan M Montgomery,Macey Montgomery,Paul S Montieth,Jenna L Montoya,Aldo Moon,Katherine Moore,Anna Chemeine Moore,Braden William Moore,Ethan Cole Moore,Hunter James Moore,Joshua Dean Moore,Katelyn I Moore,Katy Moore,Kayley N Moore,Laney Shae Moore,Malakai M Moore,Natalia Moore,Samantha Mora,Joey Elise Morales Gallardo,Kiko Moran,Hannah Grace Moran,Kelly N Moran,Kirin McKayla Morara,Rachael Moraa Moretton,Allie A Morfas,Michael Morford,Ashley Elizabeth Morgan,Adelyn Morgan,Autumn Rochelle Morgan,Emily Frances Moriarty,Kaleb Morical,Mitchell Donald Morin,Aric Maison Morlok,Sydney L Morr,Gavin Morra,Michael J Morris,Emma Morris,Ian Lindsay Morris,Laila Morris,Louis B Morris,Riley E Morrison,Cam Morrison,Lucy Ann Morrow,Anna Morse,Kelsey P Morse,Ronan Krisztian Morton,Laurel Alise Morzhova,Natalia Pavlovna Mosbaugh,Melody Moschel,Jack T Moscone,Charles Moses,Grace Mosley,Peyton Camille Moss,Adina Rebecca Moss,Madison Mossberger,Ashlynn Joy Moye,Charles James Mozeleski,Anna Mrozinski,Macy C Muckerheide,Thomas R Mueller,Devon A Muensterman,Maxwell B Muir,Olivia G Mulks,Layla Marie Mull,Megan Lynn Mullendore,Andreus Mullins,Asher Braden Chase Mullins,Sophie M Mullis,Hunter Mundy,Joleena Louise Munir,Mustafaa Munoz,Mireya Munoz,Yasmin Martinez Murad,Sayf Hasan Murff,Kenzi Michelle Murillo,Erick Murphy-Smith,Goodman Murphy,Andrew Timothy Murphy,Bailen Reis Murphy,Broc Christian Murphy,Emma C Murphy,Erin S Murphy,Jackson Stone Murphy,Joel C Murphy,Joseph Murphy,Liv Murphy,Max William Murray,Brady A Murray,Linnea Isabelle Murrell,Skye Madonna Murthy,Nithya S Murugan,Nikita Murugan,Nishta Musman,Margaux Muthukarunakaran,Sudharshini Muthuraman,Harshini Mwonya,Ashley Janice Myers,Allison Myers,Armand Dante' Myers,Hannah Sunshine Myers,Harlei Rae Myers,Kiera Marie Myers,Madi Leigh Myers,Samantha Myers,Samuel Myers,Sydney Rebecca Myles,Megan Krysteena Naaman,Drake McClain Nacyk,Amber E Nagel,Paige E Nagra,Arshdeep Nair,Madoo Nakajima,Ayumu A Namack,Nicole Nance,Sammy Gail Nanda,Poorabi Nandakumar,Kirankumar Nargang,Richard I Narvell,Karabeth A Nasar,Yumna M Nash,Graham Thomas Nathan,Micah Nation,Claire Ann Nault,Lily Marie Naumoski,Anastasija Navarro,Aniah Charis Nazarloo,Shawn Nazzal,Layla Yazied Neal,Macy Cade Neary,Brianna Elisabeth Nedelcu,Maddie Marie Neely,Treauna Leshae Negron,Angeli Neher,Phoebe R Neice,Maize Diane Neil,Darya Rose Neil,Emily Marie Nelson,Alena Ann Nelson,Ava C Nelson,Charlee Patricia Nelson,Charlotte Claire Nelson,David Alexander Masga Nelson,Ella Beth Neumeister,Matthew John Newman,Grant Newman,Jake M Newman,Nathan T Ng,Edwin Ng,Kassidy Ngo,Brandon Ngo,Daniel Nguyen,Alexis L Nguyen,Arianna M Nguyen,Chloe Nguyen,Christie Thuy Nguyen,Jason Nguyen,Joslin Tammy Nguyen,Nicole Lanchi Nguyen,Sophia Nguyen,Sophia Nguyen,Thu Ni,Nicole Niang,Marieme Niazi,Ryaan Nichols,Keegan Nicholson,Rose Nicolaides,Christopher Niehaus,Julia G Niemela,Abigail Nierste,Paige Alexis Ninneman,Katie Nirtaut,Ashley Nitschke,Kate Nix,Sophie Niyaz,Aqeel A Nochowitz,Emily Alexandra Noe,Karey E Noguchi,Aika Nolan IV,William Aloysius Nolting,Emma Grace Norman,Samantha Jo Normington,Francoise Norris,Cassie Norris,Jack R North,Sydney Jordyn Norton,Karli Maye Norton,Lydia L Novoa,Victoria Cristina Nowacki,Finn Roch Nozick,Leah Y Nuest,Lily Belle Nutter,Carson M Nyman,Nathan Thomas O'Brien,Clara Elizabeth O'Brien,Michelle O'Connell,Meaghan O'Connor,Leah O'Connor,Meg Joanne O'Dell,Catherine O'dell,Madeline O'Grady,Nellie Anne O'hair,Haley O'Mahoney,Li Mei Elizabeth O'Malley,Cailin Grace O'Reilly,Caitlin A Oakley,Lauren Elaine Oatess,Emma G Obioma,Michelle Obrecht,Carina Obuch,Melanie Michele Ochoa Lynch,Jackson Emil Oconnell,Paige Odabasi,Anil Odrich,Siena Alexis Oduwole,Temitope Dorcas Ofer,Emma R Ofer,Ty A Ogunnusi,Michael Ok,Nicholas Okano,James Okoro,Jovan Okulski,Amanda Jiae Olejnik,Shannon K Olin,Serona Oliver,Olivia G Olson,Aidan P Olson,Lauren Elizabeth Olssen,Emma Ruth Oluwajobi,Hephzibah O Oluyadi,Mariam M. Omar,Razan Raid Onderak,Johnathan Louis Oneil,Evan Onyschak,Sydney Orban,Natalie H Ordas,Jonathan A Origer,Elizabeth Colleen Orme,Emily Jo Ormsby,Logan Cole Orschell,Ava Rose Ortega,Nicholas Chaves Ortiz,Antonio J Oslan,Zoe Osmundson,Annelise Osowick,Riley Jean Osten,Lindsay Ostrowski,Rachel Ostrowski,Vincent Andrew Otten,Matthew Ballard Ou,Jianhongjing Ousterhout,Jessica Overfelt,Claire Michelle Owens,Kenya Elizabeth Owens,Mikayla Pace,Briana Jade Pace,Jordan M Pacheco,Gabriela Xitlali Padgett,Abigail Padgett,Chase A Paes,Leonardo Pajor,Luke Nathaniel Pak,Eunice TaeEun Pala,Harrison J Palakal,Melina Philomina Paley,Jack M Paley,Zachary R Palkon,Leah Jin Panda,Ayush Pandya,Priya Chinmay Panell,Brandon Christopher Pangan,Hudson L Pannell,Mayla Reese Pant,Dyuti Pantoja,Lola Reyes Papai,Ava Elizabeth Papakhin,Nicholas Aleksey Pappas,Lucy Marie Pappenheim,Kathryn Bea Par,Hanah Par,Roselyn Par,Sung Len Paredes,Nadia Christine Parekh,Anaya Park,Allie Jean Park,Andy Park,Carson James Park,Olivia Nicole Parker-Fetterman,Celia Parker,Abigail Parker,Avery E Parker,Madison Parks,Matea Parrish,Natalie I Parsons,Bailee Nicole Partin,Makayla Anne-Marie Pasalich,Ava Pascale,Anthony Paskis,Holden Gerald Pasquinelli,Leonardo Passey,Jiya Pate,Alana Kalmanova Patel,Aashna M Patel,Dhruvin Patel,Hailee Amit Patel,Himanshu Yagnesh Patel,Khushi Samir Patel,Kush Ranjit Patel,Lilly McElmurry Patel,Neel Patel,Raina D Patel,Reya B Patel,Rudra J Patel,Sanaya Patel,Shriya Patel,Siya Rupesh Patheja,Henna E Patrick,Liam George Patsfall,Erin G Patterson,Bianca Patterson,Carly Annette Patterson,Jack T Patterson,Janelle Margaret Pauwels,Jackson S Pauze,Joshua Xue-Li Pawlitz,Emma M Payne,Jocelyn M Payne,Nevaeh Payne,Sydney Payton,Ashley Nichole Payton,Emma K Pe?a,Traehlli Pearcy,Grace Emily Pearson,Kayden Marie Pearson,Levi C Pearson,Luke Ca?as Pease,Kelsey Nicole Peasley,Ian Pebworth,Charlie Pecina,Jasmin Marie Peck,Karisma Nichole Peck,Matthew Thomas Pellicone,Gabe Pelz,Molly Kanin Pence,Micah A Pendergast,Henry Paul Pendleton,Grace Elizabeth Penmathsa,Sanjana Pennington,Lily D Penny,Sarah Bonner Pentaleri,Aiden Joseph Peper,Autumn Pequignot,Maddy Mary-Sue Perdana,Kemal Ananda Peres Berti,Joao Eduardo Perez,Nathan R Pergament,Evan Daniel Perine,Isiah Drae Perkins,Emily R Perkins,Max P Perlich,Isaac Perlut,Trey Conrow Perrin IV,Les William Perrin,Ava Perry,Addyson Perry,Elyse Perry,Peter S Persohn,Andrew Peske,Amy Elizabeth Pesyna,Kelly G Peters,Ben Michael Peters,Joslynn M Peters,Lillian Petersen,Grace Petersen,Kathryn E Peterson,Reagan Petkovic,Mila Petri,Ashley Petro,Miles Pettler,Jesse Pezzuto,Michael Pfaff,Katherine Pfeifer,Collin Richard Pfeiffer,Catherine Pfeiffer,Julia G Pfingston,Iona P Pfingston,Oliver Fergus Beckett Pope Pham,Anh Thu Phelps,Allie L Philbin,Megan K Philipps,Atticus Phillips,Cameron Phillips,Graham M Phillips,Peyton LeAnne Pianczk,Paige Piazza,Blake William Piche,Gabrielle Pickett,Hannah Chrislyn Pickett,Mason Piechocki,Ellen Haley Pierce,Dane Piering,Sam Pies,Anna Pietras,Emma Alyse Pigott,Thomas Owen Pike,Payton Pilipchuk,Alexander Daniel Pinegar,Gabbi Eileena Pingul,Jazmynh Adair Pence Pinnell,Jaklynn Pinon,Selena Isabella Pinskey,Connor Piper,Bennett William Piper,Evan Bryant Pitts,Laynie Addison Plaehn,Griffin Planert,Elouise Plaskoff,Ian Samuel Platinsky,Jolie Platt,Austin Pletz,Katie Lynn Plinovich,Dani Marion Plon,Alexa Ploughe,Cara Elizabeth Plumleigh,Caroline F Pockrass,Anna Elizabeth Poduval,Anoushka Poirier,Jocelyn L Polacek,Eli Reed Polansky,Jordan Faith Polastri,Nicolas Pollard,Damion Dao Pollard,Georgia Pollin,Luke Asher Poludasu,Rishi Poludasu,Siri Pontones,Gabe Christopher Popek,Ashley Catherine Popovskiy,Leah Nichole Poppa,Andrew B Porter,Alanna R Porter,Tre'vell E Potter,Isabelle Mae Poulter,Addison Paige Povinelli,Braydon Powell,Claire Powell,Virginia Basye Pradines,Alexandre J Prairie,Amanda Rachelle Pratl,Josephine M Precht,Daniel W Preske,Clara M Press,Matthew T Pressnall,Nicholas Aaron Presson Wallace,Abigail Grace Preston,Zoe Grace Prible,Makayla Price,Alex Taylor Price,Ella Jane Price,Sarah Price,Sarah Katherine Price,Savannah Sue Primitivo,Daniel S Prisby,Molly Pritchett,Carter J Proctor,Emma G Provenzano,Elizabeth Przybyl,Lauren Publow,Matthew Pucel,Paige M Puck,Ethan S Pugh,Tommy Spencer Pujol,Will T Pumphrey,Jackson A Punater,Amee Purnama,Adina Putri Qasim,Zenia Quallich,Mallory Grace Quarrier,Julia C Quasney,Jeremy H Quearry,Katie Xian Jie Quehl,Bridget Anne Quilling,Came-Grace Quinlan,Casey Bryn Quintana,Fidel L Qureshi,Layla Ruby Raben,Lauren N Radde,Joseph Radel,Lauren Rader,Amelia Radford,Nicholas Rafalko,Chris Ragle,Cooper Rajakumar,Hemesh Rajavelu,Chatura Raju,Kathan Datla Rakow,Lauren Amanda Rallo,Sara Ralston,Jonathon Duane Ramanujan,Anjali Ramanujapuram,Ananya Ramirez,Chris Joel Ramirez,Emily Alexandra Ramirez,Emma Ramirez,Stephanie Stephanie Ramlo,Sophia Ramos,Daniela Cate Ramos,Nataly E Ramsey,Maxon Pryor Rand,Aidan Christopher Rand,Alexa Ranginwala,Aamir Amjad Ranginwala,Nadia Amjad Rankin,Katie Pinet Ransom,Tucker Vaness Raphael,Joey Michael Rasmussen,Carly Rasmussen,David Rassel,Audrey C Ratajczyk,Elizabeth J Rathnasabapathy,Akkash Ratliff,Neil Ratterman,Charlie Randall Raughter,Erin A Ravipati,Sravani M Ray,Ethan Thomas Ray,Sam Patrick Ream,Alexis Marie Reasoner,Jake T Reazor,Eric Rebekka,Katie Recht,Kobi Recht,Tal B Recker,John Thomas Henry Reda,Lindsey E Reed,Emily Reed,Jenna Nicole Reed,Kayli Jeanette Reedy,Olivia Grace Reetz,Darby Victoria Regalado,Joana Melissa Regan,Clare Elizabeth Regens,Noelle Faith Rehklau,Kennedy Rehman,Sulaiman Reich,Maxwell A Reichert,Leanna Reid,Joshua Daniel Reifel,Lauryn Reiser,Rylee E Reish,Kim Render,Morgan Vivian Renko,Olivia Skye Renner,Macy M Renninger,Amanda Marie Rensi,Caroline Repenning,Anna Marston Rettig,Cate Reynolds,Alex Reynolds,Charlie Peter Reynolds,Sean Khosla Rha,Sean Rhinesmith,Trinity E Rhodehamel,Raegan Renee Richards,Mason Junior Richards,Quinn M Richardson,Carly Emma Richardson,Cat Irene Richardson,Danin Michael Richardson,Sam Leigh Richey,Emma Claire Rickert,Alison J Ricketts,Anen Ricketts,Will Riddle,Nela M Ridge,Vanessa Lauren Rifkowitz,Noah M Riley,Londyn Rimedio,Ty G Rinehart,Ashlyn Ann Rinehart,Zoe Michelle Ringo,Mayah L Ringquist,Caroline Elizabeth Riordan,Kathryn Claire Rios,Charlize Ripley,Abigail Marie Risse,Ava Risteska,Marjana Ritchey,Brianna Ritchey,Nell Ritchie,Caroline Diana Ritter,Faith Michelle Ritter,Ian J Ritzmann,Erica Vieira Rivard,Hayden Elise Rivera,Jona Kyla Rivera,Laylani Isabel Rivers,Kelli Taylor Roadruck,Mallory Diane Robbins,Teagan Artemisia Roberge,Cara Katherine Roberson,Eve Elizabeth Roberts,Ethan M Roberts,Jaden Ty Roberts,Kendale Paige Roberts,Melanie Quinn Roberts,Payton A Robertson,Joel Robertson,Nichole Marie Robinson,Kaleb Jonathan Robinson,Kurtis Robinson,Paige Robinson,Quinn M Robinson,Rylyn Robinson,Tristan James Rocano,George Jaziel Rochte,Edward Forbes Rockliff,William Dale Rockwell,Maggie Elizabeth Rodecap,Nick Rodgers,Chloe Rodgers,Karlee Ann Rodriguez,Adriana Kristina Rodriguez,Alma Rosa Rodriguez,Eduardo Rodriguez,Yaira Roehm,Philipp L Rogal,Emma M Rogers,Addy Rogers,Chase Alan Rogers,Karlie E Rogers,Lillian Roggensack,Clara Rohn,Lauren Rohrbacher,Ashton Carter Rolfes,Josie Rollins,Noah Ryan Romano,Mahri Carole Romic,Vesna Romine,Grace Romines,Colton J Rong,Laura J Ronkin,Sydney Rorabaugh,Emma Rose,Connor Rose,Eli E Rose,Gracie Rose,Kelsey A Rose,Marcus Daniel Roseberry,Buerk Elsworth Roselle,Mikey Leonard Rosen,Hannah E Rosen,Lucy Rosenblitt,Maddie T Rosenbloom,Samantha Bella Rosenblum,Jeremy Rosenbluth,Daria Rosenthal,Kerri Erin Rosenzweig,Jillian Rosolowski,Casimir Thomas Ross,Dilyn Ava Ross,Hadlie L Ross,Jacob Ross,Stella Rossell,Jack R Rossillo,Madison Alexis Roth,Emma N Rothenberg,Ruby Bentsiyon Rothschild,Lena Roti,Salvatore N Rotolo,Maggie Mae Roudebush,Kara N Rubey,Ellie Jean Rubick,Ava Ruble,Courtney Rude,Malori Ruffer,Sam Ruffner,Katie Elizabeth Ruiz,Brodyn Ryan Runge,Gracie L Rupel,Trevor Colin Ruppert,Alex David Ruprecht,Maddy Belle Rusche,Jonathan B Rush,Trevor Howe Rushemeza,Nathan Russell,Daniel J Russell,Liona Marie Russell,Molly Russell,Sara G Rusyniak,Julia Helene Rusznak,Jace Cameron Ruth,Zoe J Ryan,Haley Ann Sabin,Max Joseph Sabo,Sophie Anne Sacco,Francesca Belle Sachdeva,Jashith Sadaqat,Imad Anjum Sadhwani,Shivom Safran,Anna Shea Sainato,Anthony F Sainato,Dominic J Saini,Sukhpreet Sakthi Velavan,Sruthilatha Salama,Mina Mounir Salama,Veronica Salazar,Jovanni Salcedo,Sophia Ava Salgado Cuevas,Daisy Salinas,Sophie Elyssa Salisbury,Kaitlyn Salter Zarro,Olivia Salzer,Grace C Salzmann,Emma Sammakieh,Sarah Leila Samuelson,Mary H Sanchez,Sofia Sanchez,Victoria P Sanders,Brittany S Sanders,Jaigh L Sanders,Zane Maverick Sanderson,Benjamin Sanderson,Ellen Sanderson,Seiler Sanduski,Andi N Santana,Johelisa Santhanam,Kavya Sai Santiago Miranda,Tati Santiago-Hernandez,Andy Iori Santiago,Randilyne Sapcut,Yonevea Sapra,Ekass Saran,Antonina A Saravanan,Sidarth Sardar,Rama Sarita Sarpong,Anna A Sarsfield,Grace Elizabeth Sartain,Jackson Matthew Sarwacinski,Juliana Satsangi,Naman Sauer,Raef Saunders,Picabo Taylor Savage,John Leo Savage,Riley Save,Advait Sawyer,Hayden D Saxena,Radhika Saxton-Stivers,Luke William Saylor,Jagger Scalzo,Marisa Corinne Scanlon,Lexi Grace Schackow,Madisyn Jayne Schad,Jessica Paige Schaefer,Ellie N Schaefer,Evan Schaefer,Lauren Schaller,Devyn Juliana Scharf,Nadia Jane Scharnowske,Grace Catherine Scheiber,Jardon Scheingold,Andrew Patrick Schertz,Katharine Schimpf,Lauren Jo Ann Schlosser,Emma L Schlueter,Anna Elizabeth Schmeltz,Erin Schmidt,Eira G Schmucker,Addie Schmucker,Maia Schnabel,Rose Schneider,Leo Abraham Schneider,Suzanne Schnurer,Ava Alexandra Schoch,Lillian Margaret Scholl,Karly Schollenberger,Avery August Schuetter,Grace Michelle Schuiteman,Collin Raymond Schultz,Victor James Schultze,Abigail Hope Schulz,Cohen R Schuster,Camden M Schutte,Dylan A Schutz,Anna E Schwartz,Leann Emily Schwartz,Mya O Schwartz,Ryan Haden Schwartz,Soul M Schwartzkopf,Hallie G Schwecke,Lily Schweiss,Riley Marie Scott,Avery N Scott,Bailey Elizabeth Scott,Becca Lauren Scott,Brooke S Scott,Dylan Scott,Lindley R Scott,Mallory Scott,Megan Scott,Quinn Seagrave,Claire L Seals,Caleb P Seddelmeyer,Drew Michael Seders,Erin Elizabeth Seely,Eliza Segal,Jolie Rose Segura,Daylan Elena Sehring III,Fritz George Seifers,Mia Seigel,Serenity Seiler,Katherine Jean Self,Hannah Semba-Norwalk,Miyako R Sena,Sydney Sensibaugh,Lauren Elizabeth Senter,Max Senuta,Kyle Seo,Joy Sepiashvili,Allon Anzor Serrano,Ana Serrano,Arianna A Seyer,Emma Seyer,Jack Peyton Shade,Benjamin Shadle,Brody Shafer,Jake Andrew Shafer,Stephen Gregory Shaffer,B Shaffer,Sammy Shah Jr,Vaidehi Mitesh Shah,Anuj Shah,Neha Rajesh Shah,Shanay Shahar,Emily Madeline Shahbaz,Annie Maria Shalley,Cooper S Shamrin,Fariya Shanker,Jackson F Shankwitz,Annika M Shannon,Emily Sharma,Aastha Sharma,Sanyam Sharrofna,Fatima Aref Shaughnessy,Kayla Mae Shaw,Cora L Shaw,Hannah Shaw,Kam M Shaw,Lyric Elise Sheehy,Morgan Sheeley,Grace Marie Sheffield,Daniel L Shelley,Delayni Grace Shelton,Reanna Jane Shelton,Sidney Elizabeth Sherer,Evalyn Marie Sherling,Phoenix Shetty,Anvi Shewman,Peter Shields,Ada Shields,Rene Renee Shimura,Maddie Shin,Nora Shininger,Sarah Ann Shipp,Edwin Frederick Shishman,Maria Rose Shively,Brooklynn Shocket,Sari Shoemaker,Keegan James Shoemaker,Samuel Shores,Gabriel Dennis Short,Austen Short,Emma K Short,Morgan K Shotton,Meris E Shoulders,Grant Shoulta,Lexie Shoultz,Xavier Clinton Shraiberg,Kylie Shriber,Taylor Shum,Danielle Shures,Sydney Jennifer Siddiqi,Aaliyah G Siddiqui,Sameer Sidel,Alaina D Sidkey,Ashley R Siegel,Sydney F Siford,Robert Thomas Silberhorn,Molly Sharon Silkes,Kathleen D Silvas,Emily Silver,Laurie Fay Simeon,Regan Simi,Mariana Valpassos Simmons,Eliot Simon,Jonah Amerasekera Simon,Madison Simons,Madison Noelle Simpkiss,Drew Simpson,Ashleigh Nicole Huibei Simpson,Joie Mai Sims,Ethan Sinder,Sam Singer,Jenna Singh,Dveena Singh,Samar Deep Sinha,Anusha Sinnis,Lawson Sinovic,Megan R Sinykin,Alyson Idah Sirajuddin,Aisha Sirdah,Sarah Sivakumar,Shruti Six,Elena Morgan Sizemore,Elisa E Skaff,Peyton Lynn Skains,Jackson Levi Skeens,Haleigh Jo Skor,Jillian N Slaton,Michael Sloan,Audrey B Sloan,Ella L Sloan,Maybelle Sarah Smart,Kelsey T Smerud,Makenzie Smethers,Anna Smith,Adele R Smith,Amanda Taylor Smith,Avery Martin Smith,Callum Smith,Connor D Smith,Cooper Smith,Corinne C Smith,Georgia Isabella Smith,Hannah I Smith,Hayden Smith,Iris Anne Huai Smith,Jess Lauren Smith,Josie Nicole Smith,Julia Amber Paez Smith,Katie Smith,Laney Smith,Lauren Elise Smith,Lilly Smith,Lucy Elizabeth Smith,Maddie V Smith,Mallory Smith,Maria Elizabeth-Rose Smith,Natalie Michelle Smith,Nicole D Smith,Olivia Jean Smith,Samantha Jo Smith,Taija Mae Smith,Taylor C Smolen,Hannah C Smyth,Clare Snock,Gillian Rose Snyder,Luke A Snyder,Renee M So,Aubrey Elizabeth Sobti,Krish Solito,Jakob M Solomon,Julia Flowers Solorzano-Guadarrama,Alan Sommer,Joey Sommers,Konner Son,Seungbeom Song,Victor Song,Yeeun Sontchi,Lauren Sorrentino,Ava L Soto,Jess Beatriz Soucek,Emma Sourwine,Joy Hua Southard,Sofia Southern,Alexander Southwick,Nate Robert Sowell,Larissa L Sowers,Olivia Antoinette Spaeth,Aaron Eliot Spaletto,Thomas Sparks,Aiden Preston Sparks,Jack Lucas Sparks,Shane Alan Sparzo,Olivia C Speir,Margaret Elizabeth Spellacy,Anna Nicole Spellman,Wren Luther Spicer,Ava June Spiegel,August R Spindler,Lucy Kathrine Spirek,Isabella Christine Spirek,Noah Karl Spires,Chloe Olivia Sprecher,Isabel Springer,Shelby Janae Squire,Sammie Srinivasan,Sriram Stafford,Emery Stafford,Erin C Stafford,Jill Stagge,Drew Staggs,Preslie Stajos,Sophia Stalbaum,Kyla M Stalcup,Brayden A Staley,Alyson Marie Stall,Maggie Lynn Stalmah,Katherine Claire Stalnaker,Rowan David Stamatas,Kayla Stamper,Morgan R Stanley,Claire E Stanley,Nithya Stanton,Alexis Katherine Staph,Elena C Stapleton,Maddie Dorris Starecheski,Elena Stark,Julia 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M Yu,Carissa
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https://www.nccu.edu/news/dream-new-horizons
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From a Dream to New Horizons
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https://www.nccu.edu/news/dream-new-horizons
Modern, Diverse Campus Grows from One Man’s Vision Much of North Carolina Central University’s history is bound up in the biography of its founder. As we celebrate the campus’s 110th anniversary in 2020, we will hear a great deal about Dr. James E. Shepard’s life and his successes, but we also must understand the hardships he overcame in turning his dream into a reality. Shepard was a founder, builder, organizer, and administrator, but his work was not limited to institutions. He also remolded minds to become stronger and wiser. He was considered one of the most gifted educators, religious advocates, and race leaders of the first half of the 20th century. Yet, it was largely through faith and hope that he created the school he imagined, which has endured despite financial and social hardships. Shepard believed in providing students with sound academic training, wide cultural and intellectual horizons, and strong faith. In seeking support for the school, Shepard called on friends and connections from across the United States and from varying backgrounds, noting that it “had no particular creed, but opened to all faiths and is designed especially to meet the needs of the leadership of the race.” On its opening day, July 5, 1910, the weather was unusually cool, with rain buffering the heat on the newest college campus in the United States. Shepard watched excitedly as the first drenched students arrived to attend the National Religious Training School and Chautauqua for the Colored Race. As he watched, he may have reflected on the lessons he learned from his parents, the Rev. Augustus and Hattie Whitted Shepard. His father, Augustus Shepard, was born in 1846 to an enslaved couple once owned by a former North Carolina governor. He attended Shaw University and became a prominent minister, eventually serving as pastor of White Rock Baptist Church in Durham. His mother, Hattie, was a graduate of Hampton Institute and among the earliest African American educators in North Carolina. Their son James was born in Raleigh’s Oberlin community on Nov. 3, 1875—a mere 10 years after the close of the Civil War. He was the eldest of 12 siblings, part of the first generation of African Americans born after Emancipation. The Shepard children learned to read and write in local public schools and were also taught by their mother. In 1890, Shepard entered Shaw University at age 15 to study pharmacy. Graduating in 1894, he carried with him Shaw’s motto, “For Christ and Humanity,” and embarked on a career of public service, as both a pharmacist and religious educator in Virginia and North Carolina. In 1905, he began working with the International Sunday School Association, whose mission was to promote a standardized Christian education curriculum across denominational lines. Shepard traveled nationally and internationally as a field superintendent for the association, soaking in words of “Negro ministers” and learning a variety of educational models. He concluded that a complete education should address the mind, the body, and the soul, a philosophy that negotiated a path between the positions of W.E.B. Du Bois and Booker T. Washington. He believed that industrial and academic educational approaches were both valid, but that neither was sufficient without religious education. He also felt that to educate the general population of African Americans, one must first educate the black clergy. Thus, he saw the future of the race as resting upon the most respected leader in the African American community: the minister. The National Religious Training School and Chautauqua for the Colored Race was chartered in 1909. Its purpose was to develop in young men and women “that fine character and sound academic training requisite for real service to the nation.” Durham was considered an ideal site for the new school because it was a major center of economic, social, and political advancement for African Americans. Philanthropist Brodie Leonidas Duke donated 20 of the initial 25 acres for the campus on Fayetteville Street, just one mile outside the city limits and within the black part of south Durham called Hayti. Shepard had considered other sites, but the Durham Merchants Association, along with prominent African American businessmen, physicians, and educators, raised $25,000 to build the school in Durham. The offered site was sometimes referred to as “the trash heap,” deemed unworkable as a farm due to deep ravines. But supporters vowed to make it work. Shepard’s wife, Annie Day Shepard, recorded some of the hardships the couple encountered en route to opening the school in 1910. Most notably was the decision by her husband to “sell their home and his interest in their drug store” to support the venture. The mother of three remarked in an article: “I felt pretty bad about our home. But I couldn’t dream of not going along with him.” She said she told him, “If this is what you want to do, we must do it.” Annie Day Shepard’s support for her husband’s work continued throughout their marriage, with Annie serving in various roles, including as matron of the dining room, a role she carried out without pay for six years. Meanwhile, Shepard went well beyond the state borders to find support for the school. The 17 members of his initial advisory board represented 10 states in both the North and South. Many early benefactors were people he had met through his work with the International Sunday School Association. By 1909, Shepard had $7,000 in donations from friends and supporters in New Jersey, New York, and Massachusetts and authorized construction to begin. Several of the earliest buildings, including Avery Auditorium, the Dining Hall, Chidley Hall, Theology Hall, and the president’s new house, were designed by noted African American architect and designer William Sidney Pittman, who was married to Portia M. Washington and was the son-in-law of Booker T. Washington. Pittman also designed the original White Rock Baptist Church that opened in 1910 in the Hayti community. By 1912, 10 buildings on the new campus had been erected. The hope and promise of the fledgling school rested with the early faculty and staff, who taught and mentored a student body of around 140. Shepard resolved that costs to students would be kept to a minimum. A notation regarding pre-1915 pricing listed six weeks of courses at $10 for tuition and fees and $3.50 for room and board. Early course offerings included music, commerce, religion, English, French, German, Greek, mathematics, geography, philosophy, ethics, agriculture, domestic science, basketry, dressmaking, millinery, physical education, and history. In a 1910 catalog, students were encouraged to maintain a strict standard and code of conduct that included the following stipulations: “All profanity, obscene language, games of chance and pool playing are strictly forbidden. Use of intoxicating liquor or tobacco in any form is forbidden. Leaving the grounds without permission or remaining in the city beyond time limits is forbidden. Absence, without excuse, from recitation or other regular school appointments is forbidden.” In 1923, the North Carolina legislature was so impressed with the work going on under Shepard that it provided $20,639 in state funding. At that point, the National Training School became Durham State Normal (Teachers) School. In 1925, upon hearing that state leaders were seeking to establish a higher education liberal arts curriculum for African Americans, Shepard and his chief lobbyist, Charles C. Amey, campaigned for selection of the Durham campus. During this same period, two fires at the school — on Jan. 28 and Jan. 29, 1925 — destroyed the administrative building, a men’s dormitory, and the dining/classroom hall. Despite the damage, Durham State Normal School became the North Carolina College for Negroes that year. It was the first state-supported liberal arts college for African Americans in the United States. Shepard’s vision always included training students in moral leadership, as well as academics. Not only were the school’s graduates expected to better the condition of their race, they were to be model citizens representing the virtues of a democratic nation. Shepard cultivated many relationships near and far to further his goals, including that of the Rev. Howard James Chidley (1878–1966), a financial supporter who served as chairman of the Board of Trustees from 1916 to 1921. Chidley’s church, the First Congregational Church in Winchester, Mass., provided clothes, linens, food, and operating costs in the early years. After state support began, the church’s donations were earmarked for scholarships, with more than $60,000 collected during the first 50 years. Chidley spoke often to the student body in Durham and allowed Shepard to preach in his Massachusetts pulpit, often sharing news about the ongoing work and needs of the college. The former all-male Chidley Hall was dedicated in 1952 and was the only structure on campus named in honor of a non-resident of North Carolina. By 1947, the year of Shepard’s death, the school had been accredited by the Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools for Negroes and the American Council on Education. It was then one of only four African American members of the Association of American Colleges. During his later years, Shepard was often asked to consent to the casting of a bust that could be displayed on campus. Instead, he would guide visitors to a window overlooking the campus and with a sweeping gesture, say: “This is my monument. If I am not remembered for this, I will be remembered for nothing.” To learn more about founder James E. Shepard, the university, or Durham’s Civil Rights period, read the "Shepard Papers," which have been digitized and are free and accessible as a part of "Content, Context and Capacity: A Collaborative Large-Scale Digitization Project on the Long Civil Rights Movement in North Carolina" (crdl.usg.edu/collections/ccc/), a project by the Triangle Research Libraries Network.
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December 1865: Henry Martin Tupper and the Founding of Shaw University – NC Miscellany
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2009-12-01T00:00:00
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https://blogs.lib.unc.edu/ncm/2009/12/01/this_month_dec_1865/
This Month in North Carolina History Massachusetts native Henry Martin Tupper (1831-1893) attended Amherst College and Newton Theological Seminary before enlisting in the Union Army in 1862. After he was honorably discharged, Tupper requested that the American Baptist Home Mission Society of New York station him in the South so that he could work with former slaves. The Tuppers arrived in Raleigh in October 1865. An anecdote recounted in Carter’s Shaw’s Universe reports that after travelling to Portsmouth, Virginia, Tupper and his wife stopped at a train station that had been partially destroyed during the Civil War, and purchased the first two tickets on the train to Raleigh after the tracks had been reconstructed. After establishing himself in Raleigh, Tupper began teaching Bible classes to former slaves in December. The classes were held in the Guion Hotel and aimed to teach African Americans how to read and interpret the Bible to prepare them to be Baptist ministers. In March of 1866, his wife began teaching classes to African American women in the Tupper’s home. Tupper quickly realized the need for education beyond theology courses, and set out to found what would eventually become Shaw University, the first black college in the South. In February 1866, Tupper purchased land on the corner of Blount and Cabarrus Streets and built a two-story structure there that would serve both as a church and a school. Tupper used $500 that he had saved from serving as a Union soldier to help fund the land purchase. Significant financial assistance for construction was provided by the Freedmen’s Bureau and the New England Freedman’s Aid Society. On January 1, 1869, the Raleigh Theological Institute admitted its first class of fifteen seminary students. A year later, the school had outgrown its facilities and began making plans to expand. Through Tupper’s fundraising efforts and monetary support from Elijah Shaw (a woolen manufacturer from Massachusetts) and the Freedmen’s Bureau, funds were secured to purchase an estate in the center of Raleigh. Upon relocating, the school changed its name to the Shaw Collegiate Institute. In 1875 the school officially became incorporated as Shaw University. Shaw University was co-educational from the beginning. A dormitory for men was built in 1871-1872, and, the first dormitory for African American women – Etsey Hall – was constructed on Shaw’s campus in 1874. Shaw University claims several other firsts, including Leonard Medical School, which was the first medical and pharmacy school that trained African Americans in the state of North Carolina, and, in 1888, the only law school for African Americans in the South. The 1878-1879 Catalogue of the Officers and Students of Shaw University reports that there were a total of 152 males and 115 females enrolled in various courses of study for that particular school year. During the 1878-1879 academic year, the majority of students were from North Carolina, but students from anywhere could enroll – several students were from Virginia and South Carolina, and one was from New Jersey. At Shaw Collegiate Institute, Tupper served both as an administrator and instructor of the school and pastor of the church. He taught lessons during the day and night school classes. Managing both the school and the church gave rise to conflict for Tupper, and in 1870, people claiming to be trustees of the Second Baptist Church brought a suit accusing him of defrauding the church. The various charges suggested intrigue and internal politics relating to Tupper’s funding and administration of the church and the school and the wronging of African American church members. The law suit lasted until 1875 when a verdict was given in Tupper’s favor. Despite the lawsuit and other setbacks, Tupper oversaw the growth and expansion of the University and advocated for access to higher education for African Americans until he died in November of 1893. Tupper was buried on the campus grounds, and Dr. Nickolas Franklin Roberts, an African American and a graduate of Shaw University, was named acting president. Sources: Carroll, Grady Lee Ernest, Sr. They Lived in Raleigh: Some Leading Personalities from 1792 to 1892. Raleigh, NC: Southeastern Copy Center, 1977. Carter, Wilmoth A. Shaw’s Universe: A Monument to Educational Innovation. Raleigh, NC: Shaw University, 1973. Kearns, Kathleen, and Dayton, Michael J. Capital Lawyers: A Legacy of Leadership. Birmingham, AL: Association Publishing, 2004. Shaw University. Catalogue of the Officers and Students of Shaw University, 1878 and 1879. Raleigh, NC: Edwards, Broughton & Co., Printers and Binders, 1879. Image Sources: “Shaw Building, Shaw University, Raleigh, N. C.” in Durwood Barbour Collection of North Carolina Postcards (P077), North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives, Wilson Library, UNC-Chapel Hill “Shaw University for the Colored, Raleigh, N.C.” in Durwood Barbour Collection of North Carolina Postcards (P077), North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives, Wilson Library, UNC-Chapel Hill “Shaw University, Raleigh, N.C.“, Wake County, North Carolina Postcard Collection (P052), North Carolina Collection Photographic Archives, Wilson Library, UNC-Chapel Hill
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https://www.thewgpearsoncenter.org/about-us
en
W.G. Pearson Center
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The W.G. Pearson Center is an extraordinary historical venue in the heart of Hayti, intertwined with Durham's vibrant Black community. To inspire growth, we unite people for learning, connections, and transformation, uniting local entities and individuals to create a meaningful experience. Enjoy a venue with space for innovation and culture, fostering partnerships and accomplishments in an atmosphere of creativity and cooperation.
en
https://static.wixstatic…6892eb%7Emv2.png
W.G. Pearson Center
https://www.thewgpearsoncenter.org/about-us
In the pursuit of a flourishing future for all, collaboration is key. At The W.G. Pearson Center, we unite with organizations, businesses, individuals, and youth to actively shape this brighter reality. With an atmosphere that exudes hope and optimism, our center stands as a beacon of possibility. Owned and managed by Student U, a dedicated Durham nonprofit, The W.G. Pearson Center is committed to spreading its influence. Join us in amplifying our impact by infusing your energy and illumination into this space. Become a beacon of positive change. William Gaston Pearson empowered young Black students with a thirst and demand for the rigorous and enriching education they deserved until the end of his career. Pearson spent his lifetime working to increase opportunities for those around him, and the building named for him has continued to house his value of education, fierce belief in all students, and hope of a better Durham ever since. The Center was originally built in 1928 as a historically Black elementary school during segregation in Durham. In 2017, the building was renovated and revitalized. Now walking into The W.G. Pearson Center almost 100 years after first being built, still feels sacred. You can feel the power of Pearson's legacy and the students of the past and the potential of students of the future.
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https://givmobileiv.com/shaw-university/
en
Shaw University, Raleigh, NC
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[ "" ]
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[ "givmobileiv.com" ]
2023-02-28T19:11:34+00:00
Shaw University is one of the nation's leading private, historically black universities. Learn more about its history and achievements.
en
https://givmobileiv.com/…IVlogo-32x32.jpg
GIV Mobile IV Therapy
https://givmobileiv.com/shaw-university/
Shaw University, Raleigh, is a private, historically black liberal arts university affiliated with the United Methodist Church. It’s among the oldest institutions of higher learning in Raleigh, North Carolina, and was founded in 1865 by Henry Martin Tupper. Though it is not situated in downtown Raleigh, Shaw is a values-based learning community of outstanding students, ambitious professors, and caring staff. The University educates its students to become valuable contributors to the world. History Dr. Henry Tupper founded Shaw University in 1865 in Raleigh, North Carolina, after the end of the world Civil War. The school was initially called ‘Raleigh Institute’ but changed its name to Shaw University in 1871 in honor of Elija Shaw, a philanthropist who funded the institution’s construction. Shaw University was founded as a theological class for freedmen. Dr. Tupper realized that newly-freed people needed more than just theology classes, so he expanded the school into a full university with departments in law and medicine. Since its inception, Shaw has been at the forefront of racial equality in higher education. The university continues to play a significant role in educating students worldwide. It’s currently an HBCU (Historically Black College/University) with around 1152 undergraduate students across different schools and programs, including: Business Administration Health Sciences & Social Work Liberal Arts & Sciences Music & Performing Arts Parks & Recreation Management Public Safety Administration Engineering Technology Criminal Justice Nursing Pharmacy Education Social Work The Southern Association of Colleges and Schools accredited the University. It was also the first to enroll women and offer 4 years of medical education in North Carolina. Shaw University Achievements The institution offers undergraduate and graduate degrees in various subjects. It also offers multiple certificate programs for students interested in specific career paths. Shaw University has a long history of achievements and accomplishments. In 1870, Shaw University became the first US college to offer a bachelor’s degree to an African American. Shaw is best known for being the first accredited black land-grant college in the South. But it has also been a pioneer in the women’s movement and interracial cooperation. Shaw University is the oldest HBCU in the South and one of the oldest institutions of higher learning in North Carolina. The educational institution has been ranked among the top HBCUs in the nation by US News & World Report. Its academic tradition dates back to its founding as a Freedmen’s School by the American Baptist Home Mission Society. In the fall of 2011, Shaw University won a 5-year grant from the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill. The partnership involves students from both schools and provides them with opportunities to gain experience through community service projects. Shaw University has also received grants to support its Nanoscience and Nanotechnology program’s recent studies and research. The grant is part of Shaw’s commitment to providing students with high-quality science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education. The institution is known for being an academic leader and a player in other activities. If you are considering university enrollment in Raleigh, NC, Shaw university is a good option. GIV Mobile IV Therapy – Raleigh
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https://pay.flywire.com/
en
Pay now with Flywire
https://www.flywire.com/…mtime=1712929209
https://www.flywire.com/…mtime=1712929209
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2021-05-18T15:00:00-04:00
It's easy to make a payment with Flywire, get started here by selecting your institution, and we will help you along the way.
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Flywire
https://pay.flywire.com
I strongly recommend Flywire to everyone for fast and safe transfer. I have recommended Flywire to my classmates in previous semesters. As compared with traditional ways of sending the payment such as bank transfer, not only does Flywire save the time to visit a bank in person, also the uni is informed instantly about the status of the paying - Instead, it usually takes a couple of days if people adopt the traditional approach. Honestly, I would say I love using Flywire.
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Shaw_University_people
en
List of Shaw University people
https://en.wikipedia.org/static/favicon/wikipedia.ico
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[ "Contributors to Wikimedia projects" ]
2022-03-25T03:21:48+00:00
en
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_Shaw_University_people
This is a list of notable alumni of Shaw University in Raleigh, North Carolina. Ezekiel Ezra Smith (A.B. 1878), president of Fayetteville State University and U.S. Ambassador to Liberia (1888–1890)[1] Edward Hart Lipscombe (A.B. 1879, A.M. 1882), educator, minister, principal of the Western Union Institute[citation needed] Charles L. Purce, (A.B.) president of Selma University and Simmons College of Kentucky[2] James B. Dudley (A.B. 1881), professor and president of North Carolina A&T State University (1896–1925)[3] Peter Weddick Moore (A.B. 1887), founder and first president of Elizabeth City Normal College, (now Elizabeth City State University)[4] James E. Shepard (A.B. 1894), founder and first president of North Carolina Central University[5] John O. Crosby (1914), founder and first president of North Carolina A&T State University[6] Benjamin Arthur Quarles (B.A. 1931), historian, administrator, scholar, educator, and writer[7] James E. Cheek (B.A. 1955), president of Shaw University, president emeritus of Howard University, 1983 recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom[8] William L. Pollard (B.A. 1967), president of the Medgar Evers College (2009–2013)[citation needed] Shirley Caesar (B.S. 1984), pastor and gospel music artist[9] Gladys Knight (B.A. 1966 and honorary doctorate), singer, Gladys Knight & the Pips, member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame[10] Kayden Carter (B.A. 2012), professional wrestler in WWE Lords of the Underground (attended), hip-hop group that was founded in the early 1990s, when all three of its members were students attending Shaw University[11] Calvin E. Lightner (1907 or 1908), architect and mortician[12] Ida Van Smith (1939), one of the first African American female pilots and flight instructors in the US[13] Lee Johnson (1975), president and CEO of Mechanics & Farmers Bank[14] Celeste Beatty (1984), first black female brewery owner[15] Willie Otey Kay (1912), prominent dressmaker in Raleigh William Gaston Pearson (1886), prominent principal, colloquially referred to as "Durham's Black Superintendent", in Durham, NC, and co-founder of Mechanics & Farmers Bank[16] Max Yergan (1914), civil rights activist; Spingarn Medal recipient[17] Ella Baker (1927), leader of SNCC and civil rights activist[18] Edward A. Johnson (B.L. 1891), first African-American member of the New York state legislature when he was elected to the New York State Assembly in 1917[19] Col. James H. Young, prominent North Carolina politician and first African American to hold the rank of colonel in the United States of the volunteer regiment during the Spanish–American War[20] Henry Plummer Cheatham (A.B. 1882), Republican member of the United States House of Representatives 1889–1893[21] Adam Clayton Powell Jr., (D.D. 1934), Congressman from New York, 1945–71[22] Angie Brooks (B.S. 1949), first African female President of the United Nations General Assembly and Associate Justice to the National Supreme Court of Liberia[23] George H. Jackson, Republican member of the Ohio House of Representatives from 1892 to 1893[24] Rita Walters (1952), member of Board of Library Commissioners for the Los Angeles Public Library[25] Vernon Malone (1953), Democratic member of the North Carolina General Assembly, 14th Senate district, including constituents in Wake County[26] Charles D. Walton (B.A. 1971), first African-American member of the Rhode Island Senate[27] Luther Jordan (B.A. 1997), member of the North Carolina Senate 1993–2002[28] Thomas O. Fuller, state senator of the North Carolina Senate in 1898[29] Roger Demosthenes O'Kelly (B.L. 1909), lawyer, first deaf and black lawyer[30] Glenford Eckleton Mitchell (B.A. 1960), member of Universal House of Justice (1982–2008)[31] Willie E. Gary (B.A. 1971), one of the world's wealthiest attorneys, known as the "Whale Killer"; co-founder of the Black Family Channel[32] Lenard Moore (B.A. 1980), first African American President of the Haiku Society of America[33] Shelia P. Moses (B.A. 1983), best-selling author, nominated for the National Book Award and NAACP Image Award[34] Richard Gene Arno, founder of the National Christian Counselors Association William R. Pettiford (1912 honorary), Birmingham, Alabama minister and banker Lucius Walker (1954), Baptist minister best known for his opposition to the United States embargo against Cuba[35] Louise Celia Fleming (1885) black medical missionary (1862–1899)[36] Manassa Thomas Pope (1885), prominent physician in Raleigh; ran for mayor in 1919[37] Dr. John Eagles, pharmacy owner in Raleigh, North Carolina; son of John S. W. Eagles, sergeant in U.S.C.T., public official, and state legislator in North Carolina Carrenza M. "Schoolboy" Howard, Negro Leagues pitcher Charlie Brandon (1964), Grey Cup champion and all-star CFL football player[38] Van Green (1973), NFL player[39] James "Bonecrusher" Smith (B.A. 1975), first heavyweight boxing champion with a college degree[40] Ronald "Flip" Murray (2002), professional basketball player[41] Julius Gregory (2011), Arena Football League player[42]
5685
dbpedia
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https://www.bullcity150.org/uneven_ground/segregation_upbuilding/quest_to_own_land/
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Quest To Own Land
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[]
[]
[ "" ]
null
[ "Shadrick Addy" ]
2018-07-16T15:07:22+00:00
John Merrick was a cofounder of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company. He invested the profits from his chain of barbershops into real estate and used salvaged lumber to build rental housing for the waves of Black workers coming to the city. Notice the difference between his first...
en
https://www.bullcity150.…150-Logo_blk.png
Bull City 150
https://www.bullcity150.org/uneven_ground/segregation_upbuilding/quest_to_own_land/
John Merrick was a cofounder of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company. He invested the profits from his chain of barbershops into real estate and used salvaged lumber to build rental housing for the waves of Black workers coming to the city. Notice the difference between his first home and the mansion he built later on. Richard Fitzgerald, Pauli Murray’s granduncle, founded a brick factory on land he purchased in the West End neighborhood, and in 1898 cofounded the first Black-owned cotton mill in Concord, NC. By 1910 the Fitzgerald brick factory was producing 30,000 bricks a day. Fitzgerald turned his brickmaking profits into real estate and business investments. In 1913, one estimate put Fitzgerald’s holdings at $100,000 – this would be $1.5 million in today’s dollars. R. L. McDougald founded the Mutual Building and Loan Association in 1921 for “the purpose of teaching our group the importance of owning their own homes.” He made over 300 real estate purchases between 1919 and 1945. Professor W. G. Pearson was one of the wealthiest Black men in Durham and gained the nickname the “Brown Duke of Durham.” He was president of the People’s Building and Loan Association, director of the Mechanics and Farmers Bank, and landlord of several dozen rental properties in the Hayti area. C. C. Spaulding was a community leader, the longtime president of the North Carolina Mutual, and an active real estate investor. In the 1920s, he purchased nearly all of the undeveloped lots in the Stokesdale neighborhood to build Black middle-class housing. John Merrick was a cofounder of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company. He invested the profits from his chain of barbershops into real estate and used salvaged lumber to build rental housing for the waves of Black workers coming to the city. Notice the difference between his first home and the mansion he built later on. Richard Fitzgerald, Pauli Murray’s granduncle, founded a brick factory on land he purchased in the West End neighborhood, and in 1898 cofounded the first Black-owned cotton mill in Concord, NC. By 1910 the Fitzgerald brick factory was producing 30,000 bricks a day. Fitzgerald turned his brickmaking profits into real estate and business investments. In 1913, one estimate put Fitzgerald’s holdings at $100,000 – this would be $1.5 million in today’s dollars. R. L. McDougald founded the Mutual Building and Loan Association in 1921 for “the purpose of teaching our group the importance of owning their own homes.” He made over 300 real estate purchases between 1919 and 1945. Professor W. G. Pearson was one of the wealthiest Black men in Durham and gained the nickname the “Brown Duke of Durham.” He was president of the People’s Building and Loan Association, director of the Mechanics and Farmers Bank, and landlord of several dozen rental properties in the Hayti area. C. C. Spaulding was a community leader, the longtime president of the North Carolina Mutual, and an active real estate investor. In the 1920s, he purchased nearly all of the undeveloped lots in the Stokesdale neighborhood to build Black middle-class housing.
5685
dbpedia
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https://goleathernecks.com/honors/hall-of-fame/gaston-freeman/76
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Western Illinois University Athletics
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Gaston Freeman, Class: 1947 Induction: 1985 Sport(s): Baseball - Gaston Freeman (deceased), 1985 - Captain of the 1946 baseball squad, Gaston went on to an outstanding
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/images/logos/site/site.png
Western Illinois University Athletics
https://goleathernecks.com/honors/hall-of-fame/gaston-freeman/76
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https://www.wikiwand.com/en/Shaw_Bears
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Wikiwand articles
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Shaw University is a private historically black university in Raleigh, North Carolina. Founded on December 1, 1865, Shaw University is the oldest HBCU to begin ...
en
https://www.wikiwand.com/en/articles/Shaw_Bears
Foundation to the 1920s The school was founded by the American Baptist Home Mission Society and the pastor Henry Martin Tupper in 1865 [8][9] In 1867 the school consisted of two buildings, a large two-story structure and one Antebellum cabins.[4] In 1870, it was renamed Shaw Collegiate Institute after Elijah Shaw who donated a sum of $5,000 ($110,897 in 2021) to partially fund the $13,000 ($288,331 in 2021) necessary to purchase 12 acres of land formally held by General Barringer (where Tupper and his wife once hid in the cornfields from a KKK lynch mob[10]) and erect Shaw Hall,[4] the first building on campus. Shaw Hall was built with a 165-foot frontage, four stories high and possessing a tower, was the most commodious school building in all of North Carolina at that time.[citation needed] It provided instruction services, a library, and lodging. In 1873, Estey Hall was built in honor of Deacon Jacob Estey and sons of Brattleboro, Vermont, who gave $8,000 ($187,365 in 2021) toward its construction.[4] Estey Hall was the first building constructed in the U.S. for the higher education of African-American women.[11] Estey Hall was devoted to training women in cooking, sewing, music, and the like. Henry Martin Tupper bought the material from which the women made garments and he himself sold the garments in an effort to pay for the cost of the material and other expenses.[citation needed] In 1879, a third major building was erected – a chapel and dining hall called the Greenleaf Building. It was named for Orick H. Greenleaf of Springfield, MA, a yearly liberal contributor.[12] The upper part of the building was accessible by stairs. Doors on either side of the tower provided entrance to the dining room. At the right of the chapel was a small room and at the left a library. A storeroom existed under the stairway. Funds saved from tuition and board were used to build this structure at a total cost of $6,000.[13] These were augmented by contributions from O.H. Greenleaf, Captain Ebenezer Morgan of Groton, CT, and Deacon O.B. Grant of Stonington, CT.[14] In 1866 when the Raleigh Institute was first being developed, Tupper had hoped to open a medical school; in 1882, $5,000 was donated from the Leonard family to establish the Leonard Medical School and the Leonard School of Pharmacy[15] with significant contributions made by Dr. Nathan Bishop, William A. Caldwell, Joseph B. Hoyt, O. H. Greenleaf, Timothy Merrick, and Colonel Levi K. Fuller.[13] The medical school complex, which housed both departments, consisted primarily of three structures – a four-story, 34 bed medical dormitory[16] built to accommodate 60 men and erected in 1881 when the trustees approved the establishment of a medical department; the Leonard Medical Building, erected in the summer and fall of 1881 and containing lecture rooms, dissecting rooms, an amphitheater, and opened for its first session on November 1, 1881; the Leonard Medical School Hospital, a 25-bed hospital which opened for the reception of patients on January 10, 1885.[17] It was the first four-year medical school to train African-American doctors in the South.[18] and the first medical school in the state to offer a four-year curriculum. The school closed in 1918 after being given a scathing evaluation by the Flexner Report that the Negro school "was in no position to make any contribution of value" but recommended Howard and Meharry medical schools remain open.[19] On December 11, 1888 the university opened the Shaw University Law School, the first of its kind for African-Americans in the country.[10] The Law School curriculum focused on "the subjects of International and Constitutional Law, the various branches of the Common Law, Equity, and Admiralty".[16] It was also the only black law school that had a course in legal shorthand. The course was offered on the premise that such a skill would broaden the opportunities for a black lawyer to work in a legal firm in a clerical position or as an office assistant should discrimination impede their ability to practice law. Shaw University graduated fifty-seven law students before it closed in 1916. It graduated fifty-four law students between 1891 and 1914.[20] North Carolina politician John S. Leary was an important figure in the founding of the law school and served as its dean[21] starting in March 1890.[22] He was followed as dean by Edward A. Johnson, who was the law school's first graduate[23] and later the first African-American member of the New York State Assembly. By 1900, Shaw University had trained more than 30,000 black teachers.[24] 1980s to present By the mid-1980s, enrollment declined and the university was deeply in debt. President Talbert O. Shaw (1988–2003) (not related to the namesake) increased the student body from 1,600 to 2,700, restructured debt and created the Raleigh Business and Technology Center. In the 1990s, Shaw ran a successful capital campaign to renovate historic buildings and construct new campus facilities, including the Talbert O. Shaw Center for Teachers' Education. In 2005, Shaw University Divinity School (SUDS) received a 10-year accreditation from the Association for Theological Schools. The university also began construction on the Center for Early Childhood Education, Research and Development. In 2009, the university's Institute for Health, Social, and Community Research was awarded a $4.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health – National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NCMHD) to implement The Shaw NCMHD Research Infrastructure in Minority Institutions (RIMI) Project.[28] The RIMI Program is designed to establish a research capacity-building infrastructure program, with benchmarks for training students, and developing a cadre of clinical, biomedical and behavioral research scientists who possess the skills, knowledge and abilities to engage in leading, cutting-edge and innovative research and training that will ultimately contribute to reducing and eliminating health disparities in the United States. During the tornado outbreak of April 14–16, 2011, the university was struck by a damaging tornado, resulting in the school cancelling classes for a semester. As a result of the storm, two dormitories, the student union, and the roof of Estey hall were severely damaged.[29][30] There were minor injuries but no one was seriously hurt. Study of World War II service of black veterans Shaw University led a research study to investigate why not a single African-American soldier who served in World War II had been awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. The study concluded that racial discrimination had contributed to the military's overlooking the contributions of black soldiers. The 272-page study recommended ten soldiers whose military records suggested they deserved the Medal of Honor. All ten had been awarded lesser medals during the war for actions the study's authors concluded merited the Medal of Honor. In January 1995, the team's findings were sent to the United States Department of Defense. In April 1996, officials at the Defense Department agreed that seven of the ten soldiers recommended in the report, should be awarded the Medal of Honor. President Bill Clinton awarded the Medals of Honor on January 13, 1997.[31] The department's decision in response to Shaw's study marked only the third time that the military re-evaluated military records to award the Medal of Honor. Only one of the seven nominees, 1st Lt. Vernon Baker of St. Maries, Idaho, was alive to receive his medal. Those who were awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously were: 1st Lt. Charles L. Thomas of Detroit, Michigan; Pvt. George Watson of Birmingham, Alabama; Staff Sgt. Edward A. Carter Jr. of Los Angeles, California; 1st Lt. John R. Fox of Boston, Massachusetts; Pfc. Willy F. James Jr. of Kansas City, Kansas; and Staff Sgt. Ruben Rivers of Tecumseh, Oklahoma. Their families received the medals.[32]
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https://www.ngu.edu/info-for/donors/giving-opportunities/light-on-a-hill-brick-campaign/find-your-brick/
en
Find Your Brick • North Greenville University
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2024-07-02T18:30:44+00:00
Donors can find their bricks on this chart and the corresponding photos
en
https://www.ngu.edu/wp-c…avicon-32x32.png
North Greenville University
https://www.ngu.edu/info-for/donors/giving-opportunities/light-on-a-hill-brick-campaign/find-your-brick/
© North Greenville University. All Rights Reserved. | Accessibility Statement North Greenville University (NGU) admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges programs, and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in the administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, and athletic and other school-administered programs.
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https://www.shawu.edu/meet-shaw/
en
Meet Shaw U
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2024-05-08T15:43:55+00:00
Learn about Shaw University's history, mission, and community.
en
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Shaw University
https://www.shawu.edu/meet-shaw/
Shaw University has been a beacon of opportunity for more than 150 years. This is a place that offers those who have too often been left behind an education grounded in the values of excellence and integrity, and focused on the future. Shaw prepares you for more than making a living. Here, you’ll learn how to make a life. At Shaw U, students learn to be responsible for themselves and others, to be leaders, and to uplift their communities.
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https://la.psu.edu/current-students/academics/deans-list/
en
Dean’s List
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2022-11-17T19:11:02+00:00
The Dean’s List honors those who receive a semester grade-point average of 3.50 or higher. This laudable achievement has placed you among the top students at the University. This academic accomplishment reflects both your ability and your effort, and it will be noted in your official record at Penn State. Click your name below to […]
en
https://la.psu.edu/wp-content/themes/hello-elementor-child/favicon.ico
College of the Liberal Arts
https://la.psu.edu/current-students/academics/deans-list/
The Dean’s List honors those who receive a semester grade-point average of 3.50 or higher. This laudable achievement has placed you among the top students at the University. This academic accomplishment reflects both your ability and your effort, and it will be noted in your official record at Penn State.
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https://www.loc.gov/item/2017881370/
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Estey Hall at Shaw University in Raleigh, the capital city of North Carolina
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1 photograph : digital, tiff file, color.
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The Library of Congress
https://www.loc.gov/item/2017881370/
The Library of Congress does not own rights to material in its collections. Therefore, it does not license or charge permission fees for use of such material and cannot grant or deny permission to publish or otherwise distribute the material. Ultimately, it is the researcher's obligation to assess copyright or other use restrictions and obtain permission from third parties when necessary before publishing or otherwise distributing materials found in the Library's collections. For information about reproducing, publishing, and citing material from this collection, as well as access to the original items, see: Carol M. Highsmith - Rights and Restrictions Information Rights Advisory: No known restrictions on publication. Reproduction Number: LC-DIG-highsm-44555 (original digital file) Call Number: LC-DIG-highsm- 44555 (ONLINE) [P&P] Access Advisory: --- Obtaining Copies If an image is displaying, you can download it yourself. (Some images display only as thumbnails outside the Library of Congress because of rights considerations, but you have access to larger size images on site.) Alternatively, you can purchase copies of various types through Library of Congress Duplication Services. If a digital image is displaying: The qualities of the digital image partially depend on whether it was made from the original or an intermediate such as a copy negative or transparency. If the Reproduction Number field above includes a reproduction number that starts with LC-DIG..., then there is a digital image that was made directly from the original and is of sufficient resolution for most publication purposes. If there is information listed in the Reproduction Number field above: You can use the reproduction number to purchase a copy from Duplication Services. It will be made from the source listed in the parentheses after the number. If only black-and-white ("b&w") sources are listed and you desire a copy showing color or tint (assuming the original has any), you can generally purchase a quality copy of the original in color by citing the Call Number listed above and including the catalog record ("About This Item") with your request. If there is no information listed in the Reproduction Number field above: You can generally purchase a quality copy through Duplication Services. Cite the Call Number listed above and include the catalog record ("About This Item") with your request. Price lists, contact information, and order forms are available on the Duplication Services Web site. Access to Originals Please use the following steps to determine whether you need to fill out a call slip in the Prints and Photographs Reading Room to view the original item(s). In some cases, a surrogate (substitute image) is available, often in the form of a digital image, a copy print, or microfilm. Is the item digitized? (A thumbnail (small) image will be visible on the left.) Yes, the item is digitized. Please use the digital image in preference to requesting the original. All images can be viewed at a large size when you are in any reading room at the Library of Congress. In some cases, only thumbnail (small) images are available when you are outside the Library of Congress because the item is rights restricted or has not been evaluated for rights restrictions. As a preservation measure, we generally do not serve an original item when a digital image is available. If you have a compelling reason to see the original, consult with a reference librarian. (Sometimes, the original is simply too fragile to serve. For example, glass and film photographic negatives are particularly subject to damage. They are also easier to see online where they are presented as positive images.) No, the item is not digitized. Please go to #2. Do the Access Advisory or Call Number fields above indicate that a non-digital surrogate exists, such as microfilm or copy prints? Yes, another surrogate exists. Reference staff can direct you to this surrogate. No, another surrogate does not exist. Please go to #3. If you do not see a thumbnail image or a reference to another surrogate, please fill out a call slip in the Prints and Photographs Reading Room. In many cases, the originals can be served in a few minutes. Other materials require appointments for later the same day or in the future. Reference staff can advise you in both how to fill out a call slip and when the item can be served.
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https://www.digitalnc.org/blog/new-yearbooks-from-shaw-university-1937-1939-1953/
en
New Yearbooks from Shaw University: 1937, 1939, 1953
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[ "Elizabeth Blackwood" ]
2016-06-22T11:04:23-04:00
                        The Shaw University Journal: Commencement Number [1939], pages 46-47 Three new yearbooks from Shaw University are now available on DigitalNC. Founded in 1865, Shaw was the first college established for African Americans in the South. Shaw has …
en
https://www.digitalnc.or…nc_ico-32x32.jpg
DigitalNC
https://www.digitalnc.org/blog/new-yearbooks-from-shaw-university-1937-1939-1953/
The Shaw University Journal: Commencement Number [1939], pages 46-47 Three new yearbooks from Shaw University are now available on DigitalNC. Founded in 1865, Shaw was the first college established for African Americans in the South. Shaw has often been called the mother of African American colleges in NC, as the founding presidents of three other NC HBCUs were all alums of Shaw. The Shaw University Journal: Commencement Number [1937] is the earliest yearbook from Shaw University now available on DigitalNC, but Shaw has shared campus publicans dating back to 1882. The three new yearbooks are available at the links below: The Shaw University Journal: Commencement Number [1937] The Shaw University Journal: Commencement Number [1939] The Bear [1953]
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https://hbculeaguepass.com/school-details/ShawUniversity/39
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HBCU
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Shaw University is a private liberal arts historically black university (HBCU) in Raleigh, North Carolina. Founded on December 1, 1865, Shaw University is the second oldest HBCU in the Southern United States, after Clark Atlanta University.
en
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Login To Your Account Forget Password? Try Our Socials Also Facebook Twitter Google+ Not A Member Yet ? Sign - Up Now ! Sign Up Now Forget Password? Try Our Socials Also Facebook Twitter Google+ Not A Member Yet ? Login - Now !
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dbpedia
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https://www.ncdhhs.gov/sunbucks-schoolsearch
en
SUN Bucks 2024 School Search
https://files.nc.gov/dhh…AuN9wuTKiD_7QyUl
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The list below includes the schools in North Carolina and shows if each school participates in the National School Lunch Program (NSLP), is a Community Eligibility Provision (CEP) school, or is neither. You can use the search bar to find your child's school by searching the school name, county, or zip code.
en
https://files.nc.gov/dhh…AuN9wuTKiD_7QyUl
https://www.ncdhhs.gov/sunbucks-schoolsearch
The list below includes the schools in North Carolina and shows if each school participates in the National School Lunch Program (NSLP), is a Community Eligibility Provision (CEP) school, or is neither. You can use the search bar to find your child's school by searching the school name, county, or zip code. Once you know which type of school your child attends, view the SUN Bucks flyer in English or Spanish to see if your child is automatically eligible or if they should apply. Children who attend an NSLP or CEP school can apply if they don’t already automatically qualify.
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https://issuu.com/bculbreath/docs/nowmagazine
en
NCCU Now Magazine
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2010-06-27T00:00:00+00:00
North Carolina Central University Magazine for Alumni, Faculty and Staff, and Friends of the University
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Issuu
https://issuu.com/bculbreath/docs/nowmagazine
Welcome to Issuu’s blog: home to product news, tips, resources, interviews (and more) related to content marketing and publishing. Here you'll find an answer to your question.
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https://www.dncr.nc.gov/blog/2023/12/21/shaw-university-h-32
en
Shaw University (H-32)
https://files.nc.gov/dnc…2ev7A_80jRsEJXfo
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2023-12-21T00:00:00
Founded 1865 by Baptist missionary Henry Martin Tupper. Chartered 1875; named for benefactor Elijah Shaw of Mass.
en
https://files.nc.gov/dnc…Lrg7MNfMHFVQfGDC
https://www.dncr.nc.gov/blog/2023/12/21/shaw-university-h-32
Location: South Street in Raleigh County: Wake Original Date Cast: 1940 Henry Martin Tupper, a graduate of Amherst and veteran of the Union Army, in 1865 was commissioned to come to Raleigh as a missionary by the American Baptist Home Mission Society. He arrived in October and “commenced his work among the colored people,” according to an 1890 tract published by that organization. By December he had convened a theological class which met in the old Guion Hotel immediately north of the Capitol grounds. This marked the beginning of Shaw University. The school initially was called the Raleigh Institute but in 1870, on receipt of a gift of $5,000 from Elijah Shaw of Wales, Massachusetts, the name was changed to Shaw Collegiate Institute. In 1875 the General Assembly granted a formal charter to Shaw University. That act of incorporation specified that “no pupils ever be excluded from the benefits arising therefrom . . . on account of race, color, or previous conditions of servitude.” Shaw University is often referred to as the oldest historically black institution of higher learning in the South. In North Carolina others soon followed. Biddle (Presbyterian), Saint Augustine’s (Episcopal), and Scotia (Presbyterian) all were established in 1867. Shaw and Saint Augustine’s historically have been the hubs for the education, cultural, and recreational life of African Americans in the Capital City. From 1882 to 1918 Shaw operated Leonard Medical School which, during that period, educated over 400 African American physicians. In 1960 the Shaw campus hosted the organizational meeting of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee, an outgrowth of the sit-ins movement destined to play a major role in the civil rights struggle.
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Washington State Courts
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You have encountered an Error. There was either a problem on the website, or you have requested a page that does not exist or is no longer available on our web site. If you are searching for a page which used to be available, or if you have discovered a link that is broken, please let us know.
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https://northcarolina.teach.org/testprep-reimbursement-form
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Fee Reimbursements in North Carolina
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Applying to teacher prep programs can get expensive. We’ll give you $100 to help you out. TEACH.org is your no. 1 source to become a teacher.
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https://northcarolina.teach.org/services/fee-reimbursements
TEACH Fee Reimbursement FAQs This is a perk designed for future teachers like you! We’ll reimburse eligible applicants up to $100 for expenses related to applying to a teaching program. Simply: Create a TeachNC account by clicking “Sign Up” in the top right corner of this page. Submit an application to one of our partner teaching programs. After applying to a program, fill out the reimbursement form with proof of your application and fees. You’ll receive your reimbursement through PayPal or Venmo. To get reimbursed, all of the following statements must be true: You signed up for a TeachNC account before you applied to a teaching program. You applied to one of our partner teaching programs. The fee you paid was required for you to apply to or enroll in the program. This could include: Application fees Transcript fees Testing or test prep fees Program deposits Any other application-related expenses You submitted copies of official documents that include dates for when you applied to the teaching program and incurred your expenses. You provided valid PayPal or Venmo account information, so we can issue you payment. Expenses are ineligible if any of the following are true: You signed up for a TeachNC account after you applied to a teaching program. You did not apply to one of our partner teaching programs. The fee you paid was required for you to complete the program, rather than to apply to or enroll inthe program. Examples include: Tuition Books Fees for tests that are required after you have enrolled The files you submitted don’t include a date, are not official copies of communications, or are in an unreadable format. You provided invalid or incomplete PayPal or Venmo account information. To be eligible, you must be pursuing initial teacher licensure through a TeachNC partner teaching program. Current teachers looking to add credentials to their license or those pursuing administrator certification are not eligible. You should submit copies of official documents that prove you applied to one of our partner teaching programs and that the expenses you incurred are related to the application process. You do not need to submit proof that you signed up for a free TeachNC account. Submit your documents as a PDF, screenshot or image file that includes: Your name. The date of the expense. The expense and its relationship to the application process. You may choose to redact personally identifiable information that is not listed here, such as your address. To submit the form, you’ll need to create a URL that links to the documents you wish to share. You can create a URL by uploading the document to a cloud sharing service like Google Drive, Dropbox, or Office 365. You should apply for reimbursement after you’ve signed up for a TeachNC account, applied to a partner teaching program and incurred the expenses related to the application process. We will reimburse each person up to $100 in total for all application expenses. That said, you can submit your expenses in one form, or through multiple forms over time. If you have met all of the eligibility criteria, you will be reimbursed through PayPal or Venmo within 15 business days of submitting your fee reimbursement request. Due to the high volume of requests we receive, we will not contact you directly if your reimbursement request is incomplete or ineligible. Please refer to the eligibility criteria listed on this page. If you still have questions, please contact . To submit the form, you’ll need to create a URL that links to the documents you wish to share. You can create a URL by uploading the document to a cloud sharing service like Google Drive, Dropbox, or Office 365. If you still aren’t able to submit the form, please contact us through our Support page. Find other financial aid opportunities for teachers with our Financial Aid Explorer. Don’t forget to apply for a TeachNC scholarship too!
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https://www.ranker.com/list/famous-shaw-university-alumni-and-students/reference
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Famous Shaw University Alumni
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[ "Reference" ]
2013-06-30T00:00:00
List of famous alumni from Shaw University, with photos when available. Prominent graduates from Shaw University include celebrities, politicians, business ...
en
/img/icons/touch-icon-iphone.png
Ranker
https://www.ranker.com/list/famous-shaw-university-alumni-and-students/reference
Ella Josephine Baker (December 13, 1903 – December 13, 1986) was an African-American civil rights and human rights activist in the United States. She was a largely behind-the-scenes organizer whose career spanned more than five decades. In New York City and the South, she worked alongside some of the most noted civil rights leaders of the 20th century, including W. E. B. Du Bois, Thurgood Marshall, A. Philip Randolph, and Martin Luther King Jr. She also mentored many emerging activists, such as Diane Nash, Stokely Carmichael, Rosa Parks, and Bob Moses, whom she first mentored as leaders in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).Baker criticized professionalized, charismatic leadership; she promoted grassroots organizing, radical democracy, and the ability of the oppressed to understand their worlds and advocate for themselves. She realized this vision most fully in the 1960s as the primary advisor and strategist of the SNCC. She has been ranked as "One of the most important African American leaders of the twentieth century and perhaps the most influential woman in the civil rights movement." She is known for her critiques not only of racism within American culture, but also of sexism within the civil rights movement. Henry Plummer Cheatham (December 27, 1857 – November 29, 1935) was an educator, farmer and politician, elected as a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from 1889 to 1893 from North Carolina. He was one of only five African Americans elected to Congress from the South in the Jim Crow era of the last decade of the nineteenth century, as disfranchisement reduced black voting. After that, no African Americans would be elected from the South until 1972 and none from North Carolina until 1992. Born on May 28, 1944, in Atlanta, Georgia, Gladys Knight emerged as a groundbreaking vocalist and performer who stamped an indelible mark on the world of music. Known endearingly as the "Empress of Soul," Knight's musical journey began at a tender age of seven when she won Ted Mack's Original Amateur Hour TV show contest. This early triumph set the stage for an illustrious career that spanned over six decades, making her one of the most enduring artists in popular music. Knight's career trajectory took a defining turn when she formed the iconic group "Gladys Knight & the Pips" with her siblings and cousins in the mid-1950s. With its unique fusion of gospel, soul, and pop music, the group produced numerous hits, including the Grammy-winning singles "Midnight Train to Georgia" and "Neither One of Us (Wants to Be the First to Say Goodbye)." The success of the group established Knight as a significant figure in music, known for her passionate vocal style and dynamic stage presence. Beyond her musical accomplishments, Knight also explored acting and authored an autobiography. She made appearances in television shows and films, demonstrating her versatility as an entertainer. Her commitment to philanthropy is another notable aspect of her life; Knight has devoted time and resources to various causes, reflecting her belief in giving back to the community. A seven-time Grammy winner, Knight's remarkable contribution to music and society truly underscore her status as an icon and a trailblazer. James Edward Cheek (December 4, 1932 – January 8, 2010), president emeritus of Howard University, was born in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina. Despite suffering from severe cataracts, Cheek was an honor student at Washington Street Grammar School. He graduated from Immanuel Lutheran College with a secondary diploma in 1950 and served as a member of the United States Air Force in Korea in 1951, eventually earning a Bachelor of Arts in sociology and history from Shaw University. In 1955, Cheek received a Master of Divinity from Colgate Rochester University in 1958 and a PhD from Drew University in 1962. During this period, Cheek was honored with a Colgate Rochester Fellowship, a Rockefeller Doctoral Fellowship and a Lily Foundation Fellowship. He was member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.
5685
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https://www.reckon.news/news/2021/09/fighting-for-legacy-and-durhams-black-wall-street.html
en
Fighting for legacy and Durham’s Black Wall Street
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2021-09-10T14:00:19+00:00
The entrepreneurial efforts of Black businessmen fueled Durham, North Carolina’s Black Wall Street -- creating lasting institutions for excellence despite the threat to decimate Black communities with plans of urban renewal, highway construction and segregation.
en
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Reckon
https://www.reckon.news/news/2021/09/fighting-for-legacy-and-durhams-black-wall-street.html
The entrepreneurial efforts of Black business men fueled Durham North Carolina’s Black Wall Street — creating lasting institutions for excellence despite the threat to decimate Black communities with plans of urban renewal, highway construction and segregation. The Black business community worked to ensure that opportunity in Durham remained available for residents who wanted to create wealth for themselves, so they formed the Durham Business and Professional Chain, an African American business advocacy organization. “Durham is an amazing place, in the sense that 30 years after slavery there were forward thinking people who thought about what type of systems needed to be put in place so African-Americans in Durham could be productive in their community, state and country” said said Larry Hester, board chairman of Durham Business and Professional Chain. That rich legacy represents why efforts continue today to make Black business ownership a priority in Durham. Origin of Black entrepreneurship in Durham Two African-American entrepreneurs: John Merrick and Charles Spaulding laid the foundation for Black people and their economic stability in Durham, starting in 1898. The men co-founded N.C. Mutual Life Insurance Company, the first black-owned insurance company in the state and, to this day, the largest in the nation. Because white insurance agencies at the time refused to work with Black residents, N.C. Mutual Life Insurance Company saw the need and opportunity to serve Black families life insurance for end-of-life expenses — a cost that was usually beyond the financial means of African Americans. Not long afterward, in 1907, local Black communities in Durham wanted to establish banking for themselves, so M&F Bank (The Mechanics and Farmers Bank) was created by seven Black businessmen in Durham: William Gaston Pearson, Richard B. Fitzgerald, J. A. Dodson, S. L. Warren, James E. Shepard, John Merrick, and W. O. Stevens. This banking effort initiated the self-reliance of Durham’s Black Wall Street, providing residents a way to build wealth and take out loans to start businesses. M&F Bank grew the community economically by investing financial resources– within 20 years of their founding they tripled the number of Black-owned businesses in the city. “We created an economic system for survival because there was an emphasis on entrepreneurship. For me and many other people growing up in that environment, we knew it was natural to go into business and feel like we could create anything that could be created,” said Hester. When prominent Black figures heard of the economic success that Durham businesses were having they began to visit the city to see for themselves. Booker T. Washington traveled to Durham in 1910 and saw the efforts of Black businessmen as “captains of industry,” visionaries employing large amounts of African Americans during a time of global economic development. W. E. B. Du Bois visited in 1912, he attributed Durham’s Black economic success to the tolerance of white residents to Black residents. Later in 1912, Du Bois wrote about the upbuilding of Black Durham: “To-day there is a singular group in Durham where a Black man may get up in the morning from a mattress made by Black men, in a house which a Black man built out of lumber which Black men cut and planed; he may put on a suit which he bought at a colored haberdashery and socks knit at a colored mill; he may cook victuals from a colored grocery on a stove which Black men fashioned; he may earn his living working for colored men, be sick in a colored hospital, and buried from a colored church; and the Negro insurance society will pay his widow enough to keep his children in a colored school. This is surely progress.” N.C. Mutual Life Insurance Company and M&F Bank played instrumental roles in establishing institutions across Durham for Black people, like White Rock Baptist Church, Lincoln Hospital, North Carolina Central University, and the Durham Colored Library (now known as the Stanford L. Warren Library). Many of the first Black-owned businesses in Durham no longer exist but N.C. Mutual Life Insurance Company and M&F Bank have continued to grow, sustain and provide support to the Black community. Impact of threats on Black businesses and communities Black income, wealth and businesses in Durham were hit hard by the city’s urban renewal projects in the 1950s and 1960s. City officials convinced Durham’s Black residents to pass a citywide highway bond referendum that would construct NC Highway 147 from downtown to the Raleigh-Durham International Airport and to a Research Triangle Park. The project was passed with a 90 percent Black vote on the confidence that this would provide the center of Black life in Durham new housing, new commercial developments and major infrastructure improvements. Prior to these urban renewal projects, Black life in Durham thrived on Parrish Street also known as the city’s Black Wall Street. This area lived on a four-block district in what is now Downtown Durham. This Black financial district was pushed out of the area by urban renewal and the financial desegregation that followed. More Black consumers began shopping with white businesses cutting off the funnel of wealth being poured back into Black businesses and communities. The Black residential district that bordered Parrish Street, known as the Hayti district, was impacted by the highway too. Urban renewal displaced 4,057 households and 502 businesses affecting an overwhelming amount of Black residents. Durham’s Black residents trusted that the city’s plans would eventually benefit their communities and business, but Black residents have continued to suffer economically in the years since with little to no support from the city. Preserving Black businesses The loss of Black businesses in Durham has had a devastating and lasting effect on entrepreneurship, but groups like Durham Business and Professional Chain continue to enrich the local Black business community through networking events, resource sharing and youth mentorship. Their vital role in Durham’s Black business scene has landed the city a ranking as one of the top 10 places where Black Americans do best economically. “Cities and governments have to change the mold and invest in communities that they are not used to investing in, especially places that have the potential and resources to do so. I think cities have to remember that they have a population that has been denied for hundreds of years and now we have to look at how to get everybody to the same place so we can compete with the world,” Hester said. Despite this ongoing work, Black business ownership in Durham continues to face challenges in 2021. COVID-19 relief funds have disproportionately left out Black businesses, which comprise only 4.7% of businesses in Durham. As a result, the total number of Black businesses in North Carolina has decreased by 41% since the start of the pandemic, according to estimates from the North Carolina Business Council. Hester shared his advice for Black business owners: “​​Believe in yourself and that you can succeed. Always try to solve the problem when you get to an issue that seems to be overwhelming. If you stop and look around, you can be flexible and look at solutions, then try and see if it works. There is no such thing as an instant genius, we all learn. And you don’t know what you don’t know; therefore you should be always learning and taking that back to your business.” Saving Places: How communities are working together to preserve historic places
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https://classes.berkeley.edu/
en
Course Catalog
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Students: Get free, digital access to books, articles, videos for your classes! Are you concerned about the high costs of course materials — whether they’re books, articles, or videos? The Library can help! Before registering for a course, you can ask the instructor whether the material will be available via e-reserves, which will provide you with free access to the required materials. After you register, you can look this up in bCourses, if the class has a bCourse site. Refer to Course Reserves for more information, including how to contact the e-reserves team with questions or comments. How to Search The Class Schedule is a robust tool to help you explore Berkeley’s curricula and find classes that fit your needs. Try the methods below to search your way: Subject Search For an alphanumeric list of classes within a subject, select a subject from the DEPARTMENT SUBJECT drop-down menu above. Classes offered under that subject will display. Keyword Search Enter keywords in the search box above to find topics, subjects, or course elements that interest you. Major Requirements Search Use the Search Major Requirements filter in the left menu bar. Start by selecting your requirement year to find classes that meet requirements for the following majors: Bioengineering, Classical Civilizations, Cognitive Science, Data Science, Economics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, English, Environmental Earth Science, Environmental Economics and Policy, Environmental Sciences, Gender and Women’s Studies, Integrative Biology, Landscape Architecture, Mathematics, Molecular and Cell Biology, Molecular Environmental Biology, Physics, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology, and Urban Studies. This search feature is brought to you by the Student Technology Fund. Instructor Search Type the name of an instructor into the instructor search field on the left menu bar to see which classes an instructor has taught or is currently teaching (results depend upon what semesters/summer sessions are selected). Additional Filters The filters on the left allow you to narrow your search to classes with open seats, breadth requirements, days offered, and more. Scroll down to see all the options. All start and end times for classes are stated in Berkeley local time.
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dbpedia
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https://www.facebook.com/thewgpearsoncenter/
en
Facebook
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Sieh dir auf Facebook Beiträge, Fotos und vieles mehr an.
de
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https://www.facebook.com/login/
5685
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https://issuu.com/shawu/docs/2015presidentsreport_web
en
2015-2016 - Shaw University President's Report
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2017-12-07T15:37:11+00:00
Shaw University's President's Report for Academic Year 2015-2016.
en
/favicon.ico
Issuu
https://issuu.com/shawu/docs/2015presidentsreport_web
Welcome to Issuu’s blog: home to product news, tips, resources, interviews (and more) related to content marketing and publishing. Here you'll find an answer to your question.
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https://www.discoverdurham.com/community-culture/black-history/durhams-story/education-in-durham/
en
Education in Durham
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From reconstruction through Jim Crow segregation to today, the history of Black Durham's educational journey is marked by triumphs over systemic racism and a
en
Discover Durham
https://www.discoverdurham.com/community-culture/black-history/durhams-story/education-in-durham/
From reconstruction through Jim Crow segregation to today, the history of Black Durham's educational journey is marked by triumphs over systemic racism and a commitment to excellence. Durham, North Carolina is a testament to African American resilience and determination the pursuit of education. Despite facing discrimination and limited resources, African American communities established schools to provide education for their children. Institutions like the Whitted School, founded in 1891 as the city's first grade school for African American students, became vital learning centers when educational opportunities were scarce. Throughout the Jim Crow era, African American educators and administrators in Durham fought tirelessly for equal educational opportunities. Figures like John Merrick, C.C. Spaulding, and William Gaston Pearson (W. G.) played instrumental roles in advancing African American education and advocating for communities. Their efforts paved the way for desegregation and the integration of schools in Durham, leading to greater access to quality education for African American students. Dr. Aaron Moore, Durham's first black physician, founder of Lincoln Community Health Center and a pillar of the city's black business community, established the Durham Colored Library in 1913. The Durham Colored Library later became the Stanford L. Warren Library. Because of Moore's advocacy, Durham schools benefitted from The Jeanes Fund and Rosenwald grants, both of which provided more opportunities to overcome the systemic barriers to Black rural education across the state. Rosenwald schools were a product of a community-based movement in the early 1900s, ignited by a collaboration between Black education leader and reformer Booker T. Washington and philanthropist Julius Rosenwald. More Rosenwald Schools were erected in North Carolina than in any other state, and 18 operated in Durham. These schools were a significant factor in the education of African American students in Durham. In 1907, Anna Jeanes, a Quaker, pledged one million dollars to start The Jeanes Fund to improve primary education for Black students in rural American schools. Beginning in 1915, Durham's Jeanes teachers, who were mostly female and all Black, often functioned as superintendents of Durham's Black schools, working under challenging conditions to improve education, public health and general living conditions for their students and community. Mrs. Carrie T. Jordan was an experienced educator and Jeanes supervisor who taught at Hillside Park School and who instituted Durham's first county-wide commencement for African American Schools. The Jeanes supervisors and the African-American teachers of Durham's Rosenwald schools worked with what they had to make the lives of their students, parents, and communities the best they could be in the context of a legally entrenched inequality. They taught a doctrine of self-improvement, hope for the future, and racial pride. These educators provided the foundation for the next generations, leading the long fight for civil rights. In the post-civil rights era, African American educators continued to make significant contributions to Durham's educational landscape. Leaders like Ann Atwater, an outspoken advocate for desegregation and community organizer, left an indelible mark on the city's history. Additionally, the rise of grassroots movements and community-led initiatives furthered the cause of educational equity and empowerment for African American students. Today, the legacy of African American education in Durham endures through the dedication and perseverance of educators, administrators, and community leaders. Educators and administrators in Durham continue to strive for excellence and foster a culture of inclusivity and academic achievement. As Durham continues to evolve, the spirit of African American education remains a guiding force, inspiring future generations. WHITTED SCHOOL Founded in 1891 as the city's earliest grade school for Black students, The Whitted School was a vital learning center when educational opportunities were scarce. In use through the mid 1970s as a grade school and later Hillside Park High School, it is now the home for a preschool and a senior living housing center, The Whitted Schools and Veranda at Whitted. JOHN HOPE FRANKLIN CENTER AT DUKE UNIVERSITY The Franklin Center was inspired by historian Dr. John Hope Franklin. Franklin was a Duke University professor emeritus and recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom and Chairman of President Clinton's Commission on Race Relations. The Franklin Center is a home for intellectual inquiries across society's most critical subjects. The Center extends an open invitation to students and the public to engage and learn. RUSSELL SCHOOL Rosenwald schools were a product of a community-based movement in the early 1900s ignited by a collaboration between Black education leader and reformer Booker T. Washington and philanthropist Julius Rosenwald. Built in the 1920s and named for local supporter Thomas Russell, the Russell School is the only standing building of Durham County’s 18 historic Rosenwald schools. MERRICK-MOORE HIGH SCHOOL Named after John Merrick and Aaron McDuffie Moore, M.D., Merrick-Moore was a powerhouse in high school athletics for many years, winning its first state championship in football in 1964-65. Merrick-Moore graduated its last class in 1969. DURHAM COUNTY LIBRARY, STANFORD L. WARREN BRANCH Dr. Aaron Moore established the Durham Colored Library in 1913. It later became the Stanford L. Warren Library. Dr. Stanford Warren donated funds to purchase the current site in 1939. Named for his daughter, a librarian, the Selena Warren Wheeler collection is recognized as one of the best African American collections in the South. more stories from the African American Heritage Guide
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http://andjusticeforall.dconc.gov/gallery_images/african-american-lawyers-in-durham/
en
» African-American Lawyers in Durham
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http://andjusticeforall.dconc.gov/gallery_images/african-american-lawyers-in-durham/
Front row, left to right: William A. “Billy” Marsh, Jr., William Gaston Pearson II, unidentified, Asa Spaulding, Walter Ricks. Back row, left to right: Ed Avant, Floyd Brown, Wade Perry, Caswell Jerry Gates, C. C. “Buddy” Malone, M. Hugh Thompson, unidentified, Howard Clement, LeMarquis DeJarmon. This group of African-American lawyers includes some of Durham’s most prominent civil rights lawyers, judges, businessmen, and academics. William Marsh and Hugh Thompson were central to proceedings that led to the integration of Durham’s public school system. William Gaston Pearson, II, was the first African American to be elected a district court judge in North Carolina. Asa Spaulding was president of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company and played a significant, behind-the scenes role in the Civil Rights Movement on both the local and national stage. C.C. “Buddy” Malone represented civil rights demonstrators across the state. Community organizer and city councilman Howard Clement led the most successful boycott of businesses ever held in Durham. LeMarquis DeJarmon was dean of the North Carolina Central University School of Law and he and William Pearson and Buddy Malone were members of Durham’s first African-American law firm, Pearson, Malone, Johnson, & DeJarmon.
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https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/shaw-university-1865/
en
Shaw University (1865
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[ "Alyssa Franz", "contributed : Alyssa Franz" ]
2010-03-02T19:06:49+00:00
Shaw University is a private, four-year coeducational historically black liberal arts university located in Raleigh, North Carolina.  Founded in 1865, Shaw University is one of the oldest historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in the country. Shaw was originally founded as Raleigh Institute, a school … Read MoreShaw University (1865- )
en
https://www.blackpast.or…e-icon-32x32.png
https://www.blackpast.org/african-american-history/shaw-university-1865/
Shaw University is a private, four-year coeducational historically black liberal arts university located in Raleigh, North Carolina. Founded in 1865, Shaw University is one of the oldest historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) in the country. Shaw was originally founded as Raleigh Institute, a school designed to teach freedmen theology and biblical interpretation. The school’s name changed to Shaw Collegiate Institute in 1870 and five years later it adopted its present name, Shaw University. The college offered its first post-secondary instruction in 1874, and the first baccalaureate degree was awarded in 1878. Initially founded by the North Carolina Baptist Convention and still closely affiliated with the Baptist Church, Shaw University is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools. This school offers two-year Associates’ degrees in addition to four-year Bachelor of Arts and Bachelor of Science degrees. The institution currently has specialized degree options in engineering and computer studies; international relations; pre-therapy; radio, television, and film; and speech therapy and audiology. Individualized majors are offered in 34 programs, ranging from education to theology to electronic communications. The university also has a specialized program titled CAPE, which is the College of Professional and Adult Education. CAPE allows participating students to pursue degrees through independent study, flexible scheduling, and credit for prior experience, and offers courses in nine locations. Shaw has been the site of many notable achievements in African American history. It is credited as having the first four-year medical school for African Americans in the nation, Leonard Medical School, which operated from 1882 to 1914, as well as the first university to build a female dormitory on a coeducational campus, built in 1873. In addition, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was established after a conference which was held on Shaw’s campus in 1960.
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https://raleighmag.com/2023/08/shawu-district/
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Shaw University’s Planned The ShawU District to Reshape DTR
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[ "Kelsie Barton" ]
2023-08-29T12:29:00+00:00
Raleigh HBCU Shaw University gets set to debut The ShawU District, bridging the gap with the Downtown community.
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Raleigh Magazine
https://raleighmag.com/2023/08/shawu-district/
Share this Post Shaw University preps for a new district—and with it, a new era for Downtown Raleigh. is a type of symbiotic relationship where all species involved benefit from their interactions. The term also perfectly encapsulates the vision Shaw University President and CEO Dr. Paulette R. Dillard has for the forthcoming The ShawU District after the school’s rezoning was approved by the Raleigh City Council in June. “It’s a district within Downtown Raleigh that gives the opportunity for separate entities to interact, support [and] make each other better,” she says of the project. “It gives the city the opportunity to experience African-American culture at its finest, while our students get an opportunity to participate in a diverse community that is a top city.” … Translation: It’s a win-win. For Shaw, founded in 1865 and boasting the distinction of being the first historically Black institution of higher education in the South, location is everything. Its main campus occupies 26 acres on the southern border of Raleigh’s Downtown boundary—and the acquisition of this property is undeniably the school’s greatest endowment. A desire among university leaders to leverage their real estate for long-term sustainability—one of the priorities agreed upon in their 2025 strategic plan—spurred talks of rezoning. And, so, the school engaged the Urban Land Institute in a land-use study in 2019 to begin exploring options for driving revenue and growth. The university got the report back in February 2020, and a month later, the world shut down. But sheltering in place had its silver linings. “[It] gave me a little bit of time to actually think about what this really means when you think about the university, its value proposition and what is the ‘why’ for Shaw,” reveals Dillard, who, as the school’s 18th president, constantly walks a tightrope between progress and preservation. And she kept coming back to the same solution: location, location, location—“where you can walk to internships, you can walk to museums, you can eat anywhere,” she says. “You’ve got everything.” That vision for student-community engagement echoes one we’ve seen play out with Campbell Law School’s move to open a DTR campus. Shaw students would likewise benefit from bridging that gap between campus and community. Proximity to the developing world-class Dix Park alone would benefit a wide swath of studies for such Shaw programs as computer science, accounting, recreation management, political science, marketing, communications and others, says Dillard. So too would “spending time in internships or shadowing individuals in companies such as Red Hat, Cisco Banking, Raleigh Magazine, News & Observer and state government agencies,” she adds. “I refer to these arrangements as affording us expanded classrooms focused on practical applications,” she says, adding the intention to have young Shaw scholars pay it forward as well. “We also want students to work with public and private K-12 schools to tutor and mentor, and to engage in volunteerism to advance community engagement.” Since the Urban Land Institute report recommended increasing density on campus via taller buildings to boost property value, Dillard and her team looked to other historically black colleges or universities (HBCUs) for inspiration, namely Howard University in DC, as they began to navigate the changes. Shaw’s real estate advisory firm, Hayat Brown, had also worked with Howard on 10 mixed-use commercial development projects on previously underutilized land, resulting in more than $1.4 billion in development and $200+ million to improve the university’s student housing portfolio. If Dillard were to dream up a wish list of the kinds of mixed-use spaces Shaw might include: “I love The Dillon, and I would love to have a residential and retail complex—coffee shop, bookstore and sandwich shop.” “Is it risky? Yes,” Dillard admits. “But the fact that Shaw is here was a risk.” Case in point: When the university broke barriers in 1882 by becoming the home of the first medical school in the U.S. to offer a four-year curriculum. And Dillard is confident Shaw can do it again. “Here is another whole new opportunity for Shaw as we rethink the higher education landscape,” she says. “We’ve got to do things differently.” A lot of the angst around the rezoning, she says, “was many of our alumni and the community thought the vision was to make Shaw indistinguishable from the city and just have everybody over here and it’s no longer Shaw—but that is counter to the vision. If we don’t do what students need who actually use it, we’ll end up just being a placard on the pavement.” Moving beyond the classroom doesn’t mean completely erasing the boundaries between college and city. Rather, Dillard hopes The ShawU District will reposition the two as neighbors who get along, collaborate and help each other thrive. Shaw’s next step is to prepare the campus master plan, a guide that will “define the physical features of The ShawU District to support the university’s vision for a reimagined core campus with a physical, social and professional connection to Downtown Raleigh, but with its own distinct and recognizable The ShawU District identity,” explains Jay Brown, chairman and managing director of Hayat Brown. To address that master plan, Dillard imagines what can go within that footprint and how it addresses lifelong learning and workforce development, in addition to how it meets the needs of the 21st century student who still wants to have a college experience. “How do you take the amazing resources that are already here—the performing arts center, the museum—and create this unique experience that can only be achieved at a small, private, flexible institution?” Looking ahead, Dillard sees The ShawU District as an unparalleled destination for cultural enrichment and social acceptance. “I think about it especially around the polarizing issue of race and diversity,” she says. “I think having an HBCU is an opportunity to interact in this environment where it’s not political. I’m not doing DEI training; I’m just being your neighbor. … It’s an opportunity to experience it not in a combative way, and our students at the same time get to experience a diverse city.” Dillard hopes Raleighites can begin to view The ShawU District as the first step toward reaching that mutualistic sweet spot. She paints a picture of an area where parents push their babies in strollers while music played by the Platinum Sound marching band drifts through the air. “We want to be an environment that shows that kind of thing can happen naturally,” she says. “You come, you feel comfortable; we go, we feel comfortable—because we’ve gotten to know each other. Because Raleigh has The ShawU District.” theshawudistrict.com
5685
dbpedia
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https://classes.berkeley.edu/
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Course Catalog
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Students: Get free, digital access to books, articles, videos for your classes! Are you concerned about the high costs of course materials — whether they’re books, articles, or videos? The Library can help! Before registering for a course, you can ask the instructor whether the material will be available via e-reserves, which will provide you with free access to the required materials. After you register, you can look this up in bCourses, if the class has a bCourse site. Refer to Course Reserves for more information, including how to contact the e-reserves team with questions or comments. How to Search The Class Schedule is a robust tool to help you explore Berkeley’s curricula and find classes that fit your needs. Try the methods below to search your way: Subject Search For an alphanumeric list of classes within a subject, select a subject from the DEPARTMENT SUBJECT drop-down menu above. Classes offered under that subject will display. Keyword Search Enter keywords in the search box above to find topics, subjects, or course elements that interest you. Major Requirements Search Use the Search Major Requirements filter in the left menu bar. Start by selecting your requirement year to find classes that meet requirements for the following majors: Bioengineering, Classical Civilizations, Cognitive Science, Data Science, Economics, Electrical Engineering and Computer Sciences, English, Environmental Earth Science, Environmental Economics and Policy, Environmental Sciences, Gender and Women’s Studies, Integrative Biology, Landscape Architecture, Mathematics, Molecular and Cell Biology, Molecular Environmental Biology, Physics, Political Science, Psychology, Sociology, and Urban Studies. This search feature is brought to you by the Student Technology Fund. Instructor Search Type the name of an instructor into the instructor search field on the left menu bar to see which classes an instructor has taught or is currently teaching (results depend upon what semesters/summer sessions are selected). Additional Filters The filters on the left allow you to narrow your search to classes with open seats, breadth requirements, days offered, and more. Scroll down to see all the options. All start and end times for classes are stated in Berkeley local time.
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http://mosaicnc.org/name/93
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Pearson, William Gaston
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1917-04-09T12:00:00+00:00
A short biography of an individual who appears in the North Carolina Governors' Papers or the North Carolina Colonial Records.
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William Gaston Pearson was born in Durham, North Carolina, on April 11, 1858. Gaston was a Shaw University alum, a Harmon award winning businessman, philanthropist, and cofounder of Durham's Mechanics and Farmers Bank. He dedicated the majority of his time, however, to education, beginning as a teacher at Whitted High School but later serving as principal of Hillside Park High.
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https://blackamericaweb.com/2020/01/24/little-known-black-history-fact-shaw-university/
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Little Known Black History Fact: Shaw University
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[ "bawtonyapendleton", "D.L. Chandler" ]
2020-01-24T00:00:00
Shaw University is the oldest HBCU in the South.
en
https://blackamericaweb.…rop=0,0,100,32px
Black America Web
https://blackamericaweb.com/2020/01/24/little-known-black-history-fact-shaw-university/
Shaw University is the first college for African-Americans established in the Southern United States, and the oldest HBCU in the region. It is also one of the nation’s oldest learning institutions. Shaw, which is located in Raleigh, N.C. was founded by Baptist minister Henry Martin Tupper, who worked with the American Baptist Home Mission Society. The school began holding bible and literacy classes in December 1865, with aims to assist African-Americans in the area at the conclusion of the American Civil War. SIGN UP FOR OUR NEWSLETTER: In 1871, the school was renamed the Shaw Collegiate Institute after major donor Elijah Shaw. The school’s first building is named after the benefactor. Four years later, the school was renamed Shaw University. The university has spawned the indirect founding of several North Carolina learning institutions. The founding presidents of North Carolina Central University, Elizabeth City State University, and Fayetteville State University all attended Shaw. In addition, the institution that eventually became North Carolina A&T was located on Shaw’s campus for the first year of its existence. Notable Shaw alumni include iconic civil rights leader Ella Baker, former New York congressman Adam Clayton Powell Jr., R&B legend Gladys Knight, and gospel singer extraordinaire Shirley Caesar. LIKE US ON FACEBOOK. FOLLOW US ON TWITTER AND INSTAGRAM Today, the school boasts over 2,100 students and cover a variety of disciplines and coursework paths that include divinity, early childhood education, teacher education and much more. Paulette Dillard is the school’s 18th president She’s been at the helm since 2017. PHOTO: Shaw University HEAD BACK TO THE BLACKAMERICAWEB.COM HOMEPAGE
5685
dbpedia
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13
https://finding-aids.lib.unc.edu/50001/
en
James E. Shepard Papers, 1905
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James Edward Shepard was born in Raleigh, N.C., on 3 November 1875 to Reverend Augustus Shepard and Harriet E. Whitted Shepard. Reverend Shepard was the pastor of White Rock Baptist Church, a prominent African American congregation in Durham, N.C. James Shepard was the eldest of twelve children. He received his undergraduate education at Shaw University in Raleigh, N.C., and graduated with a Ph.G. degree in pharmacy in 1894. From 1895 to 1897, he worked as a pharmacist and religious educator in Virginia and North Carolina. Shepard was the owner and pharmacist of the first African American drug store in Durham, N.C., and the field secretary for the International Sunday School Association. On 7 November 1895, Shepard married Annie Day Robinson, a native of Yanceyville, N.C., the daughter of Thomas Day Jr. and Mary Day of Virginia, and the granddaughter of furniture maker Thomas Day. Shepard and Robinson had two daughters, Annie Day Shepard (who married Isaac H. Smith Jr.) and Marjorie A. Shepard. In 1909, the Durham Merchants Association together with prominent African American businessmen John Merrick and Charles C. Spaulding, physicians Aaron M. Moore and Charles H. Shepard, and educator William Gaston Pearson raised $25,000 for a school that Shepard planned to open in Durham, N.C., called the National Religious Training School and Chautauqua for the Colored Race. The official charter was signed on 28 June 1909, and classes began in 1910. The school provided professional training and development for African American teachers. Twenty of the original twenty-five acres of the campus--located just outside the Durham city limits on the traditionally African American side of Durham known as Hayti--were donated by philanthropist Brodie L. Duke. By 1912, the campus had ten buildings and approximately 130 students. In 1915, the school was sold and renamed the National Training School. In 1923, the North Carolina General Assembly began to provide annual support of $20,639, and the name was changed to Durham State Normal School. Despite the support, the school faced financial hardships and mounting debt nearing $49,000. When Shepard could not raise the money, he urged the state of North Carolina to take over the school. In the legislative session of 1925, a bill was passed with only one dissenting vote to make it a state institution, and the school was renamed the North Carolina College for Negroes, becoming the first public liberal arts college for African Americans in the United States. The first four-year class graduated in 1929. After Shepard's death in 1947, the name became North Carolina College at Durham. In 1969, the North Carolina General Assembly changed the name to North Carolina Central University (NCCU), and, in 1972, NCCU joined the University of North Carolina (System). Shepard was actively involved in fraternal, religious, business, and civic organizations in the local Durham community, North Carolina, and the nation. From 1928 to 1933 and again from 1936 to his death in 1947, Shepard served as Grand Master of the Prince Hall Masons of North Carolina. Today, two Mason chapters are named in his honor, including the James E. Shepard Chapter #840 in Durham, N.C. Shepard also served as Grand Patron of the Eastern Star (the world's largest fraternal organization), and as secretary of finances for the Knights of Pythias (an international, non-sectarian fraternal order). Shepard served as president of the State Negro Teachers Association and the Interdenominational Sunday School Convention. He was a member of the board of directors for Mechanics and Farmers Bank, the trustee board for the Oxford Colored Orphanage, the Odd Fellows, the Civic Club, the Durham Committee on Negro Affairs, and the Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc. 1875 Born on 3 November 1875 to Reverend Augustus Shepard and Harriet E. Whitted Shepard. 1886-1894 Shepard attended Shaw University in Raleigh, N.C. 1894 Shepard graduated from Shaw University with a degree in pharmacy. 1895 Shepard married Annie Day Robinson and moved to Durham, N.C. 29 July 1897 Shepard's daughter Annie Day Shepard was born. 1989 Shepard helped to establish the North Carolina Mutual and Provident Insurance Company (now North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company). 1898-1900 Shepard served as Comparer of Deeds in the Recorders Office of Washington, D.C. 5 September 1900 Shepard's daughter Marjorie A. Shepard was born. 1899-1905 Shepard served as Deputy Collector of Internal Revenue in Raleigh, N.C. 1902 Shepard's daughter Marion Shepard was born. 25 July 1903 Marion Shepard died. 1905-1909 Shepard served as Field Superintendent of the International Sunday School Association. 1909 Shepard began his 38-year tenure as president of the National Religious Training School and Chautauqua for the Colored Race, Inc. 1910 Shepard was the only African American speaker at the Rome, Italy, meeting of the International Sunday School Association 1910 Shepard was awarded an honorary doctorate of divinity by Muskingum College in Ohio. 1912 Shepard was awarded an honorary master of arts degree by Selma University in Alabama. 1915 The National Religious Training School and Chautauqua for the Colored Race was sold and repurchased. 1916 The National Religious Training School and Chautauqua for the Colored Race was re-chartered as the National Training School. 1923 The General Assembly appropriated funds, making the National Training School a publicly supported institution. The National Training School was renamed Durham State Normal School. 1925 Shepard was awarded an honorary degree in literature by Howard University. 1925 Two disastrous fires struck the Durham State Normal School while students were in chapel, and official files and equipment were lost. 1925 The Durham State Normal School was renamed North Carolina College for Negroes and became the first state-supported liberal arts college for African Americans in the United States. 1925 Shepard's home burned down. Both white and black citizens of Durham, N.C., rallied to raise money for the Shepard House that served as the official residence of Shepard and his wife until their deaths in 1947. 1929 The first four-year college class graduated from the North Carolina College for Negroes. 1931 The North Carolina College for Negroes received its first accreditation from the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools. 1935 Shepard and other African American leaders founded the Durham Committee on the Affairs of Black People. 1937 The North Carolina College for Negroes was accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools as an A class institution and was admitted to membership later in 1957. 1939 The North Carolina General Assembly authorized graduate programs at the North Carolina College for Negroes. 1940 The School of Law was founded at North Carolina College for Negroes. 1941 The School of Library Science was founded at North Carolina College for Negroes. 1944 Residents in the Wakefield-Zebulon area of North Carolina renamed their public school the James E. Shepard School. 12 March 1944 North Carolina College for Negroes played the Duke Medical School basketball team in the first racially mixed basketball game of the Jim Crow era. 8 February 1947 Shepard's wife Annie Day Shepard died. 15 April 1947 Shepard's mother Hattie Whitted Shepard died. 6 October 1947 James E. Shepard died. 1947 The North Carolina College for Negroes was renamed the North Carolina College at Durham. 1948 Alfonso Elder was elected president of North Carolina College for Negroes succeeding Shepard. 1951 The James E. Shepard Memorial Library was dedicated in honor of Shepard. 1964 The James E. Shepard Middle School was built in Durham, N.C. 1969 The North Carolina General Assembly changed the name of the North Carolina College at Durham to North Carolina Central University and established the university as one of the state's regional institutions. 1972 North Carolina Central University joined the University of North Carolina (System). Back to Top The collection contains correspondence, speeches, writings, organization files, newspaper clippings, and photographs. Correspondence with local and national educators, government officials, civil rights activists, historians, and others documents Shepard's professional life at the North Carolina College for Negroes and his civic involvement. Slight correspondence with family members is also present. Speeches and writings address a variety of topics including race relations, World War II, and education. Organization files represent more than 200 local, state, and national civic associations, fraternal orders, businesses, and educational institutions with which Shepard was affiliated chiefly as a board or committee member. The organization materials document Shepard's concerns with social and economic conditions in North Carolina and his involvement in higher education and state government. World War II materials pertain to Shepard in his roles as a spokesman for African Americans in North Carolina and as one of two African Americans appointed to the North Carolina Appeals Board for men drafted into military service. Newspaper clippings represent a variety of publications and a broad range of perspectives on contemporary issues including, but not limited to, race relations and education. Subjects of photographs include Shepard and his family, as well as faculty functions, Shepard's funeral, and professional colleagues. Among the photographs is one of Booker T. Washington together with Shepard during Washington's 1910 visit to the National Religious Training School and Chautauqua for the Colored Race. Back to Top
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gaston_Pearson
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William Gaston Pearson
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gaston_Pearson
William Gaston Pearson (1858–1947) was an American educator and businessman in North Carolina. Pearson was born a slave in Durham County on April 11, 1859 to Cynthia Anne Pearson (née Barbee) and George Washington Pearson Sr. After he was freed, he worked at the Carr Factory where General Julian S. Carr, the owner, recognized his potential and financed his education at Shaw University. Pearson graduated from Shaw with a B.S. in 1886 and received an honorary M.A. in 1890. He was awarded Honorary Ph.D's from Kittrell College in 1915 and Wilberforce University in 1919. On June 6, 1893, Pearson married Minnie Sumner of Charlotte, a teacher. In 1886, Pearson began his teaching career in Whitted High School, a small grade school in Durham and he succeeded James Whitted as principal of the school. He was a close friend of Dr. James E. Shepard, founder of what is now North Carolina Central University and aided Shepard in his efforts to develop the university. Pearson became the first principal of the newly built Hillside Park High School on Umstead Street in 1922. In the 18 years during which Pearson held this position, many significant improvements were made at Hillside. The enrollment increase markedly and in 1923 the school was recognized as a standard high school by the state Department of Public Instruction. In 1931, Hillside was accredited by the Southern Association of Secondary School and Colleges. Pearson was a strict disciplinarian who improved the quality of education at Hillside by demanding dedication and excellence from teachers and students. He housed the teachers in two "teacherages" across the street from his home so he could oversee their activities. He would frequently sit in on classes and evaluate teaching techniques. He demanded course outline from each teacher at the beginning of each semester with progress reports at regular intervals during the academic year. At graduation time each year, Pearson traveled to Southern and Eastern Colleges to try to recruit the best teachers possible. Despite his stringent demands, "Profs" Pearson was well liked by students, faculty and community members. In a Principal Popularity Contest sponsored by the Carolina Times newspaper for black schools in Durham, Pearson came in third with an impressive showing of votes (each ticket sent in counted as 500 votes). Pearson also made outstanding contributions as a member of the Durham community. He was one of the original organizers of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, the Fraternal Bank and Trust Company, Southern Fidelity and Surety Company as well as Banker's Fire Insurance Company. He was a trustee of Kittrell College, St. Joseph's A.M.E. Church, the National Religious Training School, NCCU and Wilberforce University. He helped found the Mechanics and Farmers Bank in Durham's "Black Wall Street". In 1927, he received the Harmon Award for Achievement in Business. The W. G. Pearson Gifted and Talented Elementary School, W. G. Pearson Magnet Middle School and the cafeteria at N.C. Central University were named after him.
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https://www.eiu.edu/deanslist/
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Eastern Illinois University
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The Dean’s List at EIU recognizes undergraduates with a declared major whose academic performance has been excellent.
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Eastern Illinois University
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More than 860 undergraduate students have been named to Eastern Illinois University’s Spring 2024 Deans' List. The Deans’ List at EIU recognizes undergraduates with a declared major whose academic performance has been excellent. Students who achieve a GPA of 3.80 to 4.00 (on a 4.00 scale) while completing a minimum of 12 graded semester hours, excluding credit/no credit grades, in a fall or spring semester will be named to the Deans’ List. (Zip code information has been included for media use.) 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https://docsouth.unc.edu/highlights/shaw.html
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Shaw University: The First Historically Black University in the South
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Shaw University: The First Historically Black University in the South
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Click here to listen to a podcast of this highlight. The feed is located here if you would like to subscribe. Shaw University: The First Historically Black University in the South On December 1st, 2007, Shaw University, the South's oldest historically black university, turned 142. On this anniversary, DocSouth celebrates Shaw, which began with a single theology class for recently emancipated freedmen, offered by Dr. Henry Martin Tupper in 1865. Located in Raleigh, North Carolina, the Baptist-affiliated, co-educational liberal arts institution was known as the Raleigh Institute from 1866 to 1870. The school changed its name to the Shaw Collegiate Institute in 1870, after Elijah Shaw funded the construction of the campus's first building, and five years later, the campus became known as Shaw University. In 1885, it became the first school in the South to train black doctors and pharmacists, and more recently, it conducted a study of why black World War II veterans had been overlooked for the Medal of Honor. This study culminated with President Bill Clinton awarding the Medal of Honor to seven of the ten veterans whom Shaw had recommended for the award. A Shaw University catalogue dating from the 1876-1877 school year provides a glimpse into Shaw's early years. The catalogue features pictures of campus buildings, including Estey Hall, the first women's dormitory on a co-educational campus in the U.S. It also lists the university's trustees, faculty, and assistant teachers. A summary of student enrollment shows 240 students, including 89 women and 47 studying ministry. Additionally, the catalogue lays out the schedules of courses required in the university's various programs, lists the rules that students are expected to follow, and describes students' expenses, which came to around $8 a month. More concerned with Shaw's history as an institution than with its day-to-day operations, is J.A. Whitted's A History of the Negro Baptists of North Carolina (1908), the ninth chapter of which chronicles Shaw's growth from "a negro cabin on the outskirts of the city," (p. 150) to an "institution of learning, that has done so much in uplifting" African Americans (p. 146). Whitted's chapter details key moments from the life of founder Henry Martin Tupper, including a night that Tupper and his wife spent guarding their house from a Ku Klux Klan attack. Whitted also describes Shaw's various graduate and professional programs, and discusses the international influence that Shaw has exerted by enrolling students from Africa and the West Indies as well as Central and South America (p. 163). Both Whitted's book and the Shaw University catalog are part of DocSouth's "North Carolina Experience" Collection, which tells the story of the Tar Heel State as seen through representative histories, descriptive accounts, institutional reports, fiction, and other writing. A History of the Negro Baptists of North Carolina is also part of the "Church in the Southern Black Community" Collection, which documents the ways in which Southern African Americans experienced and transformed Protestant Christianity into a central institution of community life.
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https://asaphistory.com/2019/11/16/12-01-shaw-university/
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12/01 – Shaw University
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An early 1910s postcard depicting the Shaw Building. (Flickr) On this day in 1865, Shaw University - the US South's first historically Black college - was founded in Raleigh, North Carolina. American Baptist Minister Henry Martin Tupper led the construction of school buildings around his Second Baptist Church of Raleigh, and began teaching freedmen (former…
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ASAP History
https://asaphistory.com/2019/11/16/12-01-shaw-university/
On this day in 1865, Shaw University – the US South’s first historically Black college – was founded in Raleigh, North Carolina. American Baptist Minister Henry Martin Tupper led the construction of school buildings around his Second Baptist Church of Raleigh, and began teaching freedmen (former slaves) in 1865. In 1875, the school became Shaw University when it received a significant grant from Elijah Shaw. The Shaw Building – at the time, the school’s main schoolhouse – was built in a cornfield where Tupper once hid from lynch mobs. Over the years, Shaw University grew to host a law school (from 1888) and a medical school (1881), both the first institutions of their kind for Black people in the country. The school(s), faculty and students have faced harassment and even threats from its opening to the present day. Shaw University played an important part in the American Civil Rights movement, beginning in 1960 with the formation of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) at a meeting in the Shaw Building. Led by Ella Baker – a civil and human rights activist – the SNCC went on to help run the 1963 March on Washington and the Selma Campaigns. In 1995, the school published a report stating that Black soldiers who fought in WWII were less likely to be awarded medals for bravery than whites. The Department of Defense vetted and supported the findings and in 1997, US President Bill Clinton belatedly presented the Medal of Honour to seven Black American veterans.
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BOARD OF DIRECTORS
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The Glenn Foundation
https://www.theglennfoundation.org/board-of-directors
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https://prezi.com/fm3koybpta8y/dr-william-gaston-pearson/
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Dr. William Gaston Pearson
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Dr. William Gaston Pearson Educator and Community Builder Building the Community: Business Background Building the Community: Education Dr. Pearson was born a slave in Durham County in 1858 to Cynthia Ann Pearson and William Pearson. After he was freed he worked at the Carr
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https://www.amu.apus.edu/academic/academic-leadership/deans-list/
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Dean's List Honor Students | American Military University
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To succeed as a student at AMU, you need both commitment and discipline. Our students work hard to conquer the multiple challenges of completing their classwork.
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https://www.amu.apus.edu/academic/academic-leadership/deans-list/
Introduction To succeed as a student at the university, you need both commitment and discipline. Our students work hard to conquer the multiple challenges of completing their classwork, often juggling the demands of work or caring for their families. Each quarter, we are proud to recognize outstanding honor students by adding them to the Dean’s List. These students have not only met but also exceeded our academic standards. Criteria To be eligible for achieving Dean’s List status, you must: Earn a cumulative Grade Point Average (GPA) of 3.70 or higher Be enrolled in an associate, bachelor’s or master’s degree academic program Begin and complete 4 classes (12 semester hours) in your academic program at the undergraduate level or 2 classes (6 semester hours) at the master’s level Begin and complete 3 classes at the undergraduate level or 2 classes at the master’s level in the 6‐month period before the Dean’s List is published Comply with university policies on academic integrity in all classes, assignments, and interactions The Dean’s List is published on the following dates: First Quarter (Sept. 1 - Feb. 28 courses): April 1 Second Quarter (Dec. 1 - May 31 courses): July 1 Third Quarter (March 1 - Aug. 31 courses): October 1 Fourth Quarter (June 1 – Nov. 30 courses): January 1 Congratulations to this quarter’s Dean’s List achievers (as of July 1, 2024). Abankwa, Melanie Abate, Joshua Abaza, Aydin Abbate, Ronald Abbott, Aaron Abdelghani, Mohamed Abdelmegid, Adam Abduh, Yacob Abdullah, Khalil Abe, Brian Abele, Rachel Abeles, Harrison Abeling, Brogan Abercrombie, Michelle Abernathy, Tony Abernethy, Robert Abey, Zachary Abian, Timothy Abijo, Kehinde Abonwoh, Colby Abrams, Timothy Abrams, Treavor Abregano, Judith Abrell, Timothy Abreu, Franklyn Abreu, Kevin Abu, Dale Acevedo, Alexia Acevedo, Rodelyne Achuo, Yanic Ackley, Jabbok Ackley, Brian Acosta, Anetia Acosta, Alexandra Adair, Ashley Adamczyk, Samantha Adams, Michelle Adams, Lawrence Adams, Tanya Adams, Destini Adams, Courtney Adams, Bryan Adams, Kevin Adams, Abigail Adams, Kevin Adams, Aubrey Adams, Jessica Adamson, Adrian Addis, Dylan Adeniyi, Abayomi Adewole, Aramide Adhikari, Ashtyn Adinolfi, Emily Adjei Boateng, Kwaku Adkins, Joseph Adoglo, Wayne ADOGLO, Sobourou Adriatico-Westad, Jennifer Lynn Adu, Joel Adu-Wusu, Patrick Aeschliman, Lance Afodagni, Yawo Agbede, Gnongla Agboola, Khadijat Agin, Corey Agnew, Taylor Agosto, Sean Aguayo, Roman Aguilar, Edward Aguilar, Ludivina Aguilar, Eleazar Aguilar, Hector Aguilar Rodriguez, Genisis Aguilera, Chris Aguirre, Kimberly Agyemang, Clement Agyiri, Shadrack Ahearn, Kimberly Ahern, Alexis Ahmad, Jessica Ahmed, Ghayas Ahmed, Aqeel Ahmed, Salma Aigbodion, Bryan Ainsworth, Alexander Ajonu, Peter Akakpo, Atakroa Kokou Eli Akanbi, Saheed Akande, Opeyemi Akasukpe, Tobore Akinbowale, Moses Akindutire, Akindele Akpeko-Housluvi, Sabrina Akpo, Austin Al Mousawi, Esraa Alanissoto, Carlos Alaniz, Diego Alaniz, Daniella Alaniz, Austin Alaniz, Moises Alarcon, Aldrin Alarcon, Suaad Alba, Taylor Alba, Joan Albarran, Ericlee Albero, Dante Albert, Allison Alberts, Connor Albrecht, Tyler Albrezat, Yasmin Albright, Kenneth Albright, Rebecca Albuquerque, Katerina Alcorn, William Alcorta, James Ale, Enocabimelech Aleksandrowicz, Przemyslaw Aleman, Giovanni Alex, Darrell Alexander, Kelvin Alexander, Andrae Alexander, James Alexander, Shelton Alexander, Denver Alexander, Mayra Alexander, Timothy Alfaro, Heather Alfaro Garcia, Luis Alford, Shelby Alford, Derek Alfred, Breanna Alfred, Dennis Alger, Reece Ali, Zainal Ali, Laura Ali, Tamer Alicea, Luis Alicea Otero, Alexis Aliff, Derek Allard, John Allen, Jacqueline Allen, Camden Allen, Sanica Allen, Derek Allen, Thomas Allen, Harold Allen, Sarah Allen, Kimberly Allen, Greg Allen, Amanda Allen, Kelsey Allen, Amber Allen, Philip Allen, Matthew Allen, Chaundra Allen, Logan Allen, Brianna Allen, Asha Allen, Christopher Allen, Taylor Allen, Demaria Allen, Janyiah Alley, Ashley Alleyne-Mike, Adana Allison, Florence Allison, Erika Allmann, Nikki Almanzar, Karina Almeida, Frederic Almendrales, Gillian Almodovar, Victor Almrayatee, Ali Almude, Laura Alnaib, Sudad Alobase, Maxwell Alonso, Karla Alonso, Lorenzo Alroaini, Tariq Alsancak, Cristal Alston, Alexandria Altamirano, Brendalis Altman, Dale Altonji, Andrew Aluyan, Jordan Alvarado, Isae Alvarado Sierra, Alexander Alvarez, Alfredo Alvarez, Annie Alvarez, Rosa Alvarez, Daniel Alvarez, Jason Alvarez Alonso, Mayra Alvarez De La Campa, Daniel Alward, Tyler Amadis, Sandy Amake, Lawrence Amara, Theodosia Amato, Zachary Amaya, Kristfer Amaya, Manuel Amaya, Mya Amaya, Araceli Amayaargueta, Keny Amayo, Osaguona Ambrose, Tyler Amenou, Koffi Amersfoort, Anthony Ammerman, Mark Ampadu, Semra Amponsah, Peter Amrenova, Dinara Anacker, Matthew Anders, Alexandra Anderson, Richard Anderson, Daniel Anderson, Mark Anderson, Victoria Anderson, Jeffrey Anderson, Alvin Anderson, Ashley Anderson, William Anderson, Marcus Anderson, Peter Anderson, Jonathon Anderson, Eric Anderson, Miranda Anderson, Kayelan Anderson, Kerice Anderson, Jeffrey Anderson, William Anderson, Scott Anderson, Tyrra Anderson, Etoryia Anderson, William Anderson, Douglas Anderson-Starr, Samantha Andino, Fatima Andrada, Joshua Andrade, James Andrade, Brandon Andre, Timothy Andre, Mike Andrews, Caecilia Andrews, Kyle Andrews, Jessica Andrews, Graycee Androlowicz, Nicholas Andrus, Daniel Andrus, Joshua Anfield, William Angafor, Estella Angel, Robert Annavarapu, Sanya Annor, Clement Ansah, Karen Anthony, Cristina Antillon, Alijandro Antinozzi, Anthony Antoine, Diedre Antoine-Bazan, Briana Antonaccio, Joseph Antonic, Joseph Antunez, Nicholas Antwi, Kingsley Anumudu, Joey ANUMUDU, Samuel Anzek, Matthew Apencuxil, Joseph Aples, Marc Apodaca, Eva Appiah, Chalissa Applegate, Trevin Aragon, Kendrick Aragon, Allana Aranda, Alvin Jason Arango, Elizabeth Aranyos, Ryan Arbelaez, Paula Arbizu, Serene Arce-Fuentes, Jonathan Arcenal, Valeria Arceneaux, John Archer, Christopher Archer, Justin Archer, Colleen Archuleta, Anthony Arcuri, Chelsea Aregay, Semira Arellano, Brandon Arenivas, Ailynn Arevalo, Jennifer Argueta, Hamilton Argy, Robert Arias Rodriguez, Wilson Arias Rosado, Yanira Arizmendi, Christian Arline, Kristianna Armant, Shannon Armata, Madison Armbrester, Kevin Armendariz, Carlos Armijo, Christina Armour, Martina Armstead, Jennipher Armstead, Joe 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O'Donnell, Tyler Odum, Keleah Ogden, Patrick Ogg, Ashley Oghide, Stephen O'Harrow, Michael O'Harrow, Elizabeth Ohene, Joseph Ohl, Anthony Oisten, Janet Okongwu, Berny Okpalaku-Godwin, Zite Oku, Alin Okubanjo, Deborah-Tobi Okunola, Alice Okunuga, Adenike Okura, Christopher Okwesa, Oforma Olaitan, Deandre Oldfield-Clark, Chandra Oldham, Trent Olds, Hannah Olejarz, Kathleen Olesky, Brian Olimpo, Timothy Olivas, Ruben Olivas, Monique Oliver, Sarah Oliver, Christian Oliver, Robert Oliver, Christopher Oliver, Brooke Oliver, Angela Oliver, Kristin Olmack, Scotty Olmedo, Mario Olmos, Gerardo Olmos, John Olmos, Alexandra Olmsted, William Oloyede, Carlton Olsen, Evan Olson, Curtis Olson, Rhea Olson, Jeremy Olson, Brandon Olson, Hunter Olson, Caleb Olson, David Olson, Rebekah Olson, Tysen Olsson, Todd Olupitan, Folasade Olvera, Pedro Oman, Tyler Omanahernandez, Edwin Omane, Youjia O'Meara, Erica Omenitsch, Jason OMENITSCH, James O'Neal, Sean O'Neal, Jack O'Neil, Isaac ONeill, John O'Neill, Michael Onemu, Tejiri Oniha, Amber Orange, Ronald Orecchio, Ashley Oren Pinhasi, Yaniv Orlando, Veronica Ornelas, Destiny Ornelas, Santos Ornot, Matthew Orozco, Rabekka Orozco, Michael Orozco Padilla, Cristian Orozco-Fraser, Johanna Orr, Alec Orr, Jonathan Orr, Della Orr, Romen Orseno, Jeff Ortega, Nicole Ortega, Maria Ortiz, Johana Ortiz, Jose Ortiz, Michael Ortiz, Mia Ortiz, Beverly Ortiz, Franklyn Ortiz, Edwin Ortiz Palau, Greish Ortizoneill, Enrique Ortiz-Ramos, Alanis Orton, Jerron Osborn, Jacob Osborn, Anne Osborne, Esmat Osborne, Krista Osborne, Shane Osburn, Tyler Osei, Francis Osei, Reuben Osgood, Kristopher Osman, Corbin Osmoe, Steven Osorio Rosales, Alexis Oster, Saige Oswalt, Dylan Otero, Verenice Otero Otero, Neisha Ottley, Darrell Ottley, Summer Otto, Lauren Ouattara, Richard Ouedraogo, Badra Alou Ouellette, Nicholas Overstreet, Jasmine Overton, Jason Owczarski, Jennifer Owen, Abagail Owens, Brynell Owens, Brian Owens, Katelin Owens, Julianne Owono Awono, Robert Owuor, Luis Owusu, Kenneth Owusu, Enoch Oxman, Donald Oyetoro, Tolulope Ozigi, Mustafa Paaluhi, David Pacheco, Christopher pacheco, Anabelle Pacheco, Dominic Pacheco, Vito Pacheco Cales, Matthew pacheco cales, Keyvin Padaon, Aldave Padavic, John Padilla, David Padilla, Julie Padron, Gaspar Pagala, Randy Pagan, Jayleen Page, KC Page, Kyle Page, Hillary Page, Michael Page, Shamelle Page, Nia Page, Amanda Page, Keeshaun Page, Trenton Pagen, Thomas Paguio, Maria Floraida Pahs, Jessica Paige, Ashley Painter, Scott Paiz-Perez, Juana Palacio, Martha Paleno, Caitlin Palfey, Catherine Palma, David Palmateer, Kyle Palmer, Jodi Palmer, Victor Palmer, Kenyada Palmer, Chassidy Palmer, Casey Palmer, James Palmer, Joshua Palomar, Eric Pangilinan, Leriz Pangle, Keith Paniagua, Daisy Pantalo, Kaitlyn Panteloglous, Joshua Paolangeli, Michael Papile, Shannon Papocchia, Erik Pappa, Whisper Paquette, Robert Parajuli, John Paras, Radcliffe Renzo Paravati, Riana Pare, Stephen Paredes, Brian Paredes, Shane Pareja, Jhonattan Parent, Nathan Parisi, Ian Park, Alyssa Park, Kwangmoon Park, Kwang Parker, Marcello Parker, Judith Parker, DeNair Parker, William Parker, Erin Parker, Hannah Parker, Riley Parker, Patricia Parks, William Parks, Adam Parks, Jessica Parra, Angela Parra, Isaiah Parrish, Ashley Parry, John Parson, Justin Parsons, Selma Parsons, Chad Parsons, Eva Parton, Caleb Pascual, Jim Pash, Danna Pasillas, Yaritza Pasion-Rose, Ricky Paskaitis, Steven Pasquier, Nancy pasquier, Erica Passler, Patrick Passmore, Jason Pastore, Samantha Patane, Chase Patel, Sonya Patel, Jignesh Patel, Jeet Paterson, Heather Pati, Malofou Pati, Simone Patlan, Mikayla Patten, Kenneth Patterson, Ryan Patterson, Chardell Patterson, William Patterson, Jada Patterson, Alex Patterson, Kasey Patterson, Priscilla Patterson, Jason Patterson, Crystal Paudel, Suresh Paul, Michael Paul, Ragasten Paulino Cespedes, Miguel Paupard, John Pavel, Andrew Pavlides, Jennifer Payacag, Romeo Payes, Calvin Payne, DesRay Payne,
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https://www.ranker.com/list/famous-shaw-university-alumni-and-students/reference
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Famous Shaw University Alumni
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[ "Reference" ]
2013-06-30T00:00:00
List of famous alumni from Shaw University, with photos when available. Prominent graduates from Shaw University include celebrities, politicians, business ...
en
/img/icons/touch-icon-iphone.png
Ranker
https://www.ranker.com/list/famous-shaw-university-alumni-and-students/reference
Ella Josephine Baker (December 13, 1903 – December 13, 1986) was an African-American civil rights and human rights activist in the United States. She was a largely behind-the-scenes organizer whose career spanned more than five decades. In New York City and the South, she worked alongside some of the most noted civil rights leaders of the 20th century, including W. E. B. Du Bois, Thurgood Marshall, A. Philip Randolph, and Martin Luther King Jr. She also mentored many emerging activists, such as Diane Nash, Stokely Carmichael, Rosa Parks, and Bob Moses, whom she first mentored as leaders in the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC).Baker criticized professionalized, charismatic leadership; she promoted grassroots organizing, radical democracy, and the ability of the oppressed to understand their worlds and advocate for themselves. She realized this vision most fully in the 1960s as the primary advisor and strategist of the SNCC. She has been ranked as "One of the most important African American leaders of the twentieth century and perhaps the most influential woman in the civil rights movement." She is known for her critiques not only of racism within American culture, but also of sexism within the civil rights movement. Henry Plummer Cheatham (December 27, 1857 – November 29, 1935) was an educator, farmer and politician, elected as a Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from 1889 to 1893 from North Carolina. He was one of only five African Americans elected to Congress from the South in the Jim Crow era of the last decade of the nineteenth century, as disfranchisement reduced black voting. After that, no African Americans would be elected from the South until 1972 and none from North Carolina until 1992. Born on May 28, 1944, in Atlanta, Georgia, Gladys Knight emerged as a groundbreaking vocalist and performer who stamped an indelible mark on the world of music. Known endearingly as the "Empress of Soul," Knight's musical journey began at a tender age of seven when she won Ted Mack's Original Amateur Hour TV show contest. This early triumph set the stage for an illustrious career that spanned over six decades, making her one of the most enduring artists in popular music. Knight's career trajectory took a defining turn when she formed the iconic group "Gladys Knight & the Pips" with her siblings and cousins in the mid-1950s. With its unique fusion of gospel, soul, and pop music, the group produced numerous hits, including the Grammy-winning singles "Midnight Train to Georgia" and "Neither One of Us (Wants to Be the First to Say Goodbye)." The success of the group established Knight as a significant figure in music, known for her passionate vocal style and dynamic stage presence. Beyond her musical accomplishments, Knight also explored acting and authored an autobiography. She made appearances in television shows and films, demonstrating her versatility as an entertainer. Her commitment to philanthropy is another notable aspect of her life; Knight has devoted time and resources to various causes, reflecting her belief in giving back to the community. A seven-time Grammy winner, Knight's remarkable contribution to music and society truly underscore her status as an icon and a trailblazer. James Edward Cheek (December 4, 1932 – January 8, 2010), president emeritus of Howard University, was born in Roanoke Rapids, North Carolina. Despite suffering from severe cataracts, Cheek was an honor student at Washington Street Grammar School. He graduated from Immanuel Lutheran College with a secondary diploma in 1950 and served as a member of the United States Air Force in Korea in 1951, eventually earning a Bachelor of Arts in sociology and history from Shaw University. In 1955, Cheek received a Master of Divinity from Colgate Rochester University in 1958 and a PhD from Drew University in 1962. During this period, Cheek was honored with a Colgate Rochester Fellowship, a Rockefeller Doctoral Fellowship and a Lily Foundation Fellowship. He was member of Alpha Phi Alpha fraternity.
5685
dbpedia
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https://issuu.com/shawu/docs/factsheet-ataglance18-19
en
Shaw University Fact Sheet
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2018-12-05T00:00:00+00:00
Shaw University at a glance.
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Issuu
https://issuu.com/shawu/docs/factsheet-ataglance18-19
Welcome to Issuu’s blog: home to product news, tips, resources, interviews (and more) related to content marketing and publishing. Here you'll find an answer to your question.
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https://www.amu.apus.edu/academic/academic-leadership/deans-list/
en
Dean's List Honor Students | American Military University
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2024-06-28T19:40:06
To succeed as a student at AMU, you need both commitment and discipline. Our students work hard to conquer the multiple challenges of completing their classwork.
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https://www.amu.apus.edu/academic/academic-leadership/deans-list/
Introduction To succeed as a student at the university, you need both commitment and discipline. Our students work hard to conquer the multiple challenges of completing their classwork, often juggling the demands of work or caring for their families. Each quarter, we are proud to recognize outstanding honor students by adding them to the Dean’s List. These students have not only met but also exceeded our academic standards. Criteria To be eligible for achieving Dean’s List status, you must: Earn a cumulative Grade Point Average (GPA) of 3.70 or higher Be enrolled in an associate, bachelor’s or master’s degree academic program Begin and complete 4 classes (12 semester hours) in your academic program at the undergraduate level or 2 classes (6 semester hours) at the master’s level Begin and complete 3 classes at the undergraduate level or 2 classes at the master’s level in the 6‐month period before the Dean’s List is published Comply with university policies on academic integrity in all classes, assignments, and interactions The Dean’s List is published on the following dates: First Quarter (Sept. 1 - Feb. 28 courses): April 1 Second Quarter (Dec. 1 - May 31 courses): July 1 Third Quarter (March 1 - Aug. 31 courses): October 1 Fourth Quarter (June 1 – Nov. 30 courses): January 1 Congratulations to this quarter’s Dean’s List achievers (as of July 1, 2024). Abankwa, Melanie Abate, Joshua Abaza, Aydin Abbate, Ronald Abbott, Aaron Abdelghani, Mohamed Abdelmegid, Adam Abduh, Yacob Abdullah, Khalil Abe, Brian Abele, Rachel Abeles, Harrison Abeling, Brogan Abercrombie, Michelle Abernathy, Tony Abernethy, Robert Abey, Zachary Abian, Timothy Abijo, Kehinde Abonwoh, Colby Abrams, Timothy Abrams, Treavor Abregano, Judith Abrell, Timothy Abreu, Franklyn Abreu, Kevin Abu, Dale Acevedo, Alexia Acevedo, Rodelyne Achuo, Yanic Ackley, Jabbok Ackley, Brian Acosta, Anetia Acosta, Alexandra Adair, Ashley Adamczyk, Samantha Adams, Michelle Adams, Lawrence Adams, Tanya Adams, Destini Adams, Courtney Adams, Bryan Adams, Kevin Adams, Abigail Adams, Kevin Adams, Aubrey Adams, Jessica Adamson, Adrian Addis, Dylan Adeniyi, Abayomi Adewole, Aramide Adhikari, Ashtyn Adinolfi, Emily Adjei Boateng, Kwaku Adkins, Joseph Adoglo, Wayne ADOGLO, Sobourou Adriatico-Westad, Jennifer Lynn Adu, Joel Adu-Wusu, Patrick Aeschliman, Lance Afodagni, Yawo Agbede, Gnongla Agboola, Khadijat Agin, Corey Agnew, Taylor Agosto, Sean Aguayo, Roman Aguilar, Edward Aguilar, Ludivina Aguilar, Eleazar Aguilar, Hector Aguilar Rodriguez, Genisis Aguilera, Chris Aguirre, Kimberly Agyemang, Clement Agyiri, Shadrack Ahearn, Kimberly Ahern, Alexis Ahmad, Jessica Ahmed, Ghayas Ahmed, Aqeel Ahmed, Salma Aigbodion, Bryan Ainsworth, Alexander Ajonu, Peter Akakpo, Atakroa Kokou Eli Akanbi, Saheed Akande, Opeyemi Akasukpe, Tobore Akinbowale, Moses Akindutire, Akindele Akpeko-Housluvi, Sabrina Akpo, Austin Al Mousawi, Esraa Alanissoto, Carlos Alaniz, Diego Alaniz, Daniella Alaniz, Austin Alaniz, Moises Alarcon, Aldrin Alarcon, Suaad Alba, Taylor Alba, Joan Albarran, Ericlee Albero, Dante Albert, Allison Alberts, Connor Albrecht, Tyler Albrezat, Yasmin Albright, Kenneth Albright, Rebecca Albuquerque, Katerina Alcorn, William Alcorta, James Ale, Enocabimelech Aleksandrowicz, Przemyslaw Aleman, Giovanni Alex, Darrell Alexander, Kelvin Alexander, Andrae Alexander, James Alexander, Shelton Alexander, Denver Alexander, Mayra Alexander, Timothy Alfaro, Heather Alfaro Garcia, Luis Alford, Shelby Alford, Derek Alfred, Breanna Alfred, Dennis Alger, Reece Ali, Zainal Ali, Laura Ali, Tamer Alicea, Luis Alicea Otero, Alexis Aliff, Derek Allard, John Allen, Jacqueline Allen, Camden Allen, Sanica Allen, Derek Allen, Thomas Allen, Harold Allen, Sarah Allen, Kimberly Allen, Greg Allen, Amanda Allen, Kelsey Allen, Amber Allen, Philip Allen, Matthew Allen, Chaundra Allen, Logan Allen, Brianna Allen, Asha Allen, Christopher Allen, Taylor Allen, Demaria Allen, Janyiah Alley, Ashley Alleyne-Mike, Adana Allison, Florence Allison, Erika Allmann, Nikki Almanzar, Karina Almeida, Frederic Almendrales, Gillian Almodovar, Victor Almrayatee, Ali Almude, Laura Alnaib, Sudad Alobase, Maxwell Alonso, Karla Alonso, Lorenzo Alroaini, Tariq Alsancak, Cristal Alston, Alexandria Altamirano, Brendalis Altman, Dale Altonji, Andrew Aluyan, Jordan Alvarado, Isae Alvarado Sierra, Alexander Alvarez, Alfredo Alvarez, Annie Alvarez, Rosa Alvarez, Daniel Alvarez, Jason Alvarez Alonso, Mayra Alvarez De La Campa, Daniel Alward, Tyler Amadis, Sandy Amake, Lawrence Amara, Theodosia Amato, Zachary Amaya, Kristfer Amaya, Manuel Amaya, Mya Amaya, Araceli Amayaargueta, Keny Amayo, Osaguona Ambrose, Tyler Amenou, Koffi Amersfoort, Anthony Ammerman, Mark Ampadu, Semra Amponsah, Peter Amrenova, Dinara Anacker, Matthew Anders, Alexandra Anderson, Richard Anderson, Daniel Anderson, Mark Anderson, Victoria Anderson, Jeffrey Anderson, Alvin Anderson, Ashley Anderson, William Anderson, Marcus Anderson, Peter Anderson, Jonathon Anderson, Eric Anderson, Miranda Anderson, Kayelan Anderson, Kerice Anderson, Jeffrey Anderson, William Anderson, Scott Anderson, Tyrra Anderson, Etoryia Anderson, William Anderson, Douglas Anderson-Starr, Samantha Andino, Fatima Andrada, Joshua Andrade, James Andrade, Brandon Andre, Timothy Andre, Mike Andrews, Caecilia Andrews, Kyle Andrews, Jessica Andrews, Graycee Androlowicz, Nicholas Andrus, Daniel Andrus, Joshua Anfield, William Angafor, Estella Angel, Robert Annavarapu, Sanya Annor, Clement Ansah, Karen Anthony, Cristina Antillon, Alijandro Antinozzi, Anthony Antoine, Diedre Antoine-Bazan, Briana Antonaccio, Joseph Antonic, Joseph Antunez, Nicholas Antwi, Kingsley Anumudu, Joey ANUMUDU, Samuel Anzek, Matthew Apencuxil, Joseph Aples, Marc Apodaca, Eva Appiah, Chalissa Applegate, Trevin Aragon, Kendrick Aragon, Allana Aranda, Alvin Jason Arango, Elizabeth Aranyos, Ryan Arbelaez, Paula Arbizu, Serene Arce-Fuentes, Jonathan Arcenal, Valeria Arceneaux, John Archer, Christopher Archer, Justin Archer, Colleen Archuleta, Anthony Arcuri, Chelsea Aregay, Semira Arellano, Brandon Arenivas, Ailynn Arevalo, Jennifer Argueta, Hamilton Argy, Robert Arias Rodriguez, Wilson Arias Rosado, Yanira Arizmendi, Christian Arline, Kristianna Armant, Shannon Armata, Madison Armbrester, Kevin Armendariz, Carlos Armijo, Christina Armour, Martina Armstead, Jennipher Armstead, Joe Charles Armstead, Jason Armstead, Jade Armstrong, Evita Armstrong, Kaitlin Armstrong, Carlos Armstrong, Shelton Arnett, Michael Arnold, John Arnold, Sarah Arnold, Shamika Arnold, Austin Arnold, Jacob Arnold, Jordan Arocha, Merri Arreguin, Jose Arroyo Gonzalez, Angel Arroyos, Bryson Arteaga, Angelica Artesi, Jesus Arthur, Jenia Arthur, Elizabeth Arthur, Donamari Arvelo, Cecilia Arzola, Efrain Asante, Richmond Asante, Michael Asante, Sandra Ash, Douglas Ashbaugh, Steven Ashby, Zane Ashby, Jacob Ashley, Steven Ashton, Jeffery Ashworth, Heather Askew, Demetria Askew, Shenicia Askew, Hanna Aslaksen, Taylor Asogbon, Oluwaseun Assale, Russell ASSALE, Piladeou Assila, Koffi Athanasatos, Stephanie Athey, Pamela Atkins, Robbyn Atkins, Sarah Atkins, Rachel Atkins, William Atoigue, Philip Jude Attebery, Zachary Audelo, Elizabeth Auer, Kenneth Aultman, Timothy Austin, Breanne Austin, Whittney Austin, Joshua Autera, Esmeralda Autrey, Colby Avalos, Alexander Avalos, Ashanti Avendano, Renato Avina, Brandy Avina, Alexandra Avon, Danielle Awuah, Cleotis AWUAH, Ebenezer Awuku-Obeng, Daniel Ayala, Vanessa Ayala, Margie Ayala, Marcus Ayala, Ryan Ayala, Hannah Aycart, Jimmy Aycock, Alia aycock, Ashley Ayegbo, Rodnetra Ayo, Anthony Ayuk, Daviann Babatunde, Olusegun Baca, Michael Bacani, Ellysa Diane Bacchiocchi, Shaun Backe, Emily Backer, Mitchell Backus, Stephanie Bacus, Natalina Bader, Shaughn Baez, Sabrina Bagby, Tyler Bagley, Jonathan Bagli, Devin Bahena, Melissa Bailey, Macie Bailey, Nikole Bailey, Andrew Bailey, Matthew Bailey, Aaron Bailey, Brandy Bailey, Shardreka Bailey, Chadrick Bailey, Anthony Bailey, Alia Baird, Samuel Baird, Jacob Baisa, Katie Bakehouse, Joshua Baker, Jack Baker, Andrew Baker, Paige Baker, Marquis Baker, Adam Baker, Pharoll Baker, Payton Baker, Hunter Baker, Natsumi Baker, Mark Baker, Steven Balboa, Ruben Balch, Brian Balcom, Crystal Baldwin, Paul Baldwin, Siloam Balfour, Daniel Balis, Heidi Balius, Scott Ball, Justin Ball, Tyler Ball, Alexander Ballard, Natasha ballard, Benjamin Ballard, David Ballenger, Darcy Ballew, Randy Ballew, Isaiah Balloon, Artavius Balona, Raymond Balsiger, Caleb Balson-Dreyer, Knikky Bambino, Sean Bambino, Samantha Bame, Paul Banda, Adam Banda, Lisa Banfegha, Emmanuel Banion, Aurielle Banks, Oladipupo Banks, Jason Banks, LaShonda Banks, La-Nesha Banner, Buffy Bansemer, Grant Bapties, Stephen Barabash, Justin Baran, Jonathan Barb, James Barbato, Elizabeth Barber, Kenneth Barbour, Anika Barbour, Courtney Barfield, Allison Barger, Angela Bargsten, David Barillas, Carlos Bark, Joshua Barker, Michael Barker, Sierra Barker, Bridger Barker, Collin Barksdale, Deandre Barksdale, Gerry Barlett, Jared Barlow, Alex Barnes, James Barnes, Juwan Barnes, Jamia Barnes, Eilish Barnes, Amaya Barnett, Stephen Barnett, Crystal Barney, Brandon Barnhart, Jake Barnhill, Robin Baron, Curwin Barraza, Jessica Barraza, Juan Barrera, Terran Barreto Rodriguez, Jose Barrett, Roger Barrientos, Alvaro Barrios, Mark Barrios, Emily Barrios, Tony Barrios II, Mark Barros, Lindzee Barry, Kevin Bartek, Duane Bartelt, Kyle Barter, Stephen Bartie, Caleb Bartle, Katie Bartley, Andrew Bartolo, Alexander Barton, Jason Barton, Andrea Barton, Blake Barton, Derek Barton, John Barton, Lamar Barton, Seth Barua, Santu Baruch, Artamir Baruela, Anjelica Faye Basan, Daniel Basant, Brendan Basey, Jimmy Basford, Trevor Bass, Anthony Bass, Justin Bass, Robert Bassett, Cain Bastings, Rebecca Bates, Garrett Batsford, Donald Battle, Jarvis Bauer, Austin Bauer-Jones, Jordan Baugus, Shane Baumann, Stephen Baumeister, Jessica Baumgardner, Zachary Bautista, Daniel Bautista, Tashina Bautista, Claudia Bawa, Aminatou Baxter, Palance Bayaga, Belinda Baybayan, Justin Baynes, Davina Baze, Shelby Bazurto, Kevin Beacham, Laura Beadle, Hailey Beadle, Brendan Beaghan, Christopher Beale, Kennedy Bean, Richard Bean, Anijah Bean, Wilbert Beard, Kaitlyn Bearden, Alexa Bearor, Adam Beas, Karen Beasley, Justin Beauge, Gasner Beck, Gregory Beck, Samantha Beck, Kiland Beck, Michael Beck, Austin Becker, Jeremy Becker, Tyler Becker, William Becker, Mark Becker, Mark Beckford, Shawn Beckman, Joel Beculheimer, Spencer Bederio, Christopher Bedford, Anthony Bednarz-Shafer, Samantha Beede, Nikolas Begley, Dustin Behne, Megan Behnke, Marc Behrens, Joshua Beiler, David Beilke, Samantha Beland, Samuel Belanger, Joshua Belarmino, J Miguel Belem, Robin BELEM, Kiswendsida Benh Belew, Zachary Belk, Ryan Bell, James Bell, Travis Bell, Sarah Bell, Ian Bell, Zachary Bell, Michael Bell, Destiny-De'Shai Bell, Summer Bell, Caree Bell, Davia Bell, Shantice Bell, Bryan Bell, Kerri Bell, Trey Bell, Shakesaney Bell, Brian Bell, Brandyn Bell, Kenneth Belle, Spencer Bell-Green, Allison Bellman, Kasey Bello Hernandez, Sherel Bellomo, Christina Bellot, Donna Bellou, Timothy Belmar, Marco Belshe, Tracy Beltran Legorreta, Vanessa Belval, Zacchery Belyeu, Ashley Benavides, Pedro Benavides, Karyme Bencke, Troy Benedict, Brian Benitez, Abraham Benitez, Jailee Benjamin, Kimberly Bennett, Elizabeth Bennett, Barrett Bennett, Nicole Bennett, Austin Bennett, Haley Bennett-Colbert, Stephanie Benoit, James Benoit, Matthew Benoit, Lounov Benson, Michael Benson, Nicholas Benson, James Bentley, Michael Bentley, Joshua Benway-Tabor, Keeana Beran, Cody Berard, Darius Bercaw-Nelson, Chelsea Berg, Jackson Berg, Ian Berger, Mark Bergman, Cassandra Beristain Reyes, Cecilia Berlin, Daniel Bermejo, Miguel Bernacchi, Gregory Bernal, Hector Bernard, Christopher Bernardes, Thiago Bernd, Ruth Bernhardt, George Bernhardt, Taylor Bernier, Brett Bernstein, Joshua Berreles, Elizabeth Berrett, Michelle Berrios-Latorre, Sheila Berro, Zienab Berry, Joseph Berryhill, Rea Jane Berta, Danzel Bethauser, Kyle Bethi, Nazma Bettag, Marvin Betters, James Bettis, Vanessa Betty, Gregory Betty, Loi Betz, Connor Beucler-Rapos, Amanda Beverly, Caleb Beverly, Michelle Bhanukitsiri, Alex Bhatnager, Anish Bhetwal, Shishir Bhullar, Jagjot Biagi, Antony Bianco, Kyle Biancur, Christian Bibbs, 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Mote, Andrew Mott, Brandon Mott, Anthony Motto, James Mott-Smith, Trevor Motzer, Joshua Moughler, Samual Moultry, Xzayvier Moultry, Mykiesha Movido, Albert Mowery-Campbell, Payton Moyer, John Mrozek, Dakota Mrozowski, Daniel Mueller, Miia Mueller, David Mueller, Liam Muff, Christopher Muhammad-Bey, Adilah Mulcare, Kevin Mull, David Mullaney, Sean Mullins, DeAngelica Mullins, Matthew Mullins, Galen Mullins, Kameron Mullins, Larry Mulryan, Dennis Mumau, Michael Mumford, Johnathon Muna, Catherine Kaori Munford, John Munger, John Muniz, Michael Muniz, Fernando Munoz, Claudia Munoz, Cristina Munoz, Steve Munoz, Jonathan Munoz Saez, Stephanie Murad, Karzan Murdaugh, Cedric Murdock, Tyler Murdock, Nathan Muresan, Andrea Murfin, Baleigh Muriel, Kevin Murillo, Manuel Murphey, Christopher Murphy, Carlos Murphy, Jazmin Murphy, Laura Murphy, Michael Murphy, Nalia Murphy, Thomas Murphy, Adam Murphy, Zachary Murray, Ruth Murray, Kathyria Murray, Kathryn Murray, Michael Murray, Ryan Murray, Michael Murry, Nathan Musick, Daniel Mustafa, Destiny Mutchler, Matthew Mutua, MaKenna Muzingo, Jeffrey Mwambu, Geoffrey Collins Myers, Rose Myers, Megan Myers, Daniel Myers, Amanda Myers, Courtney Myers, Joshua Myers, Jennifer Myrick, Terry Myrick, Austin Na Bangchang, Pornvisanu Nagy, Brandon Najera, Yesenia Nana, Cheick Nance, Nicholas Nankeu, Hyung Jo Nanninga, Karena Napier, Bracken Nappi, Austin Naranjo, Ricardo Nascimbeni, Kristi Naseer, Sehar Nash, Aaron Nash, Michael Nasrat, Assadullah Nates-Njaa, Scott Nava, Angel Navarra, Anthony Navarro, Tyler Nava-Salazar, Isabel Navis, Jonathan Ndegwa, Jonathan Neal, Kelley Neal, Sydnee Neal, Bridney Neely, Cande Negron, Efrain Nehls, Jacob Neill, Steven Nelson, Logan Nelson, Adam Nelson, Claire Nelson, Reese Nelson, Matthew Nelson, Marvin Nelson, Garrett Nelson, Charles Nelwan, Villeneuve Nemec, Amber Nesby, DeVourie Nesloney, Charles Neumann, Trae Neuzil, Alexandria Nevenner, Matthew Newberry, Andrea Newcomer, Bryan Newman, Christopher Newman, Rebecca Newsome, Jordan Newson, Willie Newton, Mason Newton, Taylor Newton, Trevor Newton, John Nforcho Kari, Meristacia Ng III, Silvio Ngo Nguidjoe Bodoum, Elise Nguyen, Nhanh Nguyen, Anh Tuan Nguyen, Gina Nguyen, Anh Dac Nguyen, Xuan Nguyen, Justin Nguyen, Tyler Nicholls, Michael Nichols, Kristina Nichols, Matthew Nicholson, Kadian Nicklaw, Erin Nickless, Michael Nicolai, James Nicolas, Cody Nicolau, Cristalino Nidiffer, Brandon Nido, Calen Niebling, Donald Nielsen, Cody Nielsen, Lacy Niemczyk, Austin Niemi, Sydney Nieto, Viviana Nieves, George Nieves Rivera, Diana Nigaglioni, Hector Nightwine, Andrew Niraula, Binusha Nissen, Adam Nix, Steven Nixon, Joshua Nixon, Justin Njuguna, David N'kombo, Daniel Nkouambong Mbianda, Flagel Noble, Joktan Nobles, Joshua Nodine, Christopher Noel, Nathan Noel, Kenton Noel-Whitmore, Marie Noga, Ondrej Nolan, Emily NOLAN, Darwin Nolte, Anna Nord, Caleb Nordhues, Mari Nordstrom, Matthew Norman, Kimberly norman, Bailey Norman, Joshua Norman, Kristen Norman, Anastasia Norman, Jonathan Norman Jr, Carl Norris, David Norris, Jeremy Norris, William Norris, Dakota Norrod, Chanae North, Gregory Northern, Suzanne Northern, Damion Northnagle, Andrew Norton, Amber Norton, Kelsey Notaroberta, Michael Nothstein, Jared Nott, Rebecca Novak, William Nowak, Peter Nowak, Marek Nowlin, Trevor Nsuh, Divine Nunez, Dale Nunez, Gabriel Nunez, Jamie Nunez, Neyshmarie Nunez, Season Nunez, Gerardo Nunley, Tyler Nunnelee, David Nurse, Autumn Nurse, Jordan Nutter, Justin Nwankwo, Chisom Nyakundi, Franklin Nyarko, Victor Nyawir, Michael Oakley, Terry Oakley, Angelique Obeahon, Tabitha Oberhauser, Eric Oberholtzer, Heather Obrien, Ejodamen O'Brien, John O'Brien, Connor O'Brien, Matthew O'Brien, John Obryan, Michael Ocampo, Cresencio Ochoa, Baron Ochoa, Mario O'Connell, Sean O'Connell, Anthony OConnor, Timothy O'Connor, Kelsey O'Connor, John O'Connor, Grant O'Connor, Daniel Odagwe, Ifeanyichukwu Odell, Patrick Oden, Alejandra Odom, Patrick Odoms, Sonita O'Donnell, Tyler Odum, Keleah Ogden, Patrick Ogg, Ashley Oghide, Stephen O'Harrow, Michael O'Harrow, Elizabeth Ohene, Joseph Ohl, Anthony Oisten, Janet Okongwu, Berny Okpalaku-Godwin, Zite Oku, Alin Okubanjo, Deborah-Tobi Okunola, Alice Okunuga, Adenike Okura, Christopher Okwesa, Oforma Olaitan, Deandre Oldfield-Clark, Chandra Oldham, Trent Olds, Hannah Olejarz, Kathleen Olesky, Brian Olimpo, Timothy Olivas, Ruben Olivas, Monique Oliver, Sarah Oliver, Christian Oliver, Robert Oliver, Christopher Oliver, Brooke Oliver, Angela Oliver, Kristin Olmack, Scotty Olmedo, Mario Olmos, Gerardo Olmos, John Olmos, Alexandra Olmsted, William Oloyede, Carlton Olsen, Evan Olson, Curtis Olson, Rhea Olson, Jeremy Olson, Brandon Olson, Hunter Olson, Caleb Olson, David Olson, Rebekah Olson, Tysen Olsson, Todd Olupitan, Folasade Olvera, Pedro Oman, Tyler Omanahernandez, Edwin Omane, Youjia O'Meara, Erica Omenitsch, Jason OMENITSCH, James O'Neal, Sean O'Neal, Jack O'Neil, Isaac ONeill, John O'Neill, Michael Onemu, Tejiri Oniha, Amber Orange, Ronald Orecchio, Ashley Oren Pinhasi, Yaniv Orlando, Veronica Ornelas, Destiny Ornelas, Santos Ornot, Matthew Orozco, Rabekka Orozco, Michael Orozco Padilla, Cristian Orozco-Fraser, Johanna Orr, Alec Orr, Jonathan Orr, Della Orr, Romen Orseno, Jeff Ortega, Nicole Ortega, Maria Ortiz, Johana Ortiz, Jose Ortiz, Michael Ortiz, Mia Ortiz, Beverly Ortiz, Franklyn Ortiz, Edwin Ortiz Palau, Greish Ortizoneill, Enrique Ortiz-Ramos, Alanis Orton, Jerron Osborn, Jacob Osborn, Anne Osborne, Esmat Osborne, Krista Osborne, Shane Osburn, Tyler Osei, Francis Osei, Reuben Osgood, Kristopher Osman, Corbin Osmoe, Steven Osorio Rosales, Alexis Oster, Saige Oswalt, Dylan Otero, Verenice Otero Otero, Neisha Ottley, Darrell Ottley, Summer Otto, Lauren Ouattara, Richard Ouedraogo, Badra Alou Ouellette, Nicholas Overstreet, Jasmine Overton, Jason Owczarski, Jennifer Owen, Abagail Owens, Brynell Owens, Brian Owens, Katelin Owens, Julianne Owono Awono, Robert Owuor, Luis Owusu, Kenneth Owusu, Enoch Oxman, Donald Oyetoro, Tolulope Ozigi, Mustafa Paaluhi, David Pacheco, Christopher pacheco, Anabelle Pacheco, Dominic Pacheco, Vito Pacheco Cales, Matthew pacheco cales, Keyvin Padaon, Aldave Padavic, John Padilla, David Padilla, Julie Padron, Gaspar Pagala, Randy Pagan, Jayleen Page, KC Page, Kyle Page, Hillary Page, Michael Page, Shamelle Page, Nia Page, Amanda Page, Keeshaun Page, Trenton Pagen, Thomas Paguio, Maria Floraida Pahs, Jessica Paige, Ashley Painter, Scott Paiz-Perez, Juana Palacio, Martha Paleno, Caitlin Palfey, Catherine Palma, David Palmateer, Kyle Palmer, Jodi Palmer, Victor Palmer, Kenyada Palmer, Chassidy Palmer, Casey Palmer, James Palmer, Joshua Palomar, Eric Pangilinan, Leriz Pangle, Keith Paniagua, Daisy Pantalo, Kaitlyn Panteloglous, Joshua Paolangeli, Michael Papile, Shannon Papocchia, Erik Pappa, Whisper Paquette, Robert Parajuli, John Paras, Radcliffe Renzo Paravati, Riana Pare, Stephen Paredes, Brian Paredes, Shane Pareja, Jhonattan Parent, Nathan Parisi, Ian Park, Alyssa Park, Kwangmoon Park, Kwang Parker, Marcello Parker, Judith Parker, DeNair Parker, William Parker, Erin Parker, Hannah Parker, Riley Parker, Patricia Parks, William Parks, Adam Parks, Jessica Parra, Angela Parra, Isaiah Parrish, Ashley Parry, John Parson, Justin Parsons, Selma Parsons, Chad Parsons, Eva Parton, Caleb Pascual, Jim Pash, Danna Pasillas, Yaritza Pasion-Rose, Ricky Paskaitis, Steven Pasquier, Nancy pasquier, Erica Passler, Patrick Passmore, Jason Pastore, Samantha Patane, Chase Patel, Sonya Patel, Jignesh Patel, Jeet Paterson, Heather Pati, Malofou Pati, Simone Patlan, Mikayla Patten, Kenneth Patterson, Ryan Patterson, Chardell Patterson, William Patterson, Jada Patterson, Alex Patterson, Kasey Patterson, Priscilla Patterson, Jason Patterson, Crystal Paudel, Suresh Paul, Michael Paul, Ragasten Paulino Cespedes, Miguel Paupard, John Pavel, Andrew Pavlides, Jennifer Payacag, Romeo Payes, Calvin Payne, DesRay Payne,
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https://www.ancestry.com/historical-insights/social-religion/education/shaw-university
en
Shaw University
https://mediasvc.ancestry.com/v2/image/namespaces/9241/media/07091541-63b8-49b4-896a-58a779619fb9?Client=Browser:ContextUI&ImageQuality=UltraHighQuality
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Founded in 1865, Shaw University is the first college for African Americans in the South. Open to all students regardless of race, creed, or sex, Shaw has graduated 400 African American doctors and 57 lawyers.
en
https://www.ancestry.com/historical-insights/social-religion/education/shaw-university
Baptist minister and former Union soldier Henry Martin Tupper of Massachusetts came to Raleigh, North Carolina, in 1865 to found the first college for African Americans in the South following the American Civil War. Supported by the American Baptist Home Mission Society, Tupper and his wife taught Raleigh's freedmen in a two-story church containing a classroom on the top floor. Named the Raleigh Institute, the small school grew quickly; it was incorporated as Shaw University in 1875. The charter specified that enrollment was open to all students regardless of race, creed, or sex. Shaw was the first college in the U.S. to build a dormitory for female students; many women trained as teachers. Shaw established a medical school and law school by 1888, with 400 African American doctors and 57 lawyers earning degrees by 1916. Known as the mother of African American colleges in North Carolina, Shaw graduated the founders of three other historically black colleges in the state.
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https://shawuatl.org/about/history-mission
en
History & Mission
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Greater Atlanta Alumni of Shaw University
https://shawuatl.org/about/history-mission
Shaw University, located in Raleigh, North Carolina is the first historically Black institution of higher education in the South and among the oldest in the nation. The University was founded in 1865 by Henry Martin Tupper, a native of Monson, Massachusetts, a soldier in the Union Army during the Civil War, and a graduate of Amherst College and Newton Theological Seminary. Shaw was originally founded as Raleigh Institute, a school designed to teach freedman theology and biblical interpretation. The school’s name changed to Shaw Collegiate Institute in 1870 and five years later it adopted its present name, Shaw University. The college offered its first post-secondary instruction in 1874, and the first baccalaureate degree was awarded in 1878. Shaw has been the site of many notable achievements in African American history. It is credited as having the first four-year medical school for African Americans in the nation, Leonard Medical School, which operated from 1882 to 1914, as well as the first university to build a female dormitory on a coeducational campus, built in 1873. In addition, the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was established after a conference which was held on Shaw’s campus in 1960. Shaw University has produced outstanding professionals who have contributed to the advancement of society. Shaw graduates include several college presidents, a number of academic vice presidents, judges, lawyers, recording artists, school principals, pastors, teachers of the year, a president of the United Nations General Assembly, and other notable persons, such as: Ella Baker (1927), civil rights activist & co-founder of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) Dr. C.T. Vivian (1972), became the director of Seminary Without Walls at Shaw University Divinity School in Raleigh, North Carolina, Dean of Divinity at Shaw University Seminary, and recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom Award Willie E. Gary (1971), multi-millionaire attorney, motivational speaker, businessman James “Bonecrusher” Smith (1975), 1st heavyweight boxing champion to earn a college degree Shirley Caesar (1984), Grammy Award-Winning Gospel singer Shawn “CoCo” McMillan (1995), 2010 Stellar Award Winner Gladys Knight (1966), Singer, Gladys Knight & the Pips, member of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, received Honorary Doctorate Van Green (1973), NFL Player Lee Johnson (1975), President & CEO of Mechanics & Farmers Bank Ronald "Flip" Murray (2002), Professional basketball player Ida Van Smith (1939), One of the first African American female pilots and flight instructors in the United States Angie Brooks (1950), The only African female President of the United Nations General Assembly. She was also the second woman from any nation to head the United Nations Adam Clayton Powell, Jr., D.D. (1934), Congressman from New York, 1945–71 James E. Cheek (1955), Former President of Shaw University, President Emeritus of Howard University, 1983 recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom Luther Jordan (1997), Former member of the North Carolina Senate from 1993 to 2002 Sheila P Moses (1983), Best selling author, nominated for the National Book Award & NAACP Image Award William L Pollard (1967), President of the Medgar Evers College (2009–2013) James E. Shepard (1894), Founder and President of North Carolina Central University Edawn Coughman (2010), Offensive Lineman and OT for the Buffalo Bills
5685
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13
https://guides.library.duke.edu/DurhamHistoryRL/BlackLife
en
Durham and Local History at the Rubenstein Library
https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/dul/favicon/favicon.ico
https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/dul/favicon/favicon.ico
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[ "" ]
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[ "Kate Collins" ]
null
This guide will help you research Durham history using primary source materials held at the Rubenstein Library
en
https://library.duke.edu/sites/default/files/dul/favicon/favicon.ico
https://guides.library.duke.edu/DurhamHistoryRL/BlackLife
Behind the Veil: Documenting African-American Life in the Jim Crow South Records, 1940-1997 (includes digitized content) For the Behind the Veil Oral History Project teams of researchers conducted oral history interviews with more than one thousand elderly black southerners who remembered the period of legal segregation, including many from Durham, NC and surrounding areas in North Carolina. Many interviews have been digitized and are availble online. 310 of the digitized interviews are with North Carolinians, including 44 with Durham residents. Rencher Nicholas Harris Papers, 1926-1965 (includes digitized content) Rencher Nicholas Harris (1900-1965) was an African American businessman and civic leader of Durham, N.C. Harris was the first African American city councilman in Durham, N.C., and the first black man to sit on the Durham County Board of Education. The collection consists mainly of materials relating to Harris' work in political and educational affairs in Durham in the 1950s and early 1960s as a member of the Durham City Council and the Durham School Board; his career in banking, insurance, and real estate as an official of the Bankers' Fire Insurance Company; and his civic activities. The Asa and Elna Spaulding Papers, 1909-1997 (includes digitized content) Asa T. Spaulding was an insurance executive in Durham, N.C. and an activist in civil rights, education, employment, and other work related to minorities' rights. He held various positions in the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company for almost thirty-five years. Elna Bridgeforth Spaulding was an activist in civil rights for minorities and women and involved in local politics in Durham, N.C, serving as a Durham County Commissioner for five terms, from 1974 through 1984. The Spauldings were active in a broad range of political bodies, businesses, civic groups, and activist organizations Charles N. Hunter Papers, 1850s-1932 (includes digitized content) Black educator, journalist, and reformer from Raleigh, North Carolina. The collection consist of Hunter's personal and professional correspondence, scrapbooks of clippings, articles, reports, and memorabilia. Specific topics touched on throughout his papers include race relations, voting rights, creating an educational system for African Americans, the temperance movement, reconstruction, African American business and agriculture, the North Carolina Industrial Association, and the North Carolina Negro State Fair. Helen G. Edmonds Papers, 1951-1994 Helen G. Edmonds (1911-1995) was a noted educator, historian and administrator. She was active in numerous civic and social organizations and was a stalwart in the Republican Party. The correspondence, speeches and programs in the collection provide insight into her work as a teacher and scholar. The bulk of the collection, however, documents her work with the National Republican Party and appointments in the Department of State, in the Department of Defense, on the National Advisory Council of the Peace Corps, and as a U.S. delegate to the United Nations. Lincoln Hospital (Durham, N.C.) Records, 1901-1998 Lincoln Hospital was a Durham hospital established in 1901 by Dr. Aaron Moore, Dr. Stanford Warren and John Merrick to serve African Americans in the area. The Lincoln Hospital Records primarily comprise the institution's administrative and medical files. The collection as a whole documents the bi-racial cooperation that was involved in establishing, running, and maintaining the institution, and outlines the collaboration between Lincoln Hospital, Watts Hospital, and the Duke University School of Medicine in providing patient care as well as education for African American medical professionals. William Gaston Pearson Scrapbook, 1913-1976 William Gaston Pearson was a Durham, African American businessman, civic leader, educator and philanthropist. The collection includes a scrapbook of clippings and printed materials that reflect the business accomplishments and life of Pearson, who founded the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co., the Mechanics and Farmers Bank, the Durham Drug Co. and other businesses in Durham, primarily in banking, credit and insurance. Women-In-Action for the Prevention of Violence and Its Causes, Inc. Durham Chapter Records (includes digitized content) Women-in-Action for the Prevention of Violence and its Causes is a non-profit, inter-racial organization founded in Durham, N.C. in September 1968. Elna Spaulding was founder and first president. The collection documents the organization's involvement in the Durham community on a variety of issues, including easing racial tensions; smoothing the way for court ordered school integration in 1970; providing for the recreational and cultural needs of disadvantaged youth; and establishing a clearinghouse to offer information and referral services to Durham citizens for a variety of social problems. Fannie B. Rosser Papers, 1860s-1973. The collection features correspondence, legal and financial papers and photographs that document the personal relationships and professional activities of Fannie B. Rosser, a successful African American businesswoman. The correspondence series pertains to Rosser's business ventures in management of rental property in Lynchburg, Va., and Durham, N.C.; personal loans made to family and friends during the Depression; and investments in government stocks and bonds. Clydie Fullwood Scarborough Papers, 1918-1984 Dedicated to providing effective and healthy day-care for African American children in Durham, especially those from poor families, Clydie Fullwood Scarborough (d. 1989) managed the Scarborough Nursery School for more than 50 years. The Scarborough Nursery School is the oldest, licensed, black-owned day care center in North Carolina. The collection contains correspondence, financial reports, legal and administrative papers, clippings, writings, programs, flyers and photographs pertaining to the operation of the school. C.C. Spaulding Papers, 1889-1990 C.C. Spaulding was the president of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, 1923-1952. The collection contains photographs, miscellaneous business papers, programs, speeches, clippings related to C. C. Spaulding, black civil rights, and to African American life more generally, in addition to administrative materials and various publications created by and related to North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company. Earl E. Thorpe Papers, 1942-1990 Earl Thorpe, a resident of Durham, was a historian, professor, clergyman, and activist. Primarily, materials in the collection address Thorpe's work at North Carolina Central University (formerly North Carolina College), and his tenure as visiting professor at Harvard and Duke universities. Topics include student activism, teaching, racial and departmental politics on campus, and the development of viable African American Studies programs. Some materials also touch on North Carolina and Durham politics and race relations. Charles DeWitt Watts Papers, 1917-2004 Charles DeWitt Watts was a pioneering African American surgeon who was chief of surgery at Lincoln Hospital, clinical professor of surgery at Duke University, founder of Licoln Community Health Center, director of student health at North Carolina Central University, and vice president and medical director for North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, all in Durham, N.C. North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company archives, 1850-2008 The North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company was founded in Durham, N.C. in 1898 and is the oldest currently active African American-owned insurance company in the United States.This collection documents the founding and development of N.C. Mutual in Durham, N.C., and contributes to the historic record on African American businesses and entrepreneurship in the South and in the United States. Dating from 1850 to 2008, with the majority of the items dating from 1898 to 2008, the material covers nearly every aspect of N.C. Mutual's operations, management, and milestones. A small selection of images from the NC Mutual Life Archives is available online. Youth Document Durham and Durham Works Project Records, 1995-2008 Youth Document Durham and Durham Works were programs sponsored by Duke University and the Center for Documentary Studies that brought together young people ages 12–16 from diverse Durham communities to document their lives, local history and contemporary social issues through photography, oral history and narrative writing. Pauli Murray Center for History and Social Justice Center records The Pauli Murray Center is a non-profit organization located in Pauli Murray's childhood home in Durham, NC. The Pauli Murray Center records collection include both community projects and oral history projects from undergraduate courses offered by Duke University through the Center for Documentary Studies and the Franklin Humanities Institute. Contents also include various projects documenting Parrish Street/Black Wall Street in Durham, mapping and documenting civil rights/human rights in Durham, the Still Walking for Justice March, Conferences, Fellowship Proposals, LGBT Activism, and a Brown v. Board of Education anniversary exhibit.
5685
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1
11
https://www.facebook.com/groups/386326459461258/posts/history-of-whitted-schoolthe-largest-black-schools-in-durham-prior-to-the-buildi/398270318266872/
en
Facebook
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[ "" ]
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de
https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/yT/r/aGT3gskzWBf.ico
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5685
dbpedia
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44
https://wakeforestmuseum.org/2021/05/27/intern-reflection-the-rich-legacy-of-black-education-across-generations/
en
Intern Reflections: “The rich legacy of Black education across generations.”
https://i0.wp.com/wakefo…1012%2C838&ssl=1
https://i0.wp.com/wakefo…1012%2C838&ssl=1
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[ "WF Museum" ]
2021-05-27T00:00:00
As an intern with the Wake Forest Historical Museum, I've been pouring through census data, finding traces of children as young as six, adult musicians, religious leaders, and school teachers who contributed to a project of Black learning prior to and in the aftermath of emancipation in Wake Forest.
en
https://i0.wp.com/wakefo…it=32%2C32&ssl=1
Wake Forest Historical Museum
https://wakeforestmuseum.org/2021/05/27/intern-reflection-the-rich-legacy-of-black-education-across-generations/
This post was written by Kate Pearson, a Wake Forest University student. As an intern at the museum, Pearson began compiling a biographical database that documents African American history in Wake Forest from the mid-18th to the early 20th century. In this blog post, Pearson looks at the Mitchell family’s legacy in Wake Forest. Alexander and Nathaniel Mitchell were residents of the historic Northeast Community. Learn more about the Northeast Community by exploring the Town’s new StoryMap project. From the bricklayers of the 19th century to the trustees of the 21st, Black people have always been integrated into the academy of the south. Wake Forest University has been reckoning with this through the Slavery Race and Memory Project. This is vital work, but more often than not, a focus on Black communities and the college becomes a study of trauma, pain, and physical labor. We fail to see how Black scholarship and pedagogy predates the integration of Wake Forest University. It is vital to understand slavery’s role within the project of the college—from the endowment and financial gains, systems of labor, and racial dynamics. Slavery and its legacies are integral to the story of Wake Forest; however, so is Black success. As an intern with the Wake Forest Historical Museum, I’ve been pouring through census data, finding traces of children as young as six, adult musicians, religious leaders, and school teachers who contributed to a project of Black learning prior to and in the aftermath of emancipation in Wake Forest. These sources reveal a larger story of Black resilience and commitment to their own education, rather than as laborers for white learning. Their stories are just as integral to an understanding of Wake Forest and its impact as the staff members and laborers who toiled on the old and new campuses; their lives show the academic project of Wake Forest as one of success, survival, resilience, and resistance. The individuals I have studied so far lived during a decisive turning point of pre- and post- chattel enslavement, a period when education was integral to Black success. The Freedmen’s Bureau, a federal agency charged with supporting newly-freed Black folk as they established their own communities, kept detailed records chronicling the funding and growth of Black schools in North Carolina between 1865 and 1870. One of those schools was started by members of Olive Branch Baptist Church. After the Civil War, the Black members of Wake Forest Baptist Church, a congregation founded by Wake Forest College students in 1834, broke away from Wake Forest Baptist and founded Olive Branch. In 1866, Olive Branch began offering a Sunday school that by the following year had blossomed into a day school for local Black children. One of the trustees of the school, Ralph Pearce, was also a day laborer at Wake Forest College. Pearce’s story reminds us that we should not limit the focus of our studies to the physical labor or monetary value Black people contributed to the College. If we did, we’d miss the contributions he and others made as community leaders in Wake Forest. Freedmen’s schools created a safe harbor for Black families. In 1866, the North Carolina General Assembly passed a series of laws that restricted the rights of Black people and criminalized individuals—including children—who could not easily prove their employment. These so-called “Black Codes” even allowed white North Carolinians to force formerly enslaved people back into involuntary servitude. This created an imperative to find children a safe place to go during the day. Alexander Mitchell who was born around 1852, may have attended a freedmen’s school as a child. At some point after the Civil War, he moved to Wake Forest from the Smithfield area, and by 1870 Mitchell was a school teacher living in Wake Forest’s Northeast community. Mitchell likely taught at the Olive Branch school, because in the 1880s he served as a Deacon at Olive Branch Church. Alexander Mitchell’s work left a legacy to be built upon by future generations of Black educators in Wake Forest. In 1890, Mitchell’s son, Nathaniel, is listed as a wage earner and literate member of the Wake Forest community in a time where 66% of Black men were illiterate. Census annotations like “Can read and write: yes” seem inconsequential, but truly speak to a legacy of triumph in a world fraught with terror. In 1905, Nathaniel helped co-found Spring Street Presbyterian Church. That same year, he worked with Allen Young to secure funding for and establish the Presbyterian Mission School for Colored Boys and Girls. The school opened in November 1905 with 50 pupils. The boarding school provided educational opportunities for Black people beyond Wake Forest. The school’s private busses allowed children living in rural areas to attend. The Mitchell family’s story reveals the rich legacy of Black education across generations. Ralph Pearce, Alexander Mitchell, and Nathanial are just a few examples of countless Black folk who saw schools as sites of safety immediately after the Civil War and in the Jim Crow South. They successfully created schools that offered Black children a promising future. As WFU’s Slavery Race and Memory Project continues to understand the anti-Black violence fostered in the wake of academic expansion, it should also study the moments and places where Black people thrived, triumphed, and resisted the violence and oppression of white supremacy. I hope that my research can contribute to and supplement this project.
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https://studentudurham.org/celebrating-the-w-g-pearson-center-legacy/
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Celebrating The W.G. Pearson Center Legacy
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2018-10-30T23:19:07-06:00
The Durham community and Student U gathered on October 20, 2018 to celebrate the Re-Opening of The W.G. Pearson Center, honor its history, and imagine a future where all students in Durham can succeed. In 2017, in partnership with the Durham Public Schools, Durham County, and Self-Help Credit Union, Student U has built a home
en
https://studentudurham.o…avicon-32x32.jpg
Student U Durham - Empowering Students, Duilding Leaders, Changing Communities
https://studentudurham.org/celebrating-the-w-g-pearson-center-legacy/
The Durham community and Student U gathered on October 20, 2018 to celebrate the Re-Opening of The W.G. Pearson Center, honor its history, and imagine a future where all students in Durham can succeed. In 2017, in partnership with the Durham Public Schools, Durham County, and Self-Help Credit Union, Student U has built a home at The W.G. Pearson Center. By becoming a permanent resident of and thoroughly renovating The W.G. Pearson Center, the building that has housed our programming and staff for three years, Student U will enhance its current programming and continue to improve educational outcomes for Durham students. In order to empower the leaders of tomorrow and effectively march forward towards a Durham in which all students can succeed, we must first look backwards to understand the values and vision of the individuals whose legacy we are inheriting by being the stewards of this beautiful building. The W.G. Pearson Center is named after William Gaston Pearson who was born as a slave on a Durham County plantation. At the age of 21, after being self-taught throughout childhood, he continued his education at Shaw University. Upon graduating, Pearson dedicated his life to ensuring others could receive a quality education. In 1886, Pearson created The Royal Knights, a progressive reform group that focused on helping southern African-Americans advance socially and economically. As a result of his decades of teaching and leading schools, William Gaston Pearson became known as “Durham’s Black Superintendent.” Pearson empowered young black students with a thirst and demand for the rigorous and enriching education they deserved until the end of his career. Pearson spent his lifetime working to increase opportunities for those around him, and ever since, the building named for him has continued to house his value of education, fierce belief in all students, and hope of a better Durham. John Howard was the principal of the Pearson School in 1986 when it was named a national School of Excellence by Secretary of Education William J. Bennett. When interviewed by the Durham Morning Herald, Howard said the secret to their success was weekly collaboration,“to agree on what [teachers] will teach, when and how.” He continued, “They decide what works and what doesn’t. Teachers are accountable to each other. Their classrooms are not islands.”This commitment to providing an excellent education for young people in a collaborative environment where best practices are shared and commitments are held is what we hope to build in our re-imagined version of The W.G. Pearson Center. In 2009, Casey Barr-Rios was part of the first graduating class of the W.G Pearson Middle School and in 2017, she became one of the first Student U college graduates. Ms. Barr-Rios is now a full-time employee of Student U, committed to honoring the building’s past and crafting its future. As Ms. Barr-Rios shares, “William Gaston Pearson was a man that devoted his life to the empowerment of young people through education. As a student at W.G. Pearson and Student U, I was constantly reminded of how education was the way to changing my life. There was not a moment when I walked through these hallways that I was not reminded to chase my dreams without fear of failure. Not only was I taught to better myself through education, but I was also taught to lift those around me and transform my community. No matter how successful in life we may be, we must never forget where we came from and give back, change, and transform our communities. Student U and W.G. Pearson were two of the most influential parts of my life during my middle school years. Now, two spaces become one.” These are just a few examples of the many legacies that The Center’s history holds when it comes to academic success and advocacy for a better Durham. As we continue this work in creating a better future for our community’s children, we hope that we will do these legacies justice, building on the strong foundation laid before us. We understand that alone, Student U cannot adequately honor these legacies to fulfill their vision for Durham. Therefore, Student U has sought partners to join together at The Center to combat systemic racism and structural inequalities in service of a Durham where all children can succeed. Individually, tenants of The Center will continue their work to achieve their desired goals. Collectively, tenants will form a consortium of like-minded organizations, sharing best practices and advocating for policies and investments to enhance systems that enable all people to thrive. When reflecting on the vision for The Center, Student U Executive Director Alexandra Zagbayou states, “I couldn’t be more humbled and energized by the vision our community is building for The W.G. Pearson Center and grateful for the partners who will be joining forces with us to make it come to fruition. My highest aspiration is that The Center becomes a model for working with students, families and communities intergenerationally to ensure children in our communities have pathways to long-term success.” Over the past year, Student U has engaged with members of the Hayti community, Durham leaders, and long-time partners to dream fearlessly about what can happen at The Center. The results form the vision for the building’s future. The Center will remain a youth-centered space that houses activities and programs that enrich the lives and outcomes of young people while being accessible to the surrounding community of neighbors and organizations. When considering what can be accomplished at The Center, Bishop Clarence Laney, Jr., pastor of the neighboring Monument of Faith Church since 1996, states, “when I heard that Student U purchased the building, I was excited because of the life that would come back to the building. Going forward, I think it has the capabilities to once again serve the community. There are many spaces needed for meetings, social events, dramatizations, and all of those can be possible in the community once again as a result of The W.G. Pearson Center being open.” County Manager Wendell Davis agrees. He believes that this equity hub can be, “one more contributing factor to bringing the old Fayetteville corridor back to life because the truth of the matter is we have seen a lot of great growth and development occur within our downtown and throughout Durham, and it just seems like a natural progression for us to begin to think about how we move along that progression to Fayetteville Street, connecting North Carolina Central Campus and other things along that corridor with our great downtown.” Ms. Barr-Rios knows what is possible: “At The Center, students will be empowered to own their education in order to pursue their dreams and become change makers in this community. We will become tomorrow’s heroes.”
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https://www.ncpedia.org/category/subjects/universities-and-/see-all
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Universities and colleges
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https://history.ua.edu/people/jenny-shaw/
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Jenny Shaw – Department of History
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https://history.ua.edu/people/jenny-shaw/
Jenny Shaw Associate Professor [email protected] (205) 348-1860 235 ten Hoor Hall Education PhD, New York University, 2009 Research Areas History of Race Latin American History United States History About Research Interests History of the Atlantic World History of the Early Modern English Caribbean Race and Slavery in the Americas Approaches to the Archive Current Projects I am currently researching my third book project provisionally entitled The Duchess and the Dandy: Gender, Race, and Spectacle in Britain’s Eighteenth-Century Empire. This book will center Catherine Douglas, Duchess of Queensberry, and Julius Soubise, a formerly enslaved boy who lived in her household, and covers the ways that masculinity and femininity, Blackness and whiteness, shaped Britain and its Caribbean and Indian colonies. Courses Taught History of American Civilization to 1865 (HY 103) From Columbus to Castro: Caribbean History Since 1492 (HY 368) A History of the Atlantic World, 1400-1800 (HY 370) Early Modern Black Britain (HY 405) Comparative Slavery and Emancipation (HY 411) Undergraduate Research Seminar: Slavery at The University of Alabama (HY 497) Graduate Proseminar: Comparative Slavery and Emancipation (HY 606) Graduate Proseminar: Atlantic History (HY 606) Graduate Writing Seminar (HY 651) Graduate Seminar: Theoretical and Methodological Approaches to History (HY 665) Selected Publications Books The Women of Rendezvous: A Transatlantic Story of Family and Slavery (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, forthcoming December, 2024). Everyday Life in the Early English Caribbean: Irish, Africans, and the Construction of Difference (Athens, GA: University of Georgia Press, Early American Places Series, 2013). Articles & Essays “In the Name of the Mother: The Story of Susannah Mingo, A Woman of Color in the Early English Atlantic,” William and Mary Quarterly, vol. 77 (2020): 177-210. Winner of the 2020 Lester J. Cappon Prize awarded annually by the Omohundro Institute for the best article published in the WMQ. Honorable Mention for the 2022 Douglas Adair Memorial Prize awarded biennially to the best article published in theWMQ in the last six years. “Birth and Initiation on the Peers Plantation: The Problem of Creolization in Seventeenth-Century Barbados” Slavery and Abolition, vol. 39 (2018): 290-314. with Kristen Block, “Subjects without an Empire: The Irish in the Early Modern Caribbean,” Past and Present, no. 210 (Feb 2011): 33-60. “Plantation Life in the British West Indies, 1650-1850” (Oxford Research Encyclopedia of American History, Sue Juster, ed., September, 2020). “Enumeration and Control in the Early Modern Caribbean,” in The World of Colonial America: An Atlantic Handbook, ed. Ignacio Gallup-Diaz (London: Routledge, 2017): 105-22. “From Perfidious Papists to Prosperous Planters: Making Irish Elites in the Early Modern English Caribbean,” in Ireland, Slavery, and the Caribbean: Interdisciplinary Perspectives, Finola O’Kane Crimmins and Ciarán O’Neill eds. (Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2023). In progress: “The Wife, the ‘Whore,’ and the ‘Wench’: Colonial Women and the Development of Racial Hierarchy in 17th Century Barbados,” in Beyond 1619: The Atlantic Origins of American Slavery, Paul J. Polgar, Marc H. Lerner, and Jesse Cromwell eds. (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2023). In progress: “Race: How the English Became White” inNew Cambridge History of Britain, 1500-1750, Susan Dwyer Amussen and Paul Monod, eds. (scheduled publication 2025).
5685
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https://www.theassemblync.com/education/higher-education/shaw-university-zoning-development/
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Development Might Be Shaw’s Future. Can It Hold on to Its Past?
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2023-06-14T13:02:23+00:00
Inside the debate over Shaw University's attempt to rezone its downtown Raleigh campus — the cash-poor school’s biggest asset.
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The Assembly NC
https://www.theassemblync.com/education/higher-education/shaw-university-zoning-development/
Like many alumni and students at Shaw University, Mecca Dixon has mixed emotions about the university’s request to rezone much of its 26-acre campus to allow buildings up to 30 stories and make way for dramatic redevelopment. Dixon, who is pursuing a Master of Divinity degree, worries it would compromise the university’s historic downtown campus and accelerate gentrification in the neighborhoods around the South’s oldest historically Black university. But like many students and alumni, she understands Shaw is facing financial hardship and hasn’t received the same philanthropic and government investments as many predominantly white institutions. A decline in student enrollment has furthered the financial hardship; the campus reported that it had 1,067 students in 2021, less than half its historic enrollment. Rezoning would give the school a path for new revenue, which would come from leasing land to developers to build towering new offices and apartments. School leaders say it could help fulfill campus needs—like new residence halls, a student center, athletic facilities, a life sciences building, and stadium—that it couldn’t otherwise afford. The 157-year-old campus has a prime location at Raleigh’s rapidly redeveloping southern edge, and other than the state and city governments, the university is the largest landholder downtown. There is already $5.7 billion in the pipeline for development downtown, including two hotels, nearly 900 apartments, and office and retail developments to the immediate north and west of campus. The city is accepting inquiries to develop another two city blocks near the school. The land Shaw is seeking to rezone was valued between $160 and $270 million as of 2019—12 times the amount in Shaw’s $13 million endowment and four times its annual $41 million budget. The university said it does not have an estimate of expected revenue from leasing the land to developers. In May 2022, the university first alerted nearby property owners of the intent to rezone. Ahead of a city council meeting where the plan would be discussed, the university released webinars on the proposal for “The ShawU District,” the newest of downtown’s destination districts, in February and March. Campus leadership and professional partners touted it as a way to move the university forward economically and academically. “The idea is Shaw maintains its uniqueness and builds on that, and becomes a district that is a part of downtown but celebrates unique Black culture, entrepreneurship, all of the things that an area that celebrates us would do in Raleigh, and it does not currently exist,” said Paulette Dillard, the university’s president, in the webinar. But others have wondered what the cost is—particularly for the two campus buildings on the National Register of Historic Places and others that add to a historic district. Among them: Estey Hall, constructed in the early 1870s with bricks that Shaw students—many of whom were recently emancipated—dug from clay soil themselves. The hall was the first higher-education building for Black women in the country and remains the oldest standing building on campus. Estey would not be redeveloped, but many of the buildings directly around it could be demolished and rebuilt. And written into the rezoning application is a provision that if a historic building is sufficiently damaged by natural or unintended causes, it can be razed. Historic preservationists and alumni note that there’s surely a possibility of a structure cracking or bricks falling if much of the campus is under construction. “Many people have wanted to purchase that land,” Dixon said. “There’s just a lot of questions of whether the intentions and wants are true and pure for what the university needs, what students need.” Another concern for some is trust that the university is making sound decisions and being transparent about where redevelopment will happen and how money will be spent. Kasonia Smith, a 2023 Shaw graduate, wishes the redevelopment, and its impact on current and future students, was better communicated to students. The university’s first community meeting on the plan, in May 2022, took place after students had already left for the summer. Otherwise, she said she understands the financial needs. “If we don’t take this initiative to get help to do this rezoning, then Shaw is going to become nonexistent by 2035,” Smith said. The Raleigh City Council will decide whether to rezone the land. The Planning Commission, which advises the council, recommended that the city approve Shaw’s proposal in a 7-1 vote in February. But when it went before the City Council on May 2, the council members punted until June 20, asking the university to return with provisions that provide certainty to the many stakeholders, including a written commitment to hold public meetings about what redevelopment could look like once rezoning is approved. ‘We Do So Much with So Little’ As a nonprofit university, any revenue the school makes from development is supposed to be used to serve the mission of the university. University leadership discusses the potential for additional housing not exclusive to students, or academic buildings as a way to build things the school couldn’t afford on its own. (A life sciences building is something Dillard often touts; she’s a three-time HBCU graduate who has a Ph.D. in cell biology from Clark Atlanta University as well as an MBA, and previously worked for Quest Diagnostics and GlaxoSmithKline.) Rezoning is a way for the land-rich university to bring in new revenue, but how much the university plans to earn from future tenants remains unclear. Nearby Saint Augustine’s University recently announced a deal to lease land for a $75 million housing development. Shaw’s landholdings are significantly greater. As a small HBCU, Shaw has not benefited from affluent alums and intergenerational wealth as many historically white universities have. “HBCUs from the very beginning were funded at much lower rates than most majority institutions, and part of that has to do with the value put on the education of African Americans by whites,” said Marybeth Gasman, a professor at Rutgers University who studies HBCUs. “Shaw has never been an institution that was fully funded in a way that would make it prosper in the way that it should.” HBCUs like Shaw also typically serve families who can’t afford high tuition, let alone donations. Over the past decade, five in six of Shaw’s students received Pell Grants for those with exceptional financial need—roughly 2.5 times the national average. Dillard sat down with The Assembly in a historic home across the street from the main campus. If the rezoning gets approved, the university would relocate the home. Its windows look out on Estey Hall, which sits empty as the building gets a new HVAC system, a new roof, and new floors. Dillard’s normal office is on Estey’s fourth floor. “Our single largest asset is the real estate, because we have a very small endowment,” Dillard said. The $13 million endowment is a small fraction of what universities with similar enrollment have; Raleigh’s all-women Meredith College, for example, had a $125 million endowment as of June 2022. Dillard, who became interim president in 2017 before her position was made permanent in 2018, said that across the country, liberal arts colleges are facing a demographic cliff. Shaw is under pressure to upgrade its facilities to compete with other universities for a shrinking pool of students. And Shaw is more dependent on student revenue than most. Over the past decade, two-thirds of Shaw’s revenue came from tuition, room, and board, according to data from the National Center for Education Statistics. The nationwide average across all universities is 40 percent. It’s a problem Shaw’s other leaders have highlighted as they pitch rezoning. “We have no desire for Shaw University to be anything but a university of higher learning, but we do want to modernize so we can attract students, so that we can retain students, so that we can attract the best faculty and staff,” trustee Jermaine Simmons said in the March webinar. “To be quite honest, Shaw University is such a blessing because we do so much with so little.” Preserving a Place in Time Tod Hamlin answered his phone on a Monday afternoon and was surprised to hear the caller mention the name of his grandmother Ernestine Pegues Hamlin. Ernestine was the daughter of Rev. Dr. Albert Pegues, who moved to Raleigh in 1886 to become chair of Shaw’s philosophy and languages program. The university was just 21 years old—six years younger than Pegues himself, who was born into slavery in McFarlan, North Carolina. Ernestine was born in 1890, attended high school at Shaw because there was no secondary school for Black children in Raleigh at the time, and later worked at the university. In 1919, Pegues was promoted to dean of the Theological School and purchased a stately Greek Revival home on the north side of campus. A century later, the school is considering relocating the home and its pastel yellow 1920s neighbor to make way for development. “Can I get my siblings on the line?” Hamlin asked after hearing about the proposal for the first time. Built around 1855, the house had been home to a number of politically connected, wealthy, white Raleighites, including Josephus Daniels, the former News & Observer editor and a leading instigator of the 1898 Wilmington Massacre. Ernestine inherited the home from her parents after her father’s death in 1929. The Assembly’s call was the first that Hamlin, his sister Peri, and his older brother Alan—Ernestine’s only known living relatives—heard that their grandparents’ home could be relocated. Their father had sold the property to Shaw in 1996, the year after Ernestine died at 104 years old. “Our legacy is tied up in the school just as much as it is in the home,” said Peri Hamlin. “I think about our great-grandfather who was born into slavery and he got a Ph.D. and he went back to school and he wrote a book about HBCUs across the country.” Daniels—and not Pegues—is the former resident of the home Shaw named in its reasoning to move the home from its current location. “We have a house built by a Confederate general, occupied by another Confederate officer, lived in primarily by Josephus Daniels—and we all know his history—and occupied by, for about 10 years, the dean of the divinity school of Shaw University,” Dillard said in the March webinar. Both Raleigh’s Historic Development Commission and local historian Carmen Cauthen, author of the book Historic Black Neighborhoods of Raleigh, feel the university is cherry-picking from history. “It’s ironic that that’s the argument, when the school was built on a plantation,” said Cauthen, who added that the former owner of Shaw’s property was an enslaver, a congressman, a white supremacist. “If you want to get rid of that house, you have to get rid of the campus. It’s an inconsistency.” Relocating historic homes is allowed and not without precedent in Raleigh. Some residents have suggested that the homes be placed near Estey Hall to serve as a welcome center, a proposition Dillard opposes. “I cannot and will not turn the campus into a museum or a historic site. Because first and foremost, it is a university, a dynamic place,” Dillard said. The university has not specified where the Hamlin family’s former home would be moved, a fact that makes some alumni and preservationists nervous. The university has said most historic buildings like Estey will be preserved even if zoning is approved. The Hamlins concurred that education afforded their great-grandfather’s success, and access to education should be Shaw’s top priority. Tod Hamlin said that while he wants to see the property kept intact, “I’m much more attached to this HBCU lasting for generations than the home staying where it was originally built.” ‘Will No Longer Host a Public Mosque’ What isn’t protected under local historic preservation requirements is the longest-standing masjid, or mosque, in Raleigh. In 1982, Saudi Arabia gave $1 million to Shaw University to establish an international and Islamic studies center and masjid. For over a decade, the Saudi royal family sent children to Shaw University for an American education. A masjid served the needs of their children and other Muslim students, as well as the “community at large.” Raleigh sold the school the land it now sits on. It’s now the oldest mosque in the city, but because it’s still not yet 50—the age the field generally considers structures deserving of preservation—it has not been considered for historic preservation status. The nearly 3-acre parcel that the masjid sits on is included in the university’s rezoning plan, and has an estimated value of up to $16 million. Many people who worship there worry about its fate if rezoning is approved, and came to the May 2 City Council meeting carrying “Muslims Matter,” “Mosque Matters,” and “Respect Religion” signs. The masjid has been closed to the public since the pandemic began in 2020. Its leadership has repeatedly requested it be reopened. Services and events have been held in the university’s chapel, which, like most other buildings, has long since reopened. Nigel Edwards, an attorney who works with the mosque’s board, has accused the school of “discrimination” for keeping it closed. In an April 2022 letter, the university told Edwards that it was OK for the chapel to have services, because those were university led and sponsored, and that the university only denied use to outside organizations. It wasn’t until March 2023 that Masjid King Khalid’s board learned via an email from Shaw that it “will no longer host a public mosque.” The university and the mosque’s lawyers are working out an agreement, but conditions like not allowing a Sunday school, or terminating the MOU if the rezoning decision is denied or delayed beyond August, are nonstarters for Edwards. Masjid King Khalid’s supporters assume the building itself isn’t likely to survive redevelopment. “We’ve taken them on their word that they want to lease out the land: knock the buildings down and lease out the land,” Edwards said, adding that some in the community want to see the masjid remain, while others are OK with being in a new building. Taking Advantage of a Boom Shaw’s rezoning wasn’t on the agenda for the June 6 City Council meeting, but Raleigh’s booming development was certainly on people’s minds. “My neighbors and my children are losing their homes because the taxes are increasing so much,” said Cynthia Vinston, who has owned her home in southeast Raleigh for 21 years. Vinston lives roughly a mile from Shaw’s campus, and while she hasn’t been following the school’s rezoning effort, she says she gets regular mailers and texts asking if she’s interested in selling the home Habitat for Humanity helped her to purchase. She says if she were to sell her home, it would be back to Habitat. Two years ago, a 1,050-square-foot home in her neighborhood sold to an LLC for $155,000. After a few updates, it sold for $335,000 10 months later. “We feel like we built our neighborhood and we feel like the city is forcing us out with the high taxes, with the gentrification,” Vinston said. “Do you have to make six figures in order to live in Raleigh?” Four years ago, The New York Times highlighted the historic neighborhood south and east of Shaw in a story about predominantly Black, Hispanic, and Asian downtown neighborhoods growing whiter and wealthier nationwide. The trend has accelerated since then. “Families that got pushed out of the area will never have any hopes of being there,” Dixon, the Shaw divinity student, said. “It’s really challenging for me that this has happened.” Prior to enrolling in divinity school, Dixon studied psychology and worked in housing. She’s currently researching the psychological impact of people who are displaced from their community because of gentrification. She’s intrigued by statements the university has made about how it could bring in more grocery stores or Black- and Latino-owned businesses, but worries that making the area “more attractive” could result in the displacement she’s seen elsewhere. “All money isn’t good money,” Dixon said. “How do we look at and protect the interest of Shaw University with it still being sustainable and viable?” Dillard acknowledged that gentrification is a real concern in Raleigh. “But I’m not perpetuating it,” she said. “I’m trying to find a way to revitalize what is here and have the ShawU District.” Trusting in the Future Some alumni who understand the financial impetus to rezone still struggle to feel comfortable with the people leading the charge. Shaw’s 19 elected members on its board of trustees include just two women, and a handful members have served for more than two decades, including the chair, the vice chair, and the former chair. About a decade ago, the university’s highest-paid employee was sentenced to jail for scamming the Environmental Protection Agency and employing his wife and children on the federal grant. Around that time, the university reported on five separate IRS forms required by tax-exempt organizations that an insurance company owned by the brother of then-Chair Willie E. Gary was paid at least $5.5 million for insurance, a precedent that makes some in the community bristle wondering who will be offered development opportunities. While the university’s leadership changed in the wake of these scandals, the board remained intact and accusations of nepotism and corruption have lingered. Some recall a recently-settled whistleblower suit alleging a vice president awarded a contract without the competitive bidding process a decade ago. A 2019 report the university commissioned from the Urban Land Institute recommended adding “generational diversity” to the board and moving away from vendors with “longstanding relationships” to the school. Nonprofit best practices usually advise rotating members off a board after two three-year terms. The most recent bylaws for Shaw’s board that The Assembly was able to obtain require a one-year absence after the third consecutive three-year term, but don’t include lifetime limits, meaning a trustee could serve decades. According to Dillard, the university’s bylaws allow trustees to extend their terms beyond a third term, without time off, by majority vote. She mentioned she was the third president in the past decade and said having institutional memory on the board can have its benefits. “If you have a great deal of leadership turnover in the presidency, and turnover among executives, and then you have that same kind of turnover in terms of your board, that may or may not be an ideal scenario either.” The four longest-serving trustees did not respond to a request for comment. Dillard wonders when the past can remain in the past. She was hired as a professor over a decade ago and has been in the presidency for nearly six years. She sees Shaw as having stable leadership, but knows there will never be an answer that satisfies the questions of what happened over a decade ago. Eugene Myrick, a 1994 Shaw graduate who co-founded a coalition of alums and community stakeholders called Save our Shaw, wants to see the university succeed, but is among those who question its current leadership. Myrick sees the school’s declining enrollment and closure of a dorm, the mosque, and some services as “dismemberment” and “constructive eviction.” “Shaw’s saying ‘You can’t get money off of tuition alone’—you can’t get money off of no tuition: there’s currently an empty dorm,” Myrick said at the April 4 City Council meeting. “Shaw has been operating in crisis mode,” he said. “It’s been kind of frustrating, there’s no other way to explain it, because we have bad management at the school.” Myrick said that he’s gotten a lot of pushback for his criticism, but also support from fellow alumni. “Enough is enough. We’re at the danger of not having a university,” Myrick said. The May City Council meeting was standing room only, with a vast majority of attendees there in opposition of the rezoning request. Michael Hall, a 1980 graduate, sat at the back of the room dressed in a seersucker suit and yellow tie. Despite the packed room, the council heard just four minutes of public testimony from each side. “Things just aren’t being transparent, and that makes us question the integrity of everything and that makes us question the intent,” Hall, who drove from Charlotte to attend, told The Assembly. Hall recalled the first time he went into Estey Hall, in the mid ’60s when he was around 5 years old. He remembered learning about students who formed an arm-in-arm ring around the building to keep bulldozers from tearing it down in the 1970s. He knew the history of recently emancipated people digging clay to make the bricks. “Nobody is against development. We just want to see it done right, and these are not the people we trust to do it, these are not the people,” Hall said of the university’s trustees. Hall also wants to see the university preserve public spaces like the mosque—something Raleigh City Council member Megan Patton highlighted as well. The council can’t regulate future tenants of a building, but it could condition that a certain amount of space be used for similar purposes, in this case something to serve the Muslim community. “I think everyone is on the same page that we want Shaw to be wildly successful, and we want this to be and feel good for the community members who are affected,” Patton said. The council members voted unanimously to reschedule the zoning hearing to June 20, asking the university to continue communicating with stakeholders. Their request was three-part: to see a written commitment for public meetings during the campus planning process, have an outside party monitor vibrations in historic buildings, and find a way to show how Shaw, or the community, will benefit if any property is sold. Last Saturday, Myrick stood in front of a gathering of 40 outside Shaw for a rally ahead of the meeting, including representatives from Save Our Shaw, Muslims for Social Justice, and Friends of Shaw U. Myrick said he does not feel like Shaw’s leadership has had the community conversations the council directed them to before next week’s meeting. “We want to modernize, but we don’t want to commercialize our university; we have not seen any plans,” Myrick said. Ren Larson is a staff reporter at The Assembly. She previously worked for The Texas Tribune and ProPublica’s investigative team, and as a data reporter with The Arizona Republic. She holds a master’s of public policy and an M.A. in international and area studies from the University of California, Berkeley.
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https://studentudurham.org/william-gaston-pearson/
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William Gaston Pearson
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William Gaston Pearson empowered young black students with a thirst and demand for the rigorous and enriching education they deserved until the end of his career. Pearson spent his lifetime working to increase opportunities for those around him, and the building named for him has continued to house his value of education, fierce belief in all students, and hope of a better Durham ever since.
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Student U Durham - Empowering Students, Duilding Leaders, Changing Communities
https://studentudurham.org/william-gaston-pearson/
Courtesy: HBCU Library Alliance Digital Collection History of William Gaston Pearson and The W.G. Pearson Center William Gaston Pearson was born on April 11th, 1858, as a slave on a Durham County Plantation. At the age of 21, after being self-taught throughout childhood, the owner of a factory where he was employed decided to sponsor his continued education at Shaw University. With this privilege of education and a passionate belief that it belonged to all, Pearson dedicated his life to serving others from this point forward. In 1886, he created The Royal Knights, a progressive reform group that focused on helping southern African-Americans advance socially and economically. That same year, Pearson became a teacher at the Whitted School and went on to spend years educating black boys and girls under its roof while advocating for improved schools in Durham. When Hillside Park High School, Durham’s first black high school, was built, the choice for the principal was obvious: William Gaston Pearson. Pearson went on to lead the school for 18 years, presiding over the first high school graduation of Black students in Durham. As a result of his leadership, William Gaston Pearson became known as “Durham’s Black Superintendent.” Pearson continued empowering young people of color with the enriching education they deserved until the end of his career. Pearson passed away in 1947 after a lifetime of working to increase opportunities for those around him. In 1928, a new elementary school for black children was built and named after William Gaston Pearson. For almost a century, The W.G. Pearson Center on East Umstead Street has served as a home for Durham students. The building has housed children of a variety of ages – from elementary to high school – and has consistently been a place for Durham youth to learn and thrive. The W.G. Pearson Center has been a pillar of the Hayti community and an important partner in the Fayetteville corridor. Its grand entrance, with trees lining its path inside, reminds us of the children of the past who came to school each day ready to learn, not allowing the Jim Crow era of segregation and racism to get in their way of obtaining an excellent education. The front arch with the original “W.G. Pearson Elementary School” still etched in stone, pays tribute to the man for it is named after. Walking into W.G. Pearson, almost 100 years after first being built, still feels sacred, as one feels the power of students of the past and the potential of students of the future. Pearson also made outstanding contributions as a member of the Durham community. He was one of the original organizers of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, the Fraternal Bank and Trust Company, Southern Fidelity and Surety Company as well as Banker’s Fire Insurance Company. He was a trustee of Kittrell College, St. Joseph’s A.M.E. Church, the National Religious Training School, NCCU and Wilberforce University. He helped found the Mechanics and Farmers Bank in Durham’s “Black Wall Street”. In 1927, he received the Harmon Award for Achievement in Business. The W. G. Pearson Gifted and Talented Elementary School, W. G. Pearson Magnet Middle School, and the cafeteria at N.C. Central University were named after him. Resources: Andrews, R. McCants. William Gaston Pearson (Incorporator), University Archives-James E. Shepard Memorial Library, https://hbcudigitallibrary.auctr.edu/digital/collection/nccu/id/67/. Pearson, William Gaston. John Hope Franklin Research Center for African and African American History and Culture. 1913. https://find.library.duke.edu/catalog/DUKE001767379.
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O'BRIEN vs. PEARSON, 449 Mass. 377
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SPINA, J. The plaintiff, Kevin O'Brien, brought this claim against John Pearson and Margaret Palm [Note 2] (defendants), his fellow Page 378 shareholders in the closely held corporation Summerhill Estates, Inc., for breach of fiduciary duty. The jury concluded by special question that O'Brien was a forty-eight per cent shareholder in the corporation, and awarded him $900,000 on his breach claim. A Superior Court judge denied the defendants' motions for a directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict or, in the alternative, for a new trial. The Appeals Court reversed the judgment, O'Brien v. Pearson, 67 Mass. App. Ct. 29 (2006), and we granted O'Brien's application for further appellate review. We affirm in part and reverse in part and remand for a new trial solely on the issue of damages. 1. Background. Kevin O'Brien is a home builder and developer who learned of a subdivision project in 1991 on a certain parcel of land in Dracut (subdivision). O'Brien knew the defendant John Pearson to be the president of Butler Bank, which he previously used to finance construction projects. After performing preliminary research, O'Brien approached Pearson in 1996 with the intention of obtaining financing to purchase and build on the Dracut subdivision. [Note 3] Pearson and O'Brien reached a "gentlemen's agreement" to work on the development together and share the profits "fifty-fifty." Pearson asked O'Brien to work with his business partner, Nels Palm, on cost estimates for the project. The subdivision was owned at that time by Twin Hills Development Corporation (Twin Hills), whose principals were Dominic and Vincent Shelzi. By the time O'Brien became aware of the subdivision in 1991, the Shelzis were experiencing financial difficulties and Twin Hills had filed for bankruptcy protection. Development of the project was in limbo, despite previous approval of the subdivision plan by the town. In 1989 Twin Hills gave a note for $700,000 to Wakefield Savings Bank, which was secured by a mortgage on nine strategically positioned lots of the subdivision and personal guarantees by the Shelzis. By 1998 the note was in default, having accrued an obligation of over $1 million. However, the Twin Hills' debt Page 379 had been restructured by the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Massachusetts subject to a plan that allowed the note and mortgage to be satisfied with a payment of $432,000, to be repaid through the phased sale of lots in the subdivision. O'Brien, Pearson, and Palm developed a business strategy to buy the note and mortgage to use as leverage in the land acquisition process. They reached an agreement with Wakefield Savings Bank to purchase the note and mortgage for $100,000. The capital to complete this purchase was put forth by Nels Palm, who was assigned the note and mortgage individually on March 16, 1998. That same day, Pearson sent O'Brien a letter agreement on behalf of himself and "the Palms" drafted on the letterhead of American Stonehenge, Inc., a corporation whose principals were Pearson and Palm. The letter presupposed ownership of the subdivision and laid out the respective responsibilities of the parties -- with O'Brien to act as builder and Pearson and Palm as financiers. It discussed the division of fees and profits, selection of vendors, various bonuses and advances for building the houses, right to counsel for the parties and, most significantly, the creation of a corporation named Summerhill Estates, Inc. (Summerhill). The letter proposed that Summerhill would have three shareholders: John Pearson and Margaret Palm each as twenty-six per cent shareholders, and Kevin O'Brien as a forty-eight per cent shareholder. The document specifically stated that Pearson and Nels Palm would "obtain and continue the financing (as long as the project is economically feasible) and contribute or loan funds for the development of the property or properties and manage the business and financial affairs of the development." O'Brien signed and returned the agreement to Pearson. On March 19, 1998, the articles of organization for Summerhill were filed, listing John Pearson, Margaret Palm, and Kevin O'Brien as directors, without detailing the shareholder distribution. Palm assigned to the new corporation the note and mortgage that he acquired from Wakefield Savings Bank. According to O'Brien, the Summerhill principals also discussed the need to compensate the Shelzis above and beyond the release of the mortgage and note in order to obtain ownership of the Page 380 entire subdivision. As the corporation moved forward with its business plan to acquire and develop the Dracut subdivision, O'Brien was asked by Pearson and Palm not to participate in negotiations with the Shelzis. Instead, Joel Kahn, a hired consultant who assisted in the note and mortgage acquisition, was instructed by the defendants to engage the Shelzis on the sale of the Dracut subdivision. Kahn, who took his instructions from Pearson and Palm, negotiated with the Shelzis over the next four months. His approach was one of a lender discussing a debt with a borrower and he issued default letters to the Shelzis through counsel. Kahn believed this strategic decision was necessary to avoid lender liability that could open the door to Twin Hills escaping its obligation under the note and mortgage. On May 6, 1998, Kahn wrote a letter to Pearson and Palm reporting on his progress with the Shelzis. He informed them that the Shelzis had a prospective third-party buyer. He also reported that the Shelzis inquired of him whether Summerhill would be interested in purchasing the subdivision. Kahn's response "was to leave them with the impression that while this was not our primary objective, we would consider taking title to the property as a last resort." Additionally, Kahn reported that the Shelzis responded that "$250,000 would be an approximate amount that they feel would represent fair compensation to them" in addition to an agreement to allow their father to continue to occupy a house already existing in the subdivision. Throughout these negotiations, Kahn's first priority was satisfaction of the note and not acquisition of the whole subdivision. He was unwilling to meet the Shelzis' demand for an additional payment on top of the release of the note in order to obtain outright ownership of the entire subdivision. Instead, the deal contemplated by Kahn included Summerhill's receiving the whole subdivision in exchange for only the release of the note, an allowance for the Shelzis' father to remain in his house and the Shelzis retaining one or two lots in the subdivision. In his May 6, 1998, report, Kahn openly allowed for the possibility that the Shelzis could secure another buyer for the property and satisfy their debt through the proceeds of such a sale, suggesting that Summerhill's next step should be to "[s]tructure a Page 381 deed in lieu [of foreclosure] that would automatically occur should [the Shelzis] be unable to sell to a third party by no later than September 1, 1998." O'Brien made his displeasure with Kahn's course of action well known. Immediately after seeing the May 6, 1998, report from Kahn, O'Brien telephoned Pearson and questioned the course of the negotiations, but was told that "everything is going to work out." On May 18, 1998, Premier Homes, Inc., entered into an agreement with the Shelzis to buy the subdivision. Despite O'Brien's singular focus on obtaining the entire subdivision, Kahn continued to pursue a course of negotiation that allowed for Summerhill's acquisition of the subdivision only in the event that the Shelzis could not close their deal with Premier. Kahn negotiated an August, 1998, letter of agreement with the Shelzis, along the lines first discussed in his May 6 report, to the effect that Summerhill would accept either a discounted $400,000 payment to satisfy the note and mortgage, or take a quitclaim deed in lieu of foreclosure if the deal with Premier was unable to be completed by a certain date. [Note 4] In Kahn's view, the letter of agreement protected Pearson and Palm because the two possible outcomes were either a $400,000 payment on an initial $100,000 investment or a deed for the entire subdivision in lieu of foreclosure. On the other hand, Kahn also thought this was the best deal possible for Summerhill. Although the amount owing on the note had swollen in excess of $1 million, secured by both the mortgage and the personal guarantees of the Shelzis, Kahn believed that the Shelzis would follow through on threats to declare personal bankruptcy if Summerhill pressed too hard on their individual liability. Kahn also believed that, although the Twin Hills bankruptcy plan required discharge of the mortgage on payment of $432,000, it was in Summerhill's best interest to accept the discounted $400,000 amount. The August letter agreement was formalized into a settlement document dated December 8, 1998, and signed by Pearson on behalf of Summerhill. [Note 5] O'Brien sent Nels Palm a letter on September 9 expressing Page 382 his disapproval. O'Brien also met with Palm and Pearson on September 17 and 18 to object to the course of action. On September 21, O'Brien wrote again to Palm, offering to purchase the note and mortgage from Summerhill himself for $400,000, with a contingency for further "local approvals to proceed." O'Brien's offer also included a credit to himself for one-half of the profits from the sale of the note and mortgage, as per the initial March 16, 1998, agreement. Nels Palm rejected the offer by letter on September 23, stating that Summerhill would accept an offer that included a $400,000 cash payment within thirty days and a good faith deposit of $25,000. The parties continued to exchange correspondence throughout the fall, but no sale agreement of the note and mortgage to O'Brien individually was reached. Sale of the subdivision to Premier was completed on January 22, 1999, thereby nullifying the contingency in Summerhill's settlement agreement. Twin Hills received a sum of $640,000 in the transaction, of which $400,000 was earmarked to release the note and discharge the mortgage held by Summerhill, and $150,000 was used to pay back taxes. Five days later, Pearson called a special meeting of the board of directors of Summerhill, which O'Brien attended with counsel. Pearson's purpose, as reflected in draft minutes he prepared prior to the meeting, was to gain corporate approval of Summerhill's discharge of the mortgage under the terms of the settlement agreement. The draft minutes indicated that a unanimous vote of the directors and stockholders approved of such a disposition, but O'Brien objected to such a vote occurring at the meeting. The meeting concluded without a formal vote, and the mortgage and note were discharged shortly thereafter. The net proceeds of the discharge of the mortgage, after Palm's investment capital was repaid and Kahn's expenses were accounted for, totaled approximately $245,000. Pearson Page 383 contacted O'Brien to arrange a meeting to discuss the status of these proceeds. O'Brien did not respond and instead initiated this litigation. 2. Breach of fiduciary duty. The denial of a motion for directed verdict or a motion for judgment notwithstanding the verdict both present questions of law reviewed under the same standard used by the trial judge. D'Annolfo v. Stoneham Hous. Auth., 375 Mass. 650, 657 (1978). J.W. Smith & H.B. Zobel, Rules Practice § 50.12, at 208 (1977 & Supp. 2007). Review of these motions require us to construe the evidence in the light most favorable to the nonmoving party and disregard that favorable to the moving party. Cimino v. Milford Keg, Inc., 385 Mass. 323, 326 (1982). In other words, "the standard to be employed is whether 'the evidence, construed against the moving party, justif[ies] a verdict against him.' " Bonin v. Chestnut Hill Towers Realty Corp., 392 Mass. 58, 59 (1984), quoting D'Annolfo v. Stoneham Hous. Auth., supra. Our duty in this regard is to evaluate whether "anywhere in the evidence, from whatever source derived, any combination of circumstances could be found from which a reasonable inference could be made in favor of the [nonmovant]." Turnpike Motors, Inc. v. Newbury Group, Inc., 413 Mass. 119, 121 (1992), quoting Dobos v. Driscoll, 404 Mass. 634, 656, cert. denied sub nom. Kehoe v. Driscoll, 493 U.S. 850 (1989). We agree with the trial judge that the evidence presented to the jury is sufficient to warrant denial of the defendants' motions for directed verdict and judgment notwithstanding the verdict. As shareholders in a close corporation, the parties owed each other a fiduciary duty of the "utmost good faith and loyalty." [Note 6] Donahue v. Rodd Electrotype Co. of New England, Inc., 367 Mass. 578, 593 (1975), quoting Cardullo v. Landau, 329 Mass. 5, 8 (1952). O'Brien's version of the events, including his understanding of the March 16, 1998, letter agreement and the accompanying discussions leading up to formation of Page 384 Summerhill, as well as his interpretation of the negotiations of May through September, 1998, provide more than the minimal necessary factual support for a reasonable inference that the defendants committed a breach of this duty. Viewed through the lens of the directed verdict standard, there can be little doubt that evidence exists to support such a conclusion. The defendants' motion for a new trial presents a more difficult question. The standard to be used by a trial judge in this regard is more favorable to the moving party because "the judge must necessarily consider the probative force of the evidence," rather than performing only the quantitative analysis called for in a motion for a directed verdict. Hartmann v. Boston Herald-Traveler Corp., 323 Mass. 56, 60 (1948). The judge should only set aside a verdict as against the weight of the evidence when it is determined that the jury "failed to exercise an honest and reasonable judgment in accordance with the controlling principles of law." Robertson v. Gaston Snow & Ely Bartlett, 404 Mass. 515, 520, cert. denied, 493 U.S. 894 (1989), quoting Hartmann v. Boston Herald-Traveler Corp., supra at 60. Such a decision rests in the sound discretion of the judge and we disturb this ruling only if there has been an abuse of that discretion. Robertson v. Gaston Snow & Ely Bartlett, supra at 520-521. No such abuse of discretion occurred here. The fiduciary duty of "utmost good faith and loyalty" that shareholders in a close corporation owe to one another is derived from the strict standard of behavior applied to partnerships. Donahue v. Rodd Electrotype Co. of New England, Inc., supra. This shared obligation, however, is not intended to hamper legitimate corporate activity unduly. "Where the alleged wrongdoer can demonstrate a legitimate business purpose for his action, no liability will result unless the wronged shareholder succeeds in showing that the proffered legitimate objective could have been achieved through a less harmful, reasonably practicable, alternative mode of action." Zimmerman v. Bogoff, 402 Mass. 650, 657 (1988), citing Wilkes v. Springside Nursing Home, Inc., 370 Mass. 842, 851-852 (1976). The judge based his denial of the defendants' motion for a new trial on the letter agreement and other events surrounding Page 385 the creation of Summerhill. [Note 7] This evidence makes clear that all parties agreed the corporation was founded for the specific purpose of acquiring and building a housing subdivision on the land owned by Twin Hills in Dracut. The defendants contend that the discharge of the note and mortgage achieved the legitimate business purpose of earning profits for the corporation and its shareholders, including O'Brien. In turn, O'Brien contends that defendants ignored a reasonably practicable alternative that was less harmful to the original business purpose of Summerhill. There was substantial evidence that the Shelzis' invitation to Summerhill to purchase the entire subdivision, as reported by Kahn on May 6, 1998, constituted a reasonably practicable, less harmful alternative course of action. Given the ultimate purchase price accepted by the Shelzis from Premier, the record supports the inference that further negotiations between Kahn and the Shelzis could have resulted in the acquisition of the entire subdivision within the realm of economic feasibility. Standing alone, however, such action is too amorphous to constitute a breach of fiduciary duty. See O'Brien v. Pearson, 67 Mass. App. Ct. 29, 38-39 (2006). More fundamentally, the evidence virtually compels the conclusion that the defendants made a decision, whether individually or through Kahn, to shift away from the animating purpose of Summerhill, as expressed through the signing of the March 16, 1998, letter of agreement and its surrounding discussions, toward the much narrower, if legitimate, purpose of pursuing a risk-averse effort to recoup the initial investment with some return. A reasonably practicable alternative course would have included a more open, communicative, and inclusive manner of engagement between the defendants and O'Brien. Without such a dialogue, the corporate sea change that occurred in Kahn's negotiations could be interpreted by the jury as a breach of fiduciary duty. As Chief Page 386 Judge Cardozo described it, the standard of behavior applicable here is quite rigorous: "Not honesty alone, but the punctilio of an honor the most sensitive . . . ." Donahue v. Rodd Electrotype Co. of New England, Inc., supra at 594, quoting Meinhard v. Salmon, 249 N.Y. 458, 464 (1928). The defendants' argument that O'Brien could not compel them to invest their own money misses the point. The defendants' breach did not arise from their failure to purchase the entire subdivision, but rather it occurred when they unilaterally decided, after promising to fund the project to the extent that it was economically feasible, to turn away from pursuit of the agreed-on objective in favor of their preferred alternative. The defendants' own evidence is not to the contrary. If there is one theme that pervades the testimony of Pearson, it is his delegation of authority in the negotiation process to the consultant, Joel Kahn. Kahn's testimony, in turn, indicates that at no time during his negotiation process to acquire the whole subdivision did he contemplate compensation to the Shelzis beyond the release of their obligation on the note and mortgage. The weighing of this evidence, in concert with the defendants' exclusion of O'Brien from the negotiation process and the parties' prior discussion of acceptable compensation to the Shelzis created a valid basis for the judge's denial of the motion for a new trial. Although the conduct at issue here is far less typical than other circumstances falling under the elastic concept of corporate "freeze-out," see, e.g., Coggins v. New England Patriots Football Club, Inc., 397 Mass. 525, 530-533 (1986), the effect is the same where "the majority effectively frustrate the minority stockholder's purposes in entering on the corporate venture," Wilkes v. Springside Nursing Home, Inc., supra at 850, and deny "the minority's reasonable expectations of benefit." Brodie v. Jordan, 447 Mass. 866, 870 (2006). The jury were entitled to find that the defendants acted out of "avarice, expediency or self-interest," Donahue v. Rodd Electrotype Co. of New England, Inc., supra at 593, despite over-all profits to the corporation and, derivatively, O'Brien. That these circumstances did not include a financial loss to the corporation does not preclude such a characterization. There was no abuse of discretion. Page 387 3. Damages. The jury returned a damages award of $900,000 against the defendants individually. [Note 8] O'Brien's theory of damages assumed that the breach of fiduciary duty prevented him from sharing in profits he would have received from a completed subdivision. Based on his own testimony, as well as that of his expert, James Marotta, O'Brien sought to establish these lost profits to be forty-eight per cent of $4.5 to $5 million. Marotta's methodology was somewhat of a hybrid -- synthesizing actual costs for certain stages of the project as it was subsequently built with estimates drawn from his own work. Marotta testified that, after Premier purchased the subdivision from the Shelzis, it built out the infrastructure, including roads, sidewalks, wetlands crossings and a pumping station, before selling the lots individually to One Line Realty. One Line, in turn, built houses on the lots and sold them to individual home buyers. Marotta's exhibits showed that the project, as built by Premier and One Line, largely conformed with the subdivision plan originally filed with the town of Dracut by Twin Hills. Marotta estimated the total receipts from the completed subdivision to be approximately $18 million. Marotta estimated Premier's cost of building infrastructure at $2.5 million, a number he derived from his conversations with O'Brien, confirmed by his own analysis. Marotta also estimated the cost of building the houses on the lots, based in part on One Line's sales documents with certain subtractions and in part on his own analysis, at $10.2 million. His total estimate of lost profits was $4.4 million: the result of subtracting Premier's actual purchase price, plus the infrastructure, house building, and other miscellaneous costs, from the approximately $18 million gross Page 388 revenue amount. Marotta testified that this profit margin was within the normal range for developments of that size. The defendants point to the testimony of Frederick P. Fahey, president and treasurer of Premier Homes. Fahey testified that Premier lost "several hundred thousand dollars" on the project, despite having sold the lots to One Line for a total of $5.4 to $6 million. No complete itemized breakdown of Premier's actual costs was offered by either party. The defendants conclude that their decision to discharge the mortgage rather than build the subdivision likely saved the corporation and O'Brien from a profitless project and resulted in a handsome return. Recovery of lost profits, as with all compensatory damages, requires a showing that the claimed losses were proximately caused by the wrongful conduct of the defendant. H.D. Watts Co. v. American Bond & Mtge. Co., 267 Mass. 541, 552 (1929). Lowrie v. Castle, 225 Mass. 37, 51 (1916) ("Prospective profits may be recovered in an appropriate action when the loss of them appears to have been the direct result of the wrong complained of . . ."). Here, there is no doubt that there was a breach of fiduciary duty for which O'Brien was entitled to seek relief. The question is whether the facts prove within a reasonable degree of certainty that the breach, i.e., the wrongful conduct of the defendants, caused O'Brien to suffer the damages he sought to establish. See Narragansett Amusement Co. v. Riverside Park Amusement Co., 260 Mass. 265, 281 (1927) ( "Whether any profits would have resulted from the entertainments during the season of 1917 or in the four succeeding years was not proved with a reasonable degree of certainty"); Gagnon v. Sperry & Hutchinson Co., 206 Mass. 547, 556 (1910) (requiring plaintiff to show "by reasonable proof that at least he certainly has lost some profits by the breach"). [Note 9] Further, the right of a plaintiff to recover damages based on prospective Page 389 profits is a fact-specific inquiry that must be appropriately adapted to the circumstances of each case. Rambola v. Cosindas, 351 Mass. 382, 385 (1966). We recently have considered the appropriate remedy for the freezeout of a minority shareholder of a similar nature. In Brodie v. Jordan, 447 Mass. 866, 870-871 (2006), we held that the appropriate remedy "should, to the extent possible, restore to the minority shareholder those benefits which [he] reasonably expected, but has not received because of the fiduciary breach." Such a remedy seeks to place the injured party in the same position as he would have been but for the breach. John Hetherington & Sons v. William Firth Co., 210 Mass. 8, 10 (1911). As explained above, the breach of fiduciary duty here that gives rise to the claim for damages manifested itself in the exclusion of the minority shareholder from information, participation, and decision-making, to the effect that the animating purpose of the corporation was altered without his involvement. The benefits to which O'Brien could claim a reasonable expectation, but were denied as a result of the fiduciary breach, would be involvement in the information sharing and decision-making of Summerhill. To claim that the corporation, and thus O'Brien, was deprived of the full benefit of a profitable subdivision as a direct result of this breach strains any definition of proximate cause. There simply lie too many contingencies and uncertainties between the breach and the completed subdivision to conclude otherwise. [Note 10] A mutually Page 390 agreeable sale between Summerhill and the Shelzis was not the probable result of O'Brien's increased involvement in the information sharing and decision-making of the corporation. O'Brien's increased involvement would not have changed the interest of Premier, which may have responded to any bid from Summerhill with a higher offer of its own. As majority owners, the defendants, acting within a proper course of corporate conduct, could have asserted their right to "selfish ownership" to outvote O'Brien. Wilkes v. Springside Nursing Home, Inc., 370 Mass. 842, 850-851 (1976). While O'Brien hoped that Summerhill would acquire and build the subdivision, he had no reasonable expectation that the proper conduct of his fellow shareholders made this result a foregone conclusion. O'Brien has not shown with reasonable certainty that he suffered compensable damages as a result of the defendants' breach. [Note 11] The unfortunate history of Summerhill presents "[m]anifest ambiguities in ascertaining what would have been the course of events in the face of complicated factors, under circumstances which never have come to pass . . . ." Lowrie v. Castle, supra at 52. The defendants' motion for a new trial should have been granted. [Note 12] On remand, the fact finder must determine what damages were proximately caused by the fiduciary breach, i.e., the Page 391 exclusion of O'Brien from the business of the corporation, and award "to the minority shareholder those benefits which [he] reasonably expected, but has not received because of the fiduciary breach." Brodie v. Jordan, supra at 871. As the evidence now stands, "the elements, upon which the claim for prospective profits rests, are numerous and shifting contingencies," Lowrie v. Castle, supra, and result in a damages claim based in surmise and conjecture. By concluding that the jury's award reflected honest and reasonable judgment in accordance with controlling principles of law, the judge abused his discretion. 4. Conclusion. We remand the case to the Superior Court on the issue of damages only. The denial of the defendants' motion for a new trial is reversed as to the question of lost profits damages. The grant of O'Brien's motion to amend the judgment also is reversed. [Note 13] The judgment of the Superior Court is affirmed in all other respects. So ordered.
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Shaw University
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Shaw University is a private Baptist historically black university in Raleigh, North Carolina. It is affiliated with the American Baptist Churches USA. Founded on December 1, 1865, Shaw University is the oldest HBCU to begin offering courses in the Southern United States. The school had its origin
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https://ssl.gstatic.com/atari/images/public/favicon.ico
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Shaw University is a private Baptist historically black university in Raleigh, North Carolina. It is affiliated with the American Baptist Churches USA. Founded on December 1, 1865, Shaw University is the oldest HBCU to begin offering courses in the Southern United States. The school had its origin in the formation of a theological class of freedmen in the Guion Hotel. The following year it moved to a large wooden building, at the corner of Blount and Cabarrus Streets in Raleigh, where it continued as the Raleigh Institute until 1870. In 1870, the school moved to its current location on the former property of Confederate General Barringer and changed its name to the Shaw Collegiate Institute, in honor of Elijah Shaw. In 1875, the school was officially chartered with the State of North Carolina as Shaw University. The main campus resides on 24 acres in the East Raleigh-South Park Historic District in downtown Raleigh. Shaw also owns and operates a 35-acre farm located on Rock Quarry Rd.[6] Historical buildings, which either currently (Estey Hall) or previously (Shaw Hall) reside on campus, were designed by the famed Raleigh architect George S. H. Appleget and feature a Second Empire and Italianate architectural styles. Other architectural styles present on campus are Leonard Hall, a twin-turret Romanesque Revival style building, and several buildings featuring Brutalist style architectures. Shaw is known for many significant historical achievements. It was the first university to offer a four-year medical school, the first to offer a school of pharmacy, and the first to offer a law school for freed slaves in the United States.The first building of higher education for African American women in the country was built and still resides on the campus of Shaw. Shaw is the alma mater of one United Nations General Assembly President, three founders of other North Carolina HBCUs, and numerous entertainers, lawyers, politicians, and educators. Along with Howard University, Hampton University, Lincoln University and Virginia Union University, Shaw was a co-founding member of the NCAA Division II's Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) Conference, the oldest African American athletic association in the U.S. The university has won CIAA championships in Football, Basketball (women's and men's), Tennis (women's and men's) and volleyball. In 1867 the school consisted of two buildings, a large two-story structure and one Antebellum cabins. In 1870, it was renamed Shaw Collegiate Institute after Elijah Shaw who donated a sum of $5,000 ($110,897 in 2021) to partially fund the $13,000 ($288,331 in 2021) necessary to purchase 12 acres of land formally held by General Barringer (where Tupper and his wife once hid in the cornfields from a KKK lynch mob) and erect Shaw Hall, the first building on campus. Shaw Hall was built with a 165-foot frontage, four stories high and possessing a tower, was the most commodious school building in all of North Carolina at that time. It provided instruction services, a library, and lodging. In 1873, Estey Hall was built in honor of Deacon Jacob Estey and sons of Brattleboro, Vermont, who gave $8,000 ($187,365 in 2021) toward its construction. Estey Hall was the first building constructed in the U.S. for the higher education of African-American women. Estey Hall was devoted to training women in cooking, sewing, music, and the like. Henry Martin Tupper bought the material from which the women made garments and he himself sold the garments in an effort to pay for the cost of the material and other expenses. In 1879, a third major building was erected – a chapel and dining hall called the Greenleaf Building. It was named for Orick H. Greenleaf of Springfield, MA, a yearly liberal contributor. The upper part of the building was accessible by stairs. Doors on either side of the tower provided entrance to the dining room. At the right of the chapel was a small room and at the left a library. A storeroom existed under the stairway. Funds saved from tuition and board were used to build this structure at a total cost of $6,000. These were augmented by contributions from O.H. Greenleaf, Captain Ebenezer Morgan of Groton, CT, and Deacon O.B. Grant of Stonington, CT. Here’s a local business that supports the community Google map- https://goo.gl/maps/GeeTkJRuN2o1i6s87 4949 N Loop 1604 W Acc Rd #250, San Antonio, TX 78249 Be sure to check out this attraction too!
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Levesque, Gaston
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Teacher Class Number Code Gaston Levesque EL Juniors YOG 2025 8063-01 2s4f4tl Gaston Levesque EL Juniors YOG 2025 8063-02 ul3q64i Last updated - 10/5/23
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Shaw University, Raleigh, North Carolina
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2020-11-05T21:47:02+00:00
In a photograph taken about 1899, students play croquet outside the medical dormitory at Shaw University, the first black college in the South. Henry Martin Tupper founded the university, originally named Raleigh Theological Institute, in Raleigh, North Carolina. A former Union soldier, Tupper went south with his wife in 1865 as a missionary of the American Baptist Home Mission Society of New York. Read more about: Shaw University, Raleigh, North Carolina
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Encyclopedia Virginia
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» William Gaston Pearson, II, North Carolina’s First African-American District Court Judge, 1977-1984
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William Gaston Pearson, II (1915-1985), received his undergraduate and law degrees from North Carolina Central University, finishing law school in 1954. He went into private practice and in 1968 founded Durham’s first black law firm, Pearson, Malone, Johnson, & DeJarmon. Throughout the 1960s and 1970s, he traveled the state with his law partner, C. C. “Buddy” Malone, fighting civil rights cases at both the state and the federal level. In 1977 Governor James B. Hunt, Jr., appointed Pearson to fill the vacancy left by retiring chief district court judge E. Lawson Moore, making him the first black district court judge in the state. He won the next two elections in 1978 and 1982, before retiring at the age of 70. Upon his death less than a year after his retirement, a resolution of tribute to him was read into the court record by the 14th Judicial District Bar Association. Superior court Judge Milton Read remembered upon Pearson’s death: His kindness, dedication and compassion influenced my life in many positive ways. He helped teach us all that a courtroom should not only be a place for law but that it should also be a place for social justice. Pearson was instrumental in forming the George White Bar Association, a fraternity of mostly black lawyers in Durham County. He was an active member of many professional and civic organizations: president of the George White Bar Association, member of the North Carolina Association of Black Lawyers and the Durham Committee on the Affairs of Black People, and a cooperating attorney with the Education and Defense Fund of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People.
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Shaw University
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Shaw University, founded as Raleigh Institute, is a private liberal arts institution and historically black university (HBCU) in Raleigh, North Carolina, United States. Founded in 1865, it is the oldest HBCU in the Southern United States.[1] Shaw is affiliated with the General Baptist State...
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American Football Database
https://americanfootballdatabase.fandom.com/wiki/Shaw_University
Shaw University, founded as Raleigh Institute, is a private liberal arts institution and historically black university (HBCU) in Raleigh, North Carolina, United States. Founded in 1865, it is the oldest HBCU in the Southern United States.[1] Shaw is affiliated with the General Baptist State Convention of North Carolina and a member of the National Baptist Convention, USA, Inc. which supports the Shaw University Divinity School. Along with Howard University, Hampton University, Lincoln University, PA and Virginia Union University, Shaw was a co-founding member of the NCAA Division II's Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) Conference, the oldest African American athletic association in the U.S. The university has won CIAA championships in Football, Basketball (women's and mens), and Men's Tennis. The university won a 5-year grant with University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill to create a Partnership for the Elimination of Health Disparities for minorities, and a 7-year grant with Johns Hopkins University for Gerontological Research. In 2007, Shaw received $2.5 million from the National Science Foundation to support its Nanoscience and Nanotechnology program. In 2004, Shaw University received $1.1 million from the U.S. Department of Education to develop an Upward Bound Program. Academics[] Shaw is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, the Council on Social Work Education, and the American Psychological Association. The Divinity School is accredited by the Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada as its Kinesiotherapy and Sports Medicine program is accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs, the Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education, and the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education. The university offers undergraduate degrees in natural science, business and accounting, religion and philosophy, and education and computer science and graduate programs in Divinity, Religious Education and Early Childhood Instruction. The College of Adult and Professional Education (CAPE) has centers in Greenville, Kannapolis, High Point, Rocky Mount, Ahoskie, Fayetteville, Durham, Wilmington, and Asheville. History[] Presidents[2] Dr. Henry Martin Tupper 1865–1893 First/Founder Dr. Charles Francis Meserve 1894–1919 Dr. Joseph Leishman Peacock 1920–1931 Dr. William Stuart Nelson 1931–1936 Dr. Robert Prentiss Daniel 1936–1950 Dr. William Russell Strassner 1951–1962 Dr. James Edward Cheek* 1963–1969 Dr. King Vergil Cheek* 1969–1971 Dr. J. Archie Hargraves 1971–1977 Dr. Stanley Hugh Smith 1978–1987 Dr. John Lucas* 1981–1987 Dr. Talbert O. Shaw 1988–2002 Dr. Clarence G. Newsome 2003–2009 Dr. Dorothy Cowser Yancy 2009–2010 Dr.Irma McClaurin 2010–2011 Dr.Dorothy Cowser Yancy-Interim president *Alumnus Founding to the 1960s[] The school was founded by the American Baptist Home Mission Society.[1] Rev. Dr. Henry Martin Tupper came south immediately after the end of the Civil War, establishing the Second Baptist Church of Raleigh (changed to Tabernacle Baptist Church in 1910, and now the Tupper Memorial Baptist Church.)[3] Later Tupper and his Bible study students constructed a two-story church, with one story for the church, and one for the Raleigh Institute, where he taught freedmen. By 1915, supported by the American Baptist Home Mission, the school had 291 students, evenly divided between men and women. It was renamed Shaw Collegiate Institute after Elijah Shaw, benefactor of Shaw Hall, the first building. In 1875, it became Shaw University. In 1873, Estey Hall was built, the first female dormitory in the U.S. on a coeducational campus. Leonard Medical School was founded in 1881 as the first four-year medical school in the South to train black doctors and pharmacists. The first medical school in the state to offer a four-year curriculum, it operated until 1918. Given their importance in United States educational history, both Estey and Leonard halls have been listed on the National Register of Historic Places. By 1900, more than 30,000 black teachers had been trained.[4] Shaw University has been called the mother of African-American colleges in North Carolina, as the founding presidents of North Carolina Central University, Elizabeth City State University, and Fayetteville State University were all Shaw alumni. The founder of Livingstone College studied at Shaw before transferring to Lincoln University. What became North Carolina Agricultural and Technical State University was located on Shaw's campus during its first year. U.S. Civil Rights Movement[] The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) began at a conference held at Shaw University and led by Ella Baker in 1960. SNCC was created to coordinate activities among numerous civil rights groups, support civil rights leaders and publicize their activities. SNCC played a strong role in Freedom Summer and the voter registration drives in Mississippi during 1964 and 1965. 1980s to present[] By the mid-1980s, enrollment declined and the university was deeply in debt. President Talbert O. Shaw (1988–2003) (not related to the namesake) increased the student body from 1,600 to 2,700, restructured debt and created the Raleigh Business and Technology Center. In the 1990s, Shaw ran a successful capital campaign to renovate historic buildings and construct new campus facilities, including the Talbert O. Shaw Center for Teachers' Education. In 2005, SUDS received a 10-year accreditation from the Association for Theological Schools and began construction on the Center for Early Childhood Education, Research and Development. Another example of new directions is that the university is collaborating with the University of North Carolina-Chapel Hill on a Partnership for the Elimination of Health Disparities Center. As noted by Dr. Daniel Howard, center co-director at Shaw University, establishing the research resources at Shaw, meant that "more African American college students can become health researchers, which is a definite plus when trying to eliminate disparities." [5] Shaw University is also a member of the Cooperating Raleigh Colleges (CRC) Program. This intercollegiate program is a consortium to pool resources of courses and programs, material, and professors for the sake of providing effective education to all the students. The participating colleges are Shaw University, North Carolina State University, Saint Augustine's College, Wake Technical Community College, Peace College, and Meredith College. Study of World War II service of black veterans[] Shaw University led a research study to investigate why no black veterans of WWII had been awarded the Medal of Honor. The study concluded that racial discrimination had contributed to the military's overlooking the contributions of black soldiers. The 272-page study recommended ten soldiers whose military records suggested they deserved the Medal of Honor. In January 1995, the team’s findings were sent to the U.S. Department of Defense. In April 1996, the department agreed that seven of the ten soldiers should be awarded the Medal of Honor. All ten had been awarded other medals during the war years. President Bill Clinton awarded the Medals of Honor on January 13, 1997. The department's decision in response to Shaw's study marked only the third time that the military re-evaluated military records to award the Medal of Honor. Only one of the seven nominees, 1st Lt. Vernon Baker of St. Maries, Idaho, was alive to receive his medal. Those who were awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously were: 1st Lt. Charles L. Thomas of Detroit, Michigan; Pvt. George Watson of Birmingham, Alabama; Staff Sgt. Edward A. Carter Jr. of Los Angeles, California; 1st Lt. John R. Fox of Boston, Massachusetts; Pfc. Willy F. James Jr. of Kansas City, Kansas; and Staff Sgt. Ruben Rivers of Tecumseh, Oklahoma.[6] Campus Life[] Athletics[] Shaw University is a member and co-founder of the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II's Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) Conference. Shaw University's Basketball team participates in the CIAA annual Basketball Tournament, which is the third most attended athletic event in collegiate sports after the Atlantic Coast Conference and Big East tournaments. Shaw fields 14 varsity athletic teams including teams in men's basketball, women's basketball, football, tennis, baseball, cheerleading, men's and women's track and field, volleyball, golf, and bowling. Extracurricular activities[] In 2002, Shaw University's men's basketball team won the CIAA championship. Also the lady's basketball team, won the 2008 CIAA championship. The football team, reestablished by Dr. Clarence G. Newsome in 2002, played at the Durham County Memorial Stadium in Durham, North Carolina through the 2008 season. In 2009, the team relocated their home games to Millbrook High School in Raleigh. The 2011 season will be played at Durham County Stadium.[7] It won the CIAA football championship in 2004, 2007, 2008, and 2010.[8] The football team has also made the Division II playoffs in 2007 and 2010. Also in 2011 both men's and women's teams won the CIAA Tournament making Shaw the last school since Norfolk State in 1975 to win the big three championships in the same year. Shaw's Lady Bears won the NCAA Division II Championship for the season 2011/2012. ivities=== There are several organizations and clubs on-campus, including The Shaw Players and Company, the Student Government Association, cheerleaders, intramural and extramural sports, sororities, fraternities, gospel and university choirs. The University also has jazz, pep, and concert bands as well as the COGs (Children of God) which represents a wide range of student activities that exist at Shaw University. The university's radio station, 88.9 FM or WSHA, is one of the popular jazz stations in the triangle. The university supports the Honda Quiz Bowl Team, the Shawensis Literary Club, the Shaw Men and Shaw Women Society, the Divine Nine, the Student North Carolina Association of Educators, the Pre-Alumni Council, and the Shaw Journal Campus Newspaper. These pre-professional organizations provide ways to enhance classroom activities while enjoying the camaraderie of fellow students. Shaw is great. Marching band[] Shaw's marching band better known as the "platinum sound" was reestablished in the Fall of 2002 along with the reestablishment of the football team. The band has grown from 80 members in 2002 to over 130 members. Shaw's marching band has participated in the Honda Battle of the Bands at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia. Also, several Shaw student-musicians played the sounds behind the 2002, Twentieth Century Fox motion picture, Drumline.[9] Campus Infastructure[] Shaw University consists of 32 buildings and nine additional campuses across the state of North Carolina. As of July 2011, Durham County Stadium will remain the home of the Shaw University Bears football team until construction plans towards building a new facility on Shaw Farm(a 40 acre lot donated to the university under James Cheek's administration on rock quarry rd. in Raleigh NC and the site of the National Alumni House) is completed and implemented. The main campus is located in the heart of downtown Raleigh. Five of the thirty-two buildings are national and state historic landmarks which are the Frazier House, Estey Hall, Tyler Hall, Leonard Hall, and the Rogers-Bagley-Daniels-Pegues House. The Campus has a memorial garden in the heart of the campus which is also the location of the tombs of the founder of Shaw University, Dr. Henry Martin Tupper and his wife Sarah and the University Belltower, that was erected in honor of those who came and left the institution, from its founding to its present. The Campus has Three Libraries, The James E. Cheek Library, The TOS Education Library, and the Divinity School Library, that houses over 210,000 volumes, 10,000 ebooks, and many other sources of scholarly and cultural literature as well as microforms, located throughout Shaw University(including cape sites). Also, the Raleigh Business and Technology Center is located on Shaw's campus. Planned in 1989, Shaw University city council officials and Saint Augustine's College in a joint effort built the current facility on Shaw's Campus. Both colleges use the center for classes and community programs. The Campus has four dorms, the Flemming-Kee Men's Dorm, the Dimple Newsome Dorm, Talbert O. Shaw Men's Dorm and the Talbert O. Shaw Women's Dorm. Other resources available on or adjacent to the campus are McDonald's, The Willie E. Gary Student Center which houses the Bear's Den (Game Room and Grill), and the Cyber Cafe'. Student organizations[] The university has a range of student organizations, including sororities and fraternities, and honor societies. Other organizations include the Shaw Men and Shaw Women Society (organizations that emphasize development of character),the social science club, Swing Phi Swing, the Shaw University National Alumni Association, the Freemasons and the Order of the Eastern Star, the Religion and Philosophy Club, Groove Phi Groove, Iota Alpha Omega Christian Fraternity, and the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People. Tornados of April 15–17, 2011[] As a result of the massive destruction of the Mid-April 2011 Southern United States tornado outbreak, the university cancelled classes for the semester. As a result of the storm, two dormitories, the student union, and the roof of Estey hall were severely damaged.[10][11] There were minor injuries but no one was seriously hurt. Notable alumni[] Name Class year Notability References Dr. Richard Gene Arno founder of the National Christian Counselors Association Ella Baker 1927 leader of SNCC and civil rights activist Charlie Brandon Grey Cup champion and all-star CFL football player Angie Brooks 1949 former President of the United Nations General Assembly and Associate Justice to the National Supreme Court of Liberia Shirley Caesar 1984 pastor and gospel music artist Henry Plummer Cheatham 1883 Republican member of the United States House of Representatives from 1889 to 1893. James E. Cheek 1955 former President of Shaw University, President Emeritus of Howard University, 1983 recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom. Willie E. Gary 1971 multi-millionaire attorney and co-founder of the Black Family Channel Edward A. Johnson first African-American member of the New York state legislature when he was elected to the New York State Assembly in 1917. Lee Johnson 1975 President & CEO of Mechanics & Farmers Bank Lords of the Underground attended Hip-Hop Group that was founded in the early 1990s, when all three of its members were students attending Shaw University Luther Jordan 1997 former member of the North Carolina Senate from 1993 to 2002 Vernon Malone Democratic member of the North Carolina General Assembly, 14th Senate district, including constituents in Wake County Lee Monroe 1970 President of Voorhees College Peter Wedderick Moore first President of Elizabeth City Normal College, (now Elizabeth City State University) Shelia P. Moses author Ronald "Flip" Murray 2002 professional basketball player Eleanor Nunn, Ph.D. civil rights activist (one of founders of SNCC) and educator, North Carolina State University William L. Pollard 1967 President of the Medgar Evers College Dr. M. T. Pope 1886 prominent physician in Raleigh; ran for mayor in 1919. His home is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a museum Benjamin Arthur Quarles 1931 historian, administrator, scholar, educator, and writer. Dr. James E. Shepard 1894 founder and President of North Carolina Central University William Gaston Pearson 1886 educator and businessman, co-founder of Mechanics & Farmers Bank, an African-American Bank in Raleigh, North Carolina Ida Van Smith one of the first African American female pilots and flight instructors in the United States James "Bonecrusher" Smith 1975 first heavyweight boxing champion with a college degree Rita Walters currently serves on the Board of Library Commissioners for the Los Angeles Public Library Lucius Walker 1954 Baptist minister best known for his opposition to the United States embargo against Cuba [12] Col. James H. Young first African American to hold the rank of colonel in the United States of the volunteer regiment during the Spanish American War References[] Additional references[] Carter, Wilmoth A. Shaw's Universe: A Monument to Educational Innovation, Raleigh: Shaw University, 1973 Lincoln, C. Eric, The Black Church in the African American Experience, Durham: Duke University Press, 1990 [] Official website Official athletics website Shaw University Archives: History SNCC, 1960-1966: Six Years of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee Template:Colleges and Universities affiliated with the American Baptist Churches USA Template:Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association navbox Template:Triangle, NC
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Graduate Names
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[ "UCCS", "University of Colorado Colorado Springs", "Reach Higher", "Fuels Success", "University of Colorado" ]
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UCCS is home to more than 12,000 driven students and over 800 experienced faculty members. Choose from more than 100 options within 50 undergraduate, 24 graduate, and seven doctoral degrees. Take a virtual tour and explore programs and opportunities to support you in your college-decision journey.
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https://commencement.uccs.edu/spring24/graduates
SPRING 2024 COMMENCEMENT DIGITAL PROGRAM Search Start typing a name or degree in the search box and the results as sections will automatically update below with content that matches. If multiple sections appear, try using the part of the name that is more unique (last name vs. first name). If you are viewing this on a computer, you can also use the browser "Find" function to search. Ctrl + F for Windows or Command + F for Mac. If no names appear, please double-check spelling or refresh the page to try an alternate name or degree (such as using a last name instead of a first name). Candidates for Advanced Degrees The following list of candidates for degrees includes students graduating in May 2024. Graduate School Hillary Fouts, Dean PhD – Educational Leadership Research & Policy James Brendan Burke “Addressing Attrition in College Readiness Programming: Identifying Temporal Points of Student Departure from the 21st Century Scholars Program” Derion Michael Ibarra “No Child Left Sedentary: Bridging the Policy Rhetoric and Practice Gap” Ann Louise Kasunich “Impact of Industrial Agriculture Glyphosate Use On Application Trends and Chronic Diet-related Disease Prevalence in the United States” Emily Caryl Kulakowski “The Fairness Fallacy: A Discourse Analysis of U.S. State Anti-Trans Sports Bans” Lamech Moses Mbise “Transition Experiences of International Medical Graduates in the United States” Megan Sue Oleson “Teachers’ Perceptions on Social Emotional Learning: A Case Study of Teacher Preparedness in a K-5 Setting” Jennifer Weiss “A Mixed Methods Study Exploring the Discourse Surrounding Educational Gag Orders and the Environment in Which They Are Enabled” Marissa Joy Williams “NCAA Dll Soccer Coaches: Perceptions of Preseason and Leadership Behaviors” PhD – Computer Science Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Junxian Zhao Michael Bihn “Synthesis of Neonate Connectomes for Artificial Sentience and Common Sense” Uma Chinta “Pioneering Facial Expression Recognition: Unveiling Multimodel Strategies, Confronting Data Imbalance, and Decoding Emotion” Justin Leo “Advancing Incremental Learning for Autonomous Neural Networks” Junxian Zhao “Improving Performance of Garbage Collection for Data-Intensive Applications in Cloud Systems” PhD – Engineering Outstanding Graduate Students of the Year: Aloisio Kawakita de Souza, Maycon Meier dos Santos Emma Boyd (emphasis Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering) “A Diffuse Interface Method for Modeling Solid/Fluid Phase Boundaries with Mass and Heat Transfer” Aloisio Kawakita de Souza (emphasis Electrical Engineering) “Physics-Based Modeling, Estimation and Control for Lithium-Ion and Lithium-Metal Batteries” Maycon Meier dos Santos (emphasis Mechanical & Aerospace Engineering) “Thermal-Elastic Model of Regression of Solid Composite Propellants” PhD – Security Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Simeon Wuthier Thomas Hastings “Identifying and Mitigating Key Risk Indicators in Open-Source Software for Combating Next-Generation Supply Chain Attacks” Arijet Sarker “Digital Trust Management for Distributed, Privacy-Required and Mobile Networking” Simeon Wuthier “Securing Networking in Blockchain and Distributed Systems” PhD – Applied Science Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Jonathan Davidson Jonathan Davidson (emphasis in Physics) “Langevin simulations of magnetic nanoparticles: from self-assembly to magnetic relaxation” PhD – Psychology Katie Lynn Granier† (emphasis in Clinical Geropsychology) “An Examination of the Differential Effects of Age and Cognitive Functioning on Late Life Presentations of Anxiety and Worry” Julie Hurd† (emphasis in Trauma Psychology) “We Can Do It: Intraindividual and Interindividual Effects of Dyadic Efficacy on Posttraumatic Stress and Relationship Quality” Lisa Stone-Bury† (emphasis in Clinical Geropsychology) “The Alternative Model of Personality Disorders and Psychosocial Functioning in Later Life: A Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Study” Kendall L. Weber† (emphasis in Clinical Geropsychology) “Neuropsychological Evaluation Recommendations: Exploring Psychologists’ Views on Implementation” †Summer 2024 graduate walking in Spring 2024 ceremony following successful defense of dissertation; internship completion Summer 2024. Doctor of Nursing Practice Alexandria Jo Anderson “Optimizing Sexual Health Assessments & STI Screening in Rural Primary Care: A Quality Improvement Project” Katrina Eileen Rose Gustafson “Implementing a Substance Use Protocol at a University Wellness Center” Victoria Michaelson “Improving a Primary Care Clinic’s Sexually Transmitted Infection Risk Screening via Algorithm” Akua Osei Poku “Reducing Medication Administration Errors at Pueblo Regional Center” Michael Starling “Emergency Room to Inpatient Unit Nursing Handoff Reporting” Helen and Arthur E. Johnson Beth-El College of Nursing and Health Sciences Kevin Laudner, Dean The Degree Master of Science in Athletic Training (MSAT) Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Lindsey Nicole Murphy Nissa Rose Davis Madeleine Decker Brooke Dill Madison Duran Lindsey Nicole Murphy Ashlyn Week The Degree Master of Science in Nursing Monica Nicole Alm Megan Joy Ara Vanessa Victoria Belcourt Jennifer Blea Grayson Alexandra Braddy Shelby Rebecca Crenshaw Meagan Gamlen Hilary Anne Guye Taylor Hartke Mitchell Lee LeMieur Shannon Alexandra Mast Candice Christine Milone Sophia Oakjean Kim Murphy Christine Dawn Nicks Sandhya Nuggehalli Sylina Noel Peterson Ashley Jane Picinich Katherine Elizabeth Pinto Jennifer Lynn Plummer Megan Rotatori Cecilia Smith Ericka Dawn Southwick Diana Marie Taggart Kristine Ann Terry Jill Michelle Thomas Johney W. Tsai Kayla Patrice Varela Samantha Zambrano The Degree Master of Sciences in Applied Physiology Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Phillip Tracy Megan Renee Barnes Rachel Dowd Taigan Makina Lowman Kevin Michael Sullivan Phillip Tracy The Degree Master of Sciences in Health Promotion Outstanding Graduate Students of the Year: Velette Britt, Keegan Aaron Sueltz Velette Britt Ethan Christopher Gage Catherine Allison Hine Laura S. Montanez Villafane Kyleigh Rae Neese Jeanette Espiritu Stewart Keegan Aaron Sueltz The Degree Master of Sciences in Nutrition and Dietetics Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Allika Nouveau Pearson Allika Nouveau Pearson College of Business and Administration Thomas Aicher, Dean The Degree Master of Business Administration Distinguished Academic Achievement Awards: Michael Joseph Petkash, Nathan Aaron Schoonmaker, Ethan Thompson Dakota Abbott Heriberto Angel Reyes Branwick Bismarck Arancibia Cassie Lynn Marie Bonner Nataliya Church Bradley William Deland Michael Ross DuPree Jonathan C. Ehresman Brennen Erlenbach Shanda Fahey Holly Eileen Fal Tasha Franklin Kathleen Fuller Brent Matthew Fulmer Canyon Daniel Hill Timothy Hoffpauir Karen Lynn Jackson Justin Allen Jones Gregory Louis Koumis Benjamin Michael Lavoie David Evan McConnaughey Matthew S. McInerney Yamil Mendez Montes Kaitlyn Morgan Mitchell Angela Bess Naughton Michael Joseph Petkash Matthew William Radcliffe Tania Reyes Christopher W. Satchell Nathan Aaron Schoonmaker Kendra Danyel Scott Natalie Sheble Jordan Silva Michael Dominick Sinicropi Andrew Terry Ethan Thompson Shawna Jane Valencia Aaron L. Vestal The Degree Master of Science in Accounting Allison Goldhammer Mason Ryan Kellar Luke Anthony Morales Juanita Rose Munar Quengua College of Public Service George Reed, Dean The Degree Master of Criminal Justice Outstanding Graduate Student Award: Michael Kelley Naja Allen Walker Benjamin Baker Sheannah Angel Beale Chad E. Beatty Alyssa de Jesus Michael Kelley Jared Ian Kovacs Kaitlin Wickwire Panovich Edward Alec Pedraza Brittany Nicole Purnell Alexandria Nicole Remillard Miranda Williamson The Degree Master of Public Administration Outstanding Graduate Student Awards: Neah Bay Downs Dybas, Clayton Scott Lobaugh Katrina Adrianne Becker Hanah Julan Cronk Alanah Symone Daniels Neah Bay Downs Dybas Robert Michael Felts Eric Gomez Kevin Johnston Deonson Leatimua Clayton Scott Lobaugh Shay Ellen Redmond Lyon Kaitlin Wickwire Panovich Brittany Nicole Purnell Alexandria Nicole Remillard Rori Anne Romero Benjamin Daniel Shackelton Bradley Dale Smith Courtny Ann Stewart Jonathan Matthew Waldon Andrew Yost The Degree Master of Social Work Outstanding Graduate Student Awards: Camille Dysart, Leigh-Andre Faye Fleming, Jasmin Panique Helen Christine Anderson Michael Allan Baker Sydney Bauer Isabel Frances Belarde Matthew Blasquez Michael Dean Brinson Michael Anthony Brown Erin Lee Bruski Ronaldrey Navarrete Budhi Sarah Anne Connors Corrine Emerita Cyr Claire Anne Dauwe Lizeth Guadalupe De La Rosa Vazquez Blanca Diaz Camille Dysart Leigh-Andre Faye Fleming Aneqwa Francis Flor Daniela Gamboa Shundrel K. Garcia Jimena Citlali Hernandez Jeffrey Kaschnigg Margaret Kiehna Barry Christopher Leath Mary Karen Lichlyter-Klein Jordyn Kaylene Lohn Erica Lynch Jannet Martinez Chavira Raveena Mohan Jessica Diane Morales Jose Michael Ochoa Jacquelyn Elaine Othon Jasmin Panique Tory Patsis Taylor Marie Power Katrina Quinn Cassandra Ramos Bridget Renee Roberts Isabella Marie Rodriguez Adrienne Marie Ross Amanda Arlene Savoie Gillian Sheffield Scoville Taylor Luwen Swiontek Olivia Maria Thomas Amanda Karin Veneklasen Clara Vierstra Isabelle Rae Wilson Samantha Fay Wisor Michael Andrew Woissol Louis Yurkovic College of Education Joseph Wehrman, Interim Dean The Degree Master of Arts in Counseling and Human Services Outstanding Graduate Students of the Year: Kenneth Patrick Hertzler, Alicia Robillard Ojeda, Connor James Scroggins Juan Antonio Arambula Jessica Louise Barnes Megan Elizabeth Bates Kaytie Nicole Blan Michael Taylor Ray Bradshaw Elizabeth Karen Brown Lisa M. Buckman Brittany Byrd Eric Chin Nathan Charles Christian Erika Lynne Cordes Rachel Corriea James Thomas Cushing Kelli Catherine Wood DeBock Danielle Dickey Shaina Anushka Dominicci Tiffany Brooke Dow Alexis Marie Duarte Joseph Ferrari Eastman Sydney Croxton Freeman Katie Greene Emily Jo Gyurman Delaina Lee Harris Brinetta Marqetta Hence Shawna Henry Kenneth Patrick Hertzler Adam Skyler Johnson Eric Russell Johnson Stefanie Kerr Jacqueline Leindecker Lauren Kate Lopez Desirae Elmillie Lujan Em Mais Alena Carlanne Marrese Lauren Anne Mehrhoff Hailey Mompher Jeremy Mooney Thomas Gregory Nichols Alicia Robillard Ojeda Nathalie Jane Padilla Sarah Alison Remilekun Palmore Jason Michael Ponce Eryn Raborn Jessica Boone Rahl Aubrey Kristin Reel Jeffrey Rodriguez Rebecca Ann Roodhuyzen Jamela Dominique Sharrie Satterfield Connor James Scroggins Michael Richard Shaw Arpa Shirvanyan Sasha Danielle Shrestha Lindsay Ann Smith Danielle Sorcher Connor Philip Sullivan Sarah Tan Nichelle Raeann Taylor Kate Ann Thielemann Eiryn Waldman Connor Waters-Miller Katelyn Amber Wilcox Ryan Thomas Witzig Ashlyn Rae Woeltge The Degree Master of Arts in Curriculum and Instruction Alyssa Lyn Brinton Kristin Marie Chaney Allison Christine McDonald Maranda SummerWind McGowan Amanda McLane Amanda Joyce Przymus Sally Katherine Robinson Aspen Storm Walker Nathan Benton Woodroof The Degree Master of Arts in Leadership Outstanding Graduate Students of the Year: Mollie Derry Hayden, Kristi Ann Real Brittany Leigh Abbott Jessica Kayelynne Allen Jamilex Dukes Erika Alexis Rene Griego Bonnie Hart Mollie Derry Hayden Brandy Kaminsky Mary Deen Leusink Samantha Luckiw Graham Eric Maxwell Samantha Louise McComas Jennifer Marie Morgan Hunter Lee Owens Kristi Ann Real Andrea Marie Sedoryk Angello Carlos Soto Leonard Edgar Tardiff Caroline Nicole Wooten The Degree Master of Arts in Special Education Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Tonya Lynne Caruthers Tonya Lynne Caruthers Andrew Caswell Mairis Maestas Darren Neal Lauren Ashley Pegg Jorie Vallejo Kaitlin Shea Vyvlecka The Degree Master of Arts in Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Jennifer Peck Theresa Marie Lynch Jennifer Peck Chantal Stark College of Engineering and Applied Science Michael Corl, Interim Dean The Degree Master of Engineering Outstanding Graduate Students of the Year: Omolade Ikumapayi#, Kevin Allan Smith Bobby Wayne Allen Bernard Jojo Amu Arthur Ayres de Almeida Itandehui Bravo Valdes J Cole Cupit Aaron Fikar Daniel Gradisar Amanda Rae Harper Smita Khapre Solomon Ovinda Otuonye Alexandra Zinn Petkov Joseph Tyler Prosper Robert James Sallee Kevin Allan Smith Ryan Solomon Nicholas Stamatakis James Turner The Degree Master of Science in Computer Science Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Colton Zachery Hill# Riyam lutfi Abdulhameed Albazrkan Andrew Robert Bell Brendan Zachariah Bena Carlos Eugenio Lopes Pires Xavier Torres Samuel Ode Oglegba Minhajul Alam Rahat Simeon James Wuthier The Degree Master of Science in Electrical Engineering Outstanding Graduate Students of the Year: Wesley Allen Hileman, Ryan Toffel# David Abillar Madeleine J. Bahorski Joshua David Frisby Wesley Allen Hileman Caleb Hill Emmanuel Chimere Nwaulu Aaron Pauls The Degree Master of Science in Mechanical Engineering Outstanding Graduate Students of the Year: Karel Hernández Bandrich, Rebekah Marie Shepherd Karel Hernández Bandrich Duncan Schlueter Rebekah Marie Shepherd College of Letters, Arts & Sciences Lynn Vidler, Dean The Degree Master of Arts in Applied Geography Garrett Alexander Boord Nicholas Michael Miller Kayla E. Williams The Degree Master of Arts in Communication Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Crystal Bernadette Blake Crystal Bernadette Blake Kristen Lee Brainard Deidre Castaneda Andrew James Garcia Nathaniel Hernandez Jessica Mehring Brendan Ian Montoya Michelle D. Reiley The Degree Master of Arts in History Outstanding Graduate Students of the Year: Kristine Marie Bell, Kateri Lynn Pacetti, Kristy Louise Wilson Andrew Belet Kristine Marie Bell Michelle Louise Cote Kylie Renee Gonzalez Kora Leann Ivesdal Kory Mathews Miguel Ortega Kateri Lynn Pacetti Trinity Parker Kristy Louise Wilson The Degree Master of Arts in Psychology Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Elias Cruz Acevedo Elias Cruz Acevedo Christopher Xavier Griffith Jenny Anita Lagervall Heidi M. Martinez Joshua Ryan Shulkin Jonathan Mark Sundby The Degree Master of Arts in Sociology Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Megan Garedakis Katrina Adrianne Becker Neah Bay Downs Dybas Megan Garedakis Diedra Marie Russell Courtny Ann Stewart The Degree Master of Science in Applied Mathematics Outstanding Graduate Student of the Year: Michael Nameika John Nagle Michael Nameika Joseph Noernberg Jonathan Michael Thompson River VanIwaarden The Degree Master of Sciences in Biology Ikenna Chris Ozor The Degree Master of Sciences in Physics River Gassen Adrian Leanza Renju Peroor Candidates for Baccalaureate Degrees The following list of candidates for degrees includes students graduating in May 2024. Helen and Arthur E. Johnson Beth-El College of Nursing and Health Sciences Kevin Laudner, Dean The Degree Bachelor of Science in Exercise Science Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Jai Rumi Liester Jenna J. Abblett Rachel Adair* Justin Arias Warren Bennett Baker* Ian Michael Barela Gabriella Lorelie Barnett Jakob Michael Bauer Kimberly Rae Blough** Peterson Bohannon Logan Anthony Bracamonte Chloe Paige Brown Desarae Renee Burke Sofia Catalina Campos Carley Elizabeth Connelly*** Adrianna Cook Madison Duran* Elizabeth Grace Ebbert** Marc Ekker Desiree Goldsmith*** Sara Leah Green Morgan Elizabeth Gross** Angeline Guindon*** Nathan Daniel Hayes Michela Marie Hewitt Nicole R. Hill*** Madaline Eve Holguin, With University Honors Cheyenne J. Hubbard David Odhiambo Jabedo Kennedy Rose Karge Alysha Lavonne Kimler*** Mariah Kjostad Kylie Marie Knoll*** Zachary James Lau Payton A. Lewis Jai Rumi Liester** Ashten Louise Loeks Alexei Yuri Masanko* Jennifer Marlene Medina Makayla I. Merlo** Mykal Montanez Atencio Laura Marlene Morones Zachary Nance Vionna Quynh Nhi Do Nguyen Sydney Nilles Julia Mary Patrick** Dulce Megan Peacock Lauren Sara Stephens* Camden Aliah Strain* Erika J. Timbang Kaitlyn M. Townsend Kaitlyn Elizabeth Ubben* Shianne Avory Marie Valdez Aaron Bradley Ward Anna Weiss** The Degree Bachelor of Science in Health Care Science Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Judiel Amante Rico Almacen, Sarah Jacqueline Cooper, Milly Sofia Salazar Judiel Amante Rico Almacen*** Nadine Samer Almasri*** Madisyn M. Azzopardi Melanie Alyssa Bates Madalyn Joan Bender Katherine Marie Briner** Julia Rose Carter* Maia Beth Case** Sarah Jacqueline Cooper** Jordan Rae Cordova Josephine Nicole DeVries Sidney Thomson Doring Cristina Leigh Fleming* Mariah Rhiannon Haver-Robinson* Carly Allison Horn** Amanda Irene Hughes** Kathy Thien Tam Kha** Noah Scott Lasecki** Angela Marino Libby Lynn McGrath** Britney Mercer* Hannah Montano** Kaylie Yu Feng O’Flynn Aitana Reyes Farinas Milly Sofia Salazar** Janelle Sasaki*** William Gregory Schoonard Amanda Temte* Jillian Turner*** Kyler White Rayna M. White Carisa Leahi Wilkerson*** Lauren Ashley Youngquist The Degree Bachelor of Science in Human Physiology and Nutrition Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Esi Adomaa Fynn Evan Joseph Baehr* Avery Elizabeth Beck-Davis* Carly Dianne Bertelsen* Kadi McConnell Cienega** Macynn Elizabeth Day* Leah Elayna Derrera* Esi Adomaa Fynn* Joel Daniel Hill***, With University Honors Kathryn Elizabeth Kuhn Simon W. Kurtz Gabrielle Joan Pontillas Marcojos*** David Hunter McKean Amie Pham Edwin A. Sarmiento** Emma Scheitzach Caroline Tak* Autumn R. Tapia Krislyn Aiko Teruya** Kristina Olegovna Vdovich The Degree Bachelor of Science in Nursing Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: May YuanLi Bombria, Claire Dahlia LiMing DiIorio, Yoshimi Jenkins Gomez, Harley Piper Hogan, Maya Paige Powell, Bogeum Quiroz, Ashley Randall Delali Danae Adon** Emma K. Alderman* Megan McFarland Bayona*** Michael Edmund Boe May YuanLi Bombria*** Alexandria Bonus** Chandler Rose Brown* Ian Brown** Megan Ayn Carter* Stephanie Castro** Kendall Ann Clabaugh* Brooke C. Coleman** Ashlyn Marie Cordova** Lauren Elizabeth Cowie** Klara Marie DeJesus* Derek Desgroux*** Claire Dahlia LiMing DiIorio*** Maxwell Anthony Duffner** Ella Grace Eddy** Michelle Alexis Fink* Briana Sue Gascon Amanda Leigh Sue Goble*** Yoshimi Jenkins Gomez*** Joshua Matthew Gornick* Celine Billie Habimana* Nicole Renee Hansen Lily A. Harding* Krista Anne Haubert Luci Ann Heines Haley Ann Hermes** Kaitlin Renee Hinkle** Harley Piper Hogan*** Autumn Louise Hoskins* Gabriel Joesph Hotzfield** Caroline A. Howard* Mira Jenkins* Shannon Johansen*** Kearstin Leigh Johnston** Danielle Kahwaji** Theodore John Kolks* Kathryn Elaine Kossack* Kylee C. Kujalowicz* Alena Elizabeth Kuzinski* Stephanie Lynne Langhart*** Kimberly June Langston** Sydney Nichole Leifheit** Savanna Levesque* Julissa C. Livingstone** Chandler Elizabeth Mayfield*** Emma Grace McCune*** Aaron Christopher Menke* Makayla Teresa Montague*** Wendy Moreno** Jocelyn Moreno Morales* Amie Elizabeth Morgan* Teyanna Fay Norris Wendy Thi Nuno* Aspen Karis Palieri*** Rachel Kay Patterson*** Emma Pendergast** Julia Katherine Peterson*** Grant Powell** Maya Paige Powell** Bogeum Quiroz*** Ashley Randall*** Staci Dianna Reebenacker*** Robin Allison Repola*** Jannette Gamar Rhodes** Anha L. Richards* Brock Hunter Ried Tyanna Belle Rollo* Madison Bailey Root* Lauren Ann Russo*** Téa Marie Salerno*** Alexandra Maeve Savage Rebecca Lynn Schwartz Abigail Catherine Simonton*** Ashlyn Michele Smithhart* Jayme Smyth** Carllene Maria Spurlock* Ashley Kate Stenzel*** Brennan H. Stretch** Hope Lawrence Strickland* Jasmyne Sullivan** Hayli Jean Sundgaard* Jillian Elizabeth Swedensky* Sophie Lou Terry* Jace Patrick Toon**, With University Honors Giuliana Alexis Tucker Erin Utesch* Kira Elizabeth Villavert** Christi Lynn Walker* Scott Michael Weimer** Nicole D. Williams College of Business and Administration Thomas Aicher, Dean The Degree Bachelor of Innovation in Business Administration Kylie Marie Autry* Axyle Zylen Belveal*** Isabella Rose Bledsoe Chase William Culver Abbey Jacobs* Ian Michael Kersey** Myla Elizabeth Marnell*** Gabriel James Rivera Aleksandr Solano*** Danny Phuong Dang Tran** Jack Wormington The Degree Bachelor of Science in Business Distinguished Academic Achievement Awards: Beth Backora, Riley Hand, David Montero, Sydney Samuels, Alexis Wagner, Georg Weggener Marcus E. Aguilar* Camryn Jessica Amick* Derek Bradley Anderson Alexander M. Anspach Zane Maximilian Arabalo Beth Backora*** Nicholas Anthony Bandeira** Justin Daniel Banta* Antonia Loren Batuello* Andrea Bazan Alexander Manuel Bejarano Alberto Beltran** Trenton Allen Blume** Brisia Michelle Brousseau William Jay Brown* Elijah Ray Brownewell* Kylee D. Burton Hayden Gerald Byrd Maxwell T. Cahill Christina Nicole Carlisle* Angel R. Carrera Mic Chapur Ferrera Chad John Chargualaf** Rory Kesler Chase Jonas Powell Chilopoulos Meghan Clark** Elise Kathryn Cloonan*** Joshua Clutter Matthew Ryan Cochrane Sarah Renee Coker Abigayl B. Cox Karina R. Cruz* Juan Cruz Jr. Ryan Joseph Dague Holden Daniels* Colin James Derenburger Bally Idrissa Diakite Amanda Dinh Christopher Dominguez Zachary Thomas Donlan** Laura Downs** Ebisa Shahinllari Dundas** Dylan Jackson Efird Preston Matthew Eisenach** Aitana Elder Jeffery Edward Ericson* Matthias Faas Joseph Michael Martin Fiocchi Karina Zosia Florek Caden Frasl Emily Gaylord*** Alexe Dustin Gilles Elijah James Gonzales Daniel Luis Gonzalez Douglas Howard Goslin** Gavin Gary Gray*** Elijah James Gustad Fern Gutierrez Riley Hand*** Dylan Handlovitch Justin Harris Megan Lynn Harris Branden Jonscott Hart* Cade Michael Hathaway*** Cameron James Hathaway Amelia Susanne Haverkamp Daniel James Hayden Kate Sandra Hedlund Jonathan Jooyoung Ho* Brenna Ann Hoff*** Franz-Xaver Korbinian Huber Haley Huschka** Brandon Travis Hussey** Kailey Jo Johnson Serenity Anne Johnson Brandon David Jones Terrence James Jones** Shannon Kareus* Karson Karge Jared Karlin Riley McKee Keenan* Kathy Thien Tam Kha** Lauren Mikayla Kim Joel Steven Kinyon*** Kevin Don Knuth* Bailey Katrina Kolarik Michael Kopriva Garrett Craig Larson LaRiah Imani Lee-Davis** Blake Cullen Leiding* Nika Mihaelovna Lowery Dylan Luc Richard Joseph Martin* Alyia Mathenia Lauren Ashlyn McCoy Mitchell Montgomery Meler** Azuriah Mersereau*** Stephen Meyer Brennen James Meyers Jackson Robert Million Chase J. Monestime David Montero*** Lauren Jenay Moody Collin P. Moore Alyssa Victoria Moos Aiden John Murphy Alexander William Mussone Alexis Daryl Newland** Ashley Leilani Nguyen Fiona Norby Nadia Ortiz-Harris*** David Osnas* Aspasia Zoe Paganis** Elise Palmer Dylan Patrick Parsons Steven Joseph Pauka** Lexi Alexandra Petri* Cole John Philip Kaitlyn Ashley Pitts Anastasia Marie Polaczak** Shannon Lynn Pool Trinity Pope* Justice Jacob Pryor Jordan Pshigoda Bryce James Raines*** Chelsea Blue Rardon* Michael Gunther Rauschenbach Christina Marie Reece* Allan J. Remedor Evan Jack Reynolds Mikayla Raye Roche** Brittney Linae Rodriguez-Barragan* Samuel Steven Rogers James Matthew Roper Erin Ross Carson Alex Ruppert Arianna Jade Russell** Mikayla J. Russell* Sybren Hoekstra Russell Robert Ryan Ian Charles Crockett Sachs Sydney Samuels*** Brycen Nicholas Sanchez Michael R. Schneider Ryan Bernard Schulz** Evan Charles Schwarzbart* Nathaniel Lee Seay Joshua Sekutera Bailei Shaw** Jakob Shook** Garrett Liam Shriver Barbara Anett Sierra Guerrero* Alexander Raymond Sigrist Esad Sipilovic* Ainsley Marie Smith** Darinel Soriano Castillo Jack William Souder Kyle Austin Balazon Srichantra Luke Andrew Stephens* Molly Joy Strickler* Caleb James Stubbings Yujiro Tamura** Jenna Catherine Tandy*** Zachary Daniel Terradez William Smith Thompson*** Rachel Hannah Elizabeth Toon Peter V. Tran Julien Gerald Loving Trocha Chandler Tully Gabriel Nikolas Tvedt* Emily VanGundy* Rylie Elizabeth Vaughan* Alexis Wagner*** Alexia Rose Ward Nicholas Weber Georg Weggener*** Alex William Welch Brendan Ervin Weyand* Thomas T. Whitesel Hunter D. Wilhelm* Titus John Williams Shekinah Elihoenai Worthwealth Alexander Scott YBarra Ziyi Zhang Titus Harvey Ziesel Cooper Jack Zippwald** Mason Nicholas Zurun* College of Public Service George Reed, Dean The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Criminal Justice Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Maya Anne Cafasso, Kade Joseph Naso Robyn Abrams** Brianna Lynn Adams* Renée Lynnette Anderson Karla Summer Andrade Saenz*** Benjamin William Azbell* Trevor Bailey* Sophia Mikaela Bauer Tarik Bektasevic Sierra Bensing Hannah Maya Binder* Keyanda Bolton Hannah Kirsten Brower*** Anthony Bryant Maya Anne Cafasso*** Faith Caldwell Cuitlahuac Cervantes*** Allie Paige Clementi** Mackenzie Cooper Aja Grace Curtis Sarai Crystal Damasco** Nataly Moran De Lira Emily Marie Doolittle** Hunter G. Driscoll** James Philip Dunbar** Jacqueline Grace Eide Paige Kanani Fahrni*** Madilene Kenna Fleming** Katelyn E. Galloway*** Itzel Garcia Vazquez Sean Brayton Graff** Parker James Gregory Jordan Nicole Gurule Javen Ryan Hansen* Natalie L. Hill** Crystina Marrie Hirschman Abby Holmstoen** Zachary L. Jacobson* Fiona Kaira Berta Kaugars Athena Echo Keller Andrew Daniel Kovacevic* Braden Luke Krull** Annjela Katherine Lane* Dylan C. LeCocq Brianna Rose Lindsey** Dimitri Alexander Lopez*** Lara Martin*** Colton Matthews Kamryn Carol McCain* Ian Augustine McClung Anastasia Montoya Maria Guadalupe Moscosa Brenna Joy Moynihan** Nathan James Murray Kade Joseph Naso*** Rockley Grey Neal*** Scott Edward Nistler*** Stacey Pietig** Anastasia Marie Rendon Aracelli Ann Repola** Marissa A. Reyes Ella Marjorie Richards Alejandra Rodriguez* Angelina Amanda Rodriguez* Darren J. Sayers Devynne Schoch* Lindsay Noelle Severson*** Faith Morgan Grace Shierling** Sabryn Nicole Shtatman Frank Nicholas Slavens*** Alyssia Solano-Hinojosa Michael Stevens** Alexia Tabarez-Halcomb LeAnne Tomlinson** Jeremy Arthur Valdez* Maria Gisselle Vazquez Lindsey Christina VerBrugge Brendan Nicholas Walters** Taylyn Rene Warth The Degree Bachelor of Social Work Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Tyesha Rikia Robertson Sarah Bouchard*** Samantha Lynn Boutan*** Lillian Rose Carson* Elizabeth Nicole Churchill John Jay Cosmato III** Stephen R. Crahan*** Aneta Czepiel*** Emonie Davis Emily Sue Dees Jonnie Nichole Field** Emmagin Goldman*** Emily Graber* Michael Ryan Greenbaum Daniel Greenberg*** Megan Harrison*** Olivia Kimberley Hernandez Par Hnem* Alexis Aleas Huguenin Ketti Lane Lemon Anna Christine Long* Braden Lee Love*** Alicia Martinez*** Kierra Audrey Nash Teemaeh Huynh Ngo*** Tyesha Rikia Robertson** Kiahna Nicole Sanders* Rebecca Marie Sharp Ava Marie Simone Kaylee Sylvia Smith** Sarah Elizabeth Smith** Emma Lynn Stenzel** Paige Taylor*** Eric Cordero Vega Marley Jean Waltert*** Madejah A. Watson** Russell Luke Williams*** Amelia Wright Niswonger** College of Education Joseph Wehrman, Interim Dean The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Human Services Alyssa N. Anderson** Kimberly Burriesce*** Sue Curtis*** Emma Margaret de Ryk* Meagan Grace Harding Heidi Harvey* Terese Maria Hourigan** Dorothy Johnson Kara Kathleen Kennedy* Alexis Lauren Kube* Sydney Nelson** Mia Cemone Perez Maisie Marie Rice*** Imani Unique Rucker Kaitlyn Paige Smith Shelby Kaye Strode** Marlyn Torres Victoria Jacqueline Velasco** The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Inclusive Early Childhood Education Kathleen Barr Brittney Erin Benavidez*** Baylee Cortes Christina Gearhart Margaret Elizabeth Grimes** Lisa Marie Hannon*** Marissa Hart*** Justine Diane Henderlong Misty Blue Hinkle Brynn Nicole Johnson** Erin Johnson*** Misty Sue Judson Leah Murphy Nichole Jean Myers*** Randi Nicole Payan Ontiveros Jasmin Reliford Melisa S. Rondomanski** Tiffany Salazar Nyah Joann Sims Elisha Marie Stewart** The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Inclusive Elementary Education Lessly Citlaly Aguado Drew Elise Biermeier Andrew Nathanael Bracht*** Jayla Brown*** Ajani Buckhanan Daniela Buman** Hannah Lee Burgess Biridiana Corral-Ramos** Emily Crain** Shannon Doyle*** McKenna Lauren Frakes*** Lauren Dolores Gregor Matt Jonathan Grant Colton Alexander Haase*** Michael A. Hall Eriqa Mercedes Hallam Paris Johnson Ashley Janet Jones* Lauren Audrey Jordan** Joshua Glen Keltner Reagan Maye Kraemer* Alexandria Elaine Lawson** Maille Alise McGraw Jennifer Marie Oakes** Gisell Ivette Rivera Brandi Michele Rusnock*** Kennedy Rutherford Kendall Rae Sargent*** Faith Katherine Shirey* Breanna Jordan Skinner Fatima Stansell** Samantha Marie Steiner*** Deanna Gabriella Vasquez** Dayna Wahl* Madelyn Grace Wells Sophie Welp** Megan Ashleigh Whitling*** Lindsey Shou Woolsey** The Degree Bachelor of Innovation in Inclusive Early Childhood Education Alina Isabel Ehry-Ventura* Emily Ann Reddix* The Degree Bachelor of Innovation in Inclusive Early Childhood Leadership Laura Trujillo** College of Engineering and Applied Science Michael Corl, Interim Dean The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Computer Science Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Joshua Alexander Muller Yulia Marina Gutierrez Baratutis Eric Keis* Jamie Caleb Kiser Joshua Alexander Muller* Andres Eloy Puga Justin Matthew Rodriguez Isaiah M. Romero** Rilee Jo Seebaum Justice William Sparks Connor Wilson The Degree Bachelor of Innovation in Computer Science Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Sherman Douglas Kettner Felicia J. Friend* Masen Robert Gutormson Sherman Douglas Kettner***, With University Honors The Degree Bachelor of Innovation in Computer Science & Security Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Dante Takashi Cannestra Landon Christopher Bunker Dante Takashi Cannestra** Cole Christian Fukumitsu Katherine Elizabeth Larsen*** Marcus Ryan Manuel* Chris Michael Moody Jacob Paul Robert Murphy Ivan Alejandro Sarmiento MaryKathryn Elizabeth Schneider*** The Degree Bachelor of Innovation in Game Design & Development Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Ian K. Shouldice Branden Patrick Arms Jordan Arms*** Eshan Anup Bhatt Aimée Grace Branine** Alexander Scott Hughes Luis Fernando Martinez** Brendan Perry Christian James Ruiz Ian K. Shouldice** The Degree Bachelor of Science in Computer Engineering Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Jacob Lynn Wall Donovan Matheau Espiritu Cruz Daniel Kennedy** Judah Thomas Small** Kevin Paul Smithgall Jacob Lynn Wall** The Degree Bachelor of Science in Computer Science Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Brendan Todd Gould Matheus Abrantes Samuel Robert Adamson*** Daniel Atkinson Brogan Bewley** Matthew Elliot Bidwell Ryan Bieg* Benjamin Brady Bittles Brandon Bradshaw Joseph Braitsch** Joshua Everette Braseth Jasmine Nykole Brown** Christopher Burrows-Riggan Zachary Chanza Nicholas Michael Chesi Nicholas Dalton* Errick George Denning Luke Daniel Flancher Owen Zayne Garrett Johnson Matthew Francis Gibbons** Kobe Donavan Goodermont Brendan Todd Gould*** Nicholas Owen Grube Robert A. Hawkins** Brandon Hernandez Noah J. Holt Ron Lustig Jack McArthur*** Grayson G. McKenzie Mikaela Ann Moores* Chase Alexander Mutzig*** Gareth Nott* Antonio Rodriguez** Murphy James Schaff*** Keegan Martin McCrocklin Shry*** Riley Jack Staite Alexander Nicholas Traffis Moisey Tulepkaliev*** Connor Whittington* Patrick Joseph Woods*** Logan Daniel Zeien*** The Degree Bachelor of Science in Data Analytics and Systems Engineering Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Cynthia Dawn Valentine Gabriel Batizy** Mark Phillip Bowen** Brett A. Ford** Cynthia Dawn Valentine*** The Degree Bachelor of Science in Electrical Engineering Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Michael Jed Martinez Nicholas Brown* David Chandra Joshua Enzio Essler Mackenzie M. Lind* Michael Jed Martinez** Logan Ray Mros** Zachary Christopher Thomas The Degree Bachelor of Science in Mechanical Engineering Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Benjamin Kopriva, Jackson Thorne Daniel Abifoluwa Adebonojo Mathew Anderson*** Turner Lee Benham Alexa Boerger Jacob Wesley Buller** Dawson Armstrong Burch Sandy Camarena Nathaniel Rian Carey** Uriel Castellanos Austin J. Corniels Bruce Henry Cushman*** Reese Matthew Dodd** Dae Leon Downs Kyle Franklin** Jonathan David Garbrick Brian MacFarlane Gartrell Jonathon Glidden Antonio Fidel Gonzales Jacob Paul Hamilton* Tristan Alan Hodges Benjamin Kopriva*** Caleb Krantz* Julius Nicholas Lonsky*** Brock A. Martin Ethan Thomas Martin Andrea Jean Miller** Marco A. Morales*** Peter Balazs Nagy-Szasz Conor O’Brien Isaac Jonathan Payne** Daniel Jay Roach Ryan Christopher Roman Mabon Daniel Russo-Way Shea Singler*** Alexander J. Stasiak Matthew Harold Terry* Justin James Thomassen** Jackson Thorne*** Tyler Tryon*** Tristan Neal Turner Jackson Lucas Tuttle* Christian Tyler Underwood*** Nikita Waintrub, With University Honors Grace Taylor Whitehorn* College of Letters, Arts & Sciences Lynn Vidler, Dean The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Anthropology Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Sophia Grace Byrd, Shannon Marie Sullivan Jacqueline Diane Alonso Holtorf* Seth Evi Boniface*, With Honors Sophia Grace Byrd*** Jaylee Nicole Ciniello-Hepner***, With University Honors, With Highest Honors Seiva Balay Cunningham Jasmyne Jones Kaily Michelle Kessinger** Sienna Latham Sirena Jade Maley Emily S. Maxon* Emma Faith Marie Pirillo Shannon Marie Sullivan*** Nicholas Wedde Ryan Michael Anthony Wood Jillian Youtz The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Biochemistry Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Advita Bhatia Sara Lynn Anderson**, With Distinction Advita Bhatia***, With University Honors, With Honors William Yuean Smith***, With Distinction The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Chemistry Brandy Marie Baysinger* The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Communication Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Anthony James Meister, David Allen Roberts, Cody Michael Standridge, Graham Benjamin Smith Christian Michael Alires-Gallegos Colton Cedirc Aquino Delanie Marie Baker Cameron Ryan Barnes Ella Josephine Barry** Cherish Ellen Bass* William Becker Joshua Aaron Bermudez** Dylan R. Billinger Ivy Haynes Bingham*** Caitlyn G. Branine Logan Matthew Brasili Jasmine Lee Bruce Allison Cornelia Burgess* Mackenzie Cameron*** Alli Ann Carpenter* Eric Edward Carroll*** Brendan Michael Clark Gustavo Silva Costa Emily Crosson** Ava Grace DiCola** Caelan Quinn Echeverio John Gerald Delfino Elvrum** Alexander Cole Ferguson Klarissa Alondra Gamboa Kimberly Garcia Zachary James Gardner Jasmine R. Gerald*** Haden Garcia Gillespie** Kelsey Lenae Graff*** Dylan L. Hammett Zachary Robert Kelley* Nadea Su Khan Brady Thomas Lachemann** Emily Jane Larson** Cole Ronald Mahon** Bennett Paul Mallott Chloe Manansala Natalie Marie Martinez* Soraya Mayard Anthony James Meister**, With Highest Distinction Juan Miguel Mejia** Sierra K. Mench Candace Mintz Dennis Molina Olivia Rose Nordyke** Sophia Dolores Notarianni** Faith Elizabeth Novess Ryan Dashon O’Neal Jackson Powers Owens Mason Joseph Pastorello** Zoe Isabella Peery** Sebastian Pratt* David Allen Roberts Jonathon Roper* Isabel Rossi*** Raven Sol Sanchez** Sara Brittney Singleton Graham Benjamin Smith** Laney Kay Spaide Cody Michael Standridge***, With Highest Distinction Caden Audrey Stergius Braden Cole Stevens Cosette Samantha Stockstill Keegan Michael Sullivan Benjamin Edward Summers Kami Taylor Clarice Michelle Thompson*** Rebekah Longley Tonyan** Estevan J. Trujillo Cole Austin Tscherter Eric Hart Tschudy Jimmy Wang, With High Distinction Taylor Blaine White Cade Winders Jessica Diane Thien Ly Yun-Washington** Hannah Lynn Zwahlen The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Economics Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Olivia Opal Santonastaso Matthew John Carpenter Ryan Gannaway*** Samuel James Gilbert Devin Jacob Harriman Robert Hatten Alexander J. Hecker, With High Distinction Ian Herrera-Ruiz Zachery Hershberger***, With Highest Distinction Sterling Gage Kunau, With Distinction Ian Zhen Li** Jackson Wyatt Lupton*, With High Distinction Niyonyishu Magnifique Noah Steven Rakosky Ismael Ramirez Olivia Opal Santonastaso***, With Highest Distinction Jonathan James Schroeder Luke Zachariah Sussex Ethan Tramel Ashley Mi Vo Nicholas Alexander Wilson The Degree Bachelor of Arts in English Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Melody Kim Anderson, Andréa Marie Culling, Riley Jordan Gentsch, Ashlynn Renee Royall Melody Kim Anderson***, With Honors Anahi Angel Guzman Jessica Bussell**, With Honors Julia Lauryn Carpenter**, With Honors Andréa Marie Culling***, With Honors Colleen Catherine Devino* Eliana Diaz**, With Honors Nolan Harold Dotter Riley Jordan Gentsch***, With Honors Lauren Nicole Hancock Arianna Celeste Hernandez** Jadyn Marie Hunt***, With Honors Nicholas Gabriel Matte*, With Honors Amanda Marie Miranda Annie Erin O’Keefe*, With Honors Uriah James Oxford Daniel James Patterson**, With Honors Ashlynn Renee Royall***, With Honors Brenden Craig Sisk Dakota Smith* Sheybine Ložca Sylvain Jenny Marie Tedesco***, With Honors Jerri Selena Thomas***, With University Honors, With Honors Katie Lyn Turner**, With Honors Arabella Idalene Underwood**, With Honors Joshua T.L. Wright The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Geography and Environmental Studies Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Charlea Kathryn Howard, Lyndsay Weir Micah Alexander Becker*** Miranda Benson Benjamin Stephen Blood*** Julie Cochran** Natasha Kay Cowling*** Jean Oliver Drake Marcus John Emerson Melissa Rose Fisher* Jackson Michael Gaarder* Luis Angel Garcia-Lopez Charlea Kathryn Howard*** Mallory Jeffson Kayla Irene Lamreau Ethan Michael Lane* Kyle Marcell Owens Drake David Panzer Nicolaos Paul Pappas Travis Michael Leaf Pochipinski Colin Jake Ponville Aaron Riley*** Austin J. Schriever Mac Alexander Stodart** Lyndsay Weir*** Ethan Wilson Cherreka Wirth* The Degree Bachelor of Arts in History Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Catherine Elaine Bauder, Jaylee Nicole Ciniello-Hepner, Amanda Anna Espinel, Lee Adam Files, Bradley Joseph White, Ryan Wilkinson Matthew Tyler Barko Catherine Elaine Bauder***, With Highest Honors Eric Anthony Boyle Jacob Timothy Brown**, With High Honors Matthew Brunette***, With Highest Honors Benjamin Carlen*, With Honors Jaylee Nicole Ciniello-Hepner***, With University Honors, With Highest Honors Timothy Coltrin Michael Corkill***, With High Honors Dustin R. Dunn***, With Highest Honors Amanda Anna Espinel, With High Honors Eric John Farmer**, With High Honors Lee Adam Files***, With Highest Honors Braxton Alexander Fuller* Selby Knox***, With Highest Honors Tyler L. Lambott Dominic Markham** Alissa Winter Mason Justice Hunter Mendoza Shannon Elizabeth Miller**, With High Honors Milly Lynn Mollica*** Thor Donovan Moy**, With High Honors Matthew J. Nelson Brooke Emily O’Brien Dennis Lloyd Parker**, With High Honors Tyler Lee Richardson Bradley Michael Schultz Taylor Noel Sibley*, With Honors J’Amie Sirvaitis Maddison Dawn Sullivan*, With Honors Bradley Joseph White***, With Highest Honors Ryan Wilkinson***, With Highest Honors The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Interdisciplinary Studies Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Benjamin Czaplewski Benjamin Czaplewski** The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Music Natalie Breanne Jensen Christopher Dale Swanson*** Hope Gabrielle Tuin*** The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Philosophy Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Kurt Bricker Chloe I. Bailey Madeline Elyse Bailey Kurt Bricker*** Jack Robert Certo** Madison Christine Crispen Lovie B. Fairbanks* Olivia Grace Ferrara* Ari Alexander Field Anthony William Langdon** Jake Alan Neiber*** Ella Sayeed Elizabeth Marie Shafer Michelle Christine Shinnick** Aliyah Briánn Smith** Madeline Anne Tyson Rachel Olivia Wight*** The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Political Science Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Connor Hathaway David Michael Aguirre** Kyra Faith Alexander Lisa Hyland Alexander Nicole Gibson Asuquo*** Emma Elizabeth Banse Mariah Paige Boudrieau Kai E. Dillon*** MacKenzie Grace English** Lovie B. Fairbanks* Olivia Grace Ferrara* Emma Carlota Frazier*, With Honors Connor Hathaway*** Chloë Abigail Jensen* Brandon William Leiser Erynn Christyne Loges***, With High Honors Milly Lynn Mollica*** Keenan Brady Powell Lisa Renee Ward** George Zoorob Jr. The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Psychology Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Kristina Marie MacDonald, Elisabeth Cotsy McLane Brianna Lynn Adams* Lubna Tarik Al Sindy Christian James Kaipo Allen Karla Summer Andrade Saenz*** Keely Andrews Sophia Mikaela Bauer Hannah Maya Binder* Emily Brockway* Scout Carpenter Cuitlahuac Cervantes*** Raegan Elizabeth Cole Mackenzie Cooper Haley Crawford Aja Grace Curtis Jacob Dane Kylie Day** Kayla Alexis Dishuck** Emily Marie Doolittle** Jazlyn-Lanae Amunique Dyson** Jacqueline Grace Eide Robbi Alexis Esler Liliana Josefina Favila** Kira I. Ferguson* Madilene Kenna Fleming** Jaycee Jade Fuller Catherine Gajewski Will Fischer Gannon Isabel Nicole Gaston*** Steven Haemmerle Lyn Hamer Sage Nicole Hamilton*, With Honors Jade Marie Hardin Natalie C. Harrison*** Cheyanne Victoria Hart** Macie Glynn Hengel* Noelle Christine Hernandez** Natalie L. Hill** Emaya Jae Hoff Kyle Holcomb Natasha Holloway Audrey Hort Corah Breanna Hurd** Chanel Nicole Jackson Zachary L. Jacobson* Hope Renee Johnson** Maggie Jones Jessica Lynn Kearns Madelynn Rae King Joy Kitts*** Mandaryn Leander Brianna Rose Lindsey** Emily Grace Lovato* Caitlyn Marie Lutyen Kristina Marie MacDonald*** Conrad Matteson** Kamryn Carol McCain* Sophia Danielle McConnell* Caylan Marie McGregor Elisabeth Cotsy McLane***, With Honors Kara Rose Meyer Deborah Ruth Moyles* Brenna Joy Moynihan** Kaylin Muller*** Allifair Mundine, With Honors Jessica Lauren Nelson*** Scott Edward Nistler*** Heather Jacqueline O’Hern Abigail Olson* Amanda Elizabeth Orchard Mickayla Star Oswald Anthony Pantoja-Cassidy* Monet Symone Patterson-Gray Alexandria Kathryn Pavkov Abigail Lauren Peed*** Joesph Perez Alexis Maree Price Sylence Rain Pruett Shehzad Kodi Rahman Bahromkhon Valikhonavich Rashidov Matthew Lawrence Regovic** Anastasia Marie Rendon Aracelli Ann Repola** Hailey Elizabeth Richey** Adalina Marie Rodriguez Alejandra Rodriguez* Angelina Amanda Rodriguez* Emma Grace Roeda*** William Kenneth Ross* Amelia C. Sarton* Ella Sayeed Abigail Riley Sena** Elizabeth Marie Shafer Miriam Elizabeth Shamess***, With Honors Sheila Silverio Kimberley Marie Sincavage** Haleigh Mae Spadaccini** Natasha Elizabeth Spiers* Benjamin Deane Steiner* Samantha Marie Stevenson Rachel Virginia Sullivan*** Haley Dawn Tafoya, With Honors Alyssa Lynn Trujillo**, With Honors Bethany Pearl Ullom Lucas Scott Urchell Scott Albert VanCamp Madison Waller Jessica Warren Taylyn Rene Warth Ainsley Irene Woodfin*** Jillian Rose Woods* Nora Jeanine Yousef Jadyn Brielle Zook** The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Sociology Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Freddy Lopez Rodriguez, Saydra Maddison Schmitz Hayl Antis Gillian Ann Dunlap Paige Kanani Fahrni*** Jayla Rose Garcia Nicolas J. Grassi Parker James Gregory Noelle Christine Hernandez** Audrey Hort Anisha Koirala Freddy Lopez Rodriguez*** Saydra Maddison Schmitz*** Aliyah Briánn Smith** Maria Gisselle Vazquez The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Spanish Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Kelsey Lynn Maiers, Rachel Annmarie Richtman Kelsey Lynn Maiers* Rachel Annmarie Richtman*** The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Technical Communication and Information Design Kaitlyn Adair* Haley Jordyn Apricio* Amelia Hope Herman*** Dylan Asher Morrison* Haley Renee Thomas** Teague J. Torrance** Inayah Rose Velasquez Amelia Wright Niswonger** The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Visual and Performing Arts Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Abraham Bush Guevara, Laura Kuykendall, Skye Maldonado, Matt Alexander Phillips, Heather Alcorn Pitts, Grace Rudolph Alexiss Marie Bedminster**, With High Distinction Hunter L. Buck Jonah Paul Butterfield Jewel Beacham Charsley*** Eliana Diaz** Karina Kho Frederick Georgia Grace Gabriel Abraham Bush Guevara***, With Highest Distinction Phoebe Ruth Qiao Hartman*, With Distinction Ian D. Hay Sam Joseph Knopp, posthumously Laura Kuykendall***, With Highest Distinction Lindsey Larson**, With High Distinction Jesse Hunter Laverty Meagan Taylor Lorance**, With High Distinction Skye Maldonado** Audrey Ann McGee* Sydney Fullon Omadio Matt Alexander Phillips Heather Alcorn Pitts*** Grace Rudolph*** Sheridan Grace Singer* Madison Lynn Troesh Taeron Jacob Waring The Degree Bachelor of Arts in Women’s and Ethnic Studies Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Nicole Gibson Asuquo, Amanda Anna Espinel Nicole Gibson Asuquo Amanda Anna Espinel, With High Honors Megan Marie Moen** The Degree Bachelor of Innovation in Communication | Digital Filmmaking Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Aurora Ray Linn Weaver Aurora Ray Linn Weaver* The Degree Bachelor of Innovation in Communication | Digital Media Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Daniel Terry Tobias A. Estrella Sean Madsen Ford* Meghan Rose Germain** Brady Michael Hindman* Jon Patrick Karish* Althea Burgos Savage Daniel Terry The Degree Bachelor of Innovation in Women’s and Ethnic Studies Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Hailey Jordan Clark Hailey Jordan Clark The Degree Bachelor of Science in Biochemistry Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Chloe Madeline Bailey Brianna L. Burgess Shannon Elizabeth Campbell***, With Distinction Grant Foster Skyler Elinor Gillespie Farh Kaddar**, With Honors Nha Hoang Le Jamil Eihab Jamil Nemri***, With Honors Lyda Duong Quach Helen A. Sanabria Camden Trent*, With Honors The Degree Bachelor of Science in Biology Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Audrey Chun Fahland Alicia D. Beauford* Violet Mary Benson* Molly Elisabeth Boettiger Brennan Jacob Carey Yuliana Carreon James Garrett Childress Anna-Claire Cooper*** Jolene Donielle De Leo*** Kelsey Drennan Alexis Leigh Duffy*** Audrey Chun Fahland Lauren E. Flutts Vivian Gaytan Andre Celestino Genova Luis Alberto Gilart Benjamin Gokey Jordan Robert Hester Alahni Deseray Jackson Jourdan Rae Jackson Cale Coulon Kennamer*** Katrina Koetting Heather Dawn Lowry** Jonah Scott Marean Simon Marinelli Logan McCord Melissa Margaret Moreni*** Jessica Taylor Nation** Ashley M. Nguyen Aubryn Jewell Nicholas* Rebekah Elizabeth Parsons* Joanna Philips* Joyclyn Reed-Starr Christopher Scott Rogers Kelli C. Sebastine-Krisanda Isabella Elise Rene Shannon Clarissa Mae Silva*** Luke Isaiah Smith Alasyn Mathea Stowers Emma Delaney Stump* Adrienne Bou Talain* Autumn R. Tapia Alexia Thompson Megan Webb Gabriel Alano Weber Izaac Nathaniel Williams** Michal Levi Zaza The Degree Bachelor of Science in Chemistry Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Hunter Redmon Aaron Thomas Cuellar Natasha Michelle Mastalka-Tatro, With Honors Hunter Redmon**, With Distinction Allison Nicole Strimbu The Degree Bachelor of Science in Mathematics Outstanding Undergraduate Student Awards: Brendan Todd Gould, Donovan Yoshio Leyba Rezheen Hamid Aram Amanda Ariel Downs Brooke Leanne Drake Johnathan Cole Duran Olivia Elias Samantha Abigail Foster** Anders Rhys Frey Frederick Carter Frillman* Brendan Todd Gould***, With Honors Donovan Yoshio Leyba** Liam McDowell Joshua Raymond Nogajewski Jacob Robert Pintor The Degree Bachelor of Science in Physics and Energy Science Outstanding Undergraduate Student Award: Kaitlin Hope McAllister Tyler Christian Mahnken Kaitlin Hope McAllister*** Kelly Taylor Alixandir Jacob-Bear Walters** The Degree Aerospace Studies Colonel Bradley L. Spears, United States Air Force Second Lieutenant, United States Air Force Nathaniel L. Seay George K. Zoorob The Degree Military Science Lieutenant Colonel David R. Campbell, United States Army Second Lieutenant, United States Army Distinguished Military Graduates: Sheannah Angel Beale, Alberto Beltran, Zachery Rutger Hershberger, Steven Joseph Pauka, Edward Alec Pedraza, Allan Nmn Remedor, David Allen Roberts, Cody Michael Standridge, Caden Audrey Stergius, Ethan Brierly Tramel, Mason Nicholas Zurun Heriberto Angel Reyes Sheannah Angel Beale Alberto Beltran Joshua Aaron Bermudez Anthony Syrall Bryant Hunter Gene Driscoll James Philip Dunbar Joseph Michael Martin Fiocchi Brent Matthew Fulmer Zachery Rutger Hershberger Zachary James Lau Deonson Tuanuu Leatimua Ian Zhen Li Juan Miguel Mejia Wendy Moreno Miguel Angel Ortega Jr. Steven Joseph Pauka Edward Alec Pedraza Joesph Steven Perez Shehzad Kodi Rahman Allan Nmn Remedor David Allen Roberts Diedra Marie Russell Luke Isaiah Smith Cody Michael Standridge Caden Audrey Stergius Ethan Brierly Tramel Jonathan Matthew Edward Waldon Jimmy Xue Wang Miranda Renee Williamson Mason Nicholas Zurun Candidates for Associate Degrees MORNING CEREMONY Alexander R. Abeyta Amber Kassandra Alderete Katrina Antoinette Alexander Marissa Siobhan Anderson John Antich Daniel Benjamin Arellano Amanda Marie Arnold Jade Brianna Atkinson Victor Aki Atterberry Kressa Brianna Baier Tyler N. Bair Talyn Drew Barger Melanie Anne Barker Brian James Beem Kyle Aaron Bell Robert Ben III Victoria Kaye Benway Conor Thomas Bertles Daniel Shane Bird Reid Lauren Biren Brittany Danielle Blair Bryan Kenneth Boatman Justin Michael Bobo Quinten-Andrew Storm Boneta Taylor Bosler Justin Boyle Rebekah Breeze TJ Brickell Cara Brooking Christian Willem Brouwer Katheryn Brunswick Tyler Bryant Matthew Gerard Butcher Kalinka Caldas Premawardhana Janelle Nicole Canody Cassidy Carlson Nicholas Cetti James L. Chasseur Anthony Joseph Cila James Richard Clark David Ray Claycomb Marquita Shequin Cleare Michael James Coletti Ashley Marie Collins Calvin Joseph Comstock Madeline Conrique Derek Ryan Cotton Alim S. Craig Rebecca Lynn Culp Amber R. Davidson Nicole Paige Dayberry Daren Lavell Dickson Emma Kathleen Dolce Zachary James Dulmes James Dunlap Cassandra Dye Michael B. Elrod Daniel Esteban Espejo Marcela Espinoza Aaron Evans Cassidy Jordan Fairey Ramona Christine Faulkner Sydney Diann Feakes Sara Lynn Felix Chelsea Nicole Ferguson Steven Finch Morgan-Marie Fiss Imani Taisha Floyd-Bonner Rebekah Ridings Forti Dominick Fraccica Michelle Fulmer Christopher Paul Gallegos Kristina Marie Gallegos Breanna Garcia Shelly Marie Gavin Jaden Dominique Geiser Athena Givens Kaitlyn Goldberg Marina Adele Gonzales Natalie Lucia Goodrick Connor Matthews Gordon Robert Allen Gray Rachel Helen Anna Marrs Grignano Aaron Gregory Haefner Marcus Hake Jasmine Renea Harris Benjamin Clark Hatfield Brianna Lynn Hatfield Alex Hayes Tyler Hendricks Veronique Shen’e Henry Emma Marie Herman Chelsi Rae Hernandez Denesia Hernandez-Meza Jorge Cristian Hidalgo III Kelly Hilbert Adrienne Joy Hill Kevin Horst CurDesia Alishawn Hudson Andrew Humes Kyle Jackson Katherine Nicole Jarrett Kip Andrew Jessup Andrew Michael Jones Noah Jun Kelley Elizabeth Kestel Mikaila Sierra Ketcherside Brian Kiely Nayounn Eileen Kim Taylor Renee King Blair Kinsley Benjamin Scott Kirby Michelle Kosley Tommy Ryan Kurth Aaron Lamatsch John P. Lecato Sephen Lewis Maximiliano Fernando Llamas Sarah MacDonald Shane Phillip Madriaga Georganne Madelyn Mager Dominik Maligranda Vinson Thomas Marr Sandra Marroquin Samuel A. Marsh Alexander James Martin Calvin Dewayne Martin Lisa Martin Allie Martinez Taylor Danielle McMillan Antonia Medina Selena Leticia Medina Kaitlin Marie Mersnick Chase Metier Danica Michelle Miller Richard Victor Miller J Kegan Minock Bart Wade Mitchell Travis Dean Monroe Ivonne Abigail Montaño Maggie Isabelle Montoya Amanda Marie Montuori Christopher John Montuori Jonathan Morgan Skye Marie Morris Karen Lily Mortimer Elizabeth E. Moxley Taylor Akiko Nanamura Nicholas Nelson Michael R. Norton Colleen Rose Nussbaum Deneisha Cherecer Obermuller Rieshel Esther Osiecki Parker Ozburn Arthur Dale Pancoast Adam Parker Reilly Takeo Nicasio Pasion Steven Douglas Payne Michele Perez-Lopez Vanessa Perkins Joshua Michael Perkins Kerri-Ann Pitt Andrea Place Heather Marie Podrasky Jessie Alice Proffitt Amber Pruitt Morgan Catherine Quintal Audrey Anne Raezer Briana Raposa Rebecca Nicole Raymond Lauren Cristina Reece Andrew Robin Reed-Moutray Monika Ruth Reinholz Constantin Riedner Preston Scott Riley Ruthann Vivian Rivera Emily Robinson Damian Rose Michael Allen Ruff Evelyn May Sachaj Kyle Scamman Hana Marlee Schneider Sara Schneider John Schommer Diana Dominique Scott Jonny Lee Senamontry Deborah Ann Shilaikis Joseph Alexander Shofner Christian Sibo Everette Dean Sigler Nicca Jane Small Carson Smidt Andrae D. Smith Mirage Childs Smith Ryan Patrick Soeder Jacob Alexander Solberg Ethan Andrew St Amand Mackenzie Paige Stark Hannah Jean Stebbins Tate Raymond Lee Stephens Sydney Marie Stills Kelly Stokes Michael Wayne Straub Matthew Taylor Pamela Phillips Taylor David Robert Terrell Kinsey Tanae Thayer Tara Grace Thomas Sierra Danae Thompkins Jennilee Toctocan Christa Maria Toliniu Timothy Townley Macayla Rylee Trottner Kenneth Matthew Trousdale Armand V. Trujillo Jannelle Tsosie Stephen Charles Turner Cameron Justice Underwood Yana Stacy Vadala Nicholas W. Valdez Rhiannon Faith Vigil Kori Alexandra Wagner Lucas David Wankum Steven B. Weimann Seth James Williams Jasmine Vivian-Leigh Williams Preston Jacob Williamson Jessi Jo Witham Tesa Anne Woodman Michael Vernon Zarling Associate of General Studies degree: UCCS welcomes the inaugural class of Associate of General Studies degree recipients to these Commencement exercises, as part of the State of Colorado Re-Engaged (CORE) Initiative. The CORE Initiative enables four-year higher education institutions to award earned associate degrees to eligible former baccalaureate students who have met specific criteria including the course requirements defined by the four-year institution. https://cdhe.colorado.gov/students/attending-college/colorado-re-engaged-core-initiative
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https://www.rustcollege.edu/about-rust-college/history/
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Rust College
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2019-11-01T13:37:06+00:00
Over 154 Years of Quality Education Rust College was established in 1866 by the Freedman’s Aid Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Its founders were missionaries from the North who opened a school in Asbury Methodist Episcopal Church, accepting adults …
en
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Rust College
https://www.rustcollege.edu/about-rust-college/history/
Over 154 Years of Quality Education Rust College was established in 1866 by the Freedman’s Aid Society of the Methodist Episcopal Church. Its founders were missionaries from the North who opened a school in Asbury Methodist Episcopal Church, accepting adults of all ages, as well as children, for instruction in elementary subjects. A year later the first building on the present campus was erected. In 1870, the school was chartered as Shaw University, honoring the Reverend S.O. Shaw, who made a gift of $10,000 to the new institution. In 1892, the name was changed to Rust University to avoid confusion with another Shaw University. The name was a tribute to Richard S. Rust of Cincinnati, Ohio, Secretary of the Freedman’s Aid Society. In 1915, the title was changed to the more realistic name, Rust College. As students progressed, high school and college courses were added to the curriculum, and in 1878 two students were graduated from the college department. As public schools for African Americans became more widespread, the need for private schools decreased, and in 1930 the grade school was discontinued. The high school continued to function until 1953. A significant change in the administration of the institution took place in 1920 when Dr. M.S. Davage became president, the first African American to hold that position. Dr. L. M. McCoy (1924), his successor, was the first alumnus to serve his Alma Mater as president. He was followed in 1957 by Dr. Earnest A. Smith, an alumnus, class of 1937. In 1967, Dr. William A. McMillan, a non-alumnus assumed the presidency. In 1993, Dr. David L. Beckley, an alumnus, class of 1967, became the eleventh president of Rust College. In 2020, Dr. Ivy Taylor became the twelfth president of Rust College. Among approximately 20,000 former students of Rust College, many completed only their elementary or secondary education. However, more than 5,500 have graduated from the college department. Among these alumni are bishops of the United Methodist Church and other church denominations, public school teachers and administrators, college presidents, lawyers, physicians, business and government leaders and ministers.
5685
dbpedia
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gaston_Pearson
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William Gaston Pearson
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2007-06-05T13:25:35+00:00
en
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/William_Gaston_Pearson
William Gaston Pearson (1858–1947) was an American educator and businessman in North Carolina. Pearson was born a slave in Durham County on April 11, 1859 to Cynthia Anne Pearson (née Barbee) and George Washington Pearson Sr. After he was freed, he worked at the Carr Factory where General Julian S. Carr, the owner, recognized his potential and financed his education at Shaw University. Pearson graduated from Shaw with a B.S. in 1886 and received an honorary M.A. in 1890. He was awarded Honorary Ph.D's from Kittrell College in 1915 and Wilberforce University in 1919. On June 6, 1893, Pearson married Minnie Sumner of Charlotte, a teacher. In 1886, Pearson began his teaching career in Whitted High School, a small grade school in Durham and he succeeded James Whitted as principal of the school. He was a close friend of Dr. James E. Shepard, founder of what is now North Carolina Central University and aided Shepard in his efforts to develop the university. Pearson became the first principal of the newly built Hillside Park High School on Umstead Street in 1922. In the 18 years during which Pearson held this position, many significant improvements were made at Hillside. The enrollment increase markedly and in 1923 the school was recognized as a standard high school by the state Department of Public Instruction. In 1931, Hillside was accredited by the Southern Association of Secondary School and Colleges. Pearson was a strict disciplinarian who improved the quality of education at Hillside by demanding dedication and excellence from teachers and students. He housed the teachers in two "teacherages" across the street from his home so he could oversee their activities. He would frequently sit in on classes and evaluate teaching techniques. He demanded course outline from each teacher at the beginning of each semester with progress reports at regular intervals during the academic year. At graduation time each year, Pearson traveled to Southern and Eastern Colleges to try to recruit the best teachers possible. Despite his stringent demands, "Profs" Pearson was well liked by students, faculty and community members. In a Principal Popularity Contest sponsored by the Carolina Times newspaper for black schools in Durham, Pearson came in third with an impressive showing of votes (each ticket sent in counted as 500 votes). Pearson also made outstanding contributions as a member of the Durham community. He was one of the original organizers of the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company, the Fraternal Bank and Trust Company, Southern Fidelity and Surety Company as well as Banker's Fire Insurance Company. He was a trustee of Kittrell College, St. Joseph's A.M.E. Church, the National Religious Training School, NCCU and Wilberforce University. He helped found the Mechanics and Farmers Bank in Durham's "Black Wall Street". In 1927, he received the Harmon Award for Achievement in Business. The W. G. Pearson Gifted and Talented Elementary School, W. G. Pearson Magnet Middle School and the cafeteria at N.C. Central University were named after him.
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https://shawcenter.syr.edu/mission/about/history-of-the-shaw-center/
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History of the Shaw Center
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When Chancellor Kenneth A. “Buzz” Shaw became SU’s tenth Chancellor and President in 1991, he envisioned Syracuse University becoming the nation’s leading student-centered research university – making student learning the University’s highest priority. This vision coincided with a national reawakening of the service movement. Unlike efforts of earlier decades, SU’s response to the times would promote volunteer service as a fundamental part of the student learning experience at SU, becoming a core value of “the mission and curriculum of the University”(Shaw, 1994). It would be innovative, intentional, focused and driven by results. And it would be organized. “This is integral to what we do as a university, and it comes at a time when the country is renewing its efforts to involve young people in service to the nation.” (Shaw, 1994) Mary Ann Shaw, associate of the Chancellor and his wife, wove the first threads of the fabric that is today’s Shaw Center. A patient and tenacious visionary, she accomplished her goals by empowering others to do what they do best, convening a cross-section of more than 100 campus and community members to brainstorm ideas for a center. During 1992-93, goals and action plans emerged. A design team studied successful models of service learning programs at other institutions of higher learning and received technical advice and assistance from Campus Compact, a national coalition of college and university presidents committed to fulfilling the civic purposes of higher education. The team tapped into existing traditions at SU, from Professor William Coplin’s innovative Public Affairs model in the Maxwell School to engagement programs at Hendricks Chapel, as many hands – from advancement, academic and student affairs, student groups and the community – stitched the fabric of the center. The Center for Public and Community Service (CPCS) officially launched in September 1994, thanks to a three-year grant from the Carrier Corporation, continued support from the Chancellor’s Office and two student staff. CPCS began as a pilot project in a small suite of offices in the Schine Student Center with founding director, Pamela Kirwin Heintz, at the helm. 1997 provided an opportunity for CPCS and SU to expand its internal and external collaborations by responding to President Clinton’s America Reads Challenge. In partnership with SU’s School of Education, the Syracuse City School District, the Office of Financial Aid, and the Chancellor’s Office, CPCS developed the SU Literacy Corps. Through this program hundreds of trained SU tutors continue to go into the Syracuse community every year to work with children and families struggling with literacy challenges, as well as enhance and expand traditional classroom learning and scholarship. By 2001, with continued support from the Chancellor, his associate Mary Ann, and leadership from vice chancellor and provost, Deborah Freund, CPCS became a program in the division of academic affairs. In 2004, retiring SU Board of Trustees Chair, Joseph O. Lampe ’53, G’55, described Mary Ann’s work as “unparalleled and visionary,” by opening up new avenues of learning and by proclamation, the Board honored her commitment to campus and community by renaming the center – the Mary Ann Shaw Center for Public and Community Service. Syracuse University’s Strategic Plan, “Trajectory to Excellence,” identifies a first theme as providing all students with a world-class learning experience that prepares them for future success. From Trajectory to Excellence, “These competencies would connect traditional academic work (such as critical thinking, oral and written communication, scientific and quantitative reasoning, and global competencies) with essential life skills (such as resilience building, cultural and global awareness and sensitivity) and soft skills (such as teamwork and adaptability). Strategies to achieve these skills and values should be both curricular and co-curricular. Because knowledge is not static and meaningful scholarship cannot thrive in isolation, student learning will be tested and nurtured through signature experiential, entrepreneurial, and global opportunities that merge theory with practice in ways that spur innovation, enhance scholarship, encourage identity as global citizens, and facilitate substantive engagement in our communities and world. Experiential education and engagement in local and global communities are distinctive strengths at Syracuse, and they become increasingly important as employers seek employees who have real-world experience in putting theoretical knowledge into context and practice.” Community engaged learning is a high-impact research-based practice that is proven to achieve these results in college students. Over the years, our tapestry of Service Learning, Literacy, and Leadership has been enriched through the generosity of many —the Carrier Corporation, Key Bank, Chase Bank, Morgan Stanley, Starbucks, and Coca Cola to name a few— as well as individual gifts from the Kenneth A. and Mary Ann Shaw and Marion Entwistle endowments, the Robert B. Menschel family, the Whitman and Falk colleges, the Vision Fund, SRC and the Winnick Family Foundation. The continued commitment and support from the Chancellor’s Office, Academic Affairs, Office of Financial Aid, generous alumni and numerous private and public partners, allows the Shaw Center to be this special place on campus where all students are provided with a world-class community engaged learning experience, grounded in ethics and integrity, that prepares them for future success. From a dinner conversation with Founder Mary Ann Shaw when in Ireland, former Assistant Director for Literacy Initiatives, Roberta “Bobby” Gillen, knew the center would be a home for her. Accompanying her husband on an executive programs conference in Limerick, Ireland, in 2000, Bobby engaged in a conversation with Buzz and Mary Ann Shaw that would transform her life and thousands of those around her. Her twelve-year tenure with the Shaw Center has shaped the SU Literacy Corps into Shaw Center Literacy Initiatives – a strong and growing resource for urban education. Working with campus, community, and corporate partners, Bobby has overseen more than 300 SU student tutors yearly, who provide close to 40,000 hours of literacy support in classrooms, after-school programs and adult literacy sites throughout Syracuse. Advancing from a part-time SU Literacy Corps role to Assistant Director in 2003, Bobby shaped the growth of SU’s literacy leadership. With her retirement in the summer of 2012, she leaves a legacy of programs firmly in place – successful literacy outreach partnerships that touch young lives on and off campus every single day. With ever-changing threads and strands, the Shaw Center continues to evolve as a powerful learning environment on campus and as a force in and with the community. Mary Ann provided the first threads and the frame for this amazing tapestry. Bobby stitched and secured literacy to the whole – connecting points that will provide strength for those yet to come. We look forward with excitement as stories yet untold continue weaving the tapestry known as the Shaw Center.
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https://www.diverseeducation.com/leadership-policy/article/15079093/clarence-g-newsome-named-13th-president-of-shaw-university
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Clarence G. Newsome Named 13th President of Shaw University
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[ "Black Issues, cmaadmin (EDU)" ]
2003-03-13T00:00:00+00:00
Clarence G. Newsome Named 13th President of Shaw University RALEIGH, N.C.Dr. Clarence G. Newsome, longtime dean of Howard University’s School of Divinity, becomes Shaw University’s 13th president on April 1. Newsome’s appointment was officially announced in mid-February at a news conference for trustees, alumni, students as well as the media. Newsome, 52, says within 10 […]
en
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Diverse: Issues In Higher Education
https://www.diverseeducation.com/leadership-policy/article/15079093/clarence-g-newsome-named-13th-president-of-shaw-university
RALEIGH, N.C. Dr. Clarence G. Newsome, longtime dean of Howard University’s School of Divinity, becomes Shaw University’s 13th president on April 1. Newsome’s appointment was officially announced in mid-February at a news conference for trustees, alumni, students as well as the media. Newsome, 52, says within 10 years he wants to increase Shaw’s endowment to $50 million, quadruple its enrollment — to more than 10,000 — and embark on a building program. Newsome also says he wants to continue to better the 138-year-old university by improving academics, increasing research and raising money. “We’re going to grow,” says Newsome, who replaces outgoing president Dr. Talbert O. Shaw. Shaw accepted the presidency during some of the university’s darkest days and was the catalyst for getting the school back on a firmer foundation. Shaw, no relation to the name of the university, led the school for 15 years. The 75-year-old Shaw had planned on retiring Dec. 31 but agreed to remain until his successor was named. Newsome is a native of the Eastern North Carolina town of Ahoskie and the son of a school principal. He received his bachelor’s from Duke University. While at Duke, he lettered in football and was twice named to the Atlantic Coast Conference All-Academic Team. Newsome was Duke’s first Black student commencement speaker, delivering an address called “An African Concept of Time and a Theme of Liberation in the World Community.” Newsome went on to obtain a master’s of divinity at Duke, graduating magna cum laude. He took a year off to serve as acting dean of minority affairs and director of Duke’s Summer Transitional Program for high school students. Newsome won the James B. Duke Dissertation Year Fellowship while pursuing his doctoral studies. After graduating, he was a popular professor at Duke Divinity School for eight years. While on the faculty, he also served for a time as pastor of a Baptist church and was a leader in the General Baptist Convention of North Carolina, the largest African American Baptist state convention in the United States. Newsome arrived at Howard University School of Divinity in 1986 as the assistant dean. He became associate dean in 1988. When Dr. Lawrence N. Jones retired in 1991, Newsome was tapped to be acting dean and the next year was named dean of the divinity school officially. “Shaw’s gain is clearly Howard’s loss,” says Dr. A. Toy Caldwell-Colbert, Howard University provost. “Dean Newsome is a strong, charismatic and dynamic leader, who has done much to herald the accomplishments of the School of Divinity.” Newsome shepherded the School of Divinity through two 10-year reaccreditation reviews and established its first Office of Institutional Advancement and Development. During his years at the helm, applications increased 40 percent. “I think this is a perfect match for Shaw. He’s very impressive,” says Dr. Joseph Bell, vice chairman of Shaw’s board of trustees. “Dr. Shaw will always be a legend and will go down in history. He took the job when things were dark. He left the university in a good position and now Dr. Newsome will take it to the next level. We won’t miss a beat.” — By Eleanor Lee Yates
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https://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/franklin/collections/durham_afams
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African Americans in Durham
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The Franklin Research Center contains many materials pertaining to African American life in Durham, North Carolina. The collections reflect both institutions and individuals, while documenting the unique dynamics of race, gender and class in a New South city. Conerstone collections related to Durham history include the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company Archives, Lincoln Hospital Records and the papers of C.C. Spaulding and Clydie F. Scarborough.   A - M | N - Z
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https://library.duke.edu/rubenstein/franklin/collections/durham_afams
The Franklin Research Center contains many materials pertaining to African American life in Durham, North Carolina. The collections reflect both institutions and individuals, while documenting the unique dynamics of race, gender and class in a New South city. Conerstone collections related to Durham history include the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company Archives, Lincoln Hospital Records and the papers of C.C. Spaulding and Clydie F. Scarborough. A - M | N - Z Helen G. Edmonds Papers, 1951-1994 Helen G. Edmonds (1911-1995) was a noted educator, historian and administrator. She was active in numerous civic and social organizations and was a stalwart in the Republican Party. The correspondence, speeches and programs in the collection provide insight into her work as a teacher and scholar. The bulk of the collection, however, documents her work with the National Republican Party, including giving the second nomination of Dwight D. Eisenhower as a candidate for the Presidency and appointments in the Department of State, in the Department of Defense, on the National Advisory Council of the Peace Corps and as a U.S. delegate to the United Nations. Rencher Nicholas Harris Papers, 1926-1965 (digitized content) Rencher Nicholas Harris (1900-1965) was an African American businessman and civic leader of Durham, N.C. The Rencher Nicholas Harris Papers span the years from 1851 to 1980, with the bulk dating from 1926 to 1965. The collection consists mainly of materials relating to Harris' work in political and educational affairs in Durham in the 1950s and early 1960s as a member of the Durham City Council and the Durham School Board; his career in banking, insurance, and real estate as an official of the Bankers' Fire Insurance Company; and his civic activities. Chris D. Howard Papers, 1972-1983 Chris D. Howard was a Duke University undergraduate. The collection contains Howard's research material for an honors thesis. The notes concern the early history of Durham and events related to the struggle for racial equality. There are notes and outlines of interviews (cassette tapes and telephone conversations) and a list of persons interviewed by Howard — including Mary Trent Semans, Floyd McKissick and other persons who participated in or witnessed this struggle. Lincoln Hospital Records, 1901-1988 Lincoln Hospital was a Durham hospital established in 1901 by Dr. Aaron Moore, Dr. Stanford Warren and John Merrick to serve African Americans in the area. The Lincoln Hospital Records primarily comprise the institution's administrative and medical files. The collection as a whole documents the bi-racial cooperation that was involved in establishing, running and maintaining the institution and outlines the collaboration between Lincoln Hospital, Watts Hospital and the Duke University School of Medicine. Hugh Mangum Photographs, 1890-1922 (digitized content) The Hugh Mangum Photographs collection dates from approximately 1890 to 1922 and contains 689 glass plate negatives of portrait photographs taken by Hugh Mangum as he traveled a rail circuit through North Carolina, Virginia and West Virginia and taken in photography studios he and partners established in Virginia and North Carolina. The images are composed chiefly of individual portraits and group portraits of residents in those areas. The majority are white but there are a substantial number of African American portraits. Please note: The original glass plate negatives are closed to research use. Print and digital images are available for viewing. Benjamin Muse Papers, 1919-1973 Benjamin Muse (1898-1986) was a politician and author, of Reston, Va. The collection includes correspondence, writings, addresses, memoranda, printed material and clippings documenting Muse's career as a soldier and officer in World War I and II, as a Virginia state senator and as director of the Leadership Project of the Southern Regional Council from 1959-1964). The collection includes drafts and research notes for his books Tarheel Tommy Atkins (1963), Ten years of prelude: the story of integration since the Supreme Court's 1954 decision (1964) and The American Negro revolution: from nonviolence to Black Power, 1963-1967 (1968). It also includes memoranda (1959-1964) for the Southern Regional Council on his travels through the South and talks with Southern leaders on race relations. A - M | N - Z Gwendolyn M. Parker Papers, 1967-1998 The papers of Gwendolyn M. Parker, which primarily document her writing career, span the years 1967-1998. The majority of the papers date from 1986-1997. They consist primarily of diaries, correspondence, clippings, writings and other miscellaneous printed and manuscript materials. Parker's writings are well documented by several manuscript versions of her 1994 novel, These Same Long Bones, and her 1997 memoir, Trespassing: My Sojourn in the Halls of Privilege. Parker's correspondence is chiefly professional and related to her efforts to publish her work, but a small amount of personal correspondence is part of the collection. William Gaston Pearson Papers, 1913-1976 William Gaston Pearson was a Durham, African American businessman, civic leader, educator and philanthropist. The collection includes a scrapbook of clippings and printed materials that reflect the business accomplishments and life of Pearson, who founded the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Co., the Mechanics and Farmers Bank, the Durham Drug Co. and other businesses in Durham, primarily in banking, credit and insurance. Sam Reed Papers, 1968-2001 (digitized content) The Sam Reed Papers span the years 1986-2001 and pertain to his political activism in Durham, N.C. The papers highlight the Civil Rights Movement and subsequent race and labor relations issues in the South. The collection consists of the records of the organization and the newsletter, Trumpet of Conscience. Other papers include articles, correspondence, interviews and speeches by and about Reed. Fannie B. Rosser Papers, [1860s]-1973. The collection features correspondence, legal and financial papers and photographs that document the personal relationships and professional activities of Fannie B. Rosser, a successful African American businesswoman. The correspondence series pertains to Rosser's business ventures in management of rental property in Lynchburg, Va., and Durham, N.C.; personal loans made to family and friends during the Depression; and investments in government stocks and bonds. Later correspondence centers around her relationships with her foster daughter and her niece. Family photographs date to the 1860s. Clydie Fullwood Scarborough Papers, 1918-1984 Dedicated to providing effective and healthy day-care for African American children in Durham, especially those from poor families, Clydie Fullwood Scarborough (d. 1989) managed the Scarborough Nursery School for more than 50 years. The Scarborough Nursery School is the oldest, licensed, black-owned day care center in North Carolina. The collection contains correspondence, financial reports, legal and administrative papers, clippings, writings, programs, flyers and photographs pertaining to the operation of the school. The papers also provide some insight into the Scarborough's civic activities, including information about the North Carolina Daycare Association, the United Fund Agency and St. Joseph's AME Church. Asa and Elna Spaulding Papers, 1909-1997 (digitzed content) Asa T. Spaulding was an activist in civil rights, education and employment and an insurance executive in the North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company for almost 35 years. She began as the company's actuary in 1933 and served as its fifth president from 1958-1967. Elna Bridgeforth Spaulding was an activist in civil rights for minorities and women and involved in local politics in Durham, serving as a Durham County Commissioner for five terms from 1974-1984. The Asa and Elna Spaulding Papers document an African American family's lifelong involvement in the business, political, educational, religious and social life of Durham. Charles C. Spaulding Papers, 1905-1985 Charles C. Spaulding was the president of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company from 1923-1952. The collection contains photos, miscellaneous business papers, programs, speeches and clippings related to C. C. Spaulding, civil rights and to African American life local and nationally, in addition to various publications created by and related to North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company. These papers document the growth of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company and Spaulding's and the company's connection to the Durham community. Earl E. Thorpe Papers, 1942-1990 Earl E. Thorpe was a clergyman, historian and social activist. Primarily, materials in the collection address Thorpe's work at North Carolina Central University (formerly North Carolina College) and his stints as a visiting professor at Harvard and Duke universities. Thorpe's service as chair of the program committee for the 1979 meeting of the Association for the Study of Afro-American Life and History (ASALH) and his term as president of the ASALH in 1980 are also well represented. The bulk of the collection consists of Thorpe's personal and professional correspondence. Personal correspondence with family and students and material reflective of Thorpe's life in the ministry are scattered throughout. Charles DeWitt Watts, 1917-2004 Spanning the period of 1917 to 2004, the Charles DeWitt Watts Papers contain files related to Watts' education, family and community activities in Durham, N.C., and his career as a surgeon, administrator and trustee on several boards. Watts was a pioneering African American surgeon who served in a number of capacities as a leader in the medical field at Durham's Lincoln Hospital, Duke University, North Carolina Central University and North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company. There is material on the formation in 1901 of Lincoln Hospital, a medical care facility for African Americans in Durham, and other items on the early 20th-century history of Durham. The bulk of the papers relate to the later half of the 20th century. Formats primarily consist of correspondence, reports, notes, speeches, photographs and print materials. North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company Archives, 1850-2008 The North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company Archives documents the development of the company in Durham, N.C., and contributes to the historic record on African American businesses and entrepreneurship in the South and in the United States. Dating from 1850-2008, with the majority of the items dating from 1898-2008, the material covers nearly every aspect of the company's operations, management and milestones. Documents take the form of corporate office files — including the offices of five company presidents; annual statements; reports; surveys; memos; legal and financial papers; original life insurance policies; training material; programs; ephemera and artifacts; and a large number of historical photographs of staff and their families, offices, buildings and Durham scenes. Women-in-Action For Prevention of Violence and Its Causes, Inc. Durham Chapter Records, 1968-1998. (digitized content) Women-in-Action for the Prevention of Violence and Its Causes is a bi-racial community development and charitable organization in Durham. Civic leader Elna B. Spaulding founded the organization after attending a 1968 national conference on "What Women Can Do to End Violence in America." In 1970, Women-in-Action played a prominent role in smoothing the way for court-ordered school desegregation in Durham. The collection is comprised of correspondence, by-laws, meeting agendas and minutes, budgets, articles of incorporation, photographs, videos tapes, certificates and news articles documenting the organization's activities and structure. Youth Document Durham and Durham Works Project Records, 1995-2008 Youth Document Durham and Durham Works were programs sponsored by Duke University and the Center for Documentary Studies that brought together young people ages 12–16 from diverse Durham communities to document their lives, local history and contemporary social issues through photography, oral history and narrative writing.
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https://afamwilsonnc.com/tag/gaston/
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Black Wide-Awake
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[ "Lisa Y. Henderson" ]
2024-06-10T09:22:48-04:00
Posts about Gaston written by Lisa Y. Henderson
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Black Wide-Awake
https://afamwilsonnc.com/tag/gaston/
George A. Gaston‘s 1934 obituary mentioned that several of his surviving children lived in New York and Nevada. Sons Roscoe Gaston and Dewey Gaston — barbers like their father, grandfather, and brothers — were lifelong Wilson County residents. So was John Gaston, the only son who followed a different trade. As early as 1916, daughter Nina Gaston Latham Vick was in Washington, D.C., where she was eventually joined by her siblings Ada Pearl Gaston, Augustus Gaston, and Boisey Gaston. Georgia Gaston Pittman settled in Enfield, North Carolina. Son Mancie Gaston moved to the West Coast around 1930, landing in Albuquerque, New Mexico, and Reno, Nevada, before settling in Seattle, Washington. I have not been able to identify who was in New York in 1934. Roscoe Gaston In the 1900 census of Town of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Pender Street, barber and plasterer George W. Gaston, 44, wife Cilla, 44, a cook; and children Rosco, 18, bricklayer; John, 16, common laborer; Georgia, 15, cook; Addar, 12, nurse; Nina, 11, nurse; Mancy, 6; Lacy, 6; Augustas, 6; Boston, 1; and Dewey, 6 months. In the 1910 census of Town of Elm City, Wilson County: on Wilson Street, barber George Gaston, 55, wife Priscilla, 53; and children Roscoe, 28, barber; John, 26, barber; Georgie, 25; Ada, 23, teacher; Nina, 21; Mancie, 17; Augustus, 16; Flossy, 16; Boisy, 14; Dewey, 9; and Lee J. Gaston, 7. In the 1940 census of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Dixon Street, barber Roscoe Gaston, 58, and wife Bessie, 46. In the 1950 census of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Dixon Street, Roscoe Gaston, 66, and wife Bessie, 54. Roscoe Gaston died 5 February 1970 in Elm City, Wilson County. Per his death certificate, he was born 10 August 1888 to George Gaston and Priscilla Mercer; was a widower; and worked as a barber. Nina G. Vick, Washington, D.C., was informant. John Gaston In the 1900 census of Town of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Pender Street, barber and plasterer George W. Gaston, 44, wife Cilla, 44, a cook; and children Rosco, 18, bricklayer; John, 16, common laborer; Georgia, 15, cook; Addar, 12, nurse; Nina, 11, nurse; Mancy, 6; Lacy, 6; Augustas, 6; Boston, 1; and Dewey, 6 months. On 22 January 1908, John Gaston, 25, of Toisnot township, son of Geo. and P. Gaston, married Nannie Barnes, 19, of Toisnot township, daughter of Rego and Mary Barnes, at First Presbyterian Church, Elm City. Rev. E.E. Tucker performed the ceremony in the presence of Jas. G. Mitchell, G.C. Cowell, and Oliver N. Freeman. In the 1910 census of Town of Elm City, Wilson County: on Wilson Street, barber George Gaston, 55, wife Priscilla, 53; and children Roscoe, 28, barber; John, 26, barber; Georgie, 25; Ada, 23, teacher; Nina, 21; Mancie, 17; Augustus, 16; Flossy, 16; Boisy, 14; Dewey, 9; and Lee J. Gaston, 7. In the 1920 census of Toisnot township, Wilson County: barber John Gaston, 38; wife Nannie, 31; and daughters Pressilla, 11, and Minnie, 9. In the 1930 census of Toisnot township, Wilson County: brickmason John Gaston, 48; wife Nannie, 41; daughters Pricilla, 21, and Minnie, 18; and mother-in-law Mary Barnes, 62, widow. In the 1940 census of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: brickmason John Gaston, 58; wife Nannie, 57; daughter Mary E., 9; and mother-in-law Mary Barnes, 71. In the 1950 census of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: John Gaston, 63; wife Nannie, 61; and roomers Maggie Yelder, 25, and Mable G. Ellis, 40. John Gaston died 17 March 1959 in Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County. Per his death certificate, he was born 11 December 1882 in Elm City to George Gaston and Priscilla Mercer; was married to Nannie Gaston; and informant was daughter P.M. Gaston. Georgia Gaston In the 1900 census of Town of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Pender Street, barber and plasterer George W. Gaston, 44, wife Cilla, 44, a cook; and children Rosco, 18, bricklayer; John, 16, common laborer; Georgia, 15, cook; Addar, 12, nurse; Nina, 11, nurse; Mancy, 6; Lacy, 6; Augustas, 6; Boston, 1; and Dewey, 6 months. On 11 April 1906, Eugene Pittman, 24, of Enfield, son of Major and Francis Pittman, married Georgia Gaston, 21, of Enfield, daughter of John and Alice Gaston [sic], in Enfield, Halifax County, North Carolina. In 1918, Eugene Pittman registered for the World War I draft in Halifax County, North Carolina. Per his registration card, he was born 9 June 1881; lived in Enfield, Halifax County; was a farmer; and his nearest relative was Georgia Pittman. In the 1920 census of Enfield township, Halifax County, North Carolina: Eugene Pittman, 36; wife Georgia, 36; and children John R., 13, Claude, 11, Oliver, 9, Horace and Laurace, 7, Major, 4, Annie Lee, 2, and Gaston, 1 month. In the 1930 census of Enfield township, Halifax County, North Carolina: Eugene Pittman, 44; wife Georgia, 43; and children John R., 22, Claude, 21, Oliver, 19, Horace and Larce, 16, Major, 13, Annie L., 11, Gaston, 9, and Ralph, 7. In 1940, Larce Pittman registered for the World War II draft in Halifax County, North Carolina. Per his registration card, he was born 25 January 1911 in Enfield, North Carolina; lived in Enfield; his contact was mother Georgia Gaston Pittman; and he farmed for himself. In the 1950 census of Enfield township, Halifax County: widow Georgia Pittman, 65; children Lawrence, 38, Major, 35, Ralph, 25, and Annie L., 33; and grandchildren Dorothy J., 5, and William, 4. Georgia G. Pittman died 30 August 1960 in Roanoke Rapids, Halifax County, North Carolina. Per her death certificate, she was born 11 July 1884 in Wilson County to George Gaston; lived near Enfield, North Carolina; and was a widow. Ralph Pittman was informant. Ada P. Gaston In the 1900 census of Town of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Pender Street, barber and plasterer George W. Gaston, 44, wife Cilla, 44, a cook; and children Rosco, 18, bricklayer; John, 16, common laborer; Georgia, 15, cook; Addar, 12, nurse; Nina, 11, nurse; Mancy, 6; Lacy, 6; Augustas, 6; Boston, 1; and Dewey, 6 months. In the 1910 census of Town of Elm City, Wilson County: on Wilson Street, barber George Gaston, 55, wife Priscilla, 53; and children Roscoe, 28, barber; John, 26, barber; Georgie, 25; Ada, 23, teacher; Nina, 21; Mancie, 17; Augustus, 16; Flossy, 16; Boisy, 14; Dewey, 9; and Lee J. Gaston, 7. In the 1920 census of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: widowed farmer George Gaston, 69, and children [and grandchildren] Ada, 33, Nina, 31, August, 27, George J., 6, Lucile, 2, and Ernest, 9 months. (Also, in Gardners township, Wilson County: farmer Garfield Perkins, 36; wife Laura, 36; children Ethel, 15, and G. William, 12; and boarder P. Ada Gaston, 34, a teacher.) In the 1930 census of Elm City town, Toisnot township, Wilson County: barbershop proprietor George Gaston, 72, and daughter Ada, a public school teacher, 43. In the 1935 Washington, D.C., city directory: Gaston Ada maid 1521 Corcoran nw In the 1938 Washington, D.C., city directory: Gaston Ada maid 1514 Corcoran nw In the 1940 census of Washington, D.C., city directory: Ada Gaston, 53, lodger, private domestic, was a lodger at 1513 Corcoran Street. Washington Star (Washington, D.C.), 8 March 1975. Nina Gaston In the 1900 census of Town of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Pender Street, barber and plasterer George W. Gaston, 44, wife Cilla, 44, a cook; and children Rosco, 18, bricklayer; John, 16, common laborer; Georgia, 15, cook; Addar, 12, nurse; Nina, 11, nurse; Mancy, 6; Lacy, 6; Augustas, 6; Boston, 1; and Dewey, 6 months. In the 1910 census of Town of Elm City, Wilson County: on Wilson Street, barber George Gaston, 55, wife Priscilla, 53; and children Roscoe, 28, barber; John, 26, barber; Georgie, 25; Ada, 23, teacher; Nina, 21; Mancie, 17; Augustus, 16; Flossy, 16; Boisy, 14; Dewey, 9; and Lee J. Gaston, 7. On 21 May 1912, Nina Gatham, 22, of Toisnot township, daughter of George A. and Priscilla Gaston, married John Latham, 24, of Toisnot township, son of Isham and Winnie Latham, in Elm City, Wilson County. In September 1916, Samuel Vick and Nina Latham were married in Washington, D.C. [This Samuel Vick was not the son of Samuel H. Vick of Wilson.] Evening Star (Washington, D.C.), 8 September 1916. In the 1920 census of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: widowed farmer George Gaston, 69, and children [and grandchildren] Ada, 33, Nina, 31, August, 27, George J., 6, Lucile, 2, and Ernest, 9 months. (Also, in Gardners township, Wilson County: farmer Garfield Perkins, 36; wife Laura, 36; children Ethel, 15, and G. William, 12; and boarder P. Ada Gaston, 34, a teacher.) In the 1927 Washington, D.C., city directory: Vick Nina dom 339 57th ne; Vick Saml H lab 339 57th ne Augustus Carter Vick was born 24 February 1929 in Washington, D.C. In the 1932 Washington, D.C., city directory: Vick Nina Mrs dom 310 57th ne In the 1935 Washington, D.C., city directory: Vick Nina (wid Saml H) char h 310 57th ne In the 1940 census of Washington, D.C.: Nina Vick, 51, houseworker; children George B., 26, bootblack at barbershop, Earnestine L., 20, houseworker, and Augustus C., 10; and lodger Vera L. Boston, 19, houseworker. Evening Star, 13 November 1942. In the 1950 census of Washington, D.C.: widow Nina G. Vick, 61, housecleaner, and lodgers John Staley, 80, and Stanley Jackson, 43, presser at cleaning plant. Washington Star, 25 December 1980. Mancie Gaston In the 1900 census of Town of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Pender Street, barber and plasterer George W. Gaston, 44, wife Cilla, 44, a cook; and children Rosco, 18, bricklayer; John, 16, common laborer; Georgia, 15, cook; Addar, 12, nurse; Nina, 11, nurse; Mancy, 6; Lacy, 6; Augustas, 6; Boston, 1; and Dewey, 6 months. In the 1910 census of Town of Elm City, Wilson County: on Wilson Street, barber George Gaston, 55, wife Priscilla, 53; and children Roscoe, 28, barber; John, 26, barber; Georgie, 25; Ada, 23, teacher; Nina, 21; Mancie, 17; Augustus, 16; Flossy, 16; Boisy, 14; Dewey, 9; and Lee J. Gaston, 7. On 18 January 1918, Mancy Gaston, 25, of Toisnot township, son of Geo. A. and Priscilla Gaston, married Eva Mabrey, 30, of Toisnot township, daughter of H.C. and S.R. Mabrey, in Elm City. Presbyterian minister C. Dillard performed the ceremony in the presence of Aggie Williams, W.R. Lucas, and Aggie Lucas. In 1918, Mancie Gaston applied for the World War I draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 10 June 1892 in Elm City; lived in Elm City; and worked as a barber for George A. Gaston. On 8 May 1918, Mancie Gaston departed Hoboken, New Jersey, aboard the George Washington with 5th Company Camp Grant Reenforcement Draft Labor Battalion (Colored). His wife, Eva Gaston, was named as his emergency contact. On 13 June 1919, Mancie Gaston departed Saint Nazaire, France, aboard the U.S.S. Virginia with Company B, 313 Service Battalion Quartermasters, headed for Camp Alexander, Newport News, Virginia. His aunt, Agie Williams, was named as his emergency contact. In the 1922 Hill’s Wilson, N.C., city directory: Gaston Mancie (c) barber W S Hines h Elm City NC On 8 March 1923, Dewey Gaston, 23, son of George and Priscilla Gaston, all of Wilson County, married Mary B. Howard, 24, of Edgecombe County, daughter of Mary E. Darden. Brother Mancie Gaston applied for the license, and Rev. R.E. Sentelle performed the ceremony in Edgecombe County in the presence of Mancie Gaston and Fannie F. Ricks of Elm City. In the 1925 Hill’s Wilson, N.C., city directory: Gaston Mancie (c) barber W S Hines h Elm City NC In the 1931 Albuquerque, New Mexico, city directory: Gaston Mancie r 311 N 7th In the 1940 census of Seattle, King County, Washington: Mancie Gaston, 47, W.P.A. laborer. He reported that he lived in Reno, Nevada, in 1935. In 1942, Mancie Gaston registered for the World War II draft in Seattle, King County, Washington. Per his registration card, he was born 10 June 1892 in Elm City, North Carolina; lived at 413 1/2 Maynard Street, Seattle; and worked for I.D. Dudley, Seattle. Mancie Gaston died 7 August 1946 at the Marine Hospital in Seattle, King County, Washington. Per his death certificate, he was born 10 June 1892 in Elm City, N.C., to George Gaston and Priscilla Mercer; was a widower; was a barber; was a World War I veteran. He was buried in Elm City. Lacy Gaston In the 1900 census of Town of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Pender Street, barber and plasterer George W. Gaston, 44, wife Cilla, 44, a cook; and children Rosco, 18, bricklayer; John, 16, common laborer; Georgia, 15, cook; Addar, 12, nurse; Nina, 11, nurse; Mancy, 6; Lacy, 6; Augustas, 6; Boston, 1; and Dewey, 6 months. Augustus Gaston In the 1900 census of Town of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Pender Street, barber and plasterer George W. Gaston, 44, wife Cilla, 44, a cook; and children Rosco, 18, bricklayer; John, 16, common laborer; Georgia, 15, cook; Addar, 12, nurse; Nina, 11, nurse; Mancy, 6; Lacy, 6; Augustas, 6; Boston, 1; and Dewey, 6 months. In the 1910 census of Town of Elm City, Wilson County: on Wilson Street, barber George Gaston, 55, wife Priscilla, 53; and children Roscoe, 28, barber; John, 26, barber; Georgie, 25; Ada, 23, teacher; Nina, 21; Mancie, 17; Augustus, 16; Flossy, 16; Boisy, 14; Dewey, 9; and Lee J. Gaston, 7. In 1917, Augustus Gaston registered for the World War I draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 28 March 1894 in Elm City, Wilson County; worked as a barber for G.A. Gaston, Elm City; and was single. On 12 June 1919, Augustus Gaston departed Saint Nazaire, France, aboard the U.S.S. Princess Matoika with Company B, 329th Service Battalion, headed for Camp Jackson, [South Carolina]. His father, George Gaston, was named as his emergency contact. In the 1920 census of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: widowed farmer George Gaston, 69, and children [and grandchildren] Ada, 33, Nina, 31, August, 27, George J., 6, Lucile, 2, and Ernest, 9 months. On 2 July 1923, Augustus Gaston, 29, of Wilson, son of Geo. and Priscilla Gaston, married Wilhelmina Crawford, 24, daughter of Dan and Annie Crawford, in Wilson. Roderick Taylor applied for the license, and Presbyterian minister A.H. George performed the ceremony in the presence of W.C. Whitted, S.R. Battle, and Olga L. Battle. Willie Mena Gaston died 5 June 1929 in Wilson. Per her death certificate, she was 26 years old; was born in Wilson to Daniel Crawford of Alamance County and Annie Whitted of Orange County; was married to Augusta Gaston; and was buried in Wilson, N.C. [likely, Vick Cemetery.] In June 1934, Augustus Gaston and Emma L. Joyner were married in Washington, D.C. Washington Times, 22 June 1934. In 1942, Augustus Gaston registered for the World War I draft in Washington, D.C. Per his registration card, he was born 29 March 1895 in Elm City, Wilson County, North Carolina; lived at 1242 Irving Street, N.W., Washington; his contact was brother Boisey Gaston, 1614 Third Street, N.W.; and worked in a private business for Augustus Gaston, 1229 Wisconsin Avenue. In the 1950 census of Washington, D.C.: Augustus Gaston, 55, barbershop proprietor. Evening Star, 14 May 1969. Boisey Gaston In the 1900 census of Town of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Pender Street, barber and plasterer George W. Gaston, 44, wife Cilla, 44, a cook; and children Rosco, 18, bricklayer; John, 16, common laborer; Georgia, 15, cook; Addar, 12, nurse; Nina, 11, nurse; Mancy, 6; Lacy, 6; Augustas, 6; Boston, 1; and Dewey, 6 months. In the 1910 census of Town of Elm City, Wilson County: on Wilson Street, barber George Gaston, 55, wife Priscilla, 53; and children Roscoe, 28, barber; John, 26, barber; Georgie, 25; Ada, 23, teacher; Nina, 21; Mancie, 17; Augustus, 16; Flossy, 16; Boisy, 14; Dewey, 9; and Lee J. Gaston, 7. In 1917, Boisy Gaston registered for the World War I draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 7 September 1895 in Elm City, N.C.; lived in Elm City; was single; and worked as a barber for George Gaston. In the 1940 census of Washington, D.C.: barber Borizey Gaston, 44, was a lodger in the household of Elinore Walker. In 1942, Boisy Gaston registered for the World War II draft in Washington, D.C. Per his registration card, he was born 7 September 1897 in Elm City; lived at 1614 3rd Street, N.W., Washington, D.C.; his contact was Elinor Walker, same address; and he worked for Augustus Gaston, 1229 Wisconsin Avenue. Evening Star (Washington, D.C.), 23 November 1955. Dewey Gaston In the 1900 census of Town of Elm City, Toisnot township, Wilson County: on Pender Street, barber and plasterer George W. Gaston, 44, wife Cilla, 44, a cook; and children Rosco, 18, bricklayer; John, 16, common laborer; Georgia, 15, cook; Addar, 12, nurse; Nina, 11, nurse; Mancy, 6; Lacy, 6; Augustas, 6; Boston, 1; and Dewey, 6 months. In the 1910 census of Town of Elm City, Wilson County: on Wilson Street, barber George Gaston, 55, wife Priscilla, 53; and children Roscoe, 28, barber; John, 26, barber; Georgie, 25; Ada, 23, teacher; Nina, 21; Mancie, 17; Augustus, 16; Flossy, 16; Boisy, 14; Dewey, 9; and Lee J. Gaston, 7. In 1918, Dewey Gaston registered for the World War I draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was born 7 November 1899; lived in Elm City; worked as a barber for George A. Gaston; and his nearest relative was George A. Gaston. On 8 March 1923, Dewey Gaston, 23, son of George and Priscilla Gaston, all of Wilson County, married Mary B. Howard, 24, of Edgecombe County, daughter of Mary E. Darden. Dewey’s brother Mancie Gaston applied for the license, and Rev. R.E. Sentelle performed the ceremony in Edgecombe County in the presence of Mancie Gaston and Fannie F. Ricks of Elm City. In the 1930 census of Toisnot township, Wilson County: barber Dewey Gaston, 30, wife Mary, 20 [sic], and children Doris L., 5, and Victor H., 3. In the 1940 census of the Town of Elm City, Wilson County: on Dixon Street, barber Dewey Gaston, 40, wife Mary, 38, a teacher, and children Dorris, 15, and Victor H., 13. In 1942, Dewey Gaston registered for the World War II draft in Wilson County. Per his registration card, he was 42 years old; was born in Wilson County; lived in Elm City; his contact was Clara Nicholson; and he was a self-employed barber. Dewey Milton Gaston died 14 February 1946 in Elm City. Per his death certificate, he was born 15 November 1899 in Elm City to George Gaston and Priscilla (no maiden name listed); worked as a self-employed barber; was married to Mary Gaston; and was buried in Elm City cemetery. Mary Gaston was informant. Lee J. Gaston In the 1910 census of Town of Elm City, Wilson County: on Wilson Street, barber George Gaston, 55, wife Priscilla, 53; and children Roscoe, 28, barber; John, 26, barber; Georgie, 25; Ada, 23, teacher; Nina, 21; Mancie, 17; Augustus, 16; Flossy, 16; Boisy, 14; Dewey, 9; and Lee J. Gaston, 7.
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https://www.montana.edu/news/23410/montana-state-university-students-named-to-fall-semester-2023-honor-rolls
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Montana State University
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2024-01-11T08:00:00
Content hosted by Montana State University.
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Montana State University
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5685
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5
https://www.opendurham.org/buildings/808-fayetteville-wg-pearson-house
en
808 Fayetteville - W.G. Pearson House
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808 Fayetteville St., 1922. (Courtesy Duke Rare Book and Manuscript Collection. Scanned by Digital Durham.)
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/sites/default/files/favicon.ico
https://www.opendurham.org/buildings/808-fayetteville-wg-pearson-house
William Gaston Pearson was born in 1859 - I have little information about his early life, although his parents had been enslaved - originally in Florida. William and his mother came to Durham at some point. Per Jean Anderson, Julian Carr heard William give "a stump speech" and was impressed enough by his oratory to offer to pay the 24 year old's tuition to Shaw University in Raleigh. WG Pearson won multiple awards while at Shaw. Pearson was intimately involved in the growth of Hayti and in advocacy for the African-American community. In addition to founding the Southern Fidelity Mutual Insurance Co. and the Bankers Fire Insurance Co, Pearson became the principal of the first African-American Graded School (Whitted) and then Hillside High School. (A position he held for 30 years.) (He also had a few unsuccessful enterprises - the People's Savings and Loan (1915) and the Fraternal Bank and Trust Co.) Pearson died in 1947. The house appears to have been divided into apartments thereafter. The house had been torn down by 1968.
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https://goleathernecks.com/honors/hall-of-fame/ray-pearson/188
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Western Illinois University Athletics
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Ray Pearson, Class: 1954 Induction: 1985 Sport(s): Football - Ray Pearson (Deceased), 1985 - Ray excelled on offense and defense as an end on the Leatherneck football
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Western Illinois University Athletics
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Student U at the W.G. Pearson Center
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2019-08-06T18:51:49+00:00
Read more about the historic restoration of a Durham, NC elementary school into an expanded facility for the non-profit college readiness program Student U.
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National Trust Community Investment Corporation
https://ntcic.com/projects/wg-pearson/
Background Built in 1928, the main W. G. Pearson Elementary School building was named for William Gaston (W. G.) Pearson (1858-1947), a well-known African-American businessman and educator. Born into slavery, his potential was recognized by a factory owner who financed his education at Shaw University in nearby Raleigh, NC. He began teaching at a small Durham grade school in 1886, where he later became principal. In 1922, W.G. Pearson became the first principal of Hillside Park High School, (the first African-American high school in the city), a position he remained in until his death in 1940 and for which he is best remembered. W.G.Pearson was also active in the city’s business and social life. Among other contributions, he was one of the original organizers of North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company; he helped found Mechanics and Farmers Bank on Durham’s “Black Wall Street”; and he served as a trustee for both North Carolina Central University and Kittrell College. Both North Carolina Mutual Life Insurance Company and Mechanics and Farmers Bank continue to operate today. In the 1920s and 1930s, the growing black population in the Stokesdale district, as well as the philanthropy of both black and white businessmen, led to the construction of several new schools including Hillside Park High School in 1922, W. G. Pearson Elementary in 1928, and Whitted Elementary School in 1935. Whitted Elementary and Hillside High Schools suffered the same fate as neighborhood businesses and churches and were destroyed for new development or abandoned for newer structures south of town. The W. G. Pearson Elementary School is the only school in the neighborhood to survive the late twentieth century intact. W.G. Pearson was most recently a magnet school for gifted and talented students in the kindergarten through fifth grades. In 2010, the Stokesdale Historic District was listed as a national historic district; both the original main building and the gymnasium were considered to be contributing structures. The Project The W.G. Pearson Center was renovated to create a long-term home for a non-profit college readiness program, Student U. The program had been utilizing space within the center for years, but through continued success and growth, needed to expand their services to the entire structure. In addition to improving the existing instructional spaces, gymnasium, and cafeteria, the renovation created new spaces including arts and dance rooms; computer and technology labs; a multi-purpose auditorium; and office, training and convening spaces for Student U’s staff, Board, Learning Specialist, and Social Worker. The mission of Student U is to empower DPS students to own their education by developing the academic and personal skills necessary to succeed in college and beyond. Student U works exclusively with low-income children who would be the first in their families to attend college. The 51,000 square foot facility now houses Student U’s 21st Century Community Learning Center (CCLC) Year-Round Program, which is an out-of-school enrichment program designed to create a safe environment for students to complete their homework, prepare for classes, receive tutoring, and participate in various workshops. Student U also takes the students on educational field trips and college trips and provides support for parents. By providing direct services during out of school time in the summer and after-school, and advocating for students and families within schools, Student U has produced impressive results for the low-income families that they have served. Student U welcomed its first class of 50 students and 16 teachers in the summer of 2007, as a result of the collaboration of DPS, Durham Academy (a K-12 private prep school), the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, North Carolina Central University, and Duke University. Economic and Community Impact The model has a measurable impact: In 2013-2014, Student U students consistently performed higher on End of Grade (EOG) and End of Class (EOC) tests when compared to their peers who qualify for free or reduced lunch in DPS. Additionally, 100% of Student U’s students have graduated from high school and 97% of Student U’s graduating high school seniors are enrolled in college. With the additional space provided by the W.G. Pearson building, Student U is now able to serve 439 low-income children in the Durham community.
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https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/gaston-william
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Gaston, William
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https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/gaston-william
by Charles H. Bowman, Jr., 1986 19 Sept. 1778–23 Jan. 1844 William Gaston, lawyer, legislator, congressman, and jurist, was born in New Bern. His father, Alexander Gaston of Huguenot ancestry, was a native of Ireland, trained in medicine, and served as a surgeon in the British navy before settling in Craven County prior to May 1764. His Roman Catholic mother, Margaret Sharpe, went to New Bern from England nine years later. In May 1775, she married Dr. Gaston, who became an ardent patriot with the advent of the American Revolution. He was killed by a party of Tories in August 1781, leaving a widow and two children, William and Jane. Thereafter, the pious and intelligent Mrs. Gaston proceeded to mold her son's character and to instill in him a lasting devotion to the Roman Catholic church. This upbringing in time made Gaston worthy to be called "the greatest lay Catholic in America." Gaston's formal education began in 1791. After a five-month visit in Philadelphia, he arrived in the autumn of that year in Georgetown on the Potomac River to enroll as the first student at Georgetown College, a recently founded Roman Catholic institution of higher learning. III-health, however, compelled him to leave in the spring of 1793. Back in his native town, Gaston regained his strength and spent the next year as a student at New Bern Academy, where he gave the valedictory in July 1794. After another sojourn in Philadelphia, he was admitted in November to the junior class of the College of New Jersey at Princeton, from which he was graduated at age eighteen at the head of his class. Gaston then returned to New Bern to study law under François-Xavier Martin, an eminent attorney. He developed such legal competence that he was admitted to the bar in September 1798. He immediately took over part of the law practice of his brother-in-law, John Louis Taylor, who had been selected a superior court judge. Although Gaston excelled in land cases, he also emerged as a superlative criminal lawyer. A number of students prepared for the bar under his direction. Politics soon attracted Gaston's attention, and he proved to be an energetic Federalist leader. In 1800 he was elected to the state senate, where he served on several committees and was chairman of three others. He was sent to the House of Commons in 1807, 1808, and 1809. In 1808 he was chosen both speaker of the house and a presidential elector. He ran unsuccessfully for the U.S. House of Representatives in 1810, but again won a seat in the state senate in 1812. The next year he went to Washington as a member of the House in the Thirteenth Congress. He gained experience on several relatively minor committees before working on the important Ways and Means Committee; he was reelected to the Fourteenth Congress. As a congressman Gaston gained a national reputation for the eloquence of his speeches, especially those supporting the Bank of the United States and opposing the Loan Bill, by which President James Madison was to be entrusted with $25 million for the conquest of Canada. He denounced generally the War of 1812 as "forbidden by our interests, and abhorrent from our honour." His speech in reply to Henry Clay's "defense of the previous question" was a particularly noteworthy piece of parliamentary oratory. In January 1815 he presented a petition asking for authority for Georgetown College to award academic degrees. A congressional charter for the school resulted. In 1817, he voluntarily retired from Congress and resumed the practice of law. Daniel Webster, one of many national figures known by Gaston, described him as the greatest man of the War Congress. Craven County sent Gaston to the state senate in 1818 and 1819. At both sessions he served as chairman of the Judiciary Committee; he was also chairman of the joint legislative committee that in 1818 framed the act creating the North Carolina Supreme Court. Although Gaston never reentered national politics after leaving Congress, President John Quincy Adams considered naming him secretary of war in 1826 because of his faithful support of the administration. In a circular prepared by Gaston for the Committee of Correspondence and Vigilance of New Bern, he announced that the president's wisdom and honesty entitled him to a second term. In his keynote address to the anti-Jackson convention in Raleigh in December 1827, he once more urged that Adams be reelected. Gaston was returned to the House of Commons in 1827 to fill the vacancy for New Bern occasioned by John Stanly's resignation. The next year he was elected to the lower house for a full term and was returned to that body in 1829 and 1831. Besides serving on the judiciary committee during these years, Gaston was chairman of the finance committee, a position that coincided with his interest in banking. In 1828, he was appointed president of the Bank of New Bern and while in the house was able to cooperate with conservative financial groups in an effort to maintain sound banking policies for North Carolina. He also took a lively interest in internal improvements for the state. In 1827, he was elected the first president of the Agricultural Society of Craven County. The same year he was a delegate to a convention in Washington, N.C., for the purpose of deciding on ways to improve navigation at Ocracoke Inlet; he then tried to help put the measures agreed upon into effect. In July 1833 he attended an internal improvements convention in Raleigh, serving as chairman of the committee to prepare an address to the state and to lay the convention's proceedings before the state legislature. The address, which was his own handiwork, stressed the need for colleges, railroads, hospitals, and asylums for the handicapped. As a member of the House of Commons, Gaston had the satisfaction of introducing the bill to charter the North Carolina Central Railroad. Gaston's career as a public servant entered a new phase in November 1833, when the General Assembly elected him to the North Carolina Supreme Court. Although Article 32 of the state constitution denied the right to hold state office to anyone who did not believe in "the Truth of the Protestant Religion," Gaston and the politicos concluded that a Roman Catholic was not disbarred by the provision. More than thirty years earlier, former governor Samuel Johnston had given him a written opinion expressing approbation when Gaston first became a member of the state legislature. His most famous decision on the bench came in 1834 with the case of State v. Negro Will. Gaston ruled that an enslaved person had the right to defend himself against an unlawful attempt of an enslaver, or an agent of an enslaver, to kill him. In the significant case of State v. William Manuel in 1838, he held that a manumitted enslaved person was a citizen of the state and thus entitled to the guarantees of the constitution. This opinion was cited as "sound law" in 1857 by Benjamin R. Curtis of the United States Supreme Court in his dissent in the Dred Scott case. The better for the justices to render decisions, Gaston purchased a library for the state supreme court while on a trip to New York City in 1835. When Chief Justice John Marshall died that year, there was speculation that Gaston would succeed him on the United States Supreme Court, a possibility championed by various state newspapers. Elected by Craven County as its representative to the Constitutional Convention of 1835, Gaston spoke out in favor of continued suffrage for free Blacks, federal representation as the basis for representation in the House of Commons, and biennial meetings of the state legislature. However, it was to the fight against Article 32 of the state constitution that he gave most of his considerable oratorical skills, delivering a two-day address against religious tests for public office. In the end, the attempt to expunge all religious qualifications from the constitution failed, but the word "Christian" was substituted for "Protestant." Gaston served on the committee appointed at the convention to draft the proposed amendments to be submitted to the voters of North Carolina. A deeply religious man, Gaston was also an active Roman Catholic. When Bishop John England visited New Bern from Charleston, S.C., in May 1821, he celebrated in the parlor of the Gaston house his first recorded mass in North Carolina. The bishop designated Gaston one of five Catholics to conduct services every Sunday in the improvised chapel; at the same time a treasury, to which Gaston contributed $700, was established to receive funds for a church building. Appointed a church warden in February 1824, on another visit by England, Gaston suggested a few amendments to the constitution for the Catholic church in North Carolina which the bishop published in New Bern. Plans for a wooden church were finally presented at a meeting in Gaston's law office in October 1839, and he pledged an additional $500 towards the amount needed to construct the edifice. A contract was drawn up between Gaston and the builder the next year. Work on the church was completed in 1841, thus making St. Paul's Church the oldest Roman Catholic church in North Carolina. Gaston, who owned slaves and a plantation in Craven County, purchased a townhouse in New Bern in April 1818. Built about 1767 by James Coor, this fine Georgian structure is one of the few relatively untouched pre-Revolutionary frame buildings in North Carolina. It is particularly distinguished by its Chinese Chippendale balustrades on the double porches. The Gaston house, placed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1972, has been restored by the Judge Gaston House Restoration Association. Gaston's restored law office stands one block from his house in New Bern. During the sessions of the supreme court in Raleigh, Gaston stayed at the home of Mrs. James F. Taylor. At his office nearby, in 1835 he wrote the words for "The Old North State," the music for which he apparently adopted from a melody sung by a group of Swiss bellringers who had visited the capital. A bronze tablet at the site of the office commemorates the writing of what has been since 1927 the official state song of North Carolina. It was played in public for the first time at the Whig state convention in Raleigh in October 1840. Gaston, himself now a Whig, took no direct part in the presidential campaign of that year, but to the Whigs in control of the state legislature he became the leading choice for the U.S. Senate. He declined the offer as he likewise turned down the next year the post of attorney general in the cabinet of President William Henry Harrison. His name had often been presented by newspaper editors to the country as a vice-presidential prospect. The honors bestowed upon Gaston in his lifetime reflect the esteem in which he was held throughout the United States. In 1817 the American Philosophical Society elected him a member, and two years later the American Antiquarian Society made him counselor for his state. In 1819 the University of Pennsylvania conferred on him the honorary degree of doctor of laws, a degree similarly awarded him later by Harvard College and Columbia College. He was a member of the American Academy of Languages and Belles Lettres and an officer of the Cliosophic Society and of the Literary Society of the College of New Jersey. In 1835, the Philodemics Society of Georgetown College made him an honorary member, as did the Phi Beta Kappa Society of Yale College. Over the next few years he was elected to honorary membership by the literary societies of the University of Alabama, Rutgers College, the University of Georgia, St. Mary's College of Baltimore, Caldwell Institute, and Davidson College. He also belonged to the Erodelphian Society of Miami University, the Franklin Society of Randolph-Macon College, the Philo Society of Jefferson College in Cannonsburg, Pa., and the Euzelian Society of Wake Forest College. Gaston served as a director of the state institution for the instruction of the deaf and dumb, a trustee of the Griffin Free School in New Bern, and a trustee of The University of North Carolina from 1802 until his death. With his recognized speaking ability, Gaston was invariably called upon to deliver commencement addresses by colleges and universities far and wide. One of his most outstanding orations he gave in June 1832 at The University of North Carolina, where he entreated his audience to uphold the Constitution and to preserve the Union. He condemned the institution of slavery and insisted upon its abolition, although at the time of his death he owned over 200 enslaved people. He stated his antinullification position so emphatically that his address went through five printings, one of which carried a preface written by his friend Chief Justice John Marshall. In 1830, 1834, and 1835, the College of New Jersey asked Gaston to give the commencement address, as did Wake Forest College and The University of North Carolina in 1834. Many times he was requested to send copies of his different speeches to editors collecting oratory masterpieces for publication. Gaston made out his will in December 1843, citing among his legatees his surviving daughters, grandchildren, and St. Paul's Church. The next month he suddenly became ill while hearing a case in Raleigh and died in his office several hours later. His last words were said to have been: "We must believe there is a God—All wise and All mighty." He was buried temporarily in Raleigh; his remains were later moved for interment in Cedar Grove Cemetery, New Bern. There Gaston was laid to rest near his parents in a grave marked by a fine marble tombstone. Gaston was married three times: on 4 Sept. 1803, to Susan Hay; on 6 Oct. 1805, to Hannah McClure; and on 3 Sept. 1816, to Eliza Ann Worthington. By his second wife, he had one son and two daughters and by his third, two daughters. Several portraits of Gaston exist. Early in his public career he was asked for a portrait to be hung in the National Gallery in Washington. Portraits are also owned by his descendents and by the Philanthropic Society of The University of North Carolina, which possesses a fine oil on canvas. A portrait of Gaston was given to the state supreme court in 1893; another has hung in his law office in New Bern since 1954. A marble bust of Gaston is located in the Philanthropic Society Hall in Chapel Hill. One of the most interesting likenesses of Gaston is a small watercolor on ivory executed by James Peale in 1796. Gaston stood six feet tall, with blue eyes and dark hair. As he grew old, he became somewhat stout, his complexion got florid, and his hair turned gray. His face, according to a friend, continued to express "the benignity of soul which animated his life."
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https://www.jbu.edu/giving/current-endowed-scholarships
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Current Endowed Scholarships
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The current list of Endowed Scholarships at John Brown University
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https://www.jbu.edu/hubfs/favicon.ico
https://www.jbu.edu/giving/current-endowed-scholarships
Type: Endowed Donor: Alison and George Gratton Established: 2020 Alison Gratton graduated from JBU in 1987 with a degree in broadcasting and then received a pharmacy degree from the University of South Carolina in 1994. She currently works as an inspector with the South Carolina Board of Pharmacy after working for many years as a retail pharmacist. George Gratton earned his GED in 2005 after spending 22 years just one credit short of his diploma. He then received an associate's degree in 2007 and an A.A.S. in HVAC/R in 2013 from Midlands Technical College. He currently works as a commercial HVAC technician. George and Alison met and fell in love in elementary school, but took the scenic route before getting married in 2001. They love their cats, their home and their families. The Grattons also love when God uses them to help others and hope this scholarship will make a Christ-centered education more accessible to more people. Alison's parents, Ronald and Sandra Barber, were amazing Christian parents and good stewards of their money. This scholarship is a way to honor their legacy. Type: Endowed Donor: David and Bernadine Teague Established: 2009 Andrew Teague was born in 1906. His memories of the Great Depression created a desire to be in control of his own destiny. Andrew received an Engineering degree from Oklahoma State University, and his younger sister and brother also earned degrees. While training in California for World War II, he saw the growth opportunities and relocated his family there after the war. Those around Andrew respected his education and community service. His wife, Nora Belle Thornberry Teague, was also influenced by the Depression and taught school in the Ozarks with only a high school education. They both encouraged their children in every aspect of learning. David, Andrew and Nora’s son, remembers Sunday School in their front yard and Vacation Bible School in the back pasture, because there were no churches nearby. Later, Andrew’s faith became more personal, and he reveled in sharing Jesus with his Sunday School class or helping in ministry. David, who after his parents’ death began to truly appreciate his heritage, created this scholarship in their memory. Type: Endowed Donor: Barbara and John Bragg Established: 2007 Barbara and John Bragg were married on June 3, 1963. Barbara was raised in Farmington, Arkansas while John grew up in Fayetteville. John graduated from the University of Arkansas, and Barbara graduated from John Brown University. She remembers her family taking weekend drives to Siloam Springs and driving through the campus. She decided as a child that she would attend JBU. Barbara spent her career as an elementary school teacher, while John worked as a rural mail carrier and a farmer. They have 2 daughters, Gladys Strickland and Becky Hall, and 3 grandsons: Jonathan Strickland, Austin Hall, and Eric Hall. When asked why she was interested in supporting students with an endowed scholarship, Barbara replied, "I had to work when I attended JBU. I know what it means to have someone willing to help financially. I want to return the favor." The Bragg's desire for this scholarship was to help provide financial assistance for students majoring in Elementary Education. These students will then educate the youth of our country to be sincere Christian witnesses. John passed away in 2012 and Barbara in 2014, but their legacy lives on. Type: Endowed Donor: International Entertainment Buyers Association (IEBA) Established: 2011 Founded in 1970, IEBA (International Entertainment Buyers Association) is the leading trade organization for live entertainment industry professionals. IEBA established its Educational Outreach Fund in 2017. To date, IEBA has permanently endowed more than $1,000,000 in scholarships at universities across the U.S. and, in 2018, awarded more than $50,000 through these endowments and other scholarship programs. Barry Jeffrey is the Fund’s first President. Jeffrey has devoted nearly twenty years to IEBA's board of directors. His strong belief in the next generation of entertainment industry leaders drives his tireless fundraising. It is most fitting that IEBA honors Jeffrey's contributions to the organization and the industry by creating the Barry Jeffrey/IEBA Endowed Scholarship at his alma mater, JBU. Barry Jeffrey joined the William Morris Agency, now known as WME, in 1990. He is one of four agents who book the entire WME roster for festivals, fairs, private, and corporate engagements. During his tenure at WME, Barry has also been co-responsible agent for several clients and continues to serve in that capacity for Brad Paisley, Josh Turner, The Oak Ridge Boys, and others. He was made a partner at the agency in 2018. Barry majored in Broadcasting at John Brown University. He is a member of the Country Music Association, Academy of Country Music, NARAS, Gospel Music Association, and served as a Past Chairman of the Board for IEBA. The association has presented Jeffrey with “Talent Agent of the Year” and the prestigious “President’s Award.” Type: Endowed Donor: Jerry and Susie Wilson Established: 2014 Jerry and Susie Wilson created this scholarship in grateful memory of Bill Berry, and in recognition of his integrity, commitment to excellence, blend of talents, courage, optimism, leadership, and his deep faith in God. Bill Berry and Jerry Wilson were President and Executive Vice President respectively of Titan Specialties, Ltd., a manufacturer of oilfield perforating products, based in Pampa, Texas. Along with Clarence Marak, they were owners of the company until selling it in 2007. Bill was unquestionably the heart and soul of Titan and it was Jerry’s privilege to work alongside him, and be wind beneath his wings. Bill was the ultimate encourager. He understood well that people may not remember what you say, but they will remember how you made them feel. Jerry and Susie Wilson are ardent supporters of local, national, and international ministries. While they are committed supporters of conservative causes such as life before and after birth, their over-arching passion is following Christ, helping grow God’s kingdom on earth, and serving the local church. Jerry C. Wilson is a native and long-time resident of Pampa, Texas. His career included public practice as a CPA, serving as CFO of a chain of discount centers, and founding a chain of retail stores, and Executive Vice President of Titan. Susie Wilson grew up in Overland Park, Kansas. Susie and Jerry met and married while students at Texas Tech University, where Jerry earned his Bachelor of Business Administration degree in Accounting, and Susie earned her Bachelor of Music degrees. In 2006, she earned a Doctorate in Choral Conducting from the University of North Texas. The Wilsons raised their children in Pampa, Texas. While Jerry pursued entrepreneurial business ventures, Susie was a fulltime homemaker while also serving as pianist at First Baptist Church, maintaining a private voice studio, and performing as an area soloist. She became the assistant choir director at Pampa High School after the children were grown. She has sung with the Dallas Symphony Chorus since 2001, performing multiple times in Carnegie Hall with the DSC, and with famed conductor Robert Shaw. In 2014, the Wilsons celebrated 50 years of marriage. They are the parents of three adult children: Kim Stevens (B.S. Ed. ’93) and husband, Kenny, of Waco, Texas; Chris Wilson and wife, Erin, of Lubbock, Texas; and Greg Wilson and wife, Michele, Wake Forest, North Carolina; ten grandchildren, and one great grandchild. Now living in Dallas, Jerry and Susie love traveling domestically and internationally, and have seen much of the world together. They are involved in their churches in Dallas, Texas, and Scottsdale, Arizona, where they reside in the winter. Type: Endowed Donor: Bill and Judy Pollard's family Established: 2007 This scholarship was created in honor of Bill and Judy Pollard by their family. Bill and Judy attended Wheaton College in Wheaton, Illinois, and Bill received a J.D. from Northwestern University School of Law and was awarded an honorary Doctor of Humane Letters from Gordon-Conwell Theological Seminary. Bill and Judy are the parents of four children, Julie, Chip, Brian, and Amy, and the proud grandparents of 15 grandchildren. From 1963-1972, Bill practiced law, specializing in corporate finance and tax, and from 1972 to 1977 served on the faculty and as a Vice President of Wheaton College. After Wheaton College, Bill served in various roles, including Chief Executive Officer and Chairman of the Board of ServiceMaster for 30 years. He is also the author of two books, The Soul of the Firm and Serving Two Masters? Reflections on God and Profit. Judy has spent much of her life caring for others, including her children, grandchildren, parents, and friends. She has been active in her local church and in her neighborhood. Together they have sought to serve Christ through their work, family, church, and community and have been a wonderful example to their children and grandchildren. Type: Endowed Donor: Bill and Mary Eva George Established: 2007 When a young man from Pennsylvania graduated from JBU in 1948 by the name of Bill George, no one could have known that his relationship with the university was only beginning. Since that day, Bill’s life was intertwined with the university’s work, both personally and professionally. After receiving his JBU diploma, Bill stepped away from JBU briefly to serve the Department of State in the Foreign Service Division. Just two years later, he began a long tenure of employment working at JBU-owned radio stations in California and Oklahoma. He also consulted at JBU stations in Texas, Florida, and Missouri. For most of his career – 40 years of it – Bill worked with JBU organizations in California. In addition to his radio work, Bill also worked with Brown Military Academy, Southern California Military Academy, the western operations of John Brown Schools, and the John Brown Schools Foundation. Long-time friends of founder John Brown and his family, Bill and his wife Mary Eva took a personal interest in the university community that goes beyond employment. They frequently hosted students in JBU’s Sound Generation in the 1960s and 1970s as the group traveled through California. Bill lent his leadership and expertise to JBU’s development office and served as a consultant to the university from early 1990 through 2008. Throughout his life, Bill had an interest in serving his community as well as JBU. They volunteered with civic organizations, served on a number of boards, and faithfully gave their time to the churches which they called home. He received a number of awards and honors, including an honorary doctorate degree from JBU in 1998. In 1994, Bill had the privilege and great responsibility of serving as JBU’s interim president before the arrival of President Lee Balzer later that year. Bill passed away in October of 2008. John Brown University’s Bill George Arena, constructed in 2010, is named in his honor and memory. Type: Endowed Donor: Jim and Marilyn Holliday Friends and family Established: 2011 Julia Holliday got her nickname, “Billie” from the Billiken doll that was popular in the years before her birth. At the age of 7, Billie moved from Center Point, Iowa to Siloam Springs in 1919 as Southwestern Collegiate Institute, later to become John E. Brown College and finally John Brown University, was beginning. Billie’s mother, known as Aunt Elsie on campus, was the sister of John E. Brown Sr. and had moved with her children to work with her brother in the beginning years of the college. In those early years, Aunt Elsie and her children, including Billie, lived in the Sager Cabin which is still on the JBU campus. Billie grew up on campus and attended John E. Brown College. Years later, while living in Long Beach, California, Billie’s husband passed away suddenly leaving her with two young children to raise on her own. Her uncle, John E. Brown Sr., offered her a position managing the JBU cafeteria. In 1950, she moved back to Siloam Springs. From 1950 to 1978 Billie managed the JBU Cafeteria. At that time the cafeteria was in the basement of the California Dormitory and later moved to its present location. During those years Billie and her staff gained quite a reputation for the food they prepared. Alumni still remember the fried chicken and pecan pie served for Sunday dinner. She was also known for the fancy buffets that she prepared for special occasions on and off campus. Not only did she touch the lives of everyone she and her crew fed, but she had an impact on the students who worked in the cafeteria and dishroom. One former student wrote: “Billie gave me my first job, washing pots in the old California dorm cafeteria. I worked for her for over two years, and I can honestly say that I have been forever changed by the experience. She taught me about responsibility, about integrity, about being part of a team, and about having fun at work. She taught me that you can both love and fear a boss at the same time. She gave me confidence that I could please a tough supervisor (and we all knew that she was tough). I guess mostly, Billie taught me self-discipline. Without that, you don’t finish college, go to graduate school, or succeed in a career.” Type: Endowed Donor: Anonymous Established: 2007 Born November 7, 1918, Mr. Graham was reared on a dairy farm in Charlotte, North Carolina. In the fall of 1934, at age 16, Mr. Graham made a personal commitment to Christ through the ministry of Mordecai Ham, a traveling evangelist, who visited Charlotte for a series of revival meetings. Ordained in 1939 by a church in the Southern Baptist Convention, Mr. Graham received a solid foundation in the Scriptures at Florida Bible Institute (now Trinity College in Florida). In 1943 he graduated from Wheaton College in Illinois and married fellow student Ruth McCue Bell. After graduating from college, Mr. Graham pastored the First Baptist Church in Western Springs, Illinois, before joining Youth for Christ, an organization founded for ministry to youth and servicemen during World War II. He preached throughout the United States and in Europe in the immediate post war era, emerging as a rising young evangelist. Mr. Graham once said: "My one purpose in life is to help people find a personal relationship with God, which, I believe, comes through knowing Christ.” Billy Graham took Christ literally when He said in Mark 16:15, “Go ye into all the world and preach the Gospel to every creature.” Mr. Graham has preached the Gospel to more people in live audiences than anyone else in history—nearly 215 million people in more than 185 countries and territories—through various meetings, including Mission World and Global Mission. Hundreds of millions more have been reached through television, video, film, and webcasts. Ruth Bell Graham was born in China. Her parents were medical missionaries at a small hospital compound 300 miles north of Shanghai. As a young girl in the compound, Ruth first sensed the great calling to abandon all for the sake of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. She spent her childhood on China’s mission field with her parents and siblings, surrounded by disease, despair, and the eventual disorder and chaos of civil wars. The suffering she observed only strengthened in her the conviction of people’s need for the Savior. Until her early adult years, she dreamed of serving as a single missionary in a far corner of the world—the mountainous nation of Tibet. In the fall of 1937, she enrolled at Wheaton College, outside Chicago, Illinois, and three years later was introduced to Billy Graham. Shortly after their graduation from Wheaton, the two were married in Montreat, NC, on August 13, 1943. Ruth passed away in 2007 and Billy died in 2018. Type: Endowed Donor: Family and Friends of Caroline Brown Established: 2005 From 1948 to 1979, Ella Caroline Trahin Brown served the John Brown University family faithfully as the President's wife. She married John E. Brown Jr., son of JBU founder John E. Brown Sr., in 1941. They were married for 63 years and 31 of those years she spent as first lady of JBU. Caroline was a lifetime resident of Siloam Springs, graduated from Siloam Springs High School and from JBU in 1947 receiving a BA in English. Her son, John E. Brown III, said that he and his sisters watched their mother interact with different types of people while they were at JBU, and she treated them all the same way. "She's your best friend even if you've just met her. She makes you feel comfortable no matter who you are," he said. Caroline Brown's legacy goes beyond her impact on people at JBU. She was also significantly involved in the community of Siloam Springs. Mrs. Brown earned an associate degree in nursing from the University of Arkansas in 1974 and later completed the requirements for a license in Social Work. She became Director of Patient Services at Siloam Springs Memorial Hospital and retired (the second time) in 2000 following 26 years of service. In 2000, Mrs. Brown was recognized with a Pioneer Citizen Award by the Siloam Springs Chamber of Commerce. She was presented the Dr. Frist Humanitarian Award by Quorum Healthcare in 1986. Caroline Brown passed away in 2005. Type: Endowed Donor: Estate of Carrie Sliger Established: 2009 This scholarship was created by an estate gift from Carrie B. Sliger. Carrie grew up near Palestine, TX, and lost her mother when she was 2 years old and her father when she was 18 years old. Carrie was one of 10 children, 9 of which preceded her in death. She approached a bank to borrow $50 so that she could attend JBU. The banker thought for a while and then gave her the money to attend JBU as a gift, not as a loan. Carrie attended JBU high school and came to college at JBU and graduated in 1935 with a 2- year degree (all that JBU offered at the time). One of Carrie’s greatest memories of John Brown University is sitting at the Founder’s feet in the California Dorm lobby. She accepted the Lord there in front of the fireplace. The title of his talk was “Nothing but Leaves.” Carrie later earned a Masters Degree in Education in Tempe, Arizona. She taught 2nd grade for 4 years in Oklahoma and then taught in the Andalucía Independent School District in Phoenix from which she retired after more than 40 years of teaching. She lived in the Phoenix neighborhood where she taught and was known around the community by the families as “Ms. Sliger, the 2nd grade teacher who cared deeply for students.” Carrie created this scholarship to help other qualified students with financial need as she was helped. Type: Endowed Donor: Family and friends of the Gehron family Established: 1982 Clyde Gehron believed in John Brown Senior’s philosophy on teaching. He agreed that training the youth is the very best investment that can be made. Clyde believed that the best education is training youth by experience in whatever vocation they choose and to encourage them to live their lives as Christians. Clyde was a JBU grad who studied agriculture. He served in the Navy and traveled to the Pacific, South America, and Alaska. One of his most interesting happenings since his time at JBU was building two nurseries where he grew 1 billion pine trees and planted over 1 million acres in Louisiana. He was a charter member of the Dean’s Association in 1990, which was formed to ensure appropriate recognition of those persons who have shared significantly in furthering the spiritual and academic goals of the University. Clyde’s brother Vernie and his wife Helon also contributed to this scholarship. Vernie received a B.S. in Mechanical engineering from JBU and went on to be the President of G and R Consultants Inc. and APEX Printing and Envelope Co. He served in the Air Force Material Command all throughout WWII. He met and married his wife, Helon, while at JBU. He also enjoyed studying under Ben Ward who greatly influenced his life by being one of the smartest professors and Christian men that Vernie knew. He was thankful for the many life-long friends he made while at JBU. He was especially thankful to John E. Brown who provided him an opportunity to receive a college education even though he was a poor, young farm boy. He and his wife also became charter members of the Dean’s Association in 1990. Type: Endowed Donor: The Charles H. Stout Foundation Established: 2009 Charles H. "Chick" Stout's noted career in newspapers and printing-related industry spanned more than half a century. Born in Winterset, Iowa, the fourth oldest in a family of six boys, he worked his way to a degree in accounting at the University of Iowa, as a Linotype operator at the University Press. After graduation, he became an instructor in newspaper management at the University. In 1927, he co-authored the book The Business Department of School Publications with Harry S. Bunker and future pollster, George H. Gallup. Charles served as Vice President and Sales Manager for Matrix Contrast Corporation in New York, and served during World War II as a U.S. Navy Commander in the Atlantic and Pacific theaters. In 1948, college friend Bunker, then General Manager of Speidel Newspapers, recruited Stout to serve as Assistant General Manager of the Colorado Springs, Colorado headquarters of the eight-newspaper group. In 1957, Stout was named Publisher of the Nevada State Journal and Reno Evening Gazette and Vice President of Speidel. He became President of the Transcontinental group in 1964 and continued to serve as a Director and Chairman of the Executive Committee until his retirement in 1976 when Speidel merged with Gannett Co., Inc. This scholarship was created to support journalism majors at JBU. Type: Endowed Donor: Family of Chong-Nock Lee Established: 2016 The Chong-Nock Lee Endowed Scholarship was created in honor of Chong-Nock Lee by his family. Mr. Lee was born in Gongju, South Korea in 1929, and graduated from Seoul National University in 1949 with an agricultural engineering degree. Mr. Lee and his wife, Moohee, are the parents of five children­­: Wonwoo, Choonwoo, Minwoo, Eunkyoung, and Chunwoo and the grandparents of 8 grandchildren. His eldest grandchild, Ted Song, has been teaching engineering at JBU since 2012. From 1949 to 1994, Mr. Lee served in public schools in South Korea as an English teacher and school administrator. He particularly enjoyed being a school principal as he was committed to creating better teaching-learning environments for teachers and students. His love for education greatly impacted his children and grandchildren, leading two of his children to public school teaching careers and one of his grandchildren to a college teaching career. After his retirement and until his death in 2016, Mr. Lee focused his time on writing and encouraging others to follow God. His life verse was 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18: “Rejoice always; pray without ceasing; in everything give thanks; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus.” Type: Endowed Donor: Joe Zimmerman Herb and Jane Zimmerman Claude Zimmerman Jr. Richard and Anne Ruble Margaret Arnold Established: 1995 Joe Zimmerman created the Claude R. and Blanche A. Zimmerman Memorial Endowed Piano Scholarship in memory of his parents. Claude and Blanche were married on August 14, 1919 after Claude’s return from U.S. military duty in France at the end of World War I. They settled in Byron, a small town in northwestern Oklahoma where Claude worked as a blacksmith, sharpening plow shears and discs used by farmers in the area to cultivate the soil for the production of crops such as wheat and alfalfa. Due to a meager income, the family had only bare necessities for living. The Great Depression was difficult for everyone, but it taught outstanding qualities. Unsophisticated, humble Christians who were faithful in church attendance, the Zimmermans were always willing to use some of their modest financial means to help those in need in their community as well as those spreading the gospel of Christ on the mission field. Claude and Blanche had four sons, Claude Jr., Robert, Herbert, and Joe. Although Blanche had only a high school education and Claude terminated his education after eighth grade, they were very encouraging when three of their sons expressed interest in earning bachelor degrees. Claude Jr. obtained a bachelor’s degree and master’s degree in Civil Engineering which enabled him early in his career to obtain a job at NASA where he worked until retirement. Robert had a 22-year career in the U.S. Air Force servicing aircraft. Herbert graduated from JBU with assistance from a GI Bill®. Joe graduated from JBU, with considerable help from a JBU academic scholarship. Years later, after Joe had earned a doctorate and was serving on the JBU faculty, Claude and Blanche gave financially to help a deserving music student. The Zimmermans had a great sense of humor. Claude took great delight in telling jokes and relating humorous stories he had read in Reader’s Digest. Blanche had a hearty and infectious laugh. They not only had a profound influence on their sons, they also enriched all the lives they touched. Type: Endowed Donor: Clinton Fowler Friends and family Established: 1984 Clinton H. Fowler was born into a large farming family in Missouri in 1921, the youngest of 13 children. He was the first of his siblings to attend college, JBU, where he was able to work his way through college. It was at JBU that Clint met and married his wife, Jean Anne Barkley. While at JBU, Clint studied radio broadcasting and aviation. He was also a pilot for Dr. John E. Brown Sr. and worked for KUOA, a radio station licensed to Siloam Springs, Arkansas, from 1947 to 1951, while attending JBU. Jean Anne was a music major and a member of the original Triple Trio. When WWII began, Clinton joined the US Army Air Corps and taught young men to fly. While he was overseas, his first son, Clint Jr. was born. After the war, his family moved back to Siloam Springs where Clint began working for JBU. In Siloam Springs his daughters, Deborah and Andrea were born. His work with JBU moved him out to Long Beach, California where his daughter, Jonnye Faye, was born. Out in California, beginning in 1951, he went to work as Vice President and General Manager of KGER, a radio station in Long Beach, CA. He worked in this capacity for more than three decades. In 1983, his wife went home to be with the Lord. It was after his wife died that Clint created a memorial to her in the form of an endowed scholarship. When Clint died in 2002 his children wished to honor him and his broadcasting career by including his name on the scholarship. Type: Endowed Donor: Col. Kenneth W. Patrum Peter N. Stathis Established: 2005 This scholarship was created in honor of Colonel Kenneth Patrum. Kenneth Walter Patrum, a retired attorney and Lt. Colonel in the US Air Force Reserve, was a long-time resident of the District of Columbia. However, as a native of Springfield, Missouri, Mr. Patrum spent his formative years in Tulsa, Oklahoma, and Siloam Springs, Arkansas. Before Kenneth finished high school his parents passed away. Determined to earn his high school diploma, Kenneth heard about a school in Northwest Arkansas where he could work half of the day at the school to pay his expenses and attend classes the other half. That school was John Brown in Siloam Springs. With his high school diploma in hand, he moved to Washington, DC in 1930 and pursued an undergraduate degree at George Washington University and at the Benjamin Franklin University. He earned a J.D. degree in law from American University and was a long-time member of the District of Columbia Bar Association. Drafted as a Private in the armed forces during World War II, Col. Patrum continued to serve for many years afterwards in the US Air Force Reserve. He was also employed by the Washington Gaslight Company, the U.S. Department of Commerce, and the Central Intelligence Agency. He attended S. Albans Episcopal Church and served many years as a member of the Ushers Guild. His wife of 49 years, Elizabeth Thompson Patrum of Warrenton, Virginia, passed away in 1991. Col. Patrum passed away in 2010. Type: Endowed Donor: Family and Friends of David Brooker Established: 1993 David Scott Brooker's desire was for students to become light and salt in the marketplace; always placing people and their needs first. It is in this spirit that the family and friends of David Scott Brooker created this scholarship. He believed a compassion for excellence and steadfastness in all one does was as important as marketplace success. David attended Siloam Springs High School and then worked his way through JBU as a radio announcer and Sports Information Director for JBU. He graduated magna cum laude in 1980, completing degrees in radio/TV Broadcasting and English. It was at JBU that he met his wife, fellow student Amy Garber Brooker. He also played intramural basketball and city league basketball all 4 years. David began his career in marketing for Long John Silver's the summer he graduated from JBU and worked his way up the corporate ladder in a relatively short period of time. At the age of 31, he was made a vice president in the Kentucky Fried Chicken division of Pepsico in Louisville, Kentucky. In 1992, he returned to Siloam Springs as a marketing consultant for Outreach Publications and the Campaign Manager for Mike Huckabee in Huckabee’s US Senate race. That spring, David was diagnosed with multiple brain tumors. All his personal and professional achievements paled in comparison to the passion and spirit with which David confronted death--his greatest challenge. David’s favorite Bible verse was I Peter 5:6. Type: Endowed Donor: Estate of Dorothy Jelley Established: 2008 Dorothy Evelyn Jelley began her quite remarkable life in England on October 12, 1914. As a young woman, she joined the Women’s Royal Naval Service (WRNS), during WWII. She was in charge of a kitchen that provided food for the servicemen and women. After the war, a friend persuaded Dorothy to join her in emigrating to Canada. Dorothy said she made her decision more or less on the spur of the moment and accompanied her friend. Things were difficult in England after the War, and Dorothy thought Canada might be better. After her arrival, she discovered that she had Tuberculosis and spent time in a sanitarium to recover. While there, she enrolled in bookkeeping classes and became so proficient that she was hired by the sanitarium to do its bookkeeping. Later, she immigrated to the U.S., became a U.S. citizen and worked for a businessman in Washington, D.C. She later moved to Long Beach, California where she worked as the chief bookkeeper for a firm in Los Angeles. She was very interested in Missions and Bible study. Although she was colorblind, she became accomplished in needlework, both sewing and embroidery. She made several trips back to England to visit friends and family. A trip to Australia was one dream that went unfulfilled. She was a faithful Christian, full of kindness, warmth and humor and always with a glint of mischief in her eyes. Dorothy believed that “anything worth doing was worth doing well.” Dorothy was never able to visit the campus and her only connection was the radio ministry of JBU’s founder, Dr. John Brown Sr. Type: Endowed Donor: Alumni Established: 1983 Dorothy Woodland was a pilgrim in life. From working on the World War II’s top-secret Manhattan Project to preparing many young students for the challenges of the field of science, Woodland challenged the norms of her day. Dorothy graduated with an undergraduate degree from the College of Wooster in Ohio and received her Doctor of Physical Chemistry degree at Ohio State University. She then launched into a life dedicated to teaching and spent the first 30 years of her career teaching at JBU from 1944- 1974. She served as a professor as well as Academic Dean and was heavily involved with many of the artistic productions on the JBU campus. She believed in her students and they knew it. Dorothy passed away in 1999. Dr. Irvin A Wills is one of the dominant figures of JBU history. He was a professor of biology here from 1935-1974, and head of the Biology Department for about half those years. Wills’ educational background included a bachelor’s of science from Wheaton College, and master’s and doctorate degrees from the State University of Iowa. He was the sponsor of the Science Club for several decades, which made numerous field trips each year and hosted campus activities. Wills also served as Academic Dean from 1940-1955. In those days before computer registration, one student remembers that this involved writing out a note card for each student in each class, spreading them out all over a wall, and rearranging the cards until all needs were met and seats were filled! Wills was more than suited for these tasks. He had an incredibly sharp mind and consistently strove to learn more about this world. When he found items of interest in magazines or other reading materials, he would remove the article in question and place it in a scrapbook for future reference, or make illegible scribbles in one of his many notebooks. Students who worked with him marveled at how he could always direct them through his piled-up collections to the exact article he needed to reference. Irvin Wills died around 1983. Type: Endowed Donor: Anonymous Established: 2005 This scholarship is created in honor of Dr. Gary Guinn, the 2006 Distinguished Professor of English at John Brown University. Dr. Guinn was born in the JBU hospital when it was located in downtown Siloam Springs, and maintained a close relationship with the university throughout life. He graduated from JBU in 1974 with a BSE in English, and he received his M.A. and Ph.D. from the University of Arkansas. In 1979, Dr. Guinn returned to JBU to serve as the Dean of Student Life, but spent most of his time at JBU as a professor of English in the Division of Humanities and Social Sciences. He taught a variety of courses in the English Department, including Honors Composition, World Literature, Honors Integrated Humanities, 19th-century British Literature, Irish Literature, Creative Writing Workshops in both poetry and fiction, and others. Dr. Guinn served from 2002 until 2005 as the director of the Honors Scholars Program at JBU. He presented papers at the National Collegiate Honors Council (NCHC), national and regional conferences and has been involved in many projects to ensure the continued excellence and national recognition of the Honors Scholars Program at JBU. Dr. Guinn also served as editor of the Small College column in The National Honors Report, the official journal of NCHC. His fiction and poetry have been published in a variety of literary journals and anthologies. His novel, A Late Flooding Thaw, was published by Moon Lake Press in 2005. Dr. Guinn is married to Mary Ann (Huskins) Guinn '78, who served as the university nurse for 21 years. They reside in Siloam Springs and have two grown sons and two grandsons. Type: Endowed Donor: Anonymous Established: 2005 This scholarship was created in honor of Dr. James C. Walters, Distinguished Professor in the Division of Biblical Studies at John Brown University. Dr. Walters began his career with John Brown University in 1968 as Director of Admissions. In 1969 he joined the Division of Biblical Studies. He was Chair of that division until 1997. Dr. Walters received his Bachelor of Science degree in Bible from Philadelphia College of the Bible, Masters of Theology from Dallas Theological Seminary and Doctorate of Ministry from Western Conservative Baptist Seminary. During Walters’ 35 years at JBU, he counseled numerous students in pre-marital counseling and was privileged to perform nearly a hundred weddings. He was recognized as Teacher of the Year 1979, 1986, and 2003. Dr. Walters’ love and concern for students was widely known. He continues to hear from students from the earliest days of his teaching. Although he taught many Bible classes, his favorites were Bible Doctrines and Christian Life. Dr. Walters and his wife Lynda had been married for 47 years when Lynda went home to be with the Lord in 2012. They have two married sons and four grandchildren. Jim passed away in 2022. Type: Endowed Donor: Dr. John and Joallen Moose Established: 2008 Dr. John Moose, raised in Morrilton, Arkansas, obtained his Bachelor of Science degree in Pre-Med Chemistry from Hendrix College in Conway, Arkansas. He received a medical degree from the University of Arkansas Medical Center in Little Rock and interned at Baptist Hospital. Dr. Moose completed two years of military service at the Air Force base in Orlando, Florida. He then began practicing medicine in Siloam Springs in the fall of 1966 and continued until the fall of 1995. Afterwards, he practiced part-time in Prairie Grove at First Care Family Doctors Clinic until 2002. Dr. Moose, an active Rotarian, enjoyed raising flowers, collecting coins and stamps, and regular activities in the Gem and Mineral Society. He made medical/construction mission trips to Haiti, El Salvador and Mexico. He served as a trustee for John Brown University from 1985-1997, and was active in the Siloam Spring’s First United Methodist Church. He and his wife have one son, two daughters, and four grandchildren. Joallen Logan Moose, raised in Alabama and Arkansas, graduated from Hendrix College in 1959 with a Bachelor of Arts in English and Elementary Education. A week later, she and John were married in Greene Chapel on the Hendrix campus. For the next few years she was a medical secretary and 6th grade teacher in Little Rock. After the Mooses had lived in Siloam Springs for many years, Joallen, after 7 years as a part-time student at JBU, received a degree in Biblical Studies in 1990. As a Bible teacher, she has taught many classes in her home, at church, and in the community. In the 1970’s she and several other women organized the Christian Women’s Luncheon which met at Dawn Hill and JBU, and ministered to women in Northwest Arkansas and Eastern Oklahoma. She served as a bloodmobile chairman for Red Cross and Community Blood Center for 17 years, volunteered as a Laubach tutor, Literacy Council board member, and in community service projects as a member of Coterie, Rotary Anns, and Civitan clubs. Ministry to women and children’s shelters, nursing homes and shut-ins is a focus – also musical activities in church choir and hand bells, and the Chorale of the Ozarks. In 2005, Mrs. Moose was honored at the local Chamber of Commerce banquet with the “Pioneer Citizen of the Year” award. Dr. Moose passed away in 2017. The “Maranatha!” clock tower that stands in the middle of JBU’s campus was built in 2002 through a generous gift from Dr. John I. Moose and Joallen Logan Moose. Type: Endowed Donor: Keith Holmberg Mr. and Mrs. Dean Gilbert Established: 2006 The Dr. Marc David Gilbert Memorial Endowed Scholarship was created to honor the memory of a very special professor at John Brown University. Dr. Gilbert impacted countless lives as he educated students at JBU not only in the field of business, but also in different areas of life and spiritual development. The impact that he left encouraged alumni to create this endowed scholarship. Dr. Gilbert was born May 19, 1913, in Clearwater, Kansas, to Ray and Alice Gilbert. He went to be with his Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ on March 8, 2006, at the age of 92. He was a committed Christian since the age of twelve. Dr. Gilbert ministered as a pastor and Sunday school teacher at the Nicodemus Community Church, Grace Bible Church, Norwood Church, and Siloam Bible Church, all in Siloam Springs. His educational preparation included a Bachelor of Science degree in Education and a Bachelor of Science degree in Commerce from Kansas State Teachers College in 1939. In 1940 he completed a Masters degree in Law and Business from the University of Denver. In 1964 he was awarded a Doctor of Education degree from the University of Tulsa. He was also a Certified Public Accountant. His vast career led him down several different paths, but he retired in the field of teaching. He taught in a rural school in Kansas and later taught high school. He then moved to Texas and taught in several graduate schools. His principal college teaching was at John Brown University, where he served as Chairman of the Business Department and Chairman of the Social Studies Division. Type: Endowed Donor: Estate of Nathan Willits Established: 2012 The Dr. Nathan Willits Memorial Endowed Scholarship was funded by the Nathan A. Willits Trust to honor Nathan’s lifelong love for education and students. Upon completion of a Ph.D. program at Michigan State in soil physics, Nathan accepted a teaching position at Rutgers in the graduate department and began his career as an educator. In 1962, Nathan followed his heart to teach in a Christian environment, accepting an offer from a small Christian college where he taught and served as the academic dean and registrar. Four years later Nathan moved to Florida to help found a new Christian college, Clearwater Christian College. He wore many hats: academic dean, registrar, professor, all for which he accepted no pay. Nathan’s dedication to his school and students went well beyond the classroom and his office as an administrator. In the summers, Nathan painted dorm rooms and performed general maintenance. He developed many personal relationships that continued over the years. He helped many students financially pursue student missionary projects and continued to support them as they became full-time missionaries. After retirement and moving to Siloam Springs, Nathan’s love for Christian education benefited John Brown University. He volunteered, became an integral part of JBU’s host family program for international students, audited a class each semester well into his 80’s, and attended chapel services and Chai Time. The family of Nathan A. Willits is happy to see his legacy of love for Christ-centered education continued through the Dr. Nathan Willits Memorial Endowed Scholarship. Type: Endowed Donor: JBU Education Division Established: 2007 The JBU Department of Education created this scholarship in honor of Dr. Roger Iddings. Dr. Roger Iddings grew up in a small town in southern Indiana. He attended Hanover College, where he received a degree in chemistry. After graduating from Hanover, he joined the Army during which time he served in Korea. He married Joy Woods, an MK from China, in 1953. Following his discharge from the service, he attended Indiana University where he received a teaching degree and began teaching chemistry at Edsel Ford High School. He then completed a M.Ed. at Wayne State University and began his Ph.D. in Science Education at Ohio State. After receiving his Ph.D., he became a part of the original faculty at Wright State University in Ohio. He was a member of the faculty for 24 years, 14 of which he served as the Dean of the College of Education and Human Services. Dr. Iddings began his service to John Brown University in 1988 as Chair for the Division of Teacher Education. During his time as Division Chair, he initiated and developed the Professional Development School (PDS) creating a partnership with Siloam Springs School District. In 1997, Dr. Iddings became the Assistant to the Provost. He initiated and supported the development of TESOL courses in Teacher Education in response to local changing demographics. Dr. Iddings developed and started the first Masters Program (Counselor Education) at John Brown University. Before his retirement, Dr. Iddings expanded Graduate Studies into three counseling programs – adding LPC and LMFT and the first business masters (MSLE). Dr. Iddings passed away in 2015. Type: Endowed Donor: Anonymous Established: 2005 This scholarship was created in honor of Dr. Shirley Forbes Thomas, Distinguished Professor of English at JBU. Dr. Thomas came to JBU as a professor of English in 1969. She served as Dean of Undergraduate Studies and Director of the Honors Scholars Program. In 1985 she was named the JBU Teacher of the Year. In 1998 she became the first recipient of JBU’s new Distinguished Professor Award. In addition to presenting and publishing in the scholarly world, she coached numerous students who presented papers and competed in scholarly writing contests. She nominated eleven students for regional, national, and international scholarship paper competitions. Of the eleven nominated, seven received first place awards, 1 second, and two honorable mentions. Her post-graduate degrees were from the University of Arkansas where she was inducted into the Phi Beta Kappa National Honors Society. Her undergraduate degree was from the University of Central Arkansas where she received one of the first two honors degrees ever granted by the institution. Instrumental in founding the JBU Honors Scholars Program, Dr. Thomas served as director of the program from 1988 until she retired. She was active in the National Collegiate Honors Council (NCHC), served on the Semesters Committee and helped design NCHC semesters in the Czech Republic, Greece, Spain, and numerous US locations. She also helped design and facilitate NCHC honors faculty institutes both abroad and in the US. She also served on the National Executive Board of NCHC. Under her leadership, JBU’s chapter of Alpha Chi National Academic Honor Society was awarded “Star Chapter” status and was one of four nominees for top chapter in the nation. Dr. Thomas was married to Lloyd Thomas and was the mother of nine children. She and her husband were co-founders of Washington County’s APACT (Adoptive Parents and Children Together). With the exception of one semester, all of her college and professional education were attained after she had children. Dr. Thomas officially retired in 2002 from JBU, although she continued to write grants for the University until 2008. Dr. Thomas passed away in 2020. Type: Endowed Donor: Earl and Cora Eldridge Peter and Arlene Eldridge Established: 2006 Earl and Cora Eldridge have been entrepreneurs for most of their lives. They have owned small businesses in Vermont, southern California and Hawaii. Earl is also a general contractor and continues to build homes well into his retirement years. Earl and Cora had four children graduate from JBU between 1985 and 1992. Peter Eldridge, ’85, was one of those children. The other Eldridge children who attended JBU were Ruth (Eldridge) Abbey, ’87 (and her husband Chris Abbey, ’87); Becky (Eldridge) Cable, ’88; and Paul Eldridge, ’91 (and his wife Laurie Eldridge, ’92). Peter and Arlene Eldridge have been long time supporters of JBU. While a student at JBU, Peter received need-based scholarships and worked in the student work-study program. Arlene held a number of administrative positions in the JBU Business Office while Peter was a student, ultimately acting as the Executive Assistant to the JBU President, then John Brown III. JBU has had a profound impact on the spiritual, academic, emotional and social lives of the Eldridge family children, and they would not have been able to JBU without receiving crucial need-based financial aid. This scholarship is being created in recognition of and in thankfulness for that impact on the Eldridge family. Type: Endowed Donor: Thomas and Dorothy McCaw Established: 1991 Mr. McCaw attended JBU for one semester right before the start of World War II. Even though his stay at the University was short he left with lasting memories. Mr. McCaw worked for one year at Worcester Polytechnic Institute while finishing his Bachelors of Science in Electrical Engineering degree. He completed one semester of graduate work at MIT, then moved to Indiana to work for the Fairfield Manufacturing Company Inc., as a sales engineer and retired after 35 years as president. He has said about his time at Fairfield, “In my 35 years’ experience from Sales Engineer to President of Fairfield Manufacturing Co., I was impressed many times with the need for EXCELLENCE in all areas of human endeavor and particularly in product design, manufacturing methods, human relations and all other elements effecting the success or failure of product manufacturing.” The need for engineering excellence was also apparent to him at Fairfield. When reflecting on his time at Fairfield he said, “I saw numerous examples of disastrous developments that were innovative, but total failures because of the lack of engineering excellence.” These experiences inspired him to create a fund that would allow students to pursue engineering excellence at JBU. Thomas passed away in 2005 and Dorothy in 2015. Type: Endowed Donor: Steve and Kristie Genheimer Established: 2005 This scholarship recognizes the importance to our society of Christian involvement, leadership and excellence in fields of engineering and technology, and the superior preparation provided by the JBU engineering program. It was created to increase enrollment in the engineering program at John Brown University. Steve Genheimer graduated from JBU with an electrical engineering degree in 1976. Genheimer wanted to attend a Christian university that offered an engineering program and in the 70’s, JBU was one of the few schools that fit this criteria. Since his time at JBU, Steve had a successful career as an engineer moving into executive management at Seagate Technology. Taking early retirement in 2004, he went back to school to complete a doctorate in Industrial Engineering, and is now an adjunct professor at the University of Oklahoma. Genheimer credits JBU for providing him with the broad foundation of engineering fundamentals that have served him well as an engineer. From the perspective of life as a whole, he says JBU reinforced his Christian commitment and helped integrate his faith into daily life. Steve and his wife Kristie have two sons. He serves on JBU's Engineering Advisory Board and is a member of the JBU Board of Trustees. He also serves on the board of American Leprosy Missions and is an elder at Covenant Community Church in Yukon, Oklahoma. Type: Endowed Donor: Alumni Established: 1980 Born in Maryville, Missouri, in 1912, Fred moved with his family to Siloam Springs, Arkansas, when he was just six months old. At the height of the depression in 1933, Fred began his studies at John Brown University, having watched the institution mature through his teenage years. When he graduated with a science degree in 1937, Fred stayed for one year to teach. With support from JBU, he then went to Texas A & M to pursue a mechanical engineering degree. While in Texas, Fred met Laverne and they were married during the Christmas season of 1941, just after Fred finished his degree. They immediately went to a war-time assignment with the Wright Aeronautical Company in Cincinnati, Ohio. Fred was intimately involved in the production engineering of the Liberty engine which was famous for its reliability and for its service as prime mover of the P-38. While the Olneys were in Ohio, their first son, Fred Paul, was born. In the summer of 1945, as the war effort was ending, the Olneys stopped at JBU on their way back to Texas. Anticipating a great influx of students from returning armed forces personnel, Dean Irwin Wills made Fred an offer to stay and teach. He stayed, holding the position until his retirement in 1978. Fred earned a master’s degree in mechanical engineering at the University of Arkansas in 1958, thus encouraging JBU’s faculty to pursue advanced degrees in engineering. He was the chairman of the engineering division from 1961 through 1976. The Olneys’ other two children were born in Siloam Springs, Robert in 1946 and Rosanne in 1949. All three children graduated from JBU. Over his long tenure at JBU, Fred added several other credentials to his teaching portfolio. In 1951, Fred became a Professional Engineer and founded Siloam Engineering Services. Fred became a Registered Land Surveyor in 1965 and for many years ran a successful surveying business employing many student assistants. He was the first head of the engineering division at John Brown University and assisted the division as it made the transition in the early 1960s from technology to a modern engineering emphasis. He served the University for 33 years. After retirement, Fred revived his business and fulfilled many surveying needs in the area, especially for the city of Siloam Springs. Fred passed away in 1979. Type: Endowed Donor: Friends and Family Established: 2007 This scholarship was created to memorialize Carrie Oliver and to honor Gary Oliver. Carrie Oliver went home to be with the Lord on July 2, 2007 after a two-year battle with cancer. Gary and Carrie led full lives together, enjoying speaking, training, teaching, writing, counseling and impacting people’s lives. Gary and Carrie have both authored and co-authored several books. Gary directs the Center for Relationship Enrichment, an endowed center at John Brown University, is a Professor of Psychology and Practical Theology and is a nationally known speaker and author who has been victorious over several bouts with cancer. The Olivers lost their son, Matt, in May 2007. Gary said at Carrie’s memorial service, “Carrie and I didn’t understand why I had all of my cancers, why she was allowed to have cancer…why Matt was allowed to die…But Carrie was clear that the purpose of our life as a couple and her life as an individual was to somehow manifest the difference that Jesus can make in a life and marriage and family, to somehow demonstrate that circumstances don’t determine ultimate reality (even when those circumstances include a deadly diagnosis) and to somehow show that God is not just a promise maker but also a promise keeper. Carrie decided that her diagnosis didn’t change the goodness, grace and mercy of her Lord and didn’t change her ability to choose to live however many days she had to the fullest in loving, being loved and serving…in being faithful.” Type: Endowed Donor: Alumni and Faculty of Division of Natural Science Established: 1997 Alumni and faculty created this scholarship in memory of Dr. Gaston Griggs. Dr. Griggs graduated from Bristow High School in Bowling Green, Kentucky then went on to serve four years in the U.S. Air Force during the Korean War. Following his years in the Air Force he attended George Peabody College and graduated with a MA, BA, in Biology with a Chemistry minor. He graduated from Vanderbilt University with a Ph.D. in radiation biology and physics and then became a part of the university’s faculty following his completion of his doctorate. After a few years at Vanderbilt University, Dr. Griggs came to John Brown University where he taught classes on molecular and cell biology, genetics, philosophy of science, immunology and oversaw independent studies for science students. He had numerous articles of his cancer research published and many articles published with research conducted with students. He was instrumental in advising pre-med students. Dr. Griggs was active in various organizations including the National Cancer Institute and the National Science Foundation. He participated in these organizations by attending meetings, presenting papers and reviewing grant proposals. He was well-known and well-respected across the country for his cancer research. He retired from JBU in 1996 after 22 years of service. Dr. Griggs passed away in 2011. Type: Endowed Donor: Estate of Harold A. and Mary E. Nicholas Established: 2013 This scholarship was created by an estate gift from Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nicholas. Harold was born in 1921 in Mount Ida, Arkansas. He served in the U.S. Navy from 1941 to 1945 and received the Navy Unit Commendation Award for outstanding heroism while serving on the USS Salt Lake City. He later retired from Getty Oil after 30 years of service. Mary E. Nicholas was born in 1924 in Mesquite, TX. Her family members were migrant farm workers who worked in Texas, Oklahoma and California. Mary was the oldest of 7 children and helped raise her younger siblings after her mother’s death. Harold and Mary were married on July 15, 1948 and made their home in CA until 1999 when they moved to Arkansas for retirement. Mary was a devoted homemaker and helpmate to Harold, and was the love of his life. He often referred to her as "my beautiful bride." The Nicholas’ were active members of Southside Freewill Baptist Church. The character of Christ – love, honesty, integrity, diligence, kindness and servitude – was always evident in their day-to-day lives. They lived joyfully together for 61 years, and enjoyed traveling, hunting, fishing, camping and playing dominoes. Neither Harold nor Mary attended college. In fact, Mary did not attend school as a child. As an adult, she enrolled in a few educational classes, studied and practiced on her own until she could read and write fluently. Helping others achieve an education was very important to Harold and Mary, and this is the primary reason they created this memorial scholarship. Type: Endowed Donor: Leland and Ireane Stratton Established: 1988 This scholarship was created by Leland and Ireane (Brittell) Stratton in honor of their brother-in-law, Mr. Harold C. Ward, in tribute to Mr. Ward's 30 years of service at JBU. Harold, son of Dr. and Mrs. Artemus Ward who were on the staff of JBU, was a man of many dreams. Harold came to JBU with his wife, Mildred, in 1927. He was the head of the electrical department and later became head of the production department. He also served on the electrical engineering faculty and as chairman of the university industries in the late 1940’s. During his service at JBU, the electrical department produced cotton choppers, aircraft parts, beet-choppers, and hub-cutting machines to name a few. Harold Ward was a man of many talents and abilities. He was credited for several inventions including a grader that was developed to grade out all of the imperfect rice. A more modern version of his rice grader is still being used all over the world today. Mildred, Ireane's sister, taught high school math at John Brown from 1927 to 1935. She was always a favorite with students and faculty and faculty children. Mildred passed away in early February of 1988; Harold preceded her in death in 1984. Type: Endowed Donor: Lydia and Curtis Matthews Established: 2023 “Here I am Lord, Here I am,” was the first, last and life call of Harriett Juanita Dudley who walked this earth from June 14th, 1929 until her death in July of 2023. If ever there was a life lived to the fullest in the Lord it was Harriett born to George and Emma Roads in Hinsdale, Illinois. At a very young age, while sitting at her grandmother’s knee, Harriett surrendered her life to Christ, and never relinquished her call to follow. Her life truly personified and exemplified a life of obedience to her Lord and Savior. Inexplicable joy of her faith was always on display and was a cornerstone in every aspect and season of her life. The fruit of the spirit was clearly exhibited through her walk with Him that was offered on a daily basis. The foundation of her steadfast faith was the word of God and prayer that she exercised and strengthened daily in her ceaseless time spent with the Lord. Her sacrificial life of servitude touched lives all over the world through giving, hosting, entertaining, feeding, clothing, sheltering, ministering to countless strangers, family, friends, missionaries, pastors and leaders of the faith who crossed paths with Ms. Harriett. Perhaps it was just for a night or for an extended stay she served with an eternal smile. Whether in person, through letter, service or prayer, no life was the same after encountering her contagious faith. A 1951 graduate of NYACK college in New York, Harriett found herself back in Chicago knocking on doors in predominantly Jewish neighborhoods sharing her faith and the gospel of Jesus. A season of her life that not only vitalized her faith, but delighted her spirit with fond memories for years. Through ministry, Harriett met her husband, Cliff Dudley, whom she soon married and joined in ministry. With her loyal support and gifted spirit, she embodied the Christian example of a godly woman in marriage, motherhood and family. As Cliff transitioned from Moody Press to starting his own Christian Publishing Company, there was Harriett being the constant pillar of faith and confirming wife of strength. As they moved their family and business to Northwest Arkansas to start New Leaf Press, Harriett transitioned with a devoted spirit of the call to touch eternity through the printed page that Christian publishing could bring. It was the prayers of Harriett that held together and sustained an eventual means of grace that New Leaf Press became. Age never tripped up Ms. Harriett, as she worked every day up until weeks before her death. She continued in ministry in a plethora of ways, always ready to serve, pray and share her faith. She always marveled in what God was doing and what He had done. She faithfully followed Jesus and wanted to be a part of what was going on. Harriet, through everything life brought (good and bad) never faltered, failed, nor was ever shaken. Her faith abided in Jesus, always. It was that unwavering faith that touched so many lives and gave encouragement to innumerable souls. Such a beautiful vessel that allowed the Holy Sprit to work with and through to express His eternal love. “Love the Lord they God with all thy heart, soul and strength. Love they neighbor as thyself.” The two great commandments met and storied through your servant Harriett. “Yes Lord, here am I.” Type: Endowed Donor: Joanna Haspels Established: 2012 After graduating from JBU in 1962, Joanna Klock Haspels took her first teaching position on the Navajo Reservation in Kayenta, Arizona. Joanna then moved to Parker, Arizona, and discovered a fundamental church where she met her husband—Carl Haspels, a Sterling College graduate and member of a large missionary family. Many of Carl’s relatives, including Lester Haspels (uncle), Charles and Lois Haspels (uncle and aunt), Chuck and Ann Haspels (cousins), John and Gwen Haspels (cousins), and several of John and Gwen’s children have served as missionary workers in Africa with Presbyterian Church Missions. Joanna has always had a strong heart for missions. While she did not have the opportunity to serve overseas, Joanna has been a strong influence domestically on the lives of many high school and adult students. She has provided an example of faithfulness, stability, endurance, compassion, consistency, and a concern for the welfare of her students. From working with Navajo Indian students to incarcerated adult men in a state prison, this strong example has been maintained throughout her 46 years of teaching. Joanna has been blessed through the years and has consistently supported mission work, both domestic and international. She was led to give real estate to John Brown University to create an endowed scholarship that would expand the spread of the gospel. Type: Endowed Donor: Estate of Faye Phillips Established: 2008 Faye Phillips was born March 6, 1911 and died February 10, 2008. She was 96 years old, or perhaps in her opinion, it is more accurate to say she was 96 years young. Faye was born in Quay County, New Mexico before it became a state. Her family homesteaded 500 acres. Her parents, John and Dolly Estes McKown had 8 children. Life was hard in New Mexico at that time, and only 6 of their children lived past their younger years. Faye was the oldest of her siblings, and was the last one to pass away. The family moved to Maude, OK, where Faye attended high school. She lived in Georgia and then settled for many years in Elaine, AR. In 1981, she moved to Springdale. Faye was a homemaker and businesswoman and worked in banking when she was younger. She was very supportive of JBU, its mission, and appreciated the values of the students and that they were receiving a Christian college education. Type: Endowed Donor: James and Marilyn Barnett Established: 2016 James and Marilyn Barnett created this scholarship to support Business and Education majors who have a head for business and a heart for ministry. Mr. Barnett serves as president of DaySpring Cards, Inc., a subsidiary of Hallmark headquartered in Siloam Springs, AR, and the world’s largest Christian social expression company which annually distributes more than 200 million products in the United States and 60 countries worldwide. James joined the company in 1981 and has served as president since 1994. A native of Northwest Arkansas, Barnett obtained a Bachelor of Science degree in business in 1980 from John Brown University, Siloam Springs, and an MBA from the Walton School of Business at the University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, in 1982. He has been very involved in community and area organizations for more than 35 years, serving on several athletic, charitable and scholastic boards. He is currently on the Walton School of Business Advisory Board and engaged with the CEO Forum. He also has served on boards with the Arkansas Economic Development Commission, Urban Ministries, the Winshape Marriage and Family Foundation, the Soderquist Center for Leadership and Ethics at John Brown University, and Arkansas Athletes Outreach. His business affiliations include membership in the Association for Christian Retail, the Greeting Card Association, and the local Chamber of Commerce. He and his wife Marilyn have three grown children and five grandchildren and are active members of Fellowship Bible Church in Fayetteville, Arkansas. James enjoys golfing, fishing, traveling and, especially, the time spent with his children, grandchildren and extended family. Marilyn graduated from JBU in 1981 with an Elementary Education degree. Following graduation, she taught fifth grade for a few years before transitioning to a full-time stay-at-home mother to their three children. In addition to her “mom” duties, she was very active in her community and church, serving in various capacities over the years. She currently spends time in activities with their grandchildren and in caregiving to extended family members. Her interests include reading, decorating, and spending quality time with her children and grandchildren. Type: Endowed Donor: Pam Trenchard Established: 2023 The Jennifer Trenchard Memorial Endowed Scholarship was created in honor and memory of Jennifer Trenchard, who graduated from JBU in 2007 with a degree in Graphic Design. During high school, Jennifer was the leader of her school’s Fellowship of Christian Athletes and Future Business Leaders of America organizations. She also played on the tennis team and was an active member of her church youth group. Jennifer loved attending JBU and playing on the tennis team. After college, Jennifer became a professional photographer who was adventurous, and enjoyed traveling all over the world. She loved to capture images of God’s beautiful creations and people in her photographs. She made many friends around the world. Jennifer went home to be with her Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, on June 9, 2022, at the age of 37. Jennifer was a precious daughter, a wonderful big sister, a dear friend to many, and a beloved child of God. Jennifer benefitted from scholarships while she attended JBU. Her family and friends are excited to help current and future JBU students who wish to pursue a degree in Graphic Design or Photography. “And whatever you do, do it heartily, as to the Lord and not to men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the reward of the inheritance; for you serve the Lord Christ” (Colossians 3:23-24, New King James Version). Preference should be given to student athletes actively participating in JBU’s tennis program. Type: Endowed Donor: Dr. Beverly Holcomb Established: 2006 The Joe and Elva Holcomb Memorial Endowed Scholarship was created in honor and memory of Joe and Elva Holcomb. The Holcombs raised five children in Northwest Arkansas during the Great Depression. Consequently, they were unable to provide the financial support for their children to attend college. However, they encouraged their children to pursue higher education by emphasizing college as being a very important achievement that would aid in their future successes. The middle child, Beverly Holcomb, decided to attend John Brown University in Siloam Springs, AR. She was able to enroll at JBU because of her High School Valedictorian Scholarship along with the income she earned from working on campus for 30 hours a week in the work-study program. She later received the JBU Department of Bible Academic Scholarship. This scholarship along with the financial assistance awarded from the work-study program provided for her senior year. During her college breaks, she taught in a rural one-room school for all 8 grades to save money for college expenses. Upon graduation, she earned 20 graduate hours at the Summer Institute of Linguistics and was accepted as a member of Wycliffe Bible Translators. This ministry allowed Beverly to serve in Peru as a descriptive linguist with the Okaina Indians and as the Assistant Director of the Peruvian Bilingual Jungle Indian Schools. During her furloughs she was able to achieve a M.Ed. at the University of Arkansas and an M.A. in descriptive anthropology from Brandeis University in Waltham, Massachusetts. After her time with Wycliffe ended in 1968, she spent 6 years as the Specialist in Aging with the University of Arkansas Cooperative Extension Service and was also able to complete the requirements for the D.Ed. from the University of Arkansas. From 1976 until she retired in 1995, Beverly served as Executive Director of Florence Crittenton Home Services, Inc. This charity provided comprehensive residential services for girls who were pregnant out of wedlock and who had decided to give birth. She incorporated into the program the JBU education emphasis on Head, Heart, and Hand. Throughout her years she found to be true the counsel of Dr. Earl C. Smith, JBU Dean of Bible, “Know what the Lord would have you do and expect Him to provide the way.” Beverly passed away November, 2008. Type: Endowed Donor: Estate of Joe Zimmerman Established: 2018 After graduating from JBU in 1952 with a Bachelor of Music, Joe Zimmerman began working toward a Master of Music degree at Cincinnati Conservatory of Music in the Fall of 1952. He received the degree in the spring of 1954. Then, Joe joined the U.S. Army and was assigned as a Chaplain’s Assistant doing such things as typing reports and church bulletins, playing the organ for church services and driving the jeep to take the Chaplain on maneuvers with the troops. Joe’s experience in the military was good and his veteran’s benefits were helpful while he was working on his Ph.D. from Indiana University. Upon discharge from the Army in 1956, he began teaching music at JBU. During his teaching career he teamed up with friend, colleague, and former classmate Ruth Smith-Ronan `52. Ruth and Joe performed a Two-Piano Recital every two years. He retired from JBU in 1996. After retirement, Joe completed a three-year course of study in London that certified him as a teacher of the Alexander Technique. One of the most rewarding activities in his retirement was learning to play the cello. During retirement, Joe enjoyed recreational activities such as ballroom dancing and ice skating. Joe passed away in 2018. Type: Endowed Donor: Family of John and Stephania Brown Established: 2019 The John and Stephania Brown Endowed Scholarship was established by their children in honor and appreciation of their parents’ legacy at John Brown University, in the community and for their strong commitment to family. John and Stephania were high school sweethearts. Stephania is the daughter of former Siloam Springs mayor, Wilson and Mary Kathryn “Toady” Ford. John is the second born and only son of John E. Brown, Jr. and Caroline Trahin Brown. John and Stephania married on Christmas day in 1968. John graduated from JBU in 1971 with a B.S. in Business Administration and then received a J.D. from the University of Arkansas School of Law in 1974. John followed his grandfather and father, serving as President of John Brown University from 1979 to 1993. His leadership and servanthood continued as Executive Director of the Windgate Foundation starting in 1993. John was also elected to the Arkansas State Senate, serving two terms as a servant to the public from 1995-2002. Stephania served alongside John at JBU while raising five children. She hosted JBU guests and volunteered at church and in the community, all while earning her B.S. in Education from JBU in 1992. Stephania taught in the Siloam Springs school district for a few years and served on the Northwest Arkansas Children’s Shelter Board from 1995-2008. John and Stephania remain in Siloam Springs still serving the community in a myriad of ways. John is currently Senior Advisor to the Windgate Foundation and Stephania devotes her time and resources to volunteering with non-profits that are focused on helping children and the underprivileged. In her spare time, she enjoys working in her beautiful gardens around their home. John and Stephania enjoy spending time with their children and grandchildren. Type: Endowed Donor: Friends and Family of John E. Brown Jr. Established: 2011 John E. Brown Jr. graduated from JBU in 1942. He trained as a naval pilot and later served aboard a ship with the Pacific Fleet during World War II. He was on the USS Ancon and the USS Eldorado. He received the American Area Asiatic-Pacific Area star, the Philippine Liberation award, and the World War II Victory medal. He was also at NACSB Atlanta, NAS Beaufort, SC and CASCU Coronado, California. He returned to JBU after the war and was appointed JBU’s vice president by John Brown Sr. in 1946. John succeeded his father as president of JBU in 1948, when he was just 26, making him, like his father had once been, the youngest university president in America. During his tenure as president, John pushed high academic standards, leading to JBU’s accreditation by the North Central Association of Colleges and Schools in 1962. John also was responsible for the introduction of intercollegiate athletics at JBU and was a lifetime fan of JBU Golden Eagle basketball, rarely missing home games. Under John, enrollment increased steadily, and the Honors Program was founded in 1961. While he was president, John oversaw the completion of the iconic Cathedral Group of buildings in 1957. Beyond the Cathedral, many of the structures that stand on campus today were erected under John’s leadership. John was given the honorary title of Chancellor in 1987 and was honored as JBU’s Outstanding Alumnus in 1999. He passed away June 3, 2011 at the age of 89. Type: Endowed Donor: Willard and Pat Walker Charitable Foundation Established: 2020 This scholarship is established in honor of Jack and June Loyd, lifelong friends of Pat and Willard Walker. Robert James “Jack” Loyd and Iris “June” Loyd were both raised in Oklahoma. They met in High School in Burbank, Oklahoma. Jack and June were married in 1943 shortly before Jack went into the Navy to serve in the Pacific during WWII. When Jack returned from the war, his family started an agriculture business in Springdale, AR. This was the start of Springdale Farms, one of the first poultry processing plants in the 1950’s. As the company grew, they built a new plant north of Springdale. About a year later, they met Willard and Pat Walker when the Walkers built a new home on the lot next to Jack and June. It did not take Pat and June long to learn they both loved to play Bridge and started having regular games together. Jack and Willard had so much in common too; a love of horses and farms and the rural life. After both Jack and Willard passed, June and Pat continued to share many hours of friendship. One of the highlights of their time together was dressing up and going to the John Brown University events. Their smiles and laughter were legendary as they enjoyed each other’s company. Type: Endowed Donor: Mike King Alumni Established: 2008 This scholarship was created in honor and memory of Ken Schoenwald. Ken’s untimely death occurred February 16, 2008 in a car accident which also claimed the life of his 13-year old son, Jace, and one of his daughters, 18-year old Jennalea. Ken was a 1984 graduate of JBU with a major in both Construction Management and Engineering. He married Janelle Ewy, another JBU student majoring in Biology in 1985. Ken played soccer while attending JBU and on October 6, 2007 played in an alumni game celebrating 30 years of soccer at JBU. Ken, called “Shonie” by his family, grew up in Poughkeepsie, NY. He was a gentle person who was, according to his colleagues, extremely professional as an engineer. Ken owned his own company, Schoenwald Structural Engineering. Much of his work focused on church designs. According to fellow alumnus Mike King, “Ken was a very good engineer who had a real gift to make things buildable.” Ken’s wife, Janelle, is a registered nurse at Via Christi Regional Medical Center-St. Joseph Campus. The couple was very active in their church in Wichita including its children’s ministry, singing and drama. Ken also served as a deacon. Surviving members of Ken’s family are his wife Janelle, and twin daughters, Avery and Alyssa. Type: Endowed Donor: Friends and family of Kent Davis Established: 2003 Friends and family of Kent Davis created this scholarship to help JBU Construction Management students. Kent Davis came to know Christ at the age of 12 through his future father-in-law. Kent first heard of John Brown University from an aunt in California who knew John E. Brown Sr. Eager to learn, he traveled to Arkansas with no idea what to major in. With the guidance of Charles Willis, head of the building construction department, he gained interest in this field and graduated in 1963. Kent went on to teach high school math and science, earned his master's degree in civil engineering from the University of Maine, and between work, service to missions, and attending to family life, received his doctorate in civil engineering from Clemson University in 1987. While Kent was teaching high school, he felt the Lord, with a little help from Charles Willis, calling him back to JBU to utilize his skills in teaching building construction. He returned to JBU to teach from 1969 until 1975. He and his wife, Beth, felt another calling--the mission field. This interest led them to serve 2 years with Africa Inland Mission. Then, they determined they could have an even greater impact on missions by training students. They returned to JBU where many students became interested in missions under Kent and Beth's guidance. Kent continued to teach building construction until his retirement in 2004. He received the Outstanding Alumnus award in 1990. Type: Endowed Donor: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kinsman Established: 2015 Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kinsman created the Kinsman Family Endowed Scholarship for Engineering Students in gratitude for their experience at John Brown University. Frank and Ednamae came to JBU as a married couple expecting their first child. Frank enrolled as an engineering student and Ednamae became a supporting, full-time mother. Frank pursued an electrical engineering major with dual minors in general engineering and Bible. While Frank had already served in the U.S. Navy, he was not prepared academically for college. To this day Frank continues to be amazed that JBU Admissions, when informed he was lacking in high school math and science, said, “Come on. We’ll tutor you.” They did and he caught up with his classmates as he entered his sophomore year. Frank and Ednamae have never forgotten the care and encouragement they received from administrators, faculty and staff. Frank went into research at Cornell Aeronautical Laboratory upon graduation in 1958, then on to Texas Instruments as a systems analyst. After leaving TI, he became Vice President of a small engineering firm before forming his own engineering consulting firm in 1986. Frank and Ednamae have been deeply involved in church ministries all their lives, but their experience at JBU opened doors for ministry, technology advancement and leadership which they never dreamed possible. Type: Endowed Donor: Bill and Jody Kitchen Established: 2018 Kitchen family siblings, Bill Jr., Eric, Renee, and John have chosen to honor their parents, William (Bill) and Rosemary (Rosie) Kitchen through the Kitchen Family Endowed Scholarship. Bill and Rosie’s legacy of love for one another and devotion to Christ began when they met at JBU. Bill and Rosie were direct beneficiaries of John Brown Sr.’s vision to provide a Christ-centered college education to those who could not otherwise afford to attend college. To help pay their tuition, Bill worked as a JBU night watchman and Rosie as a librarian assistant. Rosie earned a Bachelor of Science in Elementary Education in 1952. A few years later, after completing a tour of duty in Korea with the U.S. Army, Bill earned a Bachelor of Arts in Christian Education. All four of Bill and Rosie’s children, along with grandchildren Jill (Kitchen) Van Hofwegen (Bill Jr. and Jody’s daughter) and Emma Kitchen (John and Pam’s daughter) attended JBU. The Kitchen family is grateful for the founder’s commitment to Christ Over All and the “can-do” resolve of helping others achieve a Christ-centered education. The family created this scholarship to express their gratitude and to give back with the hope that recipients will, in the future, choose to give back as well. Type: Endowed Donor: Larry and Adeline Meyer Established: 2000 In the fall of 1931, Larry Meyer was 15 years old and going by the name of Eugene Moore (using his step-dad’s last name). His mother heard John Brown Sr. on the radio recruiting students in Southern California for his schools in Arkansas. The cost was $50 per month, which covered tuition, room and board. Larry’s mother applied for a payment plan of $25 per month (the balance to be paid later in life). Larry applied to JBU, was accepted, and enrolled in the spring of 1932. That following summer, Larry’s mother wrote and sent $5 telling him not to come home because California was experiencing a depression. However, Larry wanted to go home so he sold his books, two blue shirts and overalls for $7. It took him five days to get home to Los Angeles, making it on $3.50. Now financially able, Larry and his wife Adeline created this scholarship to honor the commitment to John Brown School that his mother made for him sixty-eight years ago. Larry passed away in 2008. Type: Endowed Donor: Leland and Ireane Stratton Established: 2009 Ireane is a 1937 graduate of JBU. She studied at JBU from the fourth grade (when JBU had a school for staff children) through four years of college. Ireane taught Home Economics in Detroit for a time, at the Brown School for Girls in Glendora, CA, and at JBU during WWII. Leland was the ninth of twelve children. His father had diabetes and was blind by the time Leland was a teenager. Leland helped support the family by running his own gas station before he graduated from high school. Ireane was a Home Demonstration Agent during the Depression. The government had a farm loan program, and Ireane’s job was to teach the wives of farmers who had loans how to cook and manage their finances. Her office was across the street from Leland’s gas station, and that is how they met. Leland and Ireane married February 27, 1942. Leland and Ireane have three children: Lois, Marilyn and Wendell. Leland and Ireane owned the Stratton Seed Company which was recognized in 1988 by the mayor of Stuttgart by proclaiming February 2, 1988 as Leland Stratton Day. The company celebrated 40 years of operations in 1988. Leland Stratton always valued higher education although he was not able to attend himself. He made sure his children attended college and he and Ireane helped many others attend John Brown University as well as Ouachita Baptist University and Williams Baptist College. Leland passed away in 2010 and Ireane passed away in 2011. Type: Endowed Donor: Lola Woodard Established: 2014 This scholarship was created in memory of Lola Woodard’s grandmother, Lou, who introduced her to John Brown University. Lou Hancock financially supported JBU’s Founder, John E. Brown, after hearing him preach. She also supported JBU as she was able. Lola’s aunt, Bertha Maddux Magouirk, first attended JBU and later, Lola boarded a train for JBU the day after she graduated from high school. As the oldest of six children and with limited resources, Lola worked and took out loans to pay for her education. Her first job at JBU was working in the print shop and she later worked in the business office. Because she was far from her home of Oakwood, Texas, she was never able to return home during her time at JBU. Lola graduated from JBU in 1938 with a degree in journalism. She was very grateful for her JBU education and remembered her time with fondness. Lola created this scholarship to help make a JBU education and experience a reality for other young people. Lola passed away in 2016. Type: Endowed Donor: Luke Ross Legacy Foundation Established: 2019 The Luke Ross Legacy Endowed CM Scholarship is created in honor of our son and brother, Luke Cooper Ross. Luke, along with his oldest friend, tragically lost their lives in a senseless automobile accident when struck by a drunk driver just a few days before Christmas, 2017. He was a Construction Management student at John Brown University. While his time at JBU was short, he immersed himself in campus life. He made and had an impact on many of his friends. Luke was the fifth of his siblings to attend JBU. This scholarship has been established to honor and perpetuate his memory and the character qualities which were so vibrantly demonstrated in his life. Those who knew Luke knew that he lived with humility, compassion, joy, reverence, loyalty, and consistency. It is no coincidence that his qualities closely parallel the Fruits of the Spirit, evidences of a maturing Biblical faith found in Galatians 5:22-23. It is our desire that he thus be remembered, and opportunities to attend JBU be made available to others who seek to matriculate at a school that seeks to educate the whole person; Head, Heart, and Hand. Type: Endowed Donor: Steve and Jill Mitchael Established: 2009 Steven Mitchael graduated from John Brown University in 1984 with a Bachelor Science in Construction Management. During his four years, he was a basketball letterman for the Golden Eagles. After graduation, he worked for Cooper Communities Inc., a community developer of 5 large planned developments. With Cooper he held such positions as estimator, project manager, production manager and warranty administrator. During that same time he was the Architectural Control Officer, Property Owner Association Board Member, Townhouse Association President, a licensed real estate agent and held an unlimited general contractors license in the state of South Carolina. Since 1992, Steve has held several positions in design for Walmart Stores, Inc., where he has been responsible for the development of expansion, acquisition and new store designs. He has traveled to 10 countries on acquisition trips as part of Walmart’s International expansion. In May of 2013 Steve retired from Walmart as the Director of Design and Project Management for Walmart Reality, the largest developer of retail property in the United States. Steve is married to Jill Turner-Mitchael who holds a degree in pharmacy from Southwestern State University in Oklahoma and who is licensed in New Mexico and Texas. Jill is currently a Senior Vice President, General Merchandise Manager of merchandising for Sam’s Club. Steve and Jill live in Gravette and have three children, Lauren, Jake and Ava. Type: Endowed Donor: Robert and Martha Munce Established: 2006 Through the great love, perseverance, and personal interest of the JBU staff, teachers, and the generosity of many donors, Martha Ettinger worked her way through four years of college. She graduated from John Brown University in 1963. Previously, while in high school, Martha dedicated herself to foreign missions. She was later introduced to Africa Inland Mission (AIM International) through a missionary kid at JBU. After teaching school in her hometown of St. Louis for two years, she enrolled at Moody Bible Institute for a year of further Bible study. In October 1966, she relocated to Kenya where she was assigned and accepted a position in Kesho’s literature department. In 1972, Martha married Bob Munce. They distributed Christian literature from Kenya through eight or ten Christian bookstores throughout East Africa. They understood that their calling was not just to a place or a career, but to God, through going or giving towards missions. They returned to the United States in 1978 after serving in Africa for 20 years collectively. Once in the U.S., Bob established Munce Publications. He sold books and Bibles to English speaking countries, as well as becoming an agent for his grandmother’s (Grace Livingston Hill) book copyrights. Bob continued traveling to third world countries selling Christian books once a year. In 1991, Munce Marketing group was created to create catalogs of Christian products for American bookstores. This business progressed to provide Christian bookstores with marketing tools, a trade show, and other services. From 22 initial stores, the company grew to over 600 stores in the U.S. and Canada that now use the catalogs and other services. In September 2005, the on-line magazine “MTL” (More to Life) for Christian women was launched. It focuses on Christian authors, musicians, and other media personalities. Type: Endowed Donor: Lee and Nancy Netherton Roger and Eileen Culberson Doris Culberson Established: 2002 This scholarship was created by Doris Culberson, Dr. Lee Netherton’s mother-in-law. Doris Culberson wrote: "John Brown University has been very important to our family throughout the years. We have had six family members receive degrees from JBU. My son-in-law, Lee Netherton, has spent most of his career teaching in the science department and my daughter, Nancy Netherton, has spent most of her career being involved in the music department. We are glad that God has given us the opportunity to give back to the Lord's work." Dr. Netherton began his service at JBU in 1969, completing his Ph.D. in organic chemistry in 1977 from the University of Arkansas. He was Chair of the Division of Natural Science from 1986 to 1997. Dr. Netherton was selected as the JBU Teacher of the Year in 1980 and 1994, the JBU Outstanding Alumnus in 1990 and was awarded the Faculty Excellence Award in 2005. He was consistently evaluated by the students as one of the top teachers at JBU. Dr. Netherton taught in the K-4 Science Crusade for the Arkansas State Department of Higher Education for six years and presented numerous science workshops in the elementary schools throughout this area. He served on many faculty committees in his 36 years at JBU, including the Core Curriculum Committee, the Professional Development Schools Advisory Committee, and the Admissions-Financial Aid Committee. He was a sponsor of the Student Government Association for several years and volunteered as score keeper at the Golden Eagle basketball games most of his 36 years at JBU. Lee and his wife Nancy have two children, Renee and Rob. The Nethertons were married for over 50 years. Lee passed away in 2019. Type: Endowed Donor: Sarah Williams Established: 2005 This scholarship was created to honor the memory and accomplishments of two dedicated musicians who loved the Lord and used the gift of music to spread the message of the Gospel. Dr. Mabel Oiesen, Sarah Williams’ aunt, accepted the invitation by Dr. John Brown Sr. to come to John Brown University from New York City to create a music department because she shared Dr. Brown’s dream for a Christ-centered university. Though the struggles were almost overwhelming, with God’s guidance and her tenacity, a formidable department was created from which many music majors studied and afterwards began lifetime music careers. As the music department grew, the Cathedral Choir was formed. While serving as its conductor, Mabel traveled with the choir extensively across the United States participating in worship services, radio and television programs. A MIGHTY FORTRESS IS OUR GOD became the signature anthem closing every appearance the choir made. James L. Williams, Sarah Williams’ late husband, came to JBU to study voice and prepare for full-time music ministry. Sarah studied piano and organ. Both dedicated themselves to full- time ministry and, upon graduation, they formed a music ministry team. Together they served several large churches creating integrated choir programs with Christian education curriculum written by James. He was an engaging man with many talents and skills: professional baritone soloist, choral conductor and clinician, college professor, visionary and developer of large youth choirs, which were on several occasions invited to tour churches in Europe. At the time of his death, it was most apparent that his greatest legacy was the winning of souls through his ministry. Sarah Williams’ career was also a witness of the power of the Lord and the training at JBU. In addition to being a mother of three, an organist, and piano teacher, she has had the great privilege of teaching at Wheaton College in the conservatory of music and becoming its director of the Community School of the Arts. During that time, one program was created between Wheaton College’s music education students and Daystar University students to serve school children in the slums of Nairobi, Kenya. Sarah Williams’ prayer is that this scholarship will underline the power of music and how God can use humble servants to bring honor and glory to Him. Type: Endowed Donor: Peter and Yvonne Nicolay Established: 2011 This scholarship was created by Peter and Yvonne Nicolay, who were married in 1949. Yvonne was a 1949 JBU graduate with a degree in Christian Education. Yvonne attended Biola University for graduate classes and while there worked as a secretary to the Vice President of Navigators. She later earned a teaching certificate from Wheaton. The Nicolays spent four years in the Philippines at the Far East Bible Institute. Afterwards, they lived in California where Yvonne taught high school and Peter was a high school counselor before entering the real estate business. Peter Nicolay accepted the Lord as Savior in 1943 while in Chicago visiting Moody Church. He served with General MacArthur’s Sixth Army in the liberation of the Philippines. After WWII ended, Peter attended Calvin College for a year, Biola for a year and then finished at JBU in 1950 with a degree in Christian Education. At Wheaton, he obtained a Master of Arts degree in Biblical Literature. Of all the schools Peter attended, he liked JBU best because of the warm and friendly atmosphere on campus. Peter passed away in 2014 and Yvonne in 2019. Type: Endowed Donor: Mike and Deann Ross Established: 2012 This scholarship was created by Mike and Deann Ross of Oklahoma City, OK. The Rosses have 7 children—most of whom have attended or will attend JBU. They have been long term supporters of JBU primarily because JBU’s mission and vision is much like their own. It is Mike and Deann’s goal to have their children realize the breadth of God's creation, discover their own role in it, and be prepared to be successful in that role. They also recognize that JBU has similar goals for its students—realization, discovery, and preparation. The Rosses firmly believe this process must begin with an understanding of who God is and our relationship to Him. This is our central calling— to make Him known and to teach others about Him. Mike and Deann believe that God designated the local church as the venue through which much of this revelation occurs. This motivated the Rosses to create the Preach the Word Endowed Scholarship to help train young men who are called to ministry which makes Christ known and teaches about His love and grace. Type: Endowed Donor: David and Lynne Moll Established: 2018 The Psalm 16:11 Endowed Scholarship was created by David and Lynne Moll to help students pursue a Christ centered education at John Brown University. While a student at JBU in 1964, Lynne walked around campus on a beautiful spring day asking God to show her the path of life. He provided Psalm 16:11 - You will show me the path of life; in Your presence is fullness of joy; at Your right hand there are pleasures forevermore. It was also at JBU where David and Lynne met and built a firm foundation together in their experiences and education. They discovered fullness of joy in God’s presence as they served in Christian education in Missouri, California and also Belize, Central America. David and Lynne’s hope for eternity is to be at His right hand, where they will experience pleasures forevermore as they worship God with those who touched their lives and those whose lives they touched in the Body of Christ, including their JBU family. Type: Endowed Donor: Arthur and Ann Kennedy; Phil and Kendra Kennedy; Friends and family Established: 1998 Ralph and Lucy Kennedy spent most of their lives together as part of the John Brown University family, but Ralph’s association began before their marriage. In the late thirties, Mrs. Holzwarth, a California rancher who admired John Brown and his evangelistic message, told Ralph that she would pay for Ralph’s college tuition – but he had to go to “this little school in Arkansas.” Ralph went, stayed in college until he graduated and then joined the navy. He returned to Siloam Springs after WWII with his wife, Lucy, and their first son. The rest of Ralph and Lucy’s eight children were born in Siloam Springs. Six of them attended JBU. Ralph served at JBU in both faculty and staff positions until his retirement in 1986. In tribute to Ralph and Lucy Kennedy, and in a continuation of the giving legacy of Mrs. Holzwarth, whose generosity made Ralph’s education at John Brown University possible, this scholarship is dedicated to students who would otherwise have difficulty going to college. Type: Endowed Donor: Maxine Walker Established: 2009 This scholarship was created by Maxine Walker in honor of her husband, Bob and her daughter, Regina. Bob served four years in the U.S. Air Force and, in his civilian life, trained in maintenance and refrigeration. Bob and Maxine (Evans) were married 42 years before the Lord called him home. Bob was the father of two sons, Michael and Daniel, and daughter Regina. He became an ordained deacon and felt the Lord calling him to preaching in 1991. He attended JBU to further his biblical education and served as a pastor for two churches and filled in for several others. He taught senior men’s Sunday School at Harvard Avenue Baptist Church, and was the chaplain for Siloam Springs Memorial Hospital. If you were to meet Bob on any given day, he would share fr
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https://raltoday.6amcity.com/shaw-universitys-estey-hall
en
The history of Shaw University’s Estey Hall
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[]
[]
[ "" ]
null
[ "Laura Brummett" ]
2021-09-21T18:48:53+00:00
The South's first historically Black university is also home to the country's first building for the higher education of Black women.
en
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RALtoday
https://raltoday.6amcity.com/shaw-universitys-estey-hall
In NC, we’re no strangers to being first — looking at you, first successful airplane flight — and Shaw University in Downtown holds several historical “firsts” as well. Shaw, founded in 1865, was the first historically Black university in the South, the first college in the US to offer a 4-year medical program + the first historically Black college in the country to open its doors to women. Estey Hall When women were admitted to the school, the university constructed the first building in the US for the higher education of Black women — Estey Hall. Now the oldest building on campus, the Italianate-style Estey Hall was built in 1874 by architect George S. H. Appleget as a dormitory for women. The building, named for benefactor + organ maker Jacob Estey, was built using bricks that were handmade on campus grounds. It’s located at 721 S. Wilmington St., and visible when driving down South Blount Street. The women first living in Estey Hall studied home economics, music, art, and religion. It remained a women’s dorm until 1968. In the 1970s, the building was almost demolished. Resources were pooled and funding was raised in order to save Estey and keep it on campus, where it now serves as an administrative building housing affairs including the office of the president. In August, Shaw received just under $500,000 from the National Park Service to preserve the building — like doing work on the roof + redoing the floors. Ella Baker Ella Baker, a prominent civil rights activist, was a 1927 valedictorian + graduate of Shaw University. After graduation, she played a key role in the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s by working as an activist with the NAACP. After being inspired by the Greensboro Sit-Ins done by NC A&T students, Ella wanted to help more student activists participate in the movement. She returned to her alma mater, and created the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee in Estey Hall — it became a major network for student participation in activism in the US. The committee adopted a theory of nonviolent direct action, and helped organize the 1961 Freedom Rides. Ella’s history lives on in Raleigh with a mural on Shaw’s campus along South Blount Street. Estey Hall’s legacy on campus For Dr. Valerie Ann Johnson, Dean of the School of Arts, Sciences, and Humanities at Shaw University, buildings like Estey Hall are a link to where we’ve been + a reminder of where we need to go — they’re living monuments. “Even when we’re rushing to go to a particular meeting or gathering, or in the quiet times, I’ll go in and just look at the bones of the building,” the dean said. “I’m honored that I’m a beneficiary of the struggles that other people faced.” On the first floor of the building, there’s a row of paintings of the former presidents of the university, beginning with founder Henry Martin Tupper. Dean Johnson walks by the paintings and looks at the transition of presidents. The story continues to the third floor, where the photograph of Shaw’s current president resides — Dr. Paulette Dillard. Close to 150 years after Estey Hall first opened its doors to Black women, a Black woman is running the university from inside its walls. “Many other Black women and men said we can be a viable part of this country, that we can be educated,” Dean Johnson said. “We’re going to have a place in this country, for our children and our children’s children, and those children’s children. I’m the one that they built this for.” Historic Registers Estey Hall is listed on the National Register of Historic Places + as a Raleigh Historic Landmark. The National Register of Historic Places nomination form, filed in 1973, recalled that “the 1874-1875 catalogue of the school described Estey Hall in glowing terms.”
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https://uhcougars.com/sports/football/roster/chris-pearson/7843
en
University of Houston Athletics
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Chris Pearson (42) LB - As a Freshman (2023) Appeared in 11 of 12 games 173 snaps played – all on special teams Snaps on kick return (60), kick coverage (48)...
en
/favicon.ico
University of Houston Athletics
https://uhcougars.com/sports/football/roster/chris-pearson/7843
As a Freshman (2023) Appeared in 11 of 12 games 173 snaps played – all on special teams Snaps on kick return (60), kick coverage (48), punt coverage (33) and punt return (32) Four tackles (1 solo) Season-best 76.9 grade on 17 snaps vs. TCU (Sept. 16) Season-high 24 snaps in home finale vs. Oklahoma State (Nov. 18) High School Three-star prospect by 247Sports Nation’s No. 125-ranked wide receiver (247Sports) No. 54 overall player in state of Alabama (247Sports) 72 tackles and nine sacks as a senior 1,100 return yards on special teams as senior 21 touchdowns and eclipsed 2,000 all-purpose yards 93-yard punt return TD vs. Bayside Academy Sack and seven rushes for 69 yards and one touchdown Blocked 27-yard field goal attempt vs. St. Michael Two sacks and a 90-yard kickoff return TD vs. St. Michael Three touchdowns vs. St. Luke’s 75-yard punt return TD vs. St. Luke's Rushed for 115 yards on 14 carries As a junior helped Orange Beach to the 2A playoffs in program's second varsity season 65 tackles in 2021, forced three fumbles Intercepted four passes and scored three defensive touchdowns 1,095 rushing yards on 120 carries and 21 total TDs as a junior Chose Houston over Minnesota, UCF, Memphis, Liberty, Coastal Carolina and UAB among others Joined Houston in January as mid-year enrollee Personal Nickname: Poodle Hobbies: football, golf, swimming Dream job outside of football: dentist Lives on an island Hidden talent: bowling Chose UH because of the coaches Fears heights One word to describe himself on the field: cold If he could eat one food for the rest of his life: seafood Motivation for working hard: his family Best advice: gotta wait your time Highlight of his life thus far: making it to college Sports hero: Jalen Ramsey Most memorable athletic feat: earning MVP of his All-Star game
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Shaw University - Products
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This page features products and gifts for Shaw University. Shaw University, located in Raleigh, North Carolina is the first historically Black institution of higher education in the South and among the oldest in the nation.  The University was founded in 1865 by Henry Martin Tupper, a native of Monson, Massachusetts, a
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It's A Black Thang.com
https://www.itsablackthang.com/collections/shaw-university-products
This page features products and gifts for Shaw University. Shaw University, located in Raleigh, North Carolina is the first historically Black institution of higher education in the South and among the oldest in the nation. The University was founded in 1865 by Henry Martin Tupper, a native of Monson, Massachusetts, a solider in the Union Army during the Civil War, and a graduate of Amherst College and Newton Theological Seminary. It is a private, coeducational, liberal arts institution of higher learning with the main campus located in Raleigh, North Carolina, and eight satellite campuses dispersed throughout the state. Shaw University is committed to providing educational opportunities to all segments of society without regard to race, creed, or ethnic origin. However, as the oldest historically African-American university in the south, it has maintained a special interest in the education of minorities from diverse backgrounds, with academic potential for success.
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https://www.geni.com/people/William-Pearson/6000000056710115009
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William Gaston Pearson
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[ "family tree", "genealogy", "trace your ancestry", "family tree maker", "family tree search", "family tree charts", "family statistics", "ancestors", "research" ]
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2022-04-30T02:31:33-07:00
Genealogy for William Gaston Pearson (1834 - 1861) family tree on Geni, with over 260 million profiles of ancestors and living relatives.
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geni_family_tree
https://www.geni.com/people/William-Pearson/6000000056710115009
Remains removed from the Worthington Family Cemetery at Brentwood on June 29, 1864. Reference: Find A Grave Memorial - SmartCopy: Mar 30 2017, 8:53:25 UTC
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https://www.facebook.com/ShawUniversity/videos/as-womens-history-month-comes-to-a-close-lets-take-a-moment-to-highlight-our-old/1968377666841756/
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As Women's History Month comes to a close, let's take a moment to highlight our oldest building on the #ShawU campus, Estey Hall. Let's take a quick...
https://scontent.xx.fbcd…G7Zw&oe=66D5E50A
https://scontent.xx.fbcd…G7Zw&oe=66D5E50A
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As Women's History Month comes to a close, let's take a moment to highlight our oldest building on the #ShawU campus, Estey Hall. Let's take a quick...
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https://static.xx.fbcdn.net/rsrc.php/yT/r/aGT3gskzWBf.ico
https://www.facebook.com/ShawUniversity/videos/as-womens-history-month-comes-to-a-close-lets-take-a-moment-to-highlight-our-old/1968377666841756/
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https://abc11.com/post/saint-augustines-university-alumni-stunned-allegations-plans-force/14982032/
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Saint Augustine's University alumni stunned by allegations of plans to force merger with Shaw
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2024-06-20T22:49:24+00:00
Alumni of Saint Augustine's University respond after allegations that Raleigh business leaders pushed for merger with Shaw to open up land development
en
https://cdn.abcotvs.net/abcotv/assets/news/wtvd/images/logos/favicon.ico
ABC11 Raleigh-Durham
https://abc11.com/post/saint-augustines-university-alumni-stunned-allegations-plans-force/14982032/
RALEIGH, N.C. (WTVD) -- Alumni of both Saint Augustine's University and Shaw University believe the legacies of their HBCUs are at stake following the letter released by SAU Board Chairman Brian Boulware. Class of 2001 alumna Demetria Buie was home in Charlotte when she got word that a letter was circulating with shocking allegations about a dinner meeting with influential Raleigh business leaders reportedly trying to get Saint Augustine's and Shaw to merge. "We are Raleigh history. To merge both universities, we'd lose that," Buie said. "Everyone knows that Saint Augustine's and Shaw University are land rich. To have that discussion regarding land, is not farfetched." The meeting reportedly included Boulware as well as Saint Augustine's Unviersity Interim President Marcus Burgess, Shaw University leaders, local businessmen and, according to WRAL, Capitol Broadcasting Company CEO Jim Goodmon. Capitol Broadcasting Company is the parent company of WRAL. Boulware stated he rejected the merger proposal, but the idea of this meeting isn't sitting well with Buie and other alum like Marlon Lee. "These are people who really personally, I think, don't have our best interest," Lee said. Shaw University markets itself as the oldest HBCU in the south. It was founded in 1865 along South Street, which is now downtown Raleigh. The HBCU sits on premier real estate within steps of the Martin Marietta Center for Performing Arts and blocks away from the Red Hat Amphitheatre. SEE ALSO | Development prospects around Shaw, Saint Augustine's draw mixed reactions At the helm of the university's leadership is its 18th president, Dr. Paulette Dillard, who also is board chair of the Downtown Raleigh Alliance. "I just hope ShawU does fact checking and questions their president and board. Same way we're doing over here," Lee said. Boulware alleged that at the meeting Goodmon said, "Raleigh doesn't need two Black universities. We need the two to merge. Don't care what you call it. However, we need them both on SAU's property, because we need downtown land to expand the development footprint." "There's a lot of history there. For someone to say to merge the two and close campus is very disrespectful," said Lee. Just as ABC11 was wrapping up a conversation with Lee on Thursday, Interim President Burgess drove by with his window rolled down. Akilah Davis: "Do you have a comment at all?" Burgess: "No ma'am. Thank you though." WRAL has also not responded to a request for comment. ABC11 has also reached out to the downtown Raleigh Alliance, Shaw University and Boulware.
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dbpedia
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https://readtheplaque.com/plaque/shaw-university
en
Read the Plaque
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Founded 1865 by Baptist missionary Henry Martin Tupper. Chartered 1875; named for benefactor Elijah Shaw of Mass.Plaque via North Carolina Highway Historical Marker Program, and is used with their permission. Full page here (NC Marker ID H32)
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Read the Plaque
https://readtheplaque.com/plaque/shaw-university
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https://sdlegislature.gov/Historical/Reports/Statehood
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South Dakota Legislature
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South Dakota Legislature
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https://www.zippia.com/shaw-university-careers-1295385/history/
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Shaw University History: Founding, Timeline, and Milestones
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2020-08-27T00:00:00-08:00
A complete timeline of Shaw University's History from founding to present including key milestones and major events.
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https://www.zippia.com/shaw-university-careers-1295385/history/
Zippia gives an in-depth look into the details of Shaw University, including salaries, political affiliations, employee data, and more, in order to inform job seekers about Shaw University. The employee data is based on information from people who have self-reported their past or current employments at Shaw University. The data on this page is also based on data sources collected from public and open data sources on the Internet and other locations, as well as proprietary data we licensed from other companies. Sources of data may include, but are not limited to, the BLS, company filings, estimates based on those filings, H1B filings, and other public and private datasets. While we have made attempts to ensure that the information displayed are correct, Zippia is not responsible for any errors or omissions or for the results obtained from the use of this information. None of the information on this page has been provided or approved by Shaw University. The data presented on this page does not represent the view of Shaw University and its employees or that of Zippia. Shaw University may also be known as or be related to Shaw University and THE SHAW UNIVERSITY.
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https://www.opendurham.org/buildings/808-fayetteville-wg-pearson-house
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808 Fayetteville - W.G. Pearson House
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808 Fayetteville St., 1922. (Courtesy Duke Rare Book and Manuscript Collection. Scanned by Digital Durham.)
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William Gaston Pearson was born in 1859 - I have little information about his early life, although his parents had been enslaved - originally in Florida. William and his mother came to Durham at some point. Per Jean Anderson, Julian Carr heard William give "a stump speech" and was impressed enough by his oratory to offer to pay the 24 year old's tuition to Shaw University in Raleigh. WG Pearson won multiple awards while at Shaw. Pearson was intimately involved in the growth of Hayti and in advocacy for the African-American community. In addition to founding the Southern Fidelity Mutual Insurance Co. and the Bankers Fire Insurance Co, Pearson became the principal of the first African-American Graded School (Whitted) and then Hillside High School. (A position he held for 30 years.) (He also had a few unsuccessful enterprises - the People's Savings and Loan (1915) and the Fraternal Bank and Trust Co.) Pearson died in 1947. The house appears to have been divided into apartments thereafter. The house had been torn down by 1968.
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dbpedia
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https://www.shawu.edu/meet-shaw/alma-mater/
en
Shaw University
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2024-07-03T18:36:59+00:00
Our beloved Alma Mater by Harry Edgar Payne, Sr., Class of 1935
en
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Shaw University
https://www.shawu.edu/meet-shaw/alma-mater/
Alma Mater Written by Harry Edgar Payne, Sr., Class of 1935 Hail, Dear Old Shaw U, Thy Sons revere thy name, Long shall thy works be proud, Undimmed by fame. Time shall thy praises sing, Glory repay thy tears, And loud thy praises ring, Thru all the years. Noble thy hallways, Noble thy grassy plains, Nobler the hearts of men, Where thou dost reign. All we who love thy name, Stout hearts that shall no fail, All rise and loud proclaim, Alma Mater, Hail!!
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https://issuu.com/shawu/docs/prezrpt2012-13
en
2012-2013 President's Report
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2013-10-22T19:33:50+00:00
Shaw University 2012-2013 President's Report focusing on Alumni giving.
en
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Issuu
https://issuu.com/shawu/docs/prezrpt2012-13
Welcome to Issuu’s blog: home to product news, tips, resources, interviews (and more) related to content marketing and publishing. Here you'll find an answer to your question.
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dbpedia
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaw_University
en
Shaw University
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2004-04-20T20:26:40+00:00
en
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https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shaw_University
Historically black private college in Raleigh, North Carolina, US Shaw University is a private historically black university in Raleigh, North Carolina. Founded on December 1, 1865, Shaw University is the oldest HBCU to begin offering courses in the Southern United States.[2] The school had its origin in the formation of a theological class of freedmen in the Guion Hotel. The following year it moved to a large wooden building, at the corner of Blount and Cabarrus Streets in Raleigh, where it continued as the Raleigh Institute until 1870.[3] In 1870, the school moved to its current location on the former property of Confederate General Barringer and changed its name to the Shaw Collegiate Institute, in honor of Elijah Shaw.[4] In 1875, the school was officially chartered with the State of North Carolina as Shaw University.[5] The main campus resides on 24 acres in the East Raleigh-South Park Historic District in downtown Raleigh. Shaw also owns and operates a 35-acre farm located on Rock Quarry Rd.[6] Historical buildings, which either currently (Estey Hall) or previously (Shaw Hall) reside on campus, were designed by the famed Raleigh architect George S. H. Appleget and feature a Second Empire and Italianate architectural styles.[7] Other architectural styles present on campus are Leonard Hall, a twin-turret Romanesque Revival style building, and several buildings featuring Brutalist style architectures. Along with Howard University, Hampton University, Lincoln University and Virginia Union University, Shaw was a co-founding member of the NCAA Division II's Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) Conference, the oldest African American athletic association in the U.S. The university has won CIAA championships in Football, Basketball (women's and men's), Tennis (women's and men's) and volleyball. History [edit] Foundation to the 1920s [edit] The school was founded by the American Baptist Home Mission Society and the pastor Henry Martin Tupper in 1865 [8][9] In 1867 the school consisted of two buildings, a large two-story structure and one Antebellum cabins.[4] In 1870, it was renamed Shaw Collegiate Institute after Elijah Shaw who donated a sum of $5,000 ($110,897 in 2021) to partially fund the $13,000 ($288,331 in 2021) necessary to purchase 12 acres of land formally held by General Barringer (where Tupper and his wife once hid in the cornfields from a KKK lynch mob[10]) and erect Shaw Hall,[4] the first building on campus. Shaw Hall was built with a 165-foot frontage, four stories high and possessing a tower, was the most commodious school building in all of North Carolina at that time.[citation needed] It provided instruction services, a library, and lodging. In 1873, Estey Hall was built in honor of Deacon Jacob Estey and sons of Brattleboro, Vermont, who gave $8,000 ($187,365 in 2021) toward its construction.[4] Estey Hall was the first building constructed in the U.S. for the higher education of African-American women.[11] Estey Hall was devoted to training women in cooking, sewing, music, and the like. Henry Martin Tupper bought the material from which the women made garments and he himself sold the garments in an effort to pay for the cost of the material and other expenses.[citation needed] In 1879, a third major building was erected – a chapel and dining hall called the Greenleaf Building. It was named for Orick H. Greenleaf of Springfield, MA, a yearly liberal contributor.[12] The upper part of the building was accessible by stairs. Doors on either side of the tower provided entrance to the dining room. At the right of the chapel was a small room and at the left a library. A storeroom existed under the stairway. Funds saved from tuition and board were used to build this structure at a total cost of $6,000.[13] These were augmented by contributions from O.H. Greenleaf, Captain Ebenezer Morgan of Groton, CT, and Deacon O.B. Grant of Stonington, CT.[14] In 1866 when the Raleigh Institute was first being developed, Tupper had hoped to open a medical school; in 1882, $5,000 was donated from the Leonard family to establish the Leonard Medical School and the Leonard School of Pharmacy[15] with significant contributions made by Dr. Nathan Bishop, William A. Caldwell, Joseph B. Hoyt, O. H. Greenleaf, Timothy Merrick, and Colonel Levi K. Fuller.[13] The medical school complex, which housed both departments, consisted primarily of three structures – a four-story, 34 bed medical dormitory[16] built to accommodate 60 men and erected in 1881 when the trustees approved the establishment of a medical department; the Leonard Medical Building, erected in the summer and fall of 1881 and containing lecture rooms, dissecting rooms, an amphitheater, and opened for its first session on November 1, 1881; the Leonard Medical School Hospital, a 25-bed hospital which opened for the reception of patients on January 10, 1885.[17] It was the first four-year medical school to train African-American doctors in the South.[18] and the first medical school in the state to offer a four-year curriculum. The school closed in 1918 after being given a scathing evaluation by the Flexner Report that the Negro school "was in no position to make any contribution of value" but recommended Howard and Meharry medical schools remain open.[19] On December 11, 1888 the university opened the Shaw University Law School, the first of its kind for African-Americans in the country.[10] The Law School curriculum focused on "the subjects of International and Constitutional Law, the various branches of the Common Law, Equity, and Admiralty".[16] It was also the only black law school that had a course in legal shorthand. The course was offered on the premise that such a skill would broaden the opportunities for a black lawyer to work in a legal firm in a clerical position or as an office assistant should discrimination impede their ability to practice law. Shaw University graduated fifty-seven law students before it closed in 1916. It graduated fifty-four law students between 1891 and 1914.[20] North Carolina politician John S. Leary was an important figure in the founding of the law school and served as its dean[21] starting in March 1890.[22] He was followed as dean by Edward A. Johnson, who was the law school's first graduate[23] and later the first African-American member of the New York State Assembly. By 1900, Shaw University had trained more than 30,000 black teachers.[24] 1920s to 1980s [edit] In 1968, Shaw University became the first black college to own a radio station.[25] At first, the station used an antenna on top of a building on the downtown campus, but in the late 1990s a new tower was built in southeast Raleigh near Interstate 40. WFSS in Fayetteville, North Carolina, moved from 89.1 FM to 91.9 FM to allow WSHA to increase power. The university sold the station to Educational Media Foundation effective July 26, 2018, who subsequently renamed it WRKV.[26] U.S. Civil Rights Movement [edit] The Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) was one of the organizations of the American Civil Rights Movement in the 1960s. It emerged from a student meeting organized by Ella Baker that was held at Shaw University in April 1960. SNCC grew into a large organization, gaining many supporters in the North as well as in the South. It led grassroots organizing for voter education and registration in Mississippi, among other initiatives. They are best known for their support of sit-ins, including in Greensboro, North Carolina, and Nashville, Tennessee. They were also involved in the Freedom Rides.[27] 1980s to present [edit] By the mid-1980s, enrollment declined and the university was deeply in debt. President Talbert O. Shaw (1988–2003) (not related to the namesake) increased the student body from 1,600 to 2,700, restructured debt and created the Raleigh Business and Technology Center. In the 1990s, Shaw ran a successful capital campaign to renovate historic buildings and construct new campus facilities, including the Talbert O. Shaw Center for Teachers' Education. In 2005, Shaw University Divinity School (SUDS) received a 10-year accreditation from the Association for Theological Schools. The university also began construction on the Center for Early Childhood Education, Research and Development. In 2009, the university's Institute for Health, Social, and Community Research was awarded a $4.3 million grant from the National Institutes of Health – National Center on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NCMHD) to implement The Shaw NCMHD Research Infrastructure in Minority Institutions (RIMI) Project.[28] The RIMI Program is designed to establish a research capacity-building infrastructure program, with benchmarks for training students, and developing a cadre of clinical, biomedical and behavioral research scientists who possess the skills, knowledge and abilities to engage in leading, cutting-edge and innovative research and training that will ultimately contribute to reducing and eliminating health disparities in the United States. During the tornado outbreak of April 14–16, 2011, the university was struck by a damaging tornado, resulting in the school cancelling classes for a semester. As a result of the storm, two dormitories, the student union, and the roof of Estey hall were severely damaged.[29][30] There were minor injuries but no one was seriously hurt. Study of World War II service of black veterans [edit] Shaw University led a research study to investigate why not a single African-American soldier who served in World War II had been awarded the Congressional Medal of Honor. The study concluded that racial discrimination had contributed to the military's overlooking the contributions of black soldiers. The 272-page study recommended ten soldiers whose military records suggested they deserved the Medal of Honor. All ten had been awarded lesser medals during the war for actions the study's authors concluded merited the Medal of Honor. In January 1995, the team's findings were sent to the United States Department of Defense. In April 1996, officials at the Defense Department agreed that seven of the ten soldiers recommended in the report, should be awarded the Medal of Honor. President Bill Clinton awarded the Medals of Honor on January 13, 1997.[31] The department's decision in response to Shaw's study marked only the third time that the military re-evaluated military records to award the Medal of Honor. Only one of the seven nominees, 1st Lt. Vernon Baker of St. Maries, Idaho, was alive to receive his medal. Those who were awarded the Medal of Honor posthumously were: 1st Lt. Charles L. Thomas of Detroit, Michigan; Pvt. George Watson of Birmingham, Alabama; Staff Sgt. Edward A. Carter Jr. of Los Angeles, California; 1st Lt. John R. Fox of Boston, Massachusetts; Pfc. Willy F. James Jr. of Kansas City, Kansas; and Staff Sgt. Ruben Rivers of Tecumseh, Oklahoma. Their families received the medals.[32] Campus [edit] Shaw University consists of 32 buildings and nine additional campuses across the state of North Carolina. As of July 2011, Durham County Stadium will remain the home of the Shaw University Bears football team until construction plans towards building a new facility on Shaw Farm (a 40-acre lot donated to the university under James Cheek's administration on Rock Quarry Rd. in Raleigh NC and the site of the National Alumni House) is completed and implemented. The main campus is located in the heart of downtown Raleigh. Five of the thirty-two buildings are national and state historic landmarks which are the Frazier House, Estey Hall, Tyler Hall, Leonard Hall, and the Rogers-Bagley-Daniels-Pegues House. The university has a memorial garden in the heart of the campus which is also the location of the tombs of the founder of Shaw University, Henry Martin Tupper and his wife Sarah and the university bell tower, that was erected in honor of those who came and left the university, from its founding to its present. The university has three libraries, the James E. Cheek Library, the TOS Education Library, and the G. Franklin Wiggins Library, that houses over 210,000 volumes, 10,000 ebooks, many other sources of scholarly and cultural literature and microforms, located throughout Shaw University (including CAPE sites). The Raleigh Business and Technology Center is located on Shaw's campus. Planned in 1989, Shaw University city council officials and Saint Augustine's College in a joint effort built the current facility on Shaw's Campus. Both colleges use the center for classes and community programs. The Campus has four dorms, the Flemming-Kee Men's Dorm, the Dimple Newsome Dorm, Talbert O. Shaw Men's Dorm and the Talbert O. Shaw Women's Dorm. Other resources available on or adjacent to the campus are McDonald's, The Willie E. Gary Student Center which houses the Bear's Den (Game Room and Grill), and the Cyber Cafe'. Administration and organization [edit] Shaw University consists of three academic schools: School of Arts and Sciences, School of Business and Professional Studies, and the School of Divinity. Undergraduate degrees are offered through the School of Arts and Science and the School of Business and Professional Studies. Graduate degrees are offered through the School of Divinity. Academics [edit] Shaw is known for many significant historical achievements. It was the first university to offer a four-year medical school, the first to offer a school of pharmacy, and the first to offer a law school for freed slaves in the United States.[10] The first building of higher education for African American women in the country was built and still resides on the campus of Shaw.[11] Shaw is the alma mater of one United Nations General Assembly President, three founders of other North Carolina HBCUs, and numerous entertainers, lawyers, politicians, and educators. Accreditation [edit] Shaw University is accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, the Council on Social Work Education, and the American Psychological Association. The Divinity School is accredited by the Association of Theological Schools in the United States and Canada as its Allied Health Professions programs are accredited by the Commission on Accreditation of Allied Health Education Programs, the Commission on Accreditation of Athletic Training Education, and the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education. Shaw has historical, symbolic, and ongoing affiliations with the American Baptist Churches, USA.[33] Undergraduate Profile [edit] Shaw offers 21 arts and sciences majors for degrees in Bachelor of Arts (B.A.) or Bachelor of Science (B.S.). Shaw also offers a non-degree teaching certificate for individuals who have earned a bachelor's degree or higher in education or related major and wish the fulfill the requirements to obtain a teaching license. The majority of students enroll in the School of Arts and Sciences and the School of Business and Professional Studies. Graduate Profile [edit] The university's graduate and professional schools include the School of Divinity, which offers a Master of Divinity (MDiv), Master of Arts in Christian Education (MACE), and a Master of Arts in Christian Leadership (MACL), and the School of Business and Professional Studies, which offers a Master of Science in Early Childhood Education (MS) through the Department of Education and Child Development. Student life [edit] Demographics of student body in fall 2021[34] Undergraduate U.S. Census[35] African American 56% 13% Asian American 3% 6% Non-Hispanic White American 1% 60% Hispanic American 3% 19% Two or more races 16% 3% Unknown 15% N/A Non-resident alien 5% N/A Student body [edit] The Shaw University student body consists of 1,170 undergraduate students, 92% of which attend on a full-time basis[34] (as of fall 2021). The percentage of students who received an income-based federal Pell grant intended for low-income students is 84%. Greek organizations [edit] Shaw has eight of the nine National Pan-Hellenic Council organizations on campus. Student organizations [edit] Shaw University has a range of student organizations. The Student Government Association (SGA) is responsible for advising all other organization and representing the interests of other student organizations to university administration. Shaw University's quiz bowl team competed in the national Honda Campus All-Star Challenge tournament in 2015.[36] Marching band [edit] Shaw's marching band, better known as "Platinum Sound", was reestablished in the Fall of 2002 along with the reestablishment of the football team. The band has grown from 80 members in 2002 to over 130 members. Shaw's marching band has participated in the Honda Battle of the Bands at the Georgia Dome in Atlanta, Georgia. Athletics [edit] Shaw University is a member and co-founder of the National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II's Central Intercollegiate Athletic Association (CIAA) Conference. Shaw University's Basketball team participates in the CIAA annual Basketball Tournament, which is the third most attended athletic event in collegiate sports after the Atlantic Coast Conference and Big East tournaments [citation needed]. Shaw fields 14 varsity athletic teams including teams in men's soccer, women's soccer, men's basketball, women's basketball, football, tennis, baseball, cheerleading, men's and women's track and field, volleyball, golf, and bowling. The athletic teams are known by the "Bears" nickname. In 2002, Shaw University's men's basketball team won the CIAA championship. The women's basketball team won 9 CIAA championships from 2003 to 2014. The football team, reestablished by Clarence G. Newsome in 2002, played at Durham County Memorial Stadium in Durham, North Carolina, through the 2008 season. In 2009, the team relocated their home games to Millbrook High School in Raleigh.[37] The Bears currently play at Durham County Stadium. It won the CIAA football championship in 2004, 2007, 2008, and 2010.[38] The football team has also made the Division II playoffs in 2007 and 2010. Also in 2011 both men's and women's teams won the CIAA Tournament making Shaw the last school since Norfolk State in 1975 to win the big three championships in the same year. Shaw's Lady Bears won the NCAA Division II Championship for the 2011–2012 season. The Shaw University Lady Bears have won the CIAA Tournament four years in a row twice (2003–2006) (2011–2014). Their most recent win occurred on March 1, 2014. The Bears have won a total of 60 CIAA championships between men's and women's basketball, men's and women's tennis, football and volleyball. Alumni [edit] Notable alumni include Ella Baker (1927), cofounder and leader of SNCC and civil rights activist[39] Angie Brooks (B.S. 1949), first African female President of the United Nations General Assembly[40] Shirley Caesar (B.S. 1984), pastor and gospel music artist[41] John O. Crosby (1914), founder and first president of North Carolina A&T State University[42] Marguerite Frierson (1928), educator Willie E. Gary (B.A. 1971), one of the world's wealthiest attorneys[43] Gladys Knight (B.A. 1966), lead singer of Gladys Knight & the Pips[44] Peter Weddick Moore (A.B. 1887), founder and first president of Elizabeth City Normal College (now Elizabeth City State University)[45] Adam Clayton Powell Jr. (D.D. 1934), Congressman from New York, 1945–71[46] Gladys Knight, lead singer of Gladys Knight & the Pips See also [edit] United States portal List of Shaw University people List of historically black colleges and universities References [edit] Additional references [edit] Carter, Wilmoth A. Shaw's Universe: A Monument to Educational Innovation, Raleigh: Shaw University, 1973, ASIN B0006W7GHM [ISBN missing] Lincoln, C. Eric, The Black Church in the African American Experience, Durham: Duke University Press, 1990 ISBN 978-0822310730 Suttell, Brian. 2023. Campus to Counter: Civil Rights in Raleigh and Durham, North Carolina, 1960–1963. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press.[ISBN missing]