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FAMU Adds MC Lyte as Halftime Entertainment Lineup

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September 5, 2012


TALLAHASSEE, Fla.
– Florida A&M University (FAMU) continues to add to its halftime entertainment lineup as part of its enhanced football experience for the 2012 season. The university has confirmed Hip-Hop legend MC Lyte will perform during the third home game against South Carolina State University on October 20. The game is also the Prince Hall Shriners Foundation Diabetes Classic and Parents’ Weekend. Local DJs Loosekid and Dawkness will round out the halftime entertainment with live music and DJ battles to keep fans entertained.

“By now, fans and supporters of FAMU have noticed that the Athletics program has an exciting halftime production lineup for the entire 2012 football season,” shares Derek Horne, FAMU athletics director. “We are committed to our new team energy and theme and the football team has declared that it’s Our Team, Our Time. We look forward to having fans enjoy the entire football experience and the on field performance from our players.”

FAMU recently announced the entertainment lineup for the earlier home games with the first game on September 15 against Hampton University being the Hall of Fame Game to include a halftime performance by major recording artist FUTURE.  Local radio personality Joe Bullard will host the DJ battles between DJ Demp representing the New School and DJ Neaux and Will ‘Power’ Packer of Rainforest Films representing the Old School. The second home game on October 13 against Savannah State University is “Youth and Community Day” and will feature local Tallahassee high school marching bands from James S. Rickards High School and FAMU Developmental Research School. In honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month, Rattler fans are encouraged to wear pink.

This season, the football program takes on a brand new energy with a new theme – “Our Team, Our Time: Respect the Game.” More than 1,000 fans attended the annual FAMU Fan Day on August 11 to catch a glimpse of the 2012 Rattler football team.

Opponents for this year’s home games include Hampton University on September 15, Savannah State University on October 13, South Carolina State University on October 20, and the homecoming game celebrating FAMU’s 125th anniversary on November 10 against North Carolina Central University.

For more information regarding the 2012 football season, visit FAMUAthletics.com or call (850) 599-3868.

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Board of Trustees Schedules Forums and Launches Website to Gain Public Input on Search for New President

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September 26, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. — Florida A&M University's (FAMU) Board of Trustees (BOT) will seek public input regarding its presidential search process through two focus group meetings and a new website it plans to launch on Oct. 6.

“We believe that it is important to hear from our supporters, especially the faculty, students and alumni about the qualities they seek in a new leader for FAMU,” said FAMU Trustee Karl White, chair of the FAMU Presidential Search Committee. “We will use this information to help develop the presidential search criteria.”

One of the tools the board will use to gather data is a survey that will become a part of the new website. The survey would provide the board with feedback regarding the qualities that are most important. Areas of focus on the survey will be personality and style; personal experiences and skills; vision and mission; and challenges and opportunities.

“We want all of our stakeholders to be engaged in this process,” said Trustee Torey Alston, chair of the Presidential Search Marketing and Communications Subcommittee. “We have developed a website and forums to provide information that will be useful to making sure those who are interested can track the process.”

The focus groups are scheduled Thursday, Oct. 11 from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. in Tallahassee in the FAMU Grand Ballroom and Saturday, Oct. 27 in Orlando at the FAMU College of Law from 10 a.m. to noon in the Moot Courtroom. Members of the FAMU Board of Trustees will lead a discussion with alumni, faculty, staff and students about the presidential search process.

According to Solomon Badger III, chairman of the BOT, the board’s goal is to have a new president in place by July 2013.

“We believe that we can meet this deadline and prepare the campus community for new leadership,” said Badger. “This is one of the most important assignments that this board will undertake during its tenure. We know that this will not be an easy task, but we are willing to do what ever it takes to select the right person. We will work diligently, review candidates thoroughly, and select the best president for the next chapter in the life of this University.”

Beginning Oct. 6, the website can be accessed at www.famu.edu/presidentialsearch.

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History Lesson 125 - FAMU is Exceptional

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Frederick S. Humphries, eighth president of Florida A&M University, gave the keynote address for the university's Founders Day Convocation.  FAMU celebrated its 125th anniversary.


October 3, 2012


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Marcus Garvey once said, “A people without the knowledge of their past history, origin and culture is like a tree without roots.”  Today, Florida A&M University (FAMU) eighth president Frederick S. Humphries gave a history lesson that emphasized how exceptional he feels FAMU is and focused on the university’s rich history that has impacted the state of Florida and the nation. 

Humphries was the keynote speaker for the annual Founders Day Convocation, which commemorated FAMU’s 125th anniversary.

Throughout his speech, Humphries praised and shared with an audience filled with students, faculty, staff, alumni, retirees and members of the community some of FAMU’s outstanding accomplishments.  He spoke about the untiring efforts of Sybil Mobley, founding dean of the School of Business and Industry, who was instrumental in changing the lives of students at the university making FAMU one of the best business programs in the nation.  Under the leadership of William P. Foster, Humphries said the Marching “100” was awarded the Sudler Trophy, becoming the only historically black college or university to receive this award.  He shared how legendary football coach Jake Gaither led the way in football.

“As we celebrate the legacy of FAMU, we must remember that FAMU is exceptional,” said Humphries.

Humphries, too, had an exceptional presidency at FAMU.  During his nearly 17-year tenure, he created the Life Gets Better Scholarship and Graduate School Feeder Programs and he more than doubled enrollment while simultaneously raising academic standards. He increased the number of National Achievement Scholars at the university ranking first in the nation three times in recruiting National Achievement Scholars beating out Harvard and Stanford.  FAMU also became the nation’s number one producer of African Americans with baccalaureate degrees and third in the nation as the baccalaureate institution of origin for African-American doctoral degree recipients. His crowning achievement came in 1997 when FAMU was selected as the first ever TIME Magazine/Princeton Review “College of the Year.”

Before Humphries took the stage, State University System of Florida Chancellor Frank T. Brogan, FAMU’s Board of Trustees Chairman Solomon L. Badger and FAMU’s President of the National Alumni Association Tommy L. Mitchell Sr. gave greetings.  Murrell Dawson, director and curator of the Meek-Eaton Black Archives Research Center and Museum, gave an uplifting occasion that brought the audience to their feet. Members of the National Alumni Association spoke about rekindling the FAMU flame.  Rep. Alan Williams, District 8 (Tallahassee), did a historical reading.

Humphries concluded his message by challenging the audience that it was their responsibility to respond to FAMU’s needs.

“Now is the time for you to act,” said Humphries.  “We are survivors.  FAMU will be greater than it is today because of you.”

Did members of the audience enjoy their history lesson of FAMU? D’Andrea C. Cotton, who seemed to be bursting with joy after the convocation, expressed how excited she was to hear Humphries’ message and to celebrate FAMU’s 125th anniversary.

“This place [FAMU] made me,” shouted Cotton, who received her bachelor’s and master’s degrees from FAMU.  “FAMU changed my life.  Attending FAMU was the best decision I ever made.”

A native of Chicago, Ill., Cotton said that Sybil Mobley recruited her and she was the reason for her coming to FAMU.

It seems that Cotton is just one of the numerous examples that FAMU is exceptional.

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Viniece Jennings Selected to Intern at the White House

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October 8, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Viniece Jennings, a doctoral candidate in the Florida A&M University School of the Environment, has been selected as a fall intern for the White House Council of Environmental Quality (CEQ). The CEQ guides federal environmental policies and collaborates with agencies and other offices of the White House. The Council’s chair serves as the primary environmental advisor to the President of the United States. CEQ staff and interns support its chair in advising the President and developing environmental policies and initiatives.

“I am honored and humbled to serve in the Executive Office of the President, especially at this pivotal time in our nation’s environmental and political history,” said Jennings.

During her internship, she will be working on a variety of environmental projects. She will have the opportunity to work with staff at all levels of the CEQ and other offices of the White House.

“We are very proud of Viniece’s accomplishment,” said Michael Abazinge, interim dean of the School of the Environment. “She is a well-rounded student and one of our most productive graduate students, publishing seven articles before defending her dissertation.”

Jennings recently passed her dissertation defense on the role of urban tree cover as a human health indicator. She is also interested in sustainability education, social justice, multicultural team building and public engagement.

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Professor is a Recipient of the Pro Humanitate Human Service Professional Development and Training Literary Award

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October 9, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Robin Perry, associate professor and chair of Florida A&M University's (FAMU) Department of Social Work, is a recipient of the Pro Humanitate Human Service Professional Development and Training Literary Award. The award is for a research paper that Perry wrote titled "Do Social Workers Make Better Child Welfare Workers Than Non-Social Workers?"

The intent of this award is to recognize meritorious literary work that exemplifies the intellectual integrity and moral courage required to transcend political and social barriers to champion "best practice" in human service professional development and training.

"It is truly an honor to receive the Pro Humanitate Human Service Professional Development and Training Literary Award," said Perry, who is also a social scientist and professional social worker. "I am extremely humbled and appreciative that this article, and the critiques and discussion that followed it, have been acknowledged for advancing critical discussion within the literature regarding the professional development of child welfare workers."

Perry will be presented with the award in Portland, Ore. at the annual Professional Development Institute of the National Staff Development and Training
Association on October 16.

The award is co-sponsored by the North American Resource Center for Child Welfare, National Staff Development and Training Association/American Public Human Services Association, and the International Institute for Human Service Workforce Research and Development.

Perry received his bachelor's and master's degrees in social work from the University of Windsor in Windsor, Ontario and a doctorate in social work from the University of California in Berkeley, Calif.

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SBI Students Place First and Second at Globe Without Borders Business Case Competition

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From left to right: Brandon Camille, Tiana McClellan and Zachary Addy won first place in the Globe-Without-Borders Business Case Competition. Their professor, Rashada Houston (first on right), prepared them for the competition.
From left to right: Hillrod Lumpkin, Shayna Gunn and Breyon Love won second place in the Globe-Without-Borders Business Case Competition. Their professor, Rashada Houston (first on right), prepared them for the competition.

October 9, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Students from the Florida A&M University (FAMU) School of Business and Industry recently won first and second places in the 2012 Globe-Without-Borders Business Case Competition sponsored by Savannah State University.

Other universities represented in the competition were Georgia Southern University, Savannah State University and South University.
   
Globe-Without-Borders Global Business Case Competition is an annual case competition that brings together undergraduate business students to compete in a challenging business case study. The program allows students to analyze and develop a business recommendation within 96 hours.
    
“The students’ skill sets, determination, and sacrifice were remarkable, and I knew going into the competition that both teams were strong contenders,” said Rashada Houston, faculty adviser. “For both teams to place, it proved that FAMU students have the scholastic aptitude to compete on any level and perform at a superior level.”
   
Competing teams worked under pressure to solve a real problem, using simulated business conditions such as time-critical deadlines and incomplete information, to formulate workable, action-oriented recommendations.
   
Team one consisted of: Zachary Addy, a senior business student from Chicago, Ill., Brandon Camille, a senior business student from Long Island, N.Y.; and Tiana McClellan, a senior accounting student from Detroit, Mich.    
   
Team two consisted of the following: Breyon Love, a senior business administration student from Atlanta, Ga.; Shayna Gunn, a senior accounting student from Miami, Fla.; and Hillrod Lumpkin, a senior accounting and business student from Southfield, Mich.
   
Teams were judged by a panel of industry and academic experts including CEOs, top management executives and consultants. The teams had 20 minutes to present their case analysis and recommendations from a required written overview. Judges based their decisions on such criteria as the depth and comprehensiveness of analysis, relevance, originality, persuasiveness and overall presentation.
 
“The moment one of our teams won second place, I felt like FAMU’s faculty won also,” Houston said. “It was an example of our hard work paying off. Day in and day out, we spend countless hours in the classroom preparing our students and this competition was an opportunity to prove to faculty that the students are learning. And when our other team was announced as the first place winner, I was overjoyed because it shows our that we remain an institution of academic excellence.”

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Agribusiness Professor Trains Farmers in Kenya and Malawi through Farmer to Farmer Program

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Professor Zacch Olorunnipa (3rd from left) poses for a photo with Muguna Farmers’ Cooperative Society participants in the Farmer-to-Farmer Program in Kenya, Africa.

October 11, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.
– Zacch Olorunnipa, an agribusiness professor in Florida A&M University’s (FAMU) College of Agricultural and Food Sciences, recently returned from participating in two successful volunteer experiences that provided training for farmer cooperatives in Kenya and Malawi (Africa) through the USAID-funded Farmer-to-Farmer program (FTF).

Olorunnipa was recruited and sponsored by CNFA (formerly known as Citizens Network for Foreign Affairs) to conduct on-site training for farmers in the two countries regarding how to create enabling environments for sustainable business practices for income and profitability enhancement.

The assignment in Kenya was designed for the Muguna Farmers’ Cooperative Society, Ltd.  (MFCS).  MFCS has 1,463 registered members and is based in the central rural area of Kenya.  Coffee has traditionally been the major enterprise produced by members of MFCS; however, enterprise diversification has become inevitable due to low income from coffee in recent times.  A variety of agricultural practices including growing crops (passion fruits, tomatoes and maize/corn), bee keeping and dairy production have become integrated into the mix of enterprises practiced by the farmers in MFCS.

The members of the MFCS were trained in farm business management (business planning, cost/benefit analysis, budgeting and business skills); market development; farm record keeping and basic financial management.  A pre-training questionnaire to ascertain their backgrounds and training needs showed that at least 52 percent of the 40 farmers were not keeping any form of records because they did not know the value of such records.  By the end of the training, all the participants (100 percent) indicated they knew the value of business record keeping and promised to start keeping records immediately in their business.

In Malawi, the target audience of the training was the Goliati Tomato Processing Cooperative, Ltd. (GTPC), which is located approximately 19 miles south of the Thyolo district in Goliati, Malawi. The organization has about 71 members of which 31 (23 men and eight women) participated in the training.  Most of the farmers in Goliati grow fruits and vegetables, and they were interested in processing tomatoes into products such as jams, sauce, juice or puree. Because the processing facility is still under construction, the members had a goal to improve their economic status through training in business management skills, basic financial accounting and recordkeeping. To accomplish this goal, the group recruited Olorunnipa as a volunteer to work with GTPC.

The training was a little more challenging than the one in Kenya as more than 95 percent of the trainees in Malawi did not speak English.  CNFA hired a translator who translated the lessons from English to Chichewa – the local language of the trainees. The members were trained on how to keep business journals to track and record all business activities and the associated costs and revenues.  They were shown how such information can be used to construct financial documents such as the balance sheet statement, income statement cash flow budget, etc.  Additionally, the members were taught simple procedures for analyzing these statements to aid business decisions.  Business jargon (such as costs, revenues, net income/ profit, receipts, vouchers, invoices, pay slips, quotations, wages, salaries, taxes, etc.) was thoroughly explained with examples and illustrations.  Ample exercises were given to the members to reinforce the concepts taught.  They were encouraged to use data and information relevant to their own farm business experience to do the assigned work as much as possible.  The estimated financial impact of the training is about $1,100 increase in profit per farmer.

About the overall experience, Olorunnipa said, “I was glad to have the opportunity to impart valuable information that impacts the ability of the farmers to increase income, improve their quality of life and to become contributors to national development.” 

Volunteer assignments support FAMU’s efforts to offer education through diverse means and methods to an international audience.  According to Olorunnipa, both FAMU and CAFS have the potential to recruit more international students to pursue a degree in agricultural and food sciences as well as other fields. 

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Professor Awarded U.S. Patent to Identify Bacteria Stains

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October 25, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.
– Marlon S. Thomas, bioengineer and professor in Florida A&M University’s (FAMU) College of Agriculture and Food Sciences, was awarded United States Patent No. 8,252,522 for his research development in species detection methods and systems. 

Bacterial infections continue to be one of the major health risks in this country and timing in successfully diagnosing life-threatening ailments contributes to the high cost of health care and patient mortality. 

Thomas, after six years of research, has invented a new method to quickly identify bacteria stains by using chemical dyes and fluorescent assays. The patent is a significant breakthrough to better monitor health conditions through providing methods, systems and kits for cellular and sub cellular identification in a rapid, throughput manner.

Thomas explained the significance and impact of the new patent on the medical profession. 

“The goal in any health care emergency, such as food poisoning and contamination, is to quickly identify the root of the problem at hand in order to diagnosis the best remedy,” said Thomas.  “The patent holds the potential to provide the means to better manage chronic diseases for physicians and health care professionals.  The new staining method will someday in the near future impact the general public with point of care detection that can be used in the privacy of the home.” 

His patent method requires no equipment or electricity, which makes it easier to incorporate into the current process of bacterial identification.

His work was a part of his dissertation at the University of California in Riverside, Calif. where he earned his Ph.D.  Thomas is hopeful that the patent will be adopted into an assay and brought into the standing procedures of bacterial identification as what is called an “add on” to the standard method which was developed by Hans Christian Gram nearly 130 years ago.

Thomas credits Valentine I. Vullev, who served as his Ph.D. advisor, and Elizabeth R. Zielins, who was one of his undergraduate students at the University of California at Riverside, for assisting him with this patent.

Since receiving the patent, Thomas has continued his research and is working on two additional patents for new tools that will also help manage chronic diseases. His research combines his interest in microfluidics, biophotonics, surface chemistry and bioengineering.

Robert Taylor, dean and director of Land-Grant Programs in CAFS expressed, “This is the epitome of the land-grant concept under which FAMU was established! Faculty train students through academic study and scientific discoveries made to change life for the better for all. We are very proud of this significant accomplishment made by one of FAMU’s own.”

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FAMU to Honor 125 Alumni during Homecoming Gala

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October 29, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla
. — Florida A&M University (FAMU) will honor 125 alumni during its 125th Anniversary Gala, November 9, 2012, for their outstanding achievements, financial support and service to the National Alumni Association.

“We are looking forward to having these outstanding Rattlers back on the campus so that we can show our appreciation for their accomplishments and unwavering support of the university,” said Larry Robinson, interim president for FAMU.  “We are looking forward to a grand affair as we celebrate our 125th Anniversary.”

Among the lists are former presidents of FAMU, chief executive officers of corporations, educators, lawyers, film producers and directors, college administrators and professors, physicians and journalists.  This group will be honored on Friday, November 9, at 7 p.m. in the Alfred L. Lawson Jr. Multipurpose Center and Teaching Gymnasium.  At 6 p.m., an invitation only reception is scheduled.  Tickets for the gala are $125 per person and $1,000 for a table of eight.  Online purchases can be made at https://secure.qgiv.com/for/famu/event/13061/.

“It is an impressive list of graduates who have shown their dedication to the university in ways that have helped the university to thrive,” said Sharon Saunders, chair of the 125th Anniversary Planning Committee.  “Nearly 200 individuals were nominated.  The committee had a tough time whittling the list down to 125.”

To be honored as one of the Outstanding Alumni of the Quasquesentential, the individual had to be nominated.  An independent panel, selected and chaired by the FAMU National Alumni Association with representation from all alumni regions and the university, evaluated each nominee based on their professional achievements, civic involvement, and community service.  The nominees were further evaluated based on their financial contributions to the university and membership in the National Alumni Association.  In alphabetical order, the honorees are as follows:

Corey Alston
Torey Alston
James H. Ammons, Ph.D.
Gregory Anderson
Aaron P. Arnold
E. Belicia Ayers, Esq.
Alice Bacon
Solomon L. Badger III, Ed.D.
Leroy Bell Sr.
Alvin F. Benton Jr.
Amber D. Benton
Alfreda Blackshear, M.D.
Richard “Dick” Blake
Mirion P. Bowers, M.D.,

Joe Briggs, Esq
Charlie Brown
Corrine Brown, U.S. Congresswoman
Willie L. Bryant, D.D.S.
Atira C. Charles, Ph.D.
Gregory L. Clark
Yvonne Hayling Clarke
Gwenesia Smith Collins, PharmD.
Alfonso N. Cornish II, Esq.
Clara Davis
Carol Davis, PharmD.
Richard A. Dent III
Seabon Dixon III
Robert B. Donaldson, Ph.D.
Makeba S. Earst, D.D.S
Allesa Jackson English, PharmD., M.D.
Donald E. Fennoy II, Ed.D.
Pearl Lindbergh Ferguson
Charles L. Fields
Tamara Foreman, PharmD.
Emma James Fountain
Roland H. Gaines
Fred Gainous, Ed.D.
Tamara Garrett, Esq.
Andrew Gillum
Kim Godwin
Lillian Granderson
Rob Hardy

Cheryl A. Harris
Brodes H. Hartley Jr.
Jacquelyn Hartley, Ph.D.
Joseph Hatchett, Esq.
John Haugabrook
Robert Hayling

Doris Hicks
Rosalie A. Hill, Ph.D.
Adriel Hilton, Ph.D.
Eric Hinson
Bishop C. Holifield, Esq.
Earl Holmes
Marlon Honeywell, PharmD.
Frederick S. Humphries, Ph.D.
Leonard L. Inge
David Jackson Jr., Ph.D.
Eddie Jackson
C. Sha’Ron James, Esq.
Michael A. James
C. William “Bill” Jennings
Ronald Joe
Oscar A. Joyner
Arthenia Joyner, U.S. Senator
T’Keyah Crystal Keymáh
Bernard Kinsey, Ph.D.
Shirley Kinsey
Tracy Harmon-Kizer, Ph.D.
Alfred L. Lawson Jr.
Lasalle Leffall, M.D.
Margaret Lewis, Ph.D.
Henry Lewis III, PharmD.
Charles R. Lewis III
Ray C. Long

Clinton D. McGill
James “Skip” McLemore
Freddie Groomes McLendon
Spurgeon McWilliams, M.D.
Monroe Mack, PharmD.
Altha F. Manning
Carmen Cummings Martin
Carrie P. Meek, former Florida State Senator
Mitzi Miller
Tommy L. Mitchell Sr.
Paul B. Mohr Sr., Ph.D.
Rufus Montgomery
Sonia Jackson Myles
Nick F. Nelson
Wil Packer
Daryl Parks, Esq.
Maurice Pickett
Robert Porter
Wesley S. Puryear
Jonathan Quarles
Tiffany Butler Quaye
George H. Rawls, M.D.
Garth Reeves
Adam J. Richardson
William H. Robinson Ph.D.
Vernell Ross
Leo P. Sam Jr.
Sharon P. Saunders
Keisha L. Senter
Belinda Reed Shannon, Esq.
Jerry A. Simmons
Walter L. Smith, Ph.D.
Thrya Starr
Shawnta Friday-Stroud, Ph.D.
Theodore N. Taylor, Esq.
Shundrawn A. Thomas
John W. Thompson
Valencia P. Walker, M.D.
Leila A. Walker, Ph.D.
Keshia Walker
Joseph L. Webster Sr., M.D.
Nathaniel Wesley
Karl E. White
Tirrell D. Whittley
Alan B. Williams
Dorothy P. Williams
Ralph L. Wilson
Joey Womack III
Arthur Woodard, Ph.D.
Freddie Gilliam Young, Ed.D.

FAMU has Received More Than $13 Million for Research

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October 31, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. - Florida A&M University (FAMU) has been awarded more than $13 million in funding from various agencies to provide education and training for underrepresented minority students pursuing the Ph.D. in science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM) and professional disciplines to strengthen ongoing research in plant and animal sciences.
   
The funding agencies, amounts and programs are as follows:


National Institute of Food and Agriculture/USDA$1,067,323

U.S. Department of Education   $1,435,075
 
Health Resources and Services Administration

National Science Foundation

 
$6,400,000


$4,587,000 

 

From the College of Agriculture and Food Sciences to the Institute of Public Health, FAMU will conduct research and provide services that will impact the future of the state of Florida and the nation by providing the resources for students pursuing careers in the health profession fields and STEM disciplines.

The National Science Foundation awarded principal investigator Ralph Turner, 3M Distinguished Professor of Chemistry in the College of Science and Technology, $3.6 million for a five-year project titled “Florida - Georgia LSAMP.”  FAMU proposes to serve as the host and lead institution for the 2012-2017 Florida Georgia Louis Stokes Alliance for Minority Participation project (FGLSAMP). FGLSAMP is comprised of 14 institutions: Albany State University, Bethune-Cookman University; Florida International University; Florida Memorial College; Florida State University; University of Florida; University of South Florida; University of Central Florida: University of Miami; Tallahassee Community College; Miami Dade College; Florida State College at Jacksonville; and Florida Gulf Coast University. FGLSAMP is seeking to continue to employ its current program model while enhancing and focusing upon critical junctures for successful matriculation through the STEM academic pipeline.

Cynthia Hughes Harris, dean of the School of Allied Health Sciences, received funding totaling $2.6 million for four years from the U.S. Health Resources and Services Administration, to provide scholarships for disadvantaged students in occupational therapy.

Dean of the College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences Michael Thompson received more than $2.6 million for four years to help disadvantaged students pursuing bachelor or graduate degrees in pharmacy.  The program will provide needed scholarship tuition, other reasonable educational expenses (i.e. books), and reasonable living expenses per year based on need and other financial awards.

Cynthia M. Harris, director of the Institute of Public Health, is the principal investigator for a project titled “Scholarship for Disadvantaged Students Graduate degree in Public Health,” which received more than $1.2 million for four years.  The program will provide support for professional degree-seeking students in the Institute of Public Health graduate program. This program will provide needed scholarship tuition, other reasonable educational expenses (i.e. books), and reasonable living expenses per year based on need and other financial awards.

Other FAMU faculty that have received funding awards are as follows:

Mehbob B. Sheikh, College of Agriculture and Food Sciences
Project Title: An Integrative Transcriptome, Proteome and Metabolome Approach for Better Understanding Plant - Pathogen Interactions in Grape
Description: This research will provide hands-on experiential learning to African-American students and help build capacity and competency at FAMU in disease research to strengthen ongoing research in plant and animal sciences.

Stephen Leong, College of Agriculture and Food Sciences
Project Title: Youth Development Summer Inst. Phase II: Enhancement of Research and Extension Learning Lab in Search of Next George Washington Carver
Description: The purpose of this Phase II project is to expand and enhance the teaching, research and extension learning laboratories throughout the college by converting them into environments that will enable students to recognize the relationship between FASTEM coursework and their hands-on experiential activities, and to eradicate fear of the STEMs.

Muhammad Haseeb, College of Agriculture and Food Sciences
Project Title: Enhancing the Capacity of Urban Agriculture in North Florida Using Best Management of Farming Practices
Description: The proposed project is critical to strengthen the capacity of FAMU in recruitment, training, extension and outreach activities. This will certainly enhance the capacity of urban agriculture in North Florida.

Vonda Richardson, College of Agriculture and Food Sciences

Project Title: Reaching a New Generation of Agro-Entrepreneurs Through Enhanced Program Delivery Strategies
Description: This grant will provide educational opportunities and technical assistance that improve the likelihood of success for the next generation of small farmers by equipping new and beginning farmers with relevant knowledge and skills.

William E. Hudson Jr., Student Services
Project Title: Reaching Upward Bound Math and Science Program
Description: This project proposes to conduct an Upward Bound Regional Institute of Math and Science to serve participants during the academic and summer year.  This program is designed to contribute to the successful completion of the students overall postsecondary education leading to careers in the fields of math and science.

Ralph Turner, 3M Distinguished Professor of Chemistry in the College of Science and Technology
Project Title: Getting the Ph.D.
Description: This program aims to provide support for the education and training of underrepresented minorities pursuing the doctorate in STEM disciplines who met the criteria of the LSAMP Bridge to the doctorate under the Alliances for Broadening Participation solicitation, and accepted for admission into the University of Florida.

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The Ultimate Merger - Business Meets Architecture

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November 2, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.
— Florida A&M University’s (FAMU) facilities management degree program had an accreditation site visit from the International Facility Management Association (IFMA) Foundation recently where the FAMU Facility Management Academic Advisory Council also signed its charter. FAMU now offers a bachelor of science in business administration with a program major in facilities management.  This new major has been created, planned and developed with the School of Business and Industry (SBI), the School of Architecture (SOA) and IFMA.

The program is the only accredited facilities management degree program in the state of Florida and historically black college or university.

“Facilities management covers an extended range of core competencies,” said Steve Lockwood, the director of Academic Affairs for IFMA. “This is one of the first programs that we’ve had accredited that’s in the School of Business and Industry, predominantly coming from a management side, that crosses over into the School of Architecture.”

The advisory council consists of 12 volunteer professionals committed to sharing expertise and advice partnering with the university president, provost and deans of the SBI and SOA to advance and expand FAMU’s inaugural Facilities Management Academic Program. 

“There is a need to have a combination of technical business and leadership skills that can be effectively applied to ensure the experience within built space is enjoyable, economical and sustainable,” said FAMU Facility Management Academic Advisory Council Chair Thomas Mitchell Jr.

Typically it takes a program two to four years to earn its accreditation. SBI and SOA are wasting no time. The curriculum has so far met nine out of the 11 core competencies in order to gain accreditation. Full accreditation is anticipated in half the time generally expected.

During the site visit, there was an overview session of facilities management hosted in SOA. The session was split in two parts featuring three student presentations and a panel of FAMU SOA alumni working in the capacity of facilities management.

According to Mitchell, the merger between the two schools is a perfect example of how facilities management encloses multiple disciplines together. SBI and SOA faculty see where their knowledge and skills are intricate components to ensuring the functionality of the built environment.

“What the program does is create a pipeline for people that are specifically educated in multiple discipline areas,” said David Castro of Jones Lang LaSalle.

Modeled after Ferris State University in Michigan, Roscoe Hightower of SBI and Professor Ronald Lumpkin of SOA crafted the undergraduate curriculum. Both schools have worked profusely to create opportunities to give emerging leaders the skills needed to have a direct influence on ensuring the functionality of the work environment. Students can enter the program as freshman or transfer into the program.

“To leverage FAMU’s many strengths, this model will hopefully be focused across campus to deliver a cross-discipline program so other curriculums can be generated and implemented during these economic times,” said Hightower.

The program is already helping students to excel.  Recently, Lucy Diala, a graduate student majoring in business administration and landscape architecture, was named the Suncoast Chapter of IFMA 2012 scholarship recipient.

“While my education and professional experience in landscape architecture has so far provided insight into the planning and design of land infrastructure, I expect the next phase… to focus on facilities planning management,” said Diala.  “I plan to complete all required courses and certification exams that will allow me to gain competence as a facilities planning manager.”

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FAMU Moot Court Team Takes Top Honors in Competition

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FAMU College of Law students won the inaugural Puerto Rican Bar Association Moot Court Competition in St. Augustine. Pictured (l-r): Assistant Professor Rebecca Olavarria, coach; Cameryn Justice Rivera, second-year law student; Mfon Etukeren, third-year law student; and Assistant Professor Kristy D’Angelo-Corker, coach. 

November 27, 2012

Orlando, Fla.
– Two Florida A&M University (FAMU) College of Law students won the inaugural Puerto Rican Bar Association Moot Court Competition.  The team was comprised of third-year law student Mfon Etukeren and second-year law student Cameryn Justice Rivera.  They earned top honors in the moot court competition beating teams from the University of Florida Levin College of Law, Fordham Law School and Barry University Dwayne O. Andreas School of Law.

The contest was hosted by the Puerto Rican Bar Association and will be held each year in a different city.  Moot Court competitions simulate actual court proceedings at the appellate level. Participants in this year’s competition received a set of hypothetical facts involving the constitutional rights of Puerto Ricans living in Puerto Rico to vote for President of the United States.  The teams were required to write briefs and then argue the “case” before a panel of three judges selected by the competition organizers.
   
The FAMU College of Law Moot Court program is directed by Professor William Henslee, and the winning team was coached by Professors Rebecca Olavarria and Kristy D’Angelo-Corker.

The FAMU College of Law was founded in 1949 on the main campus in Tallahassee.  After graduating 57 lawyers, the law school was closed by the state of Florida in 1968. The Florida Legislature voted to reopen the law school in 2000 and Orlando was selected as the location. The re-established FAMU College of Law opened its doors in 2002 and is now housed in a state-of-the-art facility in downtown Orlando’s Parramore neighborhood.  The FAMU College of Law received full accreditation from the American Bar Association in July 2009, and has consistently been ranked in the top five for Diversity by U.S. News & World Report since 2007 -- achieving the top rank on three occasions.

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Attorney H.T. Smith to Keynote Fall Commencement

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November 27, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla
. – Attorney H.T. Smith will keynote Florida A&M University’s (FAMU) fall commencement ceremony. The ceremony is scheduled for Friday, December 14 at 6 p.m. in the Alfred Lawson Jr. Multipurpose Center and Teaching Gymnasium.  The general public is invited.
   
Atty. Smith, who is an alumnus of FAMU, began his legal career as Miami-Dade County’s first African-American assistant public defender, and then as the County’s first African-American assistant county attorney.  For the past 39 years, Smith has practiced law in Miami, specializing in civil rights, personal injury and criminal defense.  He is listed in The Best Lawyers in America, Florida Super Lawyers, Law and Leading American Attorneys, and the National Law Journal recognized him as one of the top10 trial lawyers of the year.

In the landmark case of Aubrey Arthur Livingston v. State of Florida, Atty. Smith successfully persuaded the Florida Supreme Court to reverse a death penalty case and change the law in Florida requiring that in all future death penalty cases, jurors cannot be allowed to separate once they begin deliberations.

He was one of the lead attorneys in the successful legal challenge to Ward Connelly’s effort to pass a Constitutional Amendment outlawing affirmative action in public education, public employment and public contracting.  In his argument to the Florida Supreme Court, Smith described Connelly’s so-called “Civil Rights Initiative” as a “cruel hoax” on the people of Florida.

Smith was the founding president of the Black Lawyers Association of Dade County, now known as the Wilkie D. Ferguson, Jr. Bar Association.  He served as president of the Virgil Hawkins Florida Chapter of the National Bar Association, and as National President of the National Bar Association

He has devoted his entire legal career to “agitating” for justice wherever discrimination appeared.  He has successfully litigated numerous police brutality and employment discrimination cases. From 1986 to 1990, he chaired the Free South Africa Movement, leading the successful effort to persuade governmental entities, universities, and pension funds to divest their financial interests in companies doing business in apartheid South Africa.  From 1990-1993, Atty. Smith led the successful Boycott Miami Campaign, which was organized after local politicians snubbed Nelson Mandela during his historic visit to Miami. The boycott settlement resulted in significant economic and educational opportunities for African Americans, including the development of the first black-owned convention-quality hotel in the United States on Miami Beach; 25 full tuition scholarships per year at Florida International University’s (FIU) renown hospitality management program; creation of the Black Executive Forum; and establishment of the INROADS/Miami program.

In 1995, Smith led the effort to raise $4 million and built the 22,000 square-foot NFL YET Center in the Scott Carver Projects. This Youth Center provides computer training, homework assistance, educational programs, arts and crafts, health courses, and all types of sporting activities for 500 kids daily. Recently, the Center was expanded by 5,000 square foot at a cost of $1 million to add a multi-media room and a fitness arcade.

In 1997, he chaired the Declaration of Rights Committee of the Florida Constitution Revision Commission, championing a successful constitutional amendment proposed to make explicit that equal protection of the law is available to women and persons born outside of the United States.  He also served as co-chair of the successful $200 million Safe Neighborhoods Parks Bond referendum that upgraded parks in every community in Miami-Dade County.  Later that same year, Atty. Smith fought for equal rights for people regardless of sexual orientation when he served as co-chairman of the successful “Say No To Discrimination” election campaign in Miami-Dade County. 

In 2003, he was tapped to become the first director of the FIU College of Law’s Trial Advocacy Program. In 2006, the student body honored him with the prestigious “Pioneer Award” for his innovative excellence as a legal educator and in 2010 the University honored him as a “Top Scholar.”

Recently, Atty. Smith served as a charter board member of OUR KIDS of Miami-Dade and Monroe Counties, which he oversees the provision of services for all abused, abandoned and neglected children.  Presently, Atty. Smith serves on the Board of Trustees for the University of Miami, and he is also the chairman of the Board of Directors of the Gwen Cherry Park Foundation.
   
He received his bachelors of science degree in mathematics from FAMU. Upon graduation, he received his commission as an officer in the United States Army serving a tour of duty in the Vietnam War.  He earned his juris doctor from the University of Miami School of Law.

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FAMU Freshman Continues to Excel After Inventing Surgical Technique at Age 14

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November 29, 2012


His method for sewing up hysterectomy patients a staple at Shands Jacksonville Medical Center

Tony D. Hansberry is not your average college freshman. Perceived at as a child prodigy after developing an innovative suture method that decreases hospital stay and increases efficiency during operations for hysterectomies, the then 14-year-old said he just wanted to bring a prize back home from the science fair.

“People think I’m a genius,” Hansberry said. “It’s not that at all, I just like medicine.”

Hansberry, a freshman bio-medical engineering student at Florida A&M University (FAMU), said after not winning in the science fair in the eighth grade, he teamed up with an administrator at Shands Hospital to create the innovative surgical procedure. Hansberry has continued his education in the field that caught his interest early on as a child.

Unlike most students, the 18-year-old Hansberry was no stranger to the hills of FAMU. Born in Tallahassee and raised in Jacksonville, Fla., Hansberry considers FAMU to be home.

“The joy that my dad has when he sees his friends, I wanted that,” said Hansberry, the offspring of FAMU alumnus Elder Tony Hansberry.

Like his father, a former Marching “100” member and King of Orange and Green, Tony D. Hansberry has the Rattler leadership venom in his veins. Hansberry presides as the freshman class senator and will continue to serve until his term is over.

Hansberry, like other first-time students, said he continues to learn how to balance school and extracurricular activities while he maintains his good grades.

“Make sure you know the priorities of school before you join any organization,” Hansberry said.

Being a full time student and freshman class senator requires a lot of time and networking, but Hansberry said he knows it is something he can master.

Hansberry said he was torn about changing his major from bio-medical engineering to chemistry, but now finds comfort in knowing that he has a clear definition of what he wants to pursue for the longevity of his career.

“I want to become a trauma surgeon,” Hansberry said.

Hansberry acknowledges that the career he has chosen requires dedication, plenty of studying and long nights, but he has the drive and will to get there.

“I don’t know how I’m going to get there, I just know I will,” Hansberry said.

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School of Architecture Celebrates 32 Years of Full Accreditation

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December 3, 2012

NAAB recently approves reaccreditation for another six years
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TALLAHASSEE, Fla
. – Architectural education in the 21st century is similar to the medical or legal field in several ways. Graduates from all three professions are required to complete years of extended schooling, enter a highly competitive job market, and must pass a state licensure exam to practice.  An architect, however, is the one profession expected to grow faster in this decade than the average of all occupations in the United States (to 24 percent by 2020). The recent reaccreditation of the School of Architecture at Florida A&M University (FAMU) will ensure minorities have access to these opportunities as the demand for adequately trained professionals continues to grow with the industry.

“The decision of the National Architectural Accreditation Board to again reaccredit our bachelor’s and master’s degree programs in architecture is validation that FAMU students are receiving a high quality education,” said Interim Provost Rodner Wright, who served as the school’s dean from 1996-2012. “The academic scholarship of our faculty and students is commendable and continues to raise the standard.”

A copy of the 2012 NAAB report is available in the School of Architecture. Previous NAAB reports can be viewed at www.famu.edu/architecture.    

“Central to our mission is a commitment to contributing to a culturally diverse workforce,” said Interim Dean Andrew Chin. “While most state registration boards require a degree from an accredited professional program as a prerequisite for licensure, many students see the value in accreditation even before they graduate and employers are looking for students from accredited programs.”

This summer, Jesse Hughes— a graduate student in architecture from Greenwood Miss.—interned with global architecture firm Gensler.

“Interning at one of the top firms in the world was an experience I will never forget,” said Hughes. “The experience helped me realize I am fortunate to have a strong educational foundation built at the FAMU School of Architecture, where the curriculum challenges me to be a better architect and the professors always guide me in the right direction.”

According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, the future job opportunities in architecture will be best suited for college graduates who are creative. One way creativity is generated is through collaboration. That is one reason why the School of Architecture has partnered with the FAMU School of Business and Industry to offer a new degree concentration in facilities planning, available this fall for both business and architecture majors.

“The NAAB accreditation process provides a unique opportunity to reflect on what we are doing and how well we meet our goals,” said Chin. “In the end, it shows that regardless of the hurdles we face, we can still meet and exceed the standards of a professional program.”

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Cardiopulmonary Science Program Removed from Probation Status

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November 29, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – The Commission on Accreditation for Respiratory Therapy (CoARC) has voted to remove Florida A&M University’s Cardiopulmonary Science Program, which is housed in the School of Allied Health Sciences, from probationary accreditation. The CoARC will return the accreditation status of continuing accreditation to FAMU’s bachelor of science respiratory care program. CoARC recognized the Program’s compliance with the nationally established accreditation standards.

“Our director of the cardiopulmonary science program Dr. Mary Simmons and the faculty are to be commended,” said Cynthia Hughes Harris, dean of the School of Allied Health Sciences.  “They worked tirelessly and diligently to have the probationary status reversed.”

According to the letter received by Thomas Smalling, executive director of CoARC, the commission commended Interim President Larry Robinson and the School for their commitment to continuous quality improvement in education.

The next comprehensive evaluation of the Program, including an on-site review, is scheduled to occur no later than 2014.

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Students and Alumni May Now Order and Track Transcripts Online

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December 6, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.– Florida A&M University (FAMU) has authorized the National Student Clearinghouse to provide transcript-ordering service online for current FAMU students and alumni.  Individuals can order and/or track his or her transcripts 24 hours a day, seven days a week. Other options include picking up transcripts in person with photo identifications or by submitting a letter to authorize the release of transcript(s) to a third party for pick up.

Order updates will be emailed along with text messages. Students and alumni may upload documents (in PDF only) to accompany their transcript. This option is available when placing an order. Examples include admission application forms for law, nursing, medical or graduate schools and scholarship application forms.

Transcripts can be ordered online using any major credit card.   

For more information, contact the FAMU Registrar’s Office at (850) 599-3115.

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Physical Therapy Faculty Receive Honor of Distinction

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Arnold BellAdrienne Jackson

December 6, 2012

Certified physical therapy specialists rare in U.S. and Florida, not at FAMU

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.– The American Board of Physical Therapy Specialties has (ABPTS) certified Florida A&M University (FAMU) assistant professor of physical therapy Adrienne Jackson in geriatrics and recertified professor Arnold Bell in sports physical therapy. This honor is significant. With more than 13,000 licensed physical therapists in the State of Florida, Professors Jackson and Bell now belong to a small group of only 353 licensed physical therapists in the entire state who are board certified as clinical specialists (52 in geriatrics, 34 in sports physical therapy).

The ABPTS is a component of the American Physical Therapy Association and is responsible for overseeing the credentialing of physical therapists with advanced clinical skills and knowledge as board certified clinical specialists in eight different areas.  Specialty board certification is one of the highest honors in the physical therapy profession.

“I am extremely proud of this accomplishment,” said Jackson. “It means an awful lot to me being that only a small percentage of physical therapists in the United States are board certified. The process was grueling, but it was well worth it.”

Jackson, a native of Montgomery, Ala., received her bachelor’s degree in physical therapy from FAMU and her doctorate degree in physical therapy from the University of North Texas.

Her years of clinical experience in nursing homes and rehabilitation facilities coupled with her advanced education in gerontology well prepared Jackson for the rigorous ABPTS examination. In fact, Professor Arnold Bell taught Jackson at the FAMU School of Allied Health Sciences.

“I am not surprised as Dr. Jackson is among the best and the brightest students that I have ever taught,” said Bell, the first African-American physical therapist in the nation to become a Board Certified Clinical Specialist in any area.

This is Bell’s second recertification in sports physical therapy since 1992. He is a two-time Olympic sports medicine practitioner (1984 – Los Angeles; 1996 – Atlanta) who has provided health care to athletes at FAMU and FAMU High School for three decades. The New York native holds several degrees including a bachelor’s from Springfield College, a master’s from Columbia University, a physical therapy degree from New York University and a doctorate in physical therapy from Florida State University.

“It was a demanding process…” said Bell about the recent ABPTS exam. “…but the effort was well worth it to have a continuous distinction as a Board Certified Clinical Specialist in Sports Physical Therapy.”

According to Cynthia Hughes Harris, dean of the FAMU School of Allied Health Sciences, many accredited physical therapy educational programs do not have core faculty members who are certified clinical specialists (only 38 percent according to the Commission on Accreditation in Physical Therapy Education).

“The fact that FAMU has two faculty members who are certified clinical specialists attests to the high caliber of instruction students receive in the classroom,” said Hughes Harris.

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Assistant Vice President for Academic Affairs Donald Palm III Completes ACE Fellows Program

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December 10, 2012

TALLAHASSEE, Fla.
– Donald E. Palm III, assistant vice president for Academic Affairs at Florida A&M University (FAMU), has completed the American Council on Education (ACE) Fellows Program.  Palm, nominated by University administration, underwent a national competitive selection process and was chosen as part of an elite group of candidates to participate in the Class of 2011-2012 ACE Fellows Program.

The ACE Fellows Program, established in 1965, is a leadership experience designed to advance leadership readiness, strengthen institutional capacity and build leadership in American higher education. The ACE Fellows Program combines retreats, interactive learning, campus visits and placement at another higher education institution to condense years of on-the-job experience and skills development into a single semester or year. The Fellows are included in the highest level of decision making while participating in administrative activities.

“Dr. Palm is a very impressive academic leader in American higher education,” said University of Maryland, Baltimore County, President Freeman Hrabowski III.  “He has had experience at a variety of academic institutions and understands the important role that culture and climate play in the life of a campus. Most important, he understands that a University is first and foremost an academic enterprise. He was very effective while working on our campus with people from diverse racial and ethnic backgrounds. He has a stellar future."

Palm was mentored by President Hrabowski.  Palm gained insight into the operations of a groundbreaking institution whose commitment to innovation, interdisciplinary collaboration, and inclusiveness has earned a national reputation for excellence in academics, research, and student success. 

He was also mentored by President Jay Perman, University of Maryland Baltimore. He expanded his understanding of the operations of the only state university in Maryland whose interdisciplinary programs and research efforts are devoted to healthcare, human services and law.

“I am truly honored to have represented Florida A&M University as a 2011-2012 ACE Fellow,” said Palm.  “The year-long fellowship was a transformational experience which provided a unique opportunity to enhance my executive administrative leadership skills, while focusing on innovative strategies to enhance learning, enrollment, retention and graduation in STEM Programs at FAMU.”

Palm earned his doctorate in pharmacology from Pennsylvania State University, Milton S. Hershey Medical Center and his bachelor of arts degree in chemistry from Lincoln University of Pennsylvania. He completed his training as a post-doctoral research fellow at Brown University Medical School/Rhode Island Hospital, Department of Neurosurgery.

Palm has garnered several million dollars in funding and has received many research and teaching awards. In his current position, he provides academic administrative oversight to the schools, colleges, institutes and ancillary service departments that report to the Office of Academic Affairs. He is also the project director of the Title III funded activity “Innovative Academic Instruction Project.” The project seeks to improve the overall quality of STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) education at the University through increasing its efficiency in producing STEM students that successfully complete core courses and ultimately complete their program of study in the STEM disciplines. 

About the American Council on Education
Founded in 1918, the American Council on Education is the major coordinating body for all of the nation’s higher education institutions, representing more than 1,600 college and university presidents and more than 200 related associations, nationwide. It provides leadership on key higher education issues and influences public policy through advocacy. For more information, visit www.acenet.edu.

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Professor Receives Patent for Highly Effective Anti-HIV Compounds

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Kinfe Ken Redda (in the red tie) works with post-docs and doctoral students in his synthetic medicinal chemistry lab in the College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences.

December 10. 2012


TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Florida A&M University’s (FAMU) Interim Vice President of Research Kinfe Ken Redda has reached a milestone in his research by receiving a patent for the development of therapeutic agents in the treatment of HIV infection.

“A lot of work, money and analysis were invested into this major discovery,” said Redda.  “We believe in our work. Our goal is certainly to make sure that this discovery will lead to the development of a more effective drug for the treatment of the HIV virus at an affordable price.”

Redda and his research team were awarded United States Patent #8,314,143 titled “Synthetic Flavonoids and Pharmaceutical Compositions and Therapeutic Methods of Treatment of HIV Infection and Other Pathologies.”

“We have a long way to go before the right remedy for treating HIV infection is realized,” said Redda.  “I am excited that we have taken the first step. This is a research activity that has attracted me for the past quarter of a century.  I know we need to do more in trying to make drug molecules to be safer and effective.  I’m delighted to work with such a dedicated research group to reach this stage.”

Redda, who is the principal investigator and co-inventor, secured the patent with his research team. The patent relates to novel therapeutic agents suitable for the treatment of humans afflicted HIV infections.

This patent includes a group of compounds called flavonoids.  Flavonoids are present in vascular plants and are known for their wide range of biological activities. According to Redda, the compounds his team has developed are synthetic flavonoid derivatives designed to target a specific enzyme, HIV integrase.

“HIV infection and AIDS are serious health hazards affecting our society,” said Redda.  “We are proud to be part of the global efforts for a search of a more effective treatment of the disease. Our compounds showed superior inhibitory activities, compared to zidovudine (AZT), a popular drug used for HIV treatment. There is great potential for this substance to become an effective HIV and AIDS treatment.”

Redda’s research team consists of Nelly Mateeva, an associate professor in FAMU’s Department of Chemistry, and Chavonda Janeebra Mills, an associate professor at Georgia College and State University.  Mills was a doctorate student in the FAMU College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences during the initial process of their research.

About Kinfe Ken Redda
Redda is also a professor of medicinal chemistry in the FAMU College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences.  A prolific research grant writer at FAMU, he graduated from the Faculty of Pharmacy, University of Alberta (Canada) with a Ph.D. degree in medicinal chemistry in 1978. He completed a two-year postdoctoral research fellowship in “synthetic medicinal chemistry” at Dalhousie University, Canada after graduation.
 
Redda was fully and actively engaged in teaching, research, university and national service, grant administration, as well as other scholarly activities during this time while receiving excellent research funding from the National Institutes of Health (NIH).

Among numerous achievement awards, Redda was the recipient of both the prestigious Teaching Incentive Program (TIP Award) for outstanding teaching and research contribution in 1996 and the Professorial Excellence Program (PEP Award) for longevity of service to the University and demonstrated excellence in teaching, research and service in 1999.  During his tenure at FAMU, Redda has generated more than $30.1 million from research and training grant awards at his institution.

Redda has published one book titled, “Cocaine, Marijuana, Designer Drugs: Chemistry, Pharmacology and Behavior”, CRC, Press Inc., 1989.

He has also authored more than 50 scientific peer-reviewed and indexed papers and his research findings were presented in more than 100 national and international scientific meetings in the United States, Africa, Canada, Switzerland, United Kingdom, China, Germany, Russia, Austria, Italy and Dubai.

Redda is a member of numerous state and national professional and scientific associations.  In this capacity, he is a regular manuscript reviewer of articles submitted for publication to major scientific journals. He also served in several regular and ad hoc NIH review panels over the past 20 years.

About Nelly N. Mateeva
Mateeva is a recipient of the 2010 FAMU Emerging Researcher Award and an associate professor in FAMU’s Department of Chemistry.  She received her doctorate in analytical/organic chemistry from Sofia State University in Sofia, Bulgaria, in 1995. After graduation, she was a post-doctoral researcher at Florida State University and in FAMU’s College of Pharmacy and Pharmaceutical Sciences, mentored by Redda. A co-author of 20 publications in refereed journals, who has presented nearly 30 presentations on academic conferences, Mateeva serves as an alternate councilor at the Florida Section of the American Chemical Society.  She is also an associate member of the Chemical Reagents Committee of the American Chemical Society.

Currently, Mateeva has two grants from the Department of Homeland Security and the National Center for Food Protection and Defense. She and her students have been involved in a DHS-sponsored program dealing with development of sensors for biological and chemical toxins. The team spent 10 weeks conducting research at the University of Guelph, Canada, and the University of Minnesota.  She continues to work on host-guest chemistry projects as well as the development of anti-cancer drugs.  She is currently training several graduate students and many have already graduated under her guidance. 

About Chavonda Janeebra Mills
Mills is an associate professor of chemistry at Georgia College and State University.   She received baccalaureate degrees in chemistry and chemical engineering from Spelman College, Atlanta, Ga. and The Georgia Institute of Technology respectively in 2001 and a Ph.D. degree in medicinal chemistry from FAMU in 2006, under the direction of Kinfe Ken Redda.

In 2006, she joined the faculty in the Department of Chemistry, Physics and Astronomy at Georgia College and State University and was promoted to associate professor with tenure in 2011.  Her current research interests are directed toward the design, synthesis and characterization of substituted aurones as anti-Alzheimer’s and anti-cancer agents.  She has won numerous awards including a National Science Foundation Travel Award (2009), Merck-UNCF research fellowship (2010), STEM Women of Color Conclave Travel Award (2011) and the National Science Foundation CWCS fellowship.

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