Friday, 10 July 2015

BLACK SOCIAL HISTORY : HOWARD UNIVERSITY A CHARTERED PRIVATE CO-EDUCATIONAL, NONSECTARIAN, HISTORICALLY BLACK UNIVERSITY IN WASHINGTON D.C. :

             BLACK    SOCIAL   HISTORY                                                                                                                      


























































































































Howard University


Howard University
Howard University seal.png
Howard University seal
Former names
Howard Normal and Theological School for the Education of Teachers and Preachers
MottoVeritas et Utilitas
Motto in English
"Truth and Service"
EstablishedMarch 2, 1867
TypePrivateHBCU
AffiliationNon-sectarian
Endowment$586.1 million[1]
ChairmanStacey J. Mobley, Esq.[2]
PresidentWayne A.I. Frederick
Students10,300[3]
LocationWashington, D.C.U.S.
38°55′20″N 77°01′10″W
CampusUrban; 500 acres (1.0 km²)
ColorsBlue, White and Red
              
AthleticsNCAA Division I – MEAC
Sports17 varsity teams
NicknameBison & Lady Bison
MascotBison
AffiliationsTMCF
NAICU
ORAU
AASCU
CUWMA
Websitewww.howard.edu
Howard University logo.png
Howard University is a federally chartered, privatecoeducationalnonsectarianhistorically black university in Washington, D.C. It is classified as a research university with high research activity.
From its outset it has been nonsectarian and open to people of both sexes and all races.[4] In addition to the undergraduate program, Howard has graduate schools of business, pharmacy, law, social work, medicine, dentistry, and divinity. Howard was ranked the 25th top college in the United States by Payscale and CollegeNet's Social Mobility Index college rankings.[5]

History


Main Hall (right) and Miner Hall in 1868.
Shortly after the end of the Civil War, members of The First Congregational Society of Washington considered establishing a theological seminary for the education of African-American clergymen. Within a few weeks, the project expanded to include a provision for establishing a university. Within two years, the University consisted of the Colleges of Liberal Arts and Medicine. The new institution was named for General Oliver Otis Howard, a Civil War hero, who was both the founder of the University and, at the time, Commissioner of theFreedmen's Bureau. Howard later served as President of the university from 1869–74.[6]
U.S. Congress chartered Howard on March 2, 1867, and much of its early funding came from endowment, private benefaction, and tuition. An annual congressional appropriation administered by the U.S. Department of Education funds Howard University and Howard University Hospital.[7]
Howard Hall was renovated and made a dormitory for women; many improvements were made on campus; J. Stanley Durkee, Howard's last white president, was appointed in 1918.[8]
Howard University has played an important role in American history and the Civil Rights Movement on a number of occasions. Alain Locke, Chair of the Department of Philosophy and first African American Rhodes Scholar, authored The New Negro, which helped to usher in the Harlem Renaissance.[9] Ralph Bunche, the first Nobel Peace Prize winner of African descent, served as chair of the Department of Political Science.[10] Beginning in 1942, Howard University students pioneered the "stool-sitting" technique, which was to play a prominent role in the later civil rights movement. By January, 1943, students had begun to organize regular sit-ins and pickets at cigar stores and cafeterias around Washington, D.C. which refused to serve them because of their race. These protests continued until the administration asked the students to stop in the Fall of 1944.[11] Stokely Carmichael, also known as Kwame Toure, a student in the Department of Philosophy and the Howard University School of Divinity coined the term "Black Power" and worked inLowndes CountyAlabama as a voting rights activist.[12] Historian Rayford Logan served as chair of the Department of History.[13] E. Franklin Frazier served as chair of the Department of Sociology.[14] Sterling Allen Brown served as chair of the Department of English.
Presidents of Howard University
1867Charles B. Boynton
1867–1869Byron Sunderland
1869–1874Oliver Otis Howard
1875–1876Edward P. Smith
1877–1889William W. Patton
1890–1903Jeremiah Rankin
1903–1906John Gordon
1906–1912Wilbur P. Thirkield
1912–1918Stephen M. Newman
1918–1926J. Stanley Durkee
1926–1960Mordecai Wyatt Johnson
1960–1969James Nabrit
1969–1989James E. Cheek
1990–1994Franklyn Jenifer
1994–1995Joyce A. Ladner
1995–2008H. Patrick Swygert
2008–2013Sidney A. Ribeau
2013–presentWayne A.I. Frederick
In 1965, President Lyndon B. Johnson delivered a speech to the graduating class at Howard, where he outlined his plans for civil rights legislation and endorsed aggressive affirmative action to combat the effects of years of segregation of blacks from the nation's economic opportunities.[15] At the time, the Voting Rights bill was still pending in the House of Representatives.[16]
In 1975 the historic Freedman's Hospital closed after 112 years of use as Howard University College of Medicine's primary teaching hospital. Howard University Hospital opened that same year and continues to be used as Howard University College of Medicine's primary teaching hospital with service to the surrounding community.
In 1989, Howard gained national attention when students rose up in protest against the appointment of then-Republican National Committee Chairman Lee Atwater as a new member of the university's Board of Trustees. Student activists disrupted Howard's 122nd anniversary celebrations, and eventually occupied the university's Administration building.[17]Within days, both Atwater and Howard's President, James E. Cheek, resigned.
In April 2007 the head of the faculty senate called for the ouster of Howard University President H. Patrick Swygert, saying that the school was in a state of crisis and it was time to end "an intolerable condition of incompetence and dysfunction at the highest level."[18] This came on the heels of several criticisms of Howard University and its management. The following month, Swygert announced that he would retire in June 2008.[19] The university announced in May 2008 that Sidney Ribeau of Bowling Green State University would succeed Swygert as president.[20] Ribeau appointed a Presidential Commission on Academic Renewal to conduct a year-long self-evaluation that resulted in reducing or closing 20 out of 171 academic programs.[21] For example, they proposed closing the undergraduate philosophy major and African studies major.[21]
Six years later, in 2013, university insiders again alleged that the university was in crisis. In April, the vice chairwoman of the university's board of trustees wrote a letter to her colleagues harshly criticizing the university's president and calling for a vote of no confidence; her letter was subsequently obtained by the media where it drew national headline.[22][23] Two months later, the university's Council of Deans alleged that "fiscal mismanagement is doing irreparable harm", blaming the university's senior vice president for administration, chief financial officer and treasurer and asking for his dismissal.[24] In October, the faculty voted no confidence in the university's Board of Trustees executive committee, two weeks after university president Sidney A. Ribeau announced that he would retire at the end of the year.[25] On October 1, the Board of Trustees named Wayne A.I. FrederickInterim President.[26] In July 2014 Howard's Board of Trustees named Frederick as the school's 17th president.[27]

Campus


Founders Library is an iconic building on the Howard University campus that has been declared a National Historic Landmark.

WHUT-TV station in Washington, D.C.
The 256-acre (1.04 km2; 0.400 sq mi) campus is located in northwest Washington.[28] Major improvements, additions, and changes occurred at the school in the aftermath of World War I. New buildings were built under the direction of architect Albert Cassell.[29] Howard's buildings and plant have a value of $567.6 million.[28]
Howard University has several historic landmarks on campus, such as Andrew Rankin Memorial Chapel, Fredrick Douglass Memorial Hall, and the Founders Library.
Howard University has ten residence halls in which students can live: Bethune Annex (female undergraduates), Tubman Quadrangle (female freshman), Carver Hall and Drew Hall (male undergraduates), Cook Hall (co-ed, undergraduates), Plaza Towers West (co-ed, for juniors and seniors only), Plaza Towers East (graduate and undergraduate honor students), Meridian Hill Hall (co-ed, off campus residence), Slowe Hall (co-ed) and Mays Hall (co-ed graduate students).
Howard University Hospital, opened in 1975 on the eastern end of campus, was built on the site of Griffith Stadium, in use from the 1890s to 1965 as home of the firstsecondand third incarnations of the MLB Senators, as well as the NFL's Washington Redskins, several college football teams (including GeorgetownGWU and Maryland) and part-time home of the Homestead Grays of the Negro National League.
Howard University is home to WHUR-FM 96.3, also known as Howard University Radio. Howard is also home to WHUT-TV, which is a television station located on campus beside WHUR-FM.

Organization

The university is led by a Board of Trustees that includes a faculty trustee from the undergraduate colleges, a faculty trustee from the graduate and professional colleges serving 3-year terms, two student trustees, each serving 1-year terms, and three alumni-elected trustees, each serving 3-year terms.[28]

Academics

Schools and colleges

Research

"The Moorland-Spingarn Research Center (MSRC) is recognized as one of the world's largest and most comprehensive repositories for the documentation of the history and culture of people of African descent in Africa, the Americas, and other parts of the world. The MSRC collects, preserves, and makes available for research a wide range of resources chronicling black experiences.[30]

NASA University Research Center (BCCSO)

The Beltsville Center for Climate System Observation (BCCSO) is a NASA University Research Center located at the Beltsville, Maryland campus of Howard University. BCCSO consists of a multidisciplinary group of Howard faculty in partnership with NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Earth Sciences Division, other academic institutions, and government. This group is led by three Principal Investigators, Everette Joseph, also the director of BCCSO, Demetrius Venable and Belay Demoz. BCCSO trains science and academic leaders to understand atmospheric processes through atmospheric observing systems and analytical methods.[31][32]

Publications

Howard University is home to The Hilltop, the award-winning (Princeton Review) student newspaper. Founded in 1924 by Zora Neale HurstonThe Hilltop enjoys a long legacy at the university, providing students with the ability to learn the newspaper industry.
Howard University is the publisher of The Journal of Negro Education, which began publication in 1932. The Howard University Bison Yearbook is created, edited and published during the school year to provide students a year-in-review. Howard University also publishes the Capstone, the official e-newsletter for the university; and the Howard Magazine, the official magazine for the university, which is published three times a year.

Student life

Athletics

Students

Howard undergraduates have a mean composite SAT score of 1,082.[28] The students come from the following regions: New England 2%, Mid-West 8%. South 22%, Mid-Atlantic 55%, and West 12%.[28] Howard University is almost exclusively (91.2%) African-American.[4]
As of 2006, Howard's six year graduation rate was 67.5%.[33] In 2009, 1,270 of the 1,476 full-time freshmen enrolled were found to have financial need (86%). Of these, Howard could meet the full financial aid needs of 316 freshmen.[34] Howard's average undergraduate student's indebtedness at graduation is $16,798.[34]
Between 1998 and 2009, Howard University produced a Marshall Scholar, two Rhodes Scholars, two Truman Scholars, twenty-two Fulbright Scholars and ten Pickering Fellows.[35][36]
In 2015, the top 25 percent of Howard students scored 1190 and up in SAT math and reading. 15 years ago the threshold was 1330.[37]
The student/faculty ratio at Howard is 8 to 1.[38]

Faculty

Howard faculty include media entrepreneur Cathy Hughes, marine biologist Ernest Everett Just, political consultant Ron Walters, blood shipment pioneer Charles Drew,[39]psychiatrist Francis Cress Welsing, civil rights lawyer Charles Hamilton Houston, Emmy-winning actor Al Freeman Jr.,[40] member of Congress from Maryland Roscoe Bartlett,[citation needed] and professor of surgery LaSalle D. Leffall Jr..

Greek letter organizations

Howard University is a home to all nine National Pan-Hellenic Council (NPHC) organizations; however, it is the founding site for 5 NPHC groups. The Beta Chapter of Alpha Phi Alpha was the first to appear in 1907.[41] The Alpha Chapters of Alpha Kappa Alpha (1908), Omega Psi Phi (1911), Delta Sigma Theta (1913), Phi Beta Sigma (1914), and Zeta Phi Beta (1920) were established on the Howard campus.[42] Also in 1920, the Xi Chapter of Kappa Alpha Psi appeared on the campus, followed by the Alpha Phi Chapter ofSigma Gamma Rho in 1939, and the Alpha Tau Chapter of Iota Phi Theta in 1983.

Notable alumni

Howard is the alma mater of several notable individuals, including Ben Ali, co-founder and owner of Ben's Chili Bowl, the famous restaurant in Washington, D.C.; choreographer, actress and singer Debbie Allen; the first Nigerian president Nnamdi AzikiweNFL player Antoine Bethea; Congressman Elijah Cummings; actor Ossie Davis; former Malian prime minister and NASA engineer Cheick Modibo Diarra;[43] David Dinkins, the first African-American mayor of New York City; Mike Espy, the first African-American U.S. Secretary of Agriculture; Former Mayor of the District of Columbia Adrian FentyPatricia Roberts Harris, former U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development, and first African-American woman United States Ambassador, actress Taraji P. HensonShauntay HintonMiss District of Columbia USA 2002Miss USA 2002Gus Johnson, sports broadcaster; attorneyVernon Jordan; television personality Ananda LewisThurgood Marshall, former U.S. Supreme Court Justice; Nobel Prize and Pulitzer Prize–winning author Toni Morrison; actress and singer Phylicia Rashad; Mayor of Atlanta, Georgia Kasim Reed; educator and writer Josephine Turpin Washington; recording artist Crystal WatersTom Joyner Morning Show producer Nikki Woods; and United States Ambassador Andrew Young.

No comments:

Post a Comment