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Tag: Morris Brown College

  • Morris Brown College Dismisses Dr. Kevin James As President of Georgia’s Oldest HBCU

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    The Morris Brown College Board of Trustees announced Monday that it has dismissed Dr. Kevin James as President of the historic institution, effective immediately.

    James claimed in a Facebook post Monday that he was terminated without “specific cause or substantive explanation.”

    Dr. Kevin E. James is under contract with the college under 2029, but said Monday that the contract was terminated.

    James had been the college’s president since 2019. During his tenure, the college regained its accreditation and saw a significant increase in enrollment from just 20 students in 2019 to more than 500.

    In a Facebook post James said he was dismissed without cause, and expressed particular concern about the timing, noting the Atlanta-based college is weeks away from an accreditation reaffirmation review.

    “I [was] honored to have been selected by the board to serve at the helm of Georgia’s oldest HBCU founded by black people,” James said in a 2019 interview.

    In his quarter-century-long career as a higher education administrator, executive business leader, and motivational speaker, James has been committed to improving his community through education and empowerment.

    James has served in various senior-level administrative roles within colleges across the Carolinas and Georgia and civic organizations, most recently serving as Interim CEO of the 100 Black Men of America, Inc.

    A native of Columbia, S.C., James attended South Carolina State University and earned his bachelor’s degree in Communication Disorders and Social Sciences from Winthrop University; a master’s degree in Business Management, Leadership, and Organizational Effectiveness from Troy State University; and a Doctor of Education degree in Higher Education Leadership from Nova Southeastern University. He is also a graduate of the Higher Education Institute at Harvard University

    Morris Brown College is a private Methodist historically black liberal arts college in Atlanta, Georgia. Founded January 5, 1881, Morris Brown is the first educational institution in Georgia to be owned and operated entirely by African Americans.

    Nzinga Shaw has been named interim president.

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    Roz Edward

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  • Morehouse College dedicates historical marker at Sale Hall Annex

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     Inspired by that act of courage, Morehouse students met to discuss how they, too, could challenge segregation in their city. Within weeks, hundreds of Atlanta University Center students joined what became known as the Atlanta Student Movement. Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice

    Morehouse College hosted the Sale Hall Annex Historical Marker Dedication Ceremony to honor the building as the site of the first student meeting to organize a movement demanding an end to segregation in Atlanta.

    That pivotal meeting took place on Feb. 5, 1960, inside Sale Hall Annex, just four days after the Greensboro, North Carolina, sit-in.

    Inspired by that act of courage, Morehouse students met to discuss how they, too, could challenge segregation in their city. Within weeks, hundreds of Atlanta University Center students joined what became known as the Atlanta Student Movement, led by men of Morehouse in partnership with student leaders from Spelman College, Clark College, Morris Brown College, Atlanta University, and the Interdenominational Theological Center.

    Their coordinated activism transformed Atlanta’s civic landscape, helping to desegregate public buildings, lunch counters, restaurants, and theaters, and reverberated across the nation. The movement’s momentum also helped shift the Black vote nationally toward John F. Kennedy in the 1960 U.S. presidential election, influencing both local and national history.

    Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice

    Morehouse College faculty, students, alumni, and community leaders will gather to honor this legacy of student-led activism that reshaped Atlanta and inspired generations of changemakers. The dedication recognized Sale Hall Annex as a historic site of courage and conviction, where students transformed ideas into a movement that changed the course of civil rights in America.

    Founder of the Atlanta Student Movement Trail and Councilman Michael Bond said former Atlanta Mayor Ivan Allen once said there were two things that caused Atlanta to rise to greatness, which was the advent of air conditioners that allowed businesses from the north to relocate to Atlanta and set up shop, with the other being the Atlanta Student Movement.

    “The Atlanta Student Movement is the nickname Atlanta has that’s mostly been identified for the last 60 years,” he said. “In 2010, when I was chosen for this position, we put together a commission to honor the student movement to tell this story, and we erected 15 markers around the city categorizing the places.”

    He also says there were almost 4,000 students at a time participating in the marches and they were no older than some of the students on campus today.

    “These were 16–19-year-olds or younger, putting their bodies on the line for desegregation and freedom in America. The manifesto they adopted and the appeal on human rights was carried all over the world,” he said. “That manifesto became the model for other student organizations like the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee and other student initiatives.”

    Photo by Isaiah Singleton/The Atlanta Voice

    Bond also says they want to be able to tell their authentic story for generations to come, and as his father said to him often, “this was the first successful slavery revoked since the end of the chattel slavery in 1865.

    “This marker unveiling serves as an inspiration to the students here in the Atlanta University Center, but particularly those at Morehouse College, that the three students from Morehouse scholars were the catalyst that ignited this movement,” he said. “Someone else may try to erase our history, but it is up to us every day, every night to educate ourselves and our people about our history. The challenge is yours.”

    Vice President for Student Services and Dean of the College Kevin Booker said during the ceremony they were standing on sacred ground made not by the soil beneath them, but by the courage of those who stood, sat, marched, and sacrificed over 65 years ago.

    “We are rooted firmly and proudly because of those people who sacrificed and fought 65 years ago,” he said. “We honor the appeal for human rights and the manifesto that boldly called out the injustices of segregation and discrimination through the decades. They are words that still echo in our present struggles, reminding us that the fight for equality is not just for history. Atlanta changed because of America.”

    He says the historical marker isn’t simply a symbol of what was, but of what must continue as a permanent testament to dedication and sacrifice.

    Atlanta Student Movement veteran Rev. Amos Brown said we must remember what happened and remember those people who sacrificed and fought.

    “We must remember what these people did to fight for a better future, but we cannot rest on that. We don’t realize it, but we’re at an extremely critical inflection point in our world in this country,” he said. “We got a crazy man in the White House who intends to put you back in slavery, and if you don’t believe it, just listen to what he’s saying and watch what he’s doing.”

    He also says people need to go out and vote, and if you don’t vote, you should be ashamed of yourself.

    Atlanta Student Movement veteran Dr. Georgianna Thomas said the movement can never be erased, only amplified.

    “As we unveil this mark before Sale Hall, let’s remember the movement wasn’t only about marches and sit-ins, it’s about young minds in the classroom, our parents sent us here to go to school,” she said. “We can’t let it be erased.”

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    Isaiah Singleton

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  • Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation commits $50M to CAU, Morehouse, Morris Brown & Spelman

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    The Morehouse College golf and football programs have received gifts from the AMBF. Photo by Donnell Suggs/The Atlanta Voice

    The Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation (AMBFF) is committing $50 million to four Atlanta University Center member institutions. The scholarship investment will be for 10 years, beginning in 2026, and will be awarded to Clark Atlanta University, Morehouse College, Morris Brown College, and Spelman College. 

    The $50 million is projected to assist close to 10,000 students at the institutions. The funding is from the Arthur M. Blank Family Foundation’s Founder Initiative portfolio.  

    The AMBF was founded in 1995 by Atlanta Falcons and Atlanta United owner Arthur M. Blank. Since then, the foundation has gifted more than $1.5 billion to universities, charities, and local organizations and non-profits. 

    Some of that charitable giving has gone to HBCU’s, including $10 million to Spelman College’s Arthur M. Blank Innovation Lab, $6 million for improvements of athletic fields at Clark Atlanta, Albany State University, Miles College, and Savannah State University, $3 million to Morris Brown to digitize a one-year hospitality credential, and $400,000 to the Morehouse College golf program and new football helmets for the Clark Atlanta and Morehouse football programs. 

    Born and raised in Brooklyn, New York, Donnell began his career covering sports and news in Atlanta nearly two decades ago. Since then he has written for Atlanta Business Chronicle, The Southern Cross…

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    Donnell Suggs

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