UAPB Magazine | Spring/Summer 2018

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A Publication for Alumni and Friends of the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

SPRING / SUMMER 2018

SHARRI JONES DIAMOND IN THE BLUFF


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THE ROAR CONTINUES

A new era of Golden Lion legacy begins with the selection of Cedric Thomas as head football coach.

Richard Redus


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Chancellor’s Letter News & Events Recap Athletics Alumni Updates Class Notes In Memoriam

Features 46 COVER STORY

Diamond in the bluff

SHARRI JONES

by Donna Mooney Photography by Brian Williams Alumna Sharri Jones attended other university campuses before finding her place at UAPB. It was here where she learned the real value of investing in others.

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KEEPING SCORE

by Henri Linton, Sr. and Siony Flowers UAPB sports have been in play since 1915 when baseball was a popular sport. More than 100 years later, the Golden Lions look to continue roaring well into the future.

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LAUNCHED BY LAUGHTER by Donna Mooney

How alumnus Karlton Humes went from dorm room comedy to social media domination.

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PATTERN WITH A PURPOSE by William Hehemann

Alumna Kalisha Hall encourages selfconfidence and inner strength through fashion design in New York City.

Brian T. Williams Above: Alumna Sharri Jones in the main area of the Little Rock location of Sissy's Log Cabin. In her position as Executive Secretary and Chairman of Events, she is responsible for managing events for all four of the company's locations.


CHANCELLOR'S LETTER

Greetings, Golden Lion Supporters: We cannot thank you enough for investing in the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff ’s (UAPB) most important asset, our students. Great things have happened at UAPB since the last publication, and I am delighted to share some of the achievements with you. As you are aware, student success is our top priority! There are several factors that contribute to the success of our students, and alumni giving is one of them. It assists in elevating every aspect of student success at the university. We pride ourselves on some of our accomplishments that we have experienced this year that also play a role. One of them consists of reaching new highs in our retention rates, 72% for freshmen and 78% overall. Helping our students complete their degree program is a point of pride for our faculty, staff, and alumni. Our athletics department had great achievements this year including completing the goal of raising $320,000 for the Football Scholarship Investment Fund, which allows us to recruit a greater number of very qualified student-athletes and the Golden Lion football team to compete on level playing field with their rival teams. We are proud to say that our goal was met at the 2017 UAPB/AM&N National Alumni Association Summer Conference hosted in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. In addition, the department secured $900,000 in the NCAA Accelerating Academics Success Program grant. This grant enables our university to assist with the development and enhancement of initiatives and programs that allow us to comply with the specific guidelines of the Academic Performance Program (APP) to increase graduation rates and advance the academic success of student-athletes. We are also committed to improving student life and services. We completed renovations in several dormitories this year as well as added a new residence hall. The new residence hall is an expansion to the Delta Complex and consists of additional space for 144 students. This year, we also had the opportunity to transition to a new dining service, expanding the scope of our food services. Nearly two years ago, we opened a Chick-A-Fila and Starbucks on campus. With the new dining services, Aramark, we were able to bring in Pizza Hut and a Provisions on Demand Market to give our students a variety of eateries on campus. To improve our energy infrastructure, the university along with Performance Services signed a wide ranging $19.3 million energy performance contract through the Arkansas Energy Performance Contracting (AEPC) Program. This project will deliver LED lighting, along with upgrades in water, HVAC, and controls. Once completed, the project will decrease UAPB’s energy consumption by a sizeable 32%, making UAPB the first state university to meet the 30% energy reduction mandate signed into law by Act 1494 of 2009. Energy savings from these improvements are guaranteed by Performance Services to cover the costs of installation on an annual basis over 19 years. Needless to say, we are taking great strides at UAPB, and each one contributes to our student success. However, we have many more steps to take on our journey, and we need YOUR help!

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

During Homecoming 2017, we kicked off the ROAR Campaign, an initiative to raise funds that assist in recruiting and retaining students. With your help, we can accomplish our goal of $500,000 by June 30, 2018. Our ultimate goal is to raise $1.5 million in three years. We appreciate all of your contributions and efforts in supporting our institution, and now we are asking you to take it up a notch by increasing your level of giving and telling your friends, family members, classmates, and fellow alumni to increase theirs as well. Winston Churchill once said “we make a living by what we get but we make a life by what we give.” Make it a lifestyle by continuing to breathe life into “Dear Mother!” We’re on the golden road to student success so let’s continue the journey with pride. To make a contribution towards the initiative or for more information, please contact the Office of Development at (870) 575-8701. Sincerely, Laurence B. Alexander, J.D., Ph.D. Chancellor


Volume 4 No. 1 Volume 4 No. 1 Chancellor Chancellor Laurence B. Alexander, J.D., Ph.D. Laurence B. Alexander, J.D., Ph.D. Vice Chancellor for Institutional Vice Chancellor for Institutional Advancement Advancement Marla Mayberry Marla Mayberry Editor Editor

Tisha D. Arnold Tisha D. Arnold Lead Writer Lead Writer

Donna Mooney Donna Mooney Creative Director Creative Director

Brian T. Williams Brian T. Williams

Contributing Writers Contributing Writers

Knowles Adkisson Knowles Adkisson Tisha Arnold Tisha Arnold Shakari Briggs Shakari Briggs Staphea Campbell Staphea Campbell Siony Flowers Siony Flowers William Hehemann William Hehemann David Hutter David Hutter Henri Linton, Sr. Henri Linton, Sr. Donna Mooney Donna Mooney Carol Sanders Carol Sanders

Contributing Photographers Contributing Photographers

Joe Dempsey Joe Dempsey Brad Mayhugh Brad Mayhugh Richard Redus Richard Redus Brian T. Williams Brian T. Williams

Correspondence and Address Changes Correspondence and Address Changes University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff ATTN: UAPB Magazine ATTN: UAPB Magazine 1200 N. University Drive, Mail Slot 4789 1200 N. University Drive, Mail Slot 4789 Pine Bluff, AR 71601 Pine Bluff, AR 71601 870.575.8946 870.575.8946 Email Email communications@uapb.edu communications@uapb.edu Website Website www.uapb.edu/magazine www.uapb.edu/magazine UAPB Magazine is published two times a year by the UAPB Magazine is published two times a year by the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, a member of the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, a member of the University of Arkansas System. University of Arkansas System. The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff is committed The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff is committed to a policy of equal opportunity for all in every aspect to a policy of equal opportunity for all in every aspect of its operations. The university has pledged not to of its operations. The university has pledged not to discriminate on the basis of race, color, sex, age, relidiscriminate on the basis of race, color, sex, age, religion, national origin, sexual orientation, marital status gion, national origin, sexual orientation, marital status or disability. This policy extends to all educational, or disability. This policy extends to all educational, service and employment programs of the university. service and employment programs of the university. The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff is fully The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff is fully accredited by The Higher Learning Commission, 230 accredited by The Higher Learning Commission, 230 South LaSalle Street, Suite 7-500, Chicago, IL 60604. South LaSalle Street, Suite 7-500, Chicago, IL 60604. Let Us Know What You Think! Let Us Know What You Think! We want to know what you think of this issue of We want to know what you think of this issue of UAPB Magazine. To share your opinions, email us at UAPB Magazine. To share your opinions, email us at communications@uapb.edu. communications@uapb.edu.

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Brad Mayhugh

Regulatory Sciences undergrad program relaunched at North Little Rock Site

Dr. Hao Chen, far right, Assistant Professor of Regulatory Science, demonstrates the use of a piece of equipment to Yamnah Sargent and Jessica Harston.

The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff has relaunched its undergraduate degree program in regulatory sciences at the North Little Rock Site. The degree program is intended to prepare more students in central Arkansas for careers related to regulatory and compliance activities with federal, state and local governments, as well as private industry. “The North Little Rock site is an important part of UAPB’s enrollment growth strategy,” Dr. Robert Z. Carr Jr., Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs at UAPB, said. “After meeting with community leaders, it is clear the North Little Rock community is poised to support UAPB’s regulatory science program. We are excited to partner with both the city of North Little Rock and local industries to educate the next generation of regulatory science majors.” Graduates of the regulatory sciences program qualify for entry-level positions with government agencies such as the Occupational Safety and Health Administration, U.S. Food and Drug Administration, Environmental Protection Agency and Arkansas Department of Health, as well as for positions in private industrial and manufacturing plants, he said. Though UAPB students enrolled in the program could previously take select courses at the North Little Rock location, they had to complete their degree at UAPB’s main campus in Pine Bluff. Now they can choose to complete the entire program in North Little Rock. Students enrolled in the program can pursue an option in agriculture, environmental biology or industrial health and safety. Depending on the particular degree option, courses include biostatistics, plant pathology, agricultural economics, environmental science, industrial safety management, occupational and environmental health and quality control. 6

UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

“The School of Agriculture, Fisheries and Human Sciences is very excited to offer our regulatory science bachelor degree program to the North Little Rock community,” Dr. Muthusamy Manoharan, Interim Dean/ of the SAFHS and Director of 1890 Research and Extension programs, said. “It will provide opportunities for people interested in jobs that safeguard food, environment and health and safety in the workplace.” Dr. Manoharan said governmental regulatory agencies protect the health and safety of the American public. UAPB graduates who are hired as regulatory agents will help ensure safety standards in the use of natural resources, agricultural products, environmental issues, waste disposal methods and within industrial and manufacturing sectors. “Graduates of the program have expertise in a technical field as well as broad-based knowledge of the legislative and judicial powers delegated to federal and state agencies,” he said. “They are equipped to balance regulatory issues of health and safety with the constitutional rights of citizens, economic development interests, national security and international development. An open house was held at the UAPB North Little Rock Site to announce the new degree program. During the ceremony, Dr. Carr presented his vision for the site and received a welcoming proclamation from Charlotte Thomas, special assistant to North Little Rock Mayor Joe Smith. Dr. Carr said UAPB’s North Little Rock Site works to fulfill the university’s mission to provide educational opportunities to non-traditional students who aspire to a better life through higher education.


news and events

Baccalaureate degree nursing program receives national accreditation for 5 years The Commission on Collegiate Nursing Education (CCNE) has granted accreditation to the baccalaureate degree program in nursing at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff (UAPB) for five (5) years, extending to June 30, 2022. The program received the maximum five (5) years for Initial Accreditation. According to Nursing Department Chair Diann Williams, the action by CCNE ensures that students who graduate from the program after the October 17, 2016, date are designated as graduates of an accredited BSN program. “Attending and graduating from an accredited nursing program is significant for our students, because this is one of the standards by which quality of the program is judged,” said Williams. “In addition, graduate school programs and some employers require that students accepted or employed have graduated from a program that is nationally accredited.”

Officially recognized by the U.S. Secretary of Education as a national accreditation agency, CCNE is an autonomous accrediting agency, contributing to the improvement of the public’s health. CCNE ensures the quality and integrity of baccalaureate, graduate, and residency programs in nursing and serves the public interest by assessing and identifying programs that engage in effective educational practices. The UAPB baccalaureate nursing program was reviewed based on the CCNE Standards for Accreditation of Baccalaureate and Graduate Nursing Programs (2013). The Accreditation Standards incorporate The Essentials of Baccalaureate Education for Professional Nursing Practice (2008) prepared by the American Association of Colleges of Nursing (AACN). The next on-site evaluation visit is scheduled to take place in the fall of 2021.

UAPB awarded $630,000 preservation grant for repairs, renovations to Caldwell Hall A $630,000 renovation grant was awarded by the ANCRC (Arkansas Natural and Cultural Resources Council) to cover exterior repair and interior renovations to Caldwell Hall. Specifically, the grant will return Caldwell Hall’s original grandeur and restore its architectural features. Combined with the $380,000 grant from the Arkansas State Highway and Transportation Department and approximately $430,000 in university capital improvement funds, the grant will help complete the new grand entry for the campus revealed in the campus master plan. The new entry to Caldwell will give UAPB stronger architectural character and a unique “sense of place,” according to Facilities Management Director Robert Wall.

Caldwell Hall

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news and events

Brad Mayhugh

Agricultural pioneer Pearlie S. Reed honored by alumni at bust unveiling

Horace G. Hodge '78 (left) and James Tillman, USDA/1890 Program Liaison at Prairie View A&M University unveil a bust of Pearlie S. Reed

A bust of Pearlie S. Reed (1948-2016) was unveiled and presented as part of the 2017 UAPB/AM&N National Alumni Association, Inc., Annual Summer Conference. Reed, an AM&N/UAPB alumnus, was one of only two persons nationally who started their career as a student trainee with the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s Soil Conservation Service (now the Natural Resources Conservations Service) and rose to the position of chief of NRCS. He served as Assistant Secretary for Administration in USDA from 2008-2012 and was appointed by the USDA secretary to head the Civil Rights Action Team. While there, he made 92 recommendations on how to improve civil rights for USDA. President Bill Clinton ordered that all of the recommendations be implemented. Sculpted by Ed Dwight, the bust is on permanent display inside R.C. Childress Hall on UAPB's campus.

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff


Historical marker for Joseph Carter Corbin dedicated at Ohio University

Marla Mayberry (second from right), Vice Chancellor for Institutional Advancement at UAPB, is joined by (left to right) Dr. Sharri Clarke, Vice Provost for Diversity and Inclusion at Ohio University; Dr. Gladys Turner Finney, 1957 alumna, author of the latest book on J.C. Corbin; Dr. Martin Tuck, Dean of Ohio University Chillicothe; Luke Feeney, Mayor of Chillicothe; and Kathy Wyatt from the Ohio History Connection. Photo courtesy of Ohio University Chillicothe

Ohio University - Chillicothe, in conjunction with the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff and Ohio University, held an Ohio historical marker unveiling honoring Joseph Carter Corbin, founder of Branch Normal College (now UAPB). Corbin was a prolific African-American scholar, educator, author, linguist and musician born in Chillicothe to free African American parents, and was a trailblazer for educational opportunities for free African-Americans in the post-Civil War south. Corbin earned his undergraduate and two graduate degrees from Ohio University before moving to Arkansas. There, he was later elected State Superintendent of Public Education and served as principal of Branch Normal College which later became the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. “Today we honor and we remember Dr. Corbin for his vision, his dedication to education and his continuous uplifting of the black community,” said Dr. Shari Clarke, Ohio University Vice Provost of Diversity and Inclusion. Dean of the Chillicothe campus, Dr. Martin Tuck, stated “I am grateful to get to play a small role in recognizing one of Chillicothe’s notable historic figures. It is my sincere hope that the many students and visitors who step foot onto our campus over the years will view this memorial and be reminded and inspired of Joseph Carter Corbin’s legacy of service and pursuit of educational advancement and opportunities for all.” Mayor of Chillicothe, Luke Feeney, said, “Mr. Corbin’s accomplishments…would be awe-inspiring today or any other time in history. But given the historical context of his accomplishments, the emotion I felt was pure amazement.”

Marla Mayberry, Vice Chancellor for Institutional Advancement at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, provided historical context to Corbin's work and his legacy at UAPB. “In any event of new discoveries, new innovations or new developments, you can only be first once,” she said. “Professor Corbin was not a fearful man. Actually, he progressively maneuvered through limited resources and daunting conditions to establish Branch Normal College and associations who were educating students. Professor Corbin had many firsts, and today the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff is humbled to have been led by such a man of distinction. Ultimately, he changed the history for many African Americans and minority students simply because of his love for education.” Gladys Turner Finney, a prominent Dayton-area author and researcher who has written numerous publications and books on Corbin’s life, reflected on his impact. “This prophet of education had the audacity of courage to establish Branch Normal College for the education of former slaves and their descendants. I am an heir to that legacy,” she underscored. “I am an heir of Professor Corbin’s legacy of education. I am the descendant of great-great grandparents who were slaves.” Finney was instrumental in working with Ohio University and the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff to establish the historical marker and shine light on Corbin's significant work in education.

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news and events

At left: Randy Thompson (sophomore, broadcast journalism) takes in the scenery at the Great Wall of China.

Getting oriented in China’s second largest city

Students learn Chinese language and culture through study abroad by William Hehemann

Six University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff students completed a study abroad program at two universities in China last summer. The program was sponsored by the HBCU – China Scholarship Network, a consortium of 42 historically black colleges and universities (HBCUs) that facilitates partnerships between member institutions and universities in China. Breanna Adkins, a junior major of human sciences, Ajia Richardson, a senior major of political science, Alyssa Smith, a sophomore major of political science, and Randy Thompson, a sophomore major of broadcast journalism, spent nearly two months studying at the Beijing University of Chemical Technology (BUCT) in China’s capital city. Mary Rowe, a junior major of music education, and Paige McFee, a sophomore major of political science and business administration, spent over a month at Chongqing University (CQU) in southwest China. 10

UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

During the program at BUCT, the students completed an intensive course in Chinese language. In addition to a variety of language learning activities, their weekly schedule included cultural lectures with sessions on Chinese history, art and traditions. “The experience at BUCT allowed me to take away a new interest and respect for the Chinese culture, as well as new friendships with the people I met,” Thompson said. “It was a great learning experience that I feel has ultimately shaped me into a better student and person overall.” Richardson said the thing she most appreciated was her teachers’ eagerness to not only teach students about Chinese culture, but also to learn about the students’ own culture and history. “I felt like the teachers and students taught one another new things every day,” she said. “China has rich culture, history and breathtaking sites to see.” Adkins said the cultural courses helped her understand the differences between western and eastern cultures. While the students only scratched the surface on the language during two months, the things they learned in class helped during sightseeing and shopping outings, she said. Each week of the program included visits to cultural and historic landmarks including the Great Wall of China, the Old Summer Palace and Tiananmen Square. “During the trip, a classmate and I traveled to Hong Kong to see the Big Buddha statue,” Adkins said. “The trip took me to a whole other world and a different state of mind. It was so beautiful and serene that trying to put what I saw into words would not do the experience justice.” Richardson said she spent time exploring Beijing and enjoyed the city’s unfamiliarity. Living in China was a unique experience that forced her to venture out, try new foods, get lost and use the Chinese language on the spot.


UAPB students, Ajia Richardson (political science, senior) ,and Alyssa Smith (political science, sophomore, far left), with instructor (center), Breanna Adkins (junior - textile, marketing and design, left of instructor) and other students display their work during a class activity at Beijing University of Chemical Technology.

“Being black and American was a culture shock that took a while for me to stomach because of all of the stares from strangers, the pictures they snapped and comments that I could not understand,” she said. “Many Chinese people have never had an encounter with a black person, so their ideas are often those of stereotypes from media or things they have heard.” Smith said she enjoyed befriending other international students as well as locals. “Once they got over the initial shock of meeting a black American, people made me feel really welcome,” she said. “I especially enjoyed spending time and talking with a lady who owned a local food stand. I still stay in contact with some of the people I befriended there.” Smith said she recommends the experience of studying abroad to students who are open to the idea of becoming familiar with a new culture and people. “Even though China was really different and often times difficult to navigate, I loved the experience,” she said. “I have missed being in Beijing every day since I have been back. I hope to return to China someday to study for a longer time.”

Education through exploration in southwest China During the six-week program at CQU, Rowe and McFee attended language classes and cultural lessons with 12 other students from HBCUs. The cultural program included lectures on Chinese government, education philosophies and architecture, as well as hands-on activities such as kung-fu and calligraphy.

“Throughout my time in China, I attended lectures on topics such as tea production in China and the Chinese political system,” McFee said. “Every morning we walked to class to study the Chinese language and characters.” Outside of class, the students had time to explore Chongqing and its landmarks, including the Liberation Monument located in the center of the city. Excursions further afoot included a visit to the famous panda reservation in Chengdu, China, and a boat trip down the Yangtze River to see the city lights. Rowe observed that every aspect of modern life in China – from the pricing of food to the ability to pursue higher education – seems to be affected by the country’s immense population size. Despite some apparent strains, she was impressed by the way the Chinese people continue to live in harmony with each other. “My biggest takeaway from the experience was the way the people I met treated me as an individual,” McFee said. “Strangers were always friendly and willing to offer assistance despite my race and skin tone.” Rowe recommends that any students considering studying abroad should take a chance and join a program. “Don’t let the money or the paperwork scare you,” she said. “It’s too valuable an experience to pass up.” Since her return from China, McFee has tried to convince peers and classmates of the benefits of leaving the country to gain a new perspective. “I have actually been telling anyone who will listen that studying abroad is an experience that will teach and change you,” she said.

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news and events

UAPB students delve into Ghanaian culture during HBCU study abroad in West Africa by William Hehemann

Two students of the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff recently completed a month-long education abroad program in the West African country of Ghana. Ashlyn Carlton, a junior majoring in animal science from Chicago, Illinois, and Jael Frierson, a junior majoring in political science from Cincinnati, Ohio, took part in educational sessions designed to showcase the Ghanaian culture. The program – based at Valley View University in the capital city of Accra – was attended by students of historically black colleges and universities throughout the U.S. During lectures, participants were able to study the Ghanaian culture, heritage, history and economy. “Despite the fact that I experienced so many new, interesting things in Ghana, I would definitely say I most enjoyed the spiritual journey I had,” Carlton said. “As our host institution was sponsored by the Seventh-day Adventist denomination, I was exposed to a plethora of kind-hearted Christians that welcomed me with open arms.” The students visited historical and cultural sites in and around the capital, including the Kwame Nkrumah Mausoleum, the W.E.B. Du Bois Memorial Centre for Pan-African Culture, Ghana University, Accra Art Center, the House of Parliament, Kumasi Zoo and Kakum National Park. They also saw several coastal forts that were once part of the European Atlantic slave trade. “The place that meant the most to me was the Elmina slave castle,” Frierson said. “There, I got to experience what my ancestors went through and connect with them spiritually.” Carlton said she appreciated gaining a familiarity with Ghanaian culture as she interacted with locals. “Many of the individuals I met were incredibly kind, hard-working people,” she said. “As they went about their day, it was clear that each of them were living very purpose-driven lives and had big expectations for their futures, which was such an inspirational sight. Left to right: Jael Frierson (junior, political science) and Ashlyn Carlton (junior, animal science) pause for a photo inside Dulles International Airport

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

From the way they praised God and prepared local dishes, to the way they dressed and spoke in their many distinct languages, they were unapologetically proud of their spirituality and African roots. It was simply beautiful and inspired me to learn as much as I could every day.” Frierson said studying abroad gives UAPB students the chance to learn about another culture as well as themselves. “Often times we get so consumed in our busy lives and disregard what is truly going on in the world,” Carlton said. “Therefore, I believe studying abroad gives students the opportunity to experience things outside of their lives and what is shown on their television screens. It also gives students the chance to change their perceptions, get out of their comfort zones, learn new things and build everlasting bonds.”


Angelica Perkins, third from the left, a junior major of business finance at UAPB, recently completed an intensive Spanish language course at the University of Guadalajara. The program included trips to historical and cultural sites around Guadalajara.

UAPB junior obtains increased global awareness in Guadalajara, Mexico Angelica Perkins, a junior majoring in business finance completed a study abroad program in Guadalajara, Mexico. Over the course of five weeks, she went through an intensive Spanish language course at the University of Guadalajara (UDG) that was exclusively offered to students from member universities of the Association of Public Land-grant Universities (APLU), a research, policy and advocacy organization dedicated to strengthening and advancing the work of public universities in the U.S., Canada and Mexico. “We learned about this program through the Office of the Chancellor, and I am so happy we could recruit a student from UAPB to participate in what appears to be a really great opportunity,” Dr. Pamela Moore, Associate Dean for Global Engagement, Office of International Programs at UAPB, said. “We hope to recruit and send more students next summer.” The program was designed to allow students from APLU universities to study the Spanish language and strengthen their knowledge of Mexican culture and history while receiving academic credits. A 60-hour language course focused on grammar, oral expression and reading skills, while a 20-hour cultural course

helped students learn more about Mexican society through geography, arts, education and history. During university sessions, Perkins’ learning objectives were split between Spanish grammar and verb tenses, reading and speaking sessions, as well as cultural activities that included dance workshops. During informal conversational meetings, she was able to interact with Mexican students enrolled at UDG in Spanish. After a month of speaking Spanish, Perkins says she finds herself speaking the language more deliberately and making fewer grammatical errors. “The first week I was tired in class almost every day, as my brain was overloaded with Spanish,” she said. “The following weekend I had a dream in Spanish, and the second week I found myself thinking in the language without having to translate as much. My level of comprehension has increased, and I have bettered my grammar while writing.” Perkins said she appreciated working with university faculty and staff, who were helpful and supportive of their students’ learning progress. The chance to learn alongside students from a variety of North American land-grant universities gave her new insights into her educational goals.

“In the classroom, I was reminded that my competition is not only with UAPB students,” she said. “Therefore I feel motivated to work 10 times harder this school year to ensure I am adequately prepared upon graduation.” The program included trips to historical and cultural sites around Guadalajara, as well as a five-day excursion to Puerto Vallarta on Mexico’s Pacific coast in Jalisco state. “I most enjoyed the Mexican culture and people – some of the most genuine and friendly people I have ever met,” Perkins said. “Mexican culture seemed like intensified southern hospitality. The people go out of their way to make others feel special.” The study abroad program was the first time Perkins had traveled outside the U.S. She said she delighted in the simple pleasures of the trip, from arriving at the airport to walking around the UDG campus. “I recommend studying abroad to other UAPB students, as it increases your global awareness and helps you realize the world is so much bigger than you,” she said. “The experience has also made me realize how blessed I am and that it is my duty to help others as I have been helped.” Spring/Summer 2018 13


news and events

Vesper Choir marks 70th anniversary with performances at venues in Spain by William Hehemann

The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff Vesper Choir spent a week in Madrid, Spain, where they performed in historical venues including the Church of San Manuel and San Benito, the royal palace at El Escorial and the Church of St. John the King. Dr. Michael Bates, Vesper Choir director, led the group of 49 students and staff members of the choir on a program titled “An American Celebration of Music in Spain.” In addition to concerts, the students’ agenda included visits to historical landmarks and museums where they learned about Spanish history and culture. During the concerts, the choir performed selections by composers such as Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart, Heinrich Schutz, Francis Poulenc and George Frideric Handel. Performances also included a selection of spirituals and gospel songs. “One of our biggest successes was the concert at the Church of St. John the King in Toledo,” Dr. Bates said. “I was told that at least 225 people were in attendance. There was sustained applause after almost every selection and a prolonged standing ovation at the end of the concert. We even did an encore performance when the audience didn’t stop applauding.” At the royal palace at El Escorial, the choir performed for the El Escorial Boys’ Choir, a chorus of about 50 children who reside and receive academic and musical training at the Royal Monastery at El Escorial. Following UAPB’s performance, the boys’ choir took the stage, and later members of each choir were able to meet each other. “Performance experiences of this sort validate students’ training, ability and talent,” Dr. Bates said. “Being able to sing in the gothic cathedral in Toledo and in the neo-byzantine church in Madrid gives new meaning to an individual’s musical experience. The chance to experience the positive reactions of the people in attendance in this foreign setting was an added plus that was especially gratifying.” Mary Rowe, a sophomore music education major from Dermott, Arkansas, said she was surprised during two of the concerts when she noticed the venues were filled to capacity with an even mixture of younger and older attendees. “What 20-year-olds do you know who want to go to a choral concert on a Saturday night?” she said. “The local people’s appreciation for music was a beautiful thing.” Evan Murray, a senior physical education major from Pine Bluff, said the chance to perform for a foreign audience was unforgettable. 14

UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

“The trip to Spain was an experience I wouldn’t trade for anything, and I absolutely had the time of my life with my Vesper family,” he said. “The most memorable experiences were performing for people of a different ethnicity and having the chance to visit several palaces and historical sites. The main thing that I loved about Spain’s historical landmarks was that even though they were hundreds of years old, everything was still up to par and had a rich look to it that amazed me.” On a tour through Madrid – the capital and largest city in Spain – the students learned about the historical context of the Spanish monarchy and its relation to contemporary Spanish history. Topics on the tour included the growth of the city of Madrid over the past thousand years, the Moorish conquest and lasting cultural influences, the fascist politics of Francisco Franco Bahamonde in the mid-20th century, as well as the country’s eventual modernization and integration into the European community. “The tours were quite amazing,” said Ricky Wade, a senior music major from Little Rock. “We learned so much about the Spanish culture and way of life. The visit to the royal palace at El Escorial was very interesting. It amazed me that the buildings were built so many years ago and are still as beautiful as they once were.” At the Prado Museum, the main national museum of Spanish art, the students took part in an art history lesson in which they learned about the styles, techniques and religious history related to Spanish visual arts from the 14th to the 21st centuries. “The art we experienced was what I enjoyed most about traveling to Spain,” Rowe said. “Some of the churches we visited I had only ever seen in my humanities course textbook. To actually stand in a place that has remained untouched for hundreds of years was humbling and awe inspiring.” Dr. Bates said the choir’s trip to Spain reflects UAPB’s mission to equip students to participate in a global environment. “The more experience our students gain from international engagement, the easier it will be for them to understand and participate in the global society we are currently living in,” he said. “Programs like this help students gain an understanding of different cultures and customs, as well as experience new outlooks. They undergo personal development and gain a level of confidence that comes from a greater cultural awareness.”


Above: University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff music faculty pause for a photograph with the Vesper Choir inside El Escorial in Madrid, Spain.

Dr. Bates said the tour in Spain was also a fitting way to mark the 70th anniversary of the founding of the Vesper Choir, which was originally established by Professor Ariel “Pops” Lovelace, then chairman of the Music Department, and was later directed by Professor Shelton J. “Fessor” McGee for over 40 years. Dr. Bates has served as director of the choir since 1999.

At right: Views within the gothic cathedral in Toledo features sprawling altars.

Spring/Summer 2018 15


news and events

UAPB students assist farmers in Guyana with sweet potato crop, community service

From left, Laura Wright (sophomore, animal science), Imani Coleman (sophomore, agronomy), and LaTaylor Rembert (sophomore, agriculture business) speak to Deoram Timram, administrator of the organization during a community service activity at the Hauraruni Girls Home in Guyana.

Three sophomore students of agriculture at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff are spending a month in the South American country of Guyana, learning about the country’s agricultural practices, history and culture. Over the course of the program, Imani Coleman, an agronomy major, LaTaylor Rembert, an agriculture business major, and Laura Wright, an animal science major, are also getting the chance to contribute to work on one of UAPB’s primary international Extension projects. “The program abroad intends to help the students learn about life in a foreign country and give them an understanding of Guyana’s history and all aspects of its culture,” Kacy Wright, instructor/research associate for the Department of Agriculture and coordinator for the Guyana program, said. “One of the program’s most important objectives is to involve the students in UAPB’s project to increase the availability of high-quality sweet potato planting materials to limitedresource farmers in Guyana through the establishment of a virus-indexing laboratory.” Prior to their departure from the U.S., the students were briefed on the project by representatives of the National Agricultural Research and Extension Institute in Guyana, 16

UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

UAPB’s primary partner institution in the project. In Guyana, the students have since had the opportunity to learn firsthand about how UAPB is breeding sweet potato plants with better resistance to common diseases and pests, and then distributing these resilient lines to small-scale farmers to help expand their operations and income. The students’ agenda has included site visits to various agricultural agencies in Guyana including the Ministry of Agriculture, Inter-American Institute for Cooperation on Agriculture and the Food and Agricultural Organization of the United Nations. Throughout the program, they have been required to collect information that pertains to their specific majors in order to give presentations upon the program’s conclusion. The students have also taken time to participate in community service activities. During visits to the St. John Bosco Orphanage for Boys and the Hauraruni Girl’s Home, they played games and had motivational discussions with the youth residents. They also took tours of the facilities and learned about the residents’ efforts in community gardening.


From left, UAPB graduate students Jenat Rahman (agricultural regulations), Greyson Farris (aquaculture and fisheries) and Tiffanna Ross (agricultural regulations) receive awards during the 18th Biennial Research Symposium of the Association of 1890 Research Directors.

Three UAPB graduate students win awards at Research Directors conference for 1890 HBCU land-grant universities Three graduate students of the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff (UAPB) School of Agriculture, Fisheries and Human Sciences (SAFHS) recently took awards at the 18th Biennial Research Symposium of the Association of 1890 Research Directors (ARD) in Atlanta, Georgia. The conference provided opportunities for scientists and students from the nation’s 1890 land-grant universities to present research papers and posters on innovative and practical research findings in food and agricultural sciences. “I am pleased to see three of our graduate students leave the research competition with flying colors,” Muthusamy Manoharan, interim assistant dean for research and Extension at UAPB, said. Two graduate students of agricultural regulations were awarded for their poster presentations in the Plant Health and Production and Plant Products category. Jenat Rahman won the first place prize for a presentation titled, “DownRegulation of Lignin Biosynthetic Genes in Big Bluestem Grass (Andropogon gerardii Vitman).” Tiffanna Ross won the third place prize for her poster, “In vitro Plant Regeneration in Sweetpotato (Ipomoea batatas L. Lam cv. Beauregard).”

In the Animal Health and Production and Animal Products category, Greyson Farris, graduate student of aquaculture and fisheries, won second place for his oral presentation titled, “Calcein Marking: A Non-Lethal Batch Marking Option for Stocking Evaluation.” “The occasion marked the first time UAPB won three graduate student awards at an ARD symposium at the same time,” Dr. Edmund Buckner, interim dean/director for SAFHS, said. “This achievement speaks highly of the quality of our graduate programs at SAFHS.” This year’s symposium, which focused on the theme “1890 Research: Meeting 21st Century Challenges Through Innovation,” included nearly 1,000 participants. Around 500 research papers and posters were presented, which also included topics on animal health and production, food safety, nutrition and health, and economic development for families and communities. The first ARD Research Symposium was held in 1976 to commemorate the United States Bicentennial and to showcase the varied accomplishments of research at the 1890 institutions. Spring/Summer 2018 17


news and events

UAPB students engage in educational, volunteer work in Dominican Republic Justin Burchett, a sophomore major of psychology from Chicago, Illinois, and Paris Patterson, a junior major of English education from East St. Louis, Illinois did service-learning projects in the north coastal region of the Dominican Republic (DR). In addition to assisting in volunteer work, they learned about issues such as the complexities of poverty and development, food justice and community gardening and youth development. The UAPB Office of International Programs and Studies (OIPS) supported the two UAPB students and Dr. Felicia Taylor-Waller, assistant professor of health, physical education and recreation at UAPB, who organized the study abroad project as part of an OIPS initiative that encourages UAPB faculty to develop study abroad opportunities for students and faculty. “It was very important for me to develop my first faculty-led study abroad program as a service-learning experience,” Dr. Taylor-Waller said. “Giving back to others is a sentiment shared by my discipline in health education and the UAPB mission.” The program centered around the Mariposa DR Foundation, an organization based in Cabarete, DR, that focuses on the education and empowerment of women and young girls. The group was founded in 2009 in response to the area’s need for communitybased solutions to high rates of poverty and teen pregnancy. Working alongside college students from other states in the U.S., Burchett and Patterson were responsible for participating in and leading several educational sessions with the Mariposa Foundation’s residents, primarily Haitian and Dominican girls from impoverished families who come to the center to play sports and have access to libraries and computers, as well as receive academic tutoring, job and life skills training and health and wellness care. The students also interacted with the residents through social activities such as sports, dance and games. “My favorite part of the program was seeing the impact we made in a short time as a group,” Burchett said. “The service was more interactive than most of the volunteer work I have been a part of in the past. In the DR, we were able to interact directly with the people we were helping and see how much it meant to them, which made the experience even more satisfying.” Service activities focused on improvements and 18

UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

Paris Patterson (seated in the pink shirt), a junior major of English education, works on a mosaic art piece at the Mariposa DR Foundation.

measures to expand the school. The UAPB students cleaned and took inventory in the classrooms, laid gravel around the school’s perimeter and helped create mosaic art pieces on the signs, benches and sidewalks. Upon the program’s conclusion, the students received a certificate from the Mariposa Foundation indicating their 35 hours of community service. “It warms my heart to know my contribution to the mosaics at the beautiful Mariposa Foundation will always be there,” Patterson said. “My takeaway from the Dominican Republic is that although it is an extremely beautiful country, there are many problems most people are unaware of because it is only seen as a tourist destination,” Burchett said. “I recommend studying abroad because reading or being knowledgeable about a place is an entirely different experience than being immersed firsthand in the culture. In my opinion, the experience can’t be replicated.” From interacting with students and employees at the Mariposa Foundation, to enjoying the local beaches and taking in scenery on bus rides, Patterson said she appreciated the chance to observe and experience life in a developing country. “It is still sometimes hard for me to believe that I actually went abroad to participate in a service project,” she said. “It was a new experience for me and I enjoyed every part of it.”


BECOME A PART OF THE

PRIDE At the UniversitY of ArkAnsAs At Pine BlUff, YoU Are A PArt of A PlAce where A legAcY of excellence hAs Been forged. You are a part of a place where our students are as diverse as the world in which they are preparing to thrive. You are a part of a place where world-renowned academic programs are led by stellar faculty who provide one-on-one instruction. You are a part of a place that prepares you to go on to impact the world — as a proud representative of the pride.

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news and events

Dr. Mansour Mortazavi

Dr. Robert Z. Carr

Dr. Robert Carr, Dr. Mansour Mortazavi appointed to Vice Chancellor positions The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff welcomed Dr. Robert Z. Carr as Provost and Vice Chancellor of Academic Affairs, and Dr. Mansour Mortazavi as Vice Chancellor of Research, Innovation, and Economic Development. Dr. Carr brings broad administrative experience to UAPB, having served in leadership roles in academic affairs; planning and evaluation; securing and managing grants; and faculty development. He led numerous accreditation and assessment activities for Alcorn State University and was a member of the provost’s advisory staff. Carr received an Ed.D. in curriculum and instruction from Oklahoma State University, a M.S. in curriculum and instruction from Oklahoma State University, a M.S. in Educational Leadership from Walden University and a B.A. degree in psychology from Tougaloo College. Dr. Carr is currently a 20172019 Whisenton Public Scholar and in 2013, he completed the Management and Leadership Institute at Harvard University. Carr has been a National Council for Teacher Education (NCATE) board of examiners member and national team 20

chair and is currently a Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP) site visitor. A true higher education trailblazer, Dr. Carr led Alcorn State University to become the first historically black university in the nation and first institution of higher learning in the state of Mississippi to CAEP accreditation. He has spearheaded a technological overhaul at Alcorn State University, where he has led an effort to transform numerous classrooms into smart classrooms. Dr. Mortazavi has worked at UAPB since 1992, teaching in the areas of physics and mathematics, and conducting research that has contributed to a prolific publication record and numerous research grants. He joined a renowned team of scientists in the early days of the development of nanoscience and engineering, and participated in several multi-million dollar National Science Foundation projects. Recently, his team from UAPB worked collaboratively on grant-supported projects with the Department of Electrical Engineering of the University of Arkansas, University

UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

of Boston, and University of Arizona to develop new lasers with variable wavelengths in the mid-infra-red region of spectrum for the first time in the United States. Dr. Mortazavi also worked on many computational science projects as Principal Investigator (PI) or Co-PI, which resulted in UAPB securing its first supercomputer and developing a Master’s Degree in computer science. He has established three nano-sciences and engineering research laboratories in which he is currently serves as the director. Dr. Mortazavi is an active member of many professional organizations such as the National Council of University Research Administrators, a life member of the Arkansas Academy of Sciences, an honorary member of Sigma Pi Sigma and many other scientific societies. He served on the Arkansas Science and Technology Authority Committee, Arkansas Nanoscience and Technology for Healthcare’s Technical Advisory Committee, Arkansas Space Grant Consortium-NASA, and the NASAEPSCoR Technical Advisory Committee.


Dr. Rebecca Lochmann gets distinction with appointment as Arkansas Research Alliance Fellow Dr. Rebecca Lochmann, interim chair of the Department of Aquaculture and Fisheries at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff (UAPB), was recognized as one of five Arkansas Research Alliance (ARA) Fellows. The ARA Fellows program recognizes distinguished university research leaders in the state with an established history of impact. Governor Asa Hutchinson announced the five ARA Fellows, each representing one of the five research universities in the state: UAPB, Arkansas State University, University of Arkansas at Fayetteville, University of Arkansas at Little Rock and University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences. Each ARA Fellow was nominated by the chancellor of their affiliated university and will receive a $75,000 grant paid over three years. “Dr. Lochmann is a leading scholar in the field of aquaculture,” UAPB Chancellor Laurence B. Alexander said. “I am so pleased to see Dr. Lochmann receive this well-deserved recognition. We are truly proud of her achievements and contributions in teaching, research and Extension, and we greatly appreciate her leadership to our Department of Aquaculture and Fisheries and the Aquaculture/Fisheries Center of Excellence.” The ARA grant Dr. Lochmann received will fund research projects related to the efficacy of alternative dietary protein and lipid sources, prebiotics and probiotics and other feed additives on the growth, health, product quality and reproductive performance of baitfish, catfish, largemouth bass, hybrid striped bass and tilapia. UAPB assesses the cost-effectiveness of these ingredients to estimate the effects of diet manipulations on production profitability of these species. Dr. Lochmann earned a doctoral degree in wildlife and fisheries science from Texas A&M University, a master’s degree in marine biology from the Florida Institute of Technology and a bachelor’s degree in zoology from Louisiana State University.

Dr. Rebecca Lochmann, center, receives recognition with UAPB Chancellor Laurence B. Alexander and Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson.

Her career at UAPB began when she was hired as a professor of aquaculture/fisheries in 1996. Her research focus is fish nutrition with an emphasis on small cyprinids (baitfish), channel catfish and largemouth bass. During her tenure at UAPB, Dr. Lochmann has published over 70 journal articles, two book chapters, one symposium chapter and 16 Extension and popular articles. She has secured more than $3 million in extramural grant funding. She has also chaired or served on approximately 20 graduate and doctoral student committees at UAPB and other institutions.

Student Success leader Dr. Linda Okiror appointed to KIPP Delta Board of Directors Dr. Linda Okiror, Vice Chancellor for Enrollment Management and Student Success at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff, has been appointed to the KIPP Delta board of directors. In her position at UAPB, Dr. Okiror is responsible for the Offices of Recruitment, Admissions, the Student Success Center, the Living/Learning Centers, and the summer Learning Institute and Opportunities for New Students (LIONS) Program. She provides leadership to programs that create opportunities for new students and persistence to graduation for all students. She was first employed at UAPB in January 1996 in the School of Agriculture, Fisheries and Human Sciences where she rose from Assistant to the Dean to Associate Dean for Academic Programs. Dr. Okiror has been a member of the enrollment management administrative team since 1998 as Director of Education Assessment. She is the 2008 founder and past director of LIONS Program with 20 years of experience programming student summer bridging-to-college activities. Dr. Okiror holds a Master’s and Ph.D. in crop physiology from the University of Minnesota and a Master’s in school leadership and supervision from Trenton State College. Dr. Okiror authored and co-authored successful grants of more than $1.5 million for programs at UAPB that support student success and faculty development. Dr. Linda Okiror

Spring/Summer 2018 21


news and events

RESIDENCE HALL DEVELOPMENTS

Ribbon cutting marks opening of the Delta Complex Annex A ribbon cutting ceremony was held to celebrate the completion and opening of an annex to the Delta Housing Complex. Originally built in 2003, the Delta Housing Complex is a three-story residence hall, providing suite-style living for 384 female students. The annex of the Delta Housing Complex is a four-story structure that adds 144 units to the complex and creates a courtyard between the two buildings. The 41,835 square-foot addition also houses the residential life office and a police substation. Because CDI employed innovative and efficient use of materials during the construction phase, a check for $100,000 - the total amount saved - was given to the institution. Britteny Anderson, a Theatre major from Forrest City, Arkansas, lives in the original part of the structure and was excited about the change. "I believe that the addition was a great look for the campus as a whole and think it's a wonderful change that we all can appreciate," Anderson said. "I like the good attention it gives to the Delta Housing Complex as a whole. Many [people] will slow down in their vehicles just to see the Delta Annex. I am grateful to have been around to see this new addition." Amera Allison, an Accounting major from Detroit, Michigan, moved to the newly constructed annex said she liked that there are lounges on each floor and the option of separate showers and restrooms. "My favorite place to hang out in is the computer lab," Allison said, noting that it was an added advantage to keep the same roommate she had in her previous dorm. "It's quiet and everybody that comes in here is focused on work." Allison added that she is equally impressed with the swipe key system that gives them secure access to the building.

Brian T. Williams Above: Front entrance of the Delta Housing Annex from L.A. "Prexy" Davis drive.

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff


The 88th Miss University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff Salonica Hunter, second from left, cuts the ribbon that officially opened the Delta Complex Annex. She is pictured with Dean of Students Ralph Owens (left), UAPB Chancellor Laurence B. Alexander, and University of Arkansas System Board of Trustees members Kelly Eichler and Morril Harriman.

Brian T. Williams Brian T. Williams

Brian T. Williams The rooms inside the Delta Complex annex feature suite style living complete with a full bathroom.

The lobby of the annex features a common area with high ceilings, multiple flat screen televisions, and spaces to study. Other amenities include a full kitchen, information desk, laundry room, and vending area.

Spring/Summer 2018 23


news and events

"LET THE GOOD TIMES ROAR" Homecoming 2017 welcomed alumni and friends to a weeklong celebration that gave them the opportunity to reconnect, reinvigorate and develop a deeper love for the Pride. With the theme, "Let the Good Times Roar," the celebration included events for students, alumni and the Pine Bluff community alike. Photos by Richard Redus

Below: Salonica Hunter, the 88th Miss University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff waves to the crowd during the Homecoming Parade. UAPB faculty, staff, and students celebrate together during the Black and Gold Pride Assembly.

John E. Smith ‘61, second from the left, presented a check for $334,185.00 to establish the John E. Smith and Charlene Smith-Gaines Vesper Choir Fund. UAPB Chancellor Laurence B. Alexander, Vesper Choir Director Michael Bates, and Director of Development and Title III Programs, Dr. Margaret Martin-Hall.

Ashleigh Marie Tate is officially crowned as the 87th Miss University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff during the coronation ceremony. Above: The Marching Musical Machine of the Mid-South stunned the crowd at the Homecoming Parade.

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff


The annual Comedy Show featured a litany of talented comedians including D'Lai

Above: The UAPB Spirit Team leads the way onto the field during the homecoming game against the Central State University Marauders.

Ahjah Walls, a member of the award-winning ensemble, The Walls Group, shares a moment with the audience during the Gospel Extravaganza.

Spring/Summer 2018 25


Lyceum Event

Judge Lynn Toler encourages students to make the most out of life by Knowles Adkisson | Courtesy of the Pine Bluff Commercial

“If you can look in your garage and your closet and see your bank account, you’re doing it wrong. Don’t be a consumer, be a person who has options.”

Judge Lynn Toler speaks to a capacity crowd in the Hathaway-Howard Fine Arts Building during the annual Lyceum event.

Speaking from everywhere but the podium reserved for her, Judge Lynn Toler moved swiftly across the stage in an inspirational speech to students at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. The star of the long-running TV show “Divorce Court” peppered her speech with advice on subjects such as relationships, money management and good decisionmaking. Toler graduated from Harvard University and University of Pennsylvania School of Law. She later ran successfully as a Republican for a municipal judgeship in heavily Democratic Cuyahoga County, Ohio. She said that representatives of Fox Broadcasting Company reached out to her one day, and, after a brief run on the court show “Power of Attorney,” she began hosting “Divorce Court” in 2006. On the show, Toler frequently dishes criticism, advice and encouragement to bickering couples on topics such as manhood, female empowerment and the nature of healthy relationships. 26

UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

She has written three books, including a book on marriage and a memoir featuring her mother’s advice for living. Her presence drew a capacity audience to J.M. Ross Auditorium, which seats 600 people. Toler dispensed advice on many familiar issues. She described herself as a shy girl growing up who wanted to be a doctor, “so I could put people to sleep,” she joked. But when she got to college she changed course “because I couldn’t do the math. This is my backup career.” Pivoting from her original plan was a valuable lesson, she said. While going through life, she said one must use your “peripheral vision” and always remain open to other opportunities. “Young people: Only go steady with your ideas, never marry,” she said. “Because the stuff I thought I knew at 22 makes me scream at 57. I hope I’m a much better version of myself at 58.”


news and events

She also told the audience to be persistent. When she was eight years old, she said she was denied entrance to a white swimming pool. When she told her father, he took her to a pool in the “inner-city” to learn how to swim, but the children there were mean to her because she was well-off. When she told him she didn’t want to go back, he insisted, and eight weeks later she said she was doing every type of swimming stroke there was. “You’ve got to earn your way out” of difficult situations, she said. She offered many other pieces of advice, including: You’re going to make mistakes, but learn from them: “The only way to not make mistakes is if you don’t try. If you’re not trying, you’ll stay in the same place. If you’re gonna stay in the same place, you might as well call it a day... I love to learn that I’m the chick that did the wrong thing, because I can fix this chick.” Learn from—or “steal”—from other people: “I steal all day every day. It’s one of my favorite things to do. Stories, abilities, knowledge. Everybody has something you can learn from. Maybe it’s a phrase you used, maybe it’s something that didn’t work out. I steal all the time.” Don’t just stand in a room with people that agree with you: “Your ideas will never be honed [if they are not challenged]. Your ability to change positions will go [away].” Collect options, not possessions: Toler said she does not live an extravagant lifestyle. At home she wears Keds shoes purchased from Payless Shoe Store, and she does not have a closet full of expensive shoes and clothes. However, “I’ll tell what I also don’t have: a mortgage,” she said. “I’ll tell you what I do have: options. I’d like to encourage you to collect options." It’s hard to pay for college if you’re paying Mr. Jordan and Mr. Yves Saint Laurent. They already sent their kids through college. “If you can look in your garage and your closet and see your bank account, you’re doing it wrong. Don’t be a consumer, be a person who has options.” Avoid paying the “Stupid Tax”: “The stupid tax is the $25 fine you pay because you didn’t put a quarter in the traffic meter,” she said. “It’s getting a $1,500 apartment you can’t afford, so you pay a $50 late fee every month.” Claim every part of your life: “Vote in every election, not just ones where a black man is running,” she said. Every minute that you live is both an option and an opportunity: “Every word you say can heal or divide things. I want you to own all of it outright and in full. Never just say, ‘Whatever, it doesn’t matter.’ Because it does.”

UAPB first to meet energy reduction mandate with completion of solar park

Above: The Solar Park is installed adjacent to the Kenneth L. Johnson, Sr. Health, Physical Education and Recreation (HPER) Complex.

The solar park is the culmination of a $19.3 million energy performance contract through the Arkansas Energy Performance Contracting (AEPC) Program. The keystone of the project is a 321 KwH photovoltaic solar array that ranks as the largest public solar installation in Arkansas. The use of the solar panels in the array will power the Johnny B. Johnson Housing complex, one of the largest dormitories on campus. The panels will also decrease UAPB’s energy consumption by a sizeable 32%, making UAPB the first state university to meet the 30% energy reduction mandate signed into law by Act 1494 of 2009. “This project quite demonstrably shows UAPB’s commitment to environmental sustainability and campus improvement on a large scale,” Chet Howland, energy program manager for Arkansas Energy Office, said in a statement. “Further, the economic benefits of such an undertaking cannot be understated, as we estimate the project will result in an economic impact of more than $60 million to Jefferson County and Pine Bluff while remaining budget neutral for the university.” When the Arkansas General Assembly in 2009 passed Act 1494, the legislative measure encouraged the conservation of energy and natural resources in buildings owned by public agencies and institutions of higher education. The primary goal of the legislation was to reduce total energy consumption by 20% by 2014 and 30% by 2017 when compared to fiscal 2008. “The increasing economic viability of public solar projects is driving much of this interest, though limited operational budgets and efficiency mandates remain our main drivers,” Howland said. Performance Energy spokeswoman Arlene Gavin said the Indiana company is involved in similar energy conservation project across the U.S. with a price tag of more than $16 million. Energy savings from improvements at UAPB are guaranteed by Performance Services to cover the costs of installation on an annual basis over 19 years. Spring/Summer 2018 27


golden lions athletics

Department of Athletics receives $900,000 NCAA grant for student academic support The University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff celebrated a feat never before accomplished by its athletics program – the winning of a major grant from the National Collegiate Athletics Association (NCAA) that will vastly improve the level of academic support that it will be able to extend to its student-athletes. The grant, known as the Accelerating Academic Success Program (AASP), is a comprehensive grant dispersed over a period of three years. UAPB is one of just three schools nationally which saw its application for the award approved and one of just two athletics programs that were awarded the maximum amount of $900,000. Southern University, like UAPB, is a member of the Southwestern Athletic Conference and was also awarded a $900,000 AASP grant. Morgan State University, a member of the Mid-Eastern Athletic Conference, was awarded $887,700. “We’re elated to receive the multi-year comprehensive grant from the NCAA,” UAPB Chancellor Laurence B. Alexander said. “This award honors the supportive academic environment that exists in our athletics department and it recognizes the broad university-wide support for even greater academic achievement by student-athletes across campus units.” UAPB’s AASP grant application, the brainchild of StudentAthlete Academic Services Director Kimberly Evans, includes four initiatives which should aid the athletics program as it works to make sure that UAPB student-athletes continue to

pace their non-athlete counterparts in academic achievement: installation of a Student-Athlete Academic Center at the J. Thomas May Field House, hiring of additional academic counselors and tutors and the purchase of computer hardware and software; funding to increase the number of studentathletes who will be able to attend the LIONS summer bridge program; a Degree Completion and Scholarship Program that will assist students who will need additional time to earn their degrees after their playing eligibility has expired; and professional development that will provide funds for members of the academic support staff to take advantage of opportunities that would help them to better assist studentathletes. “The impact of the Accelerating Academic Success Program has exceeded expectations and the reach has expanded far beyond the Academic Progress Rate (APR),” said Bernard Franklin, the NCAA’s Executive Vice-President of Education and Community Engagement and Chief Inclusion Officer. “The program’s success is an illustration of the transformation that can take place when adequate resources are combined with creative and strategic planning.” In addition to the three universities which have been awarded the multi-year grants, six other universities have been awarded single-year grants. Combined with the multiyear grants, a total of $3.1 million is being dispersed to the nine schools by the NCAA.

Cedric Thomas named Head Football Coach

Joe Dempsey

Coach Cedric Thomas

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

Cedric Thomas has been named the 20th head coach of the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff Golden Lions football team. Returning home to the institution that gave him the opportunity to play collegiate football, Coach Thomas has been involved in football for over 15 years and brings championship-level experience to UAPB. Thomas graduated from UAPB in 2001 and played football as a defensive back with the Golden Lions. Coach Thomas has held a variety of positions which eventually led to becoming a head coach. He has been a recruiting coordinator, a graduate assistant, a running back coach, a special teams coordinator, a defensive back coach, and a defensive coordinator. When asked what it means to come back to UAPB, Thomas answered confidently. "It absolutely means everything. This place saved my life, and I feel obligated to give back."


On behalf of the Department of Athletics at the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff,

Thank You

for helping us reach our goal of $320,000 for the Football Investment and Scholarship Fund. Your gift will help student-athletes win on the field and in the classroom.


recap

LIVE BOLDLY

Phylicia Rashad tells graduates to be bold, be beautiful, be free by David Hutter | Courtesy of the Pine Bluff Commercial

“This institution is more than brick and mortar, my friends... It is a living legacy, and now you are a part of it..."

Actress Phylicia Rashad speaks to graduates and attendees during Commencement Exercises at the Pine Bluff Convention Center.

University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff graduates were advised to be bold, beautiful, and free during commencement exercises at the Pine Bluff Convention Center. Award-winning actress Phylicia Rashad gave this message as part of her commencement address to the graduates, lauding them as great gifts to the world. An inductee into the Theater Hall of Fame, Rashad portrayed Claire Huxtable on “The Cosby Show” and plays a recurring role as Diana Dubois on the Fox TV series “Empire.” A 1977 graduate of Howard University, Rashad recalled the United States was undergoing tumultuous social change 40 years ago. She recalled young people working for equality and advised graduates to thank their parents and each other by giving a lion’s roar. “This institution is more than brick and mortar, my friends,” Rashad said. “It is a living legacy, and now you are a part of it. Gratitude attracts grace: it is true.” 30

UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

She apologized on behalf of her generation for what she called its missteps. “There are things you are seeing that you should not have to see because they should not be happening,” Rashad said. “You were born at this time for a reason. You have come for a great purpose. This commencement is part of that purpose.” Referencing Mother’s Day, Rashad shared advice that her own mother gave to her. “Be bold, be beautiful, be free,” Rashad said. “Be bold in the assertion that all that life is holy. Honor omnipresence in all that you see and within yourself. Be beautiful in your attempts to recognize God’s presence. When we see His presence in our own hearts, we see it everywhere.” UAPB senior class president Evan Murry shared a student reflection with fellow graduates. He saluted his classmates for making it through in one piece and reminded them to recognize people who helped them.


Brian T. Williams

At left: Anthony Wyrick, Tailor Collins, and Debra Jackson were sworn in as Second Lieutenants in the United States Army.

Brian T. Williams

Brian T. Williams

UAPB Chancellor Laurence B. Alexander joins the Chancellor's Medallion Recipients during commencement exercises.

“Today is a milestone for each of us and our families and it is to our loved ones that we owe our deepest thanks,” Murry said. “After today, we leave the protection of the university, the community of our friends, roommates, and teachers. We have improved the education of our peers and advanced our own knowledge. We endured, we wallowed, we revealed, and now we emerged.” UAPB Chancellor Laurence Alexander welcomed family members, friends, guests, students, and elected leaders to the ceremony. He noted that commencement means beginning and that the Lord has created this day. “This is the day you begin the rest of your lives,” Alexander, who has a doctorate degree, said. “And you should be proud. Today we celebrate your new beginning. We have an awesome class of students graduating today. Since the return of the nursing program in 2015, we have our first corps of nursing student graduates.”

Alexander and UAPB Provost and Vice Chancellor for Academic Affairs Jacquelyn McCray awarded Rashad with an honorary degree. The commencement ceremony included the UAPB combined bands performing “Pomp and Circumstance,” and the Vesper Choir and band performing “the Star-Spangled Banner,” and “Lift Every Voice and Sing.” Lt. Gen. Aundre Piggee and Lt. Col. Willette Alston-Williams, Director of Military Science at UAPB commissioned Second Lts. Tailor Collins, Debra Jackson, and Anthony Wyrick as officers into the Army. They received an ovation. Prior to the ceremony, students posed for pictures with each other and family members. A total of 288 students were candidates for either baccalaureate or master’s degrees, according to the program.

Spring/Summer 2018 31


then and now

Tashombia

and over 2,600 other students need your help to ROAR! Your on-going investment makes a positive difference!

Tashombia Lindsey Accounting Greenville, MS Sophomore

Please help us to

ROAR. REACHING OPTIMAL ACADEMIC READINESS University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff Office of Development • UAPB Foundation Fund 1200 North University Drive, Mail Slot 4981 • Pine Bluff, AR 71601 Phone: 870-575-8701 • Fax: 870-575-4605


Courtesy of the University Museum and Cultural Center

then and now

Superintendent Jefferson Ish (front row, far right) poses with his baseball team in this circa 1916 photograph.

KEEPING SCORE

UAPB sports have been in play since 1915 when baseball was the most popular sport. More than 100 years later, the Golden Lions look to continue roaring well into the future. By Henri Linton, Sr. and Siony Flowers

Prior to 1915, sports at small colleges, especially historically black colleges, were practically non-existent or at best in an infancy stage. By 1916, baseball was the rave of the land. Practically every black college fielded a baseball team with games played on Saturday afternoon. Football was soon to follow. Baseball, the first sport at Branch Normal College (now the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff) was organized in 1912 under the leadership of Charles McClurkin. It was not until 1915, during the administration of Superintendent Jefferson G. Ish, Jr., that various other athletic teams appeared on a regular basis. The teams included baseball and football for boys and basketball and lawn tennis for girls.

President John Brown Watson (center, second row) sits among the 1929 football team that finished the season with six wins and two losses.

Spring/Summer 2018 33


then and now The athletic program was supported by a 33 ½ percent of the one dollar per year student activity fee that had been assessed to the students for the first time. McClurkin continued to serve as coach of the men’s and women’s teams until 1919. The athletic teams were comprised of both high school and junior college students. Games were regularly scheduled between Branch Normal, the local Merrill High School and other colleges from the Little Rock area that were similarly comprised of high school and junior college students. In 1921, the name of the college was changed from Branch Normal College to the Arkansas AM&N School.

By 1925, the school had been advanced to a two-year junior college. Sports continued to be an important part of campus life throughout this period prior to the school regaining full status as a four-year degree granting college in 1928. Intercollegiate athletics at AM&N College essentially had its beginning with the John Brown Watson administration in 1928, when the college regained full status as a four-year degree-granting institution. Even at this early date, sports played an important role in the viability of colleges and universities.

The 2012 women’s basketball team poses for a group photo.

Terron Armstead was drafted in 2013 by the New Orleans Saints.

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff


It was Watson’s objective to make AM&N College as attractive as any other Negro college in the southern states. In the fall of 1928, President Watson assembled the student body to select a school mascot for the team. One young lady suggested the owl, the wisest bird. Another student, Raymond “De De” Johnson, put forth the lion, the king of the jungle animals. By a voice vote of the student body, the Golden Lion was chosen as the school’s mascot. This was the beginning of the legacy of the Golden Lions. The first intercollegiate sports included football and baseball for boys and basketball for girls. High school students were no longer permitted to play on the college teams. The Lions' competition now included colleges from Arkansas and other bordering states including Tennessee, Mississippi, Missouri and Louisiana. President John Brown Watson understood the importance of having a school mascot and school colors, but most of all the need to give recognition to the college’s student-athletes for their outstanding athletic exploits on behalf of their alma mater. Starting in 1928, the wearers of the college “A”, the insignia of varsity competition, organized themselves into the Letter “A” Varsity Club. Membership was limited to the men and women who had been awarded athletic letters by the Athletic Council in the various sports. This was the beginning of a tradition at the University that continues through today. Each year during Homecoming, the club members and their families gather for the Letter “A” Club breakfast. In 1936, AM&N College joined the Southwestern Athletic Conference (SWAC) that was formed in 1920 by six Texas HBCUs – Bishop College, Paul Quinn College, Prairie View A&M College, Texas College, Wiley College and HustonTillotson. These Texas teams along with the Arkansas and Louisiana HBCUs constituted the bulk of the Golden Lions competition. With the United States entering World War II in the early 1940s, sports competition came to a virtual halt with many of the college athletes leaving for military service. AM&N did not participate in intercollegiate sports during the 1942 and 1943 seasons. When World War II ended, AM&N College resumed intercollegiate athletics in 1944. In 1972, AM&N College merged with the University of Arkansas system and became the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff (UAPB). After the Title IX law passed in 1972 that required gender equity for boys and girls in every educational program that received federal funding, women’s sports returned to the scene at UAPB. During the 19751976 school year, women’s basketball and volleyball started competition. The women’s track program soared to national prominence, which was evident by their performances at several National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics (NAIA) national championship meets. The sport of track and field was a household name in and outside of Arkansas

throughout the 1960s, 1970s, 1980s and 1990s with the men and women’s teams recording impressive numbers. During this period, more than 100 track athletes were named NAIA All-Americans while establishing several state records. The women’s 1989 track team finished second in the nation at the outdoor championships in Azusa, California. Women’s athletics continued to blossom in the mid to late 2000s as the Lady Lions soccer team and cross-country track team began to make their marks in the Conference. For the first time in school history, the Lady Lions took winning honors in the 2009 SWAC soccer and cross-country championships. As UAPB’s student body has become more diverse, so have its sports teams. The University continues to attract student-athletes across the country and around the world.

The 1970 track team won the National (Astrodome Federation) Indoor Track and Field Championship. Courtesy of the University Museum and Cultural Center.

Interim Chancellor Calvin Johnson (center), Lonza Hardy, Jr. and Coach Monte Coleman hold the 2012 SWAC Championship trophy. Courtesy of Edwin Nicholson, former Sports Information Director.

Spring/Summer 2018 35


alumni updates UAPB/AM&N National Alumni Association Greetings fellow alumni and UAPB friends, As President and Chairman of the Board of Directors of the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff National Alumni Association, I have had the privilege of working with some of the most committed and compassionate alumni you can find anywhere. They are always ready to support and give back to the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. Timothy Pighee The mission of the National Alumni Association has always been to support the University and its program. The National Alumni Association, with the support of the alumni, has been able to answer the call from “Dear Mother” by providing scholarships for students, encouraging alumni attendance to activities that promote school spirit, displaying pride and a sense of community, responding to the call to assist with scholarships for the summer LIONS Program and call to increase athletic scholarships. We will continue to support the University and its programs by focusing on recruitment and retention of students and increasing membership of the National Alumni Association. UAPB is everywhere you are. Every day, you each have the opportunity to represent the institution through participation

in chapter events, community volunteerism, current and future student outreach, and peer-to-peer collaboration. We encourage you to get involved in a UAPB activity that inspires you, whether volunteering to participate in Lion Fever Day, attending a local chapter event, or participating in a student recruitment fair. Please join me as we challenge ourselves to be the best UAPB ambassadors that we can be. I want to hear from you. Send me your suggestions on how we can make our Alumni Association a stronger, more engaged organization or you can simply send a quick note to tdpja2415@aol.com to let me know what you’ve been up to. Thank you again for allowing me the opportunity to serve as your Alumni Association President. I’m excited about the next year of my presidency, and what it holds for us as we partner to strengthen and grow our Alumni Association. Best wishes, Timothy Pighee`78 President and Chairman of the Board UAPB/AM&N National Alumni Association

UAPB Office of Alumni Affairs It is with great pride that the Office of Alumni Affairs and Governmental Relations relates to you some of the things that happened in the current biennium. There are events which happen in our lives that I believe are destined to occur. When they do, the forces produce a reaction that compels the human spirit to rise above its normal level of reactions. This is a spirit of time when the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff needs a John Kuykendall giant leap forward in order to continue to educate our student population. It is important that our alumni understand that we are in a new era and the institution is in dire need of more assistance from our alumni, friends and others. When the face of the campus changes, so do the needs of the university. There are many ways that you can support your alma mater. Financial contributions are always welcome, as are recruiting students, governmental relations and attending events on campus. There are many other activities and some will interest you.

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

We have received support from Governor Asa Hutchinson that provided the one-to-one dollar match for 1890 Research and Extension Programs as required by the United States Department of Agriculture. This is the first time that UAPB has achieved this status. We are expecting a small increase in the State Appropriation FY 18-19. We expect to continue receiving support for scholarships/ awards from alumni, license plate programs and the golf tournament to assist deserving students at the university. Finally, we extend to you our sincere appreciation for your support. Although we have not achieved all of our goals, we are extremely encouraged by your response. We look forward to bigger and better things. Sincerely, John Kuykendall, Jr. Director - Alumni Affairs University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff


THERE ARE

HUNDREDS

OF STUDENTS WHO WILL BENEFIT FALL 2018 FROM THE GENEROSITY OF THOSE WHO GIVE TO THE ROAR APPEAL. Please give today.

THE ROAR FUNDS WILL BE USED TO MEET THE FINANCIAL NEEDS OF OUR STUDENTS WHEN OTHER SCHOLARSHIPS AND FINANCIAL ASSISTANCE FALL SHORT. WITH YOUR HELP, WE WILL REACH OUR GOAL OF $500,000. Credit Card

All major credit cards are accepted.

*Donations made to endowment funds may be matched dollar-for-dollar through the Title III Program, HBCU Program, U.S. Department of Education, Department of Institutional Services.

Please make a gift of:

U A P B F O U N D AT I O N F U N D

n $145

n $500

n $1,450

n Other: $_________

1200 North University Drive, Mail Slot 4981 • Pine Bluff, AR 71601

Phone: 870-575-8701 • Fax: 870-575-4605

www.uapb.edu/giving


alumni profiles

D E H C N U LA BY R E T H G U LA DORM R

NT FROM TORIETY E W S E N HUM AME AND NO O T L R A MNUS K OCIAL MEDIA F U L A W HO DY TO S E M O C OOM

by Donna M. Mooney What began as a pastime between classes in Johnny B. Johnson residence halla has turned into a fast-paced career opportunity for Karlton Humes, a former University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff art education major. Humes is the creator of comedy videos under his handle “NotKarltonBanks” that have received national recognition and a great following on the internet and in social/ entertainment venues.

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

Humes said he discovered his true calling while he was a junior on campus. After he posted a few videos, some of the UAPB Golden Girls donated wigs for his female characters that he still uses today. His audience was pleased, and stars were born. Character names are Pastor; First Lady; Sis. Mary; Sis. Squint (blond wig); Sis. Bun; Le Le; Le Le’s Momma; Le Le’s Dad; and Guest Church Member. Currently, Le Le is the only stand-alone character.


“I know who I am. I always put God first in what I do. This is just comedy. I’m not mocking the church, but there are people in the pews who make the church personalities funny.”

Karlton Humes poses inside Faith Temple Church of God In Christ, his home church in Hayti, Missouri.

Brian Williams

Spring/Summer 2018 39


Above: One of Karlton Humes' favorite spots in his hometown of Hayti, Missouri is downtown near the civic center.

At 24, Humes has boyish good looks that some say resemble writer/producer Tyler Perry – a young Tyler Perry with less height – but the resemblance is striking. He has the bright expressive eyes, low haircut, welltrimmed mustache and beard, and of course the signature smile. Recently, Humes, was cast in an upcoming Tyler Perry movie that will be released in spring 2018. “I don’t have a speaking part, but I was just excited to be in the movie,” Humes said. “When my agent called with the news, I thought it was a joke at first. “ The name of the movie will be released at a later date. However, Hume’s YouTube videos are available 24 hours a day. The videos, short clips that last from 20 seconds to 1 minutes and 30 seconds, make for good clean comedy using homemade videos depicting African American southern church life. And, not just any church, but his church in Hayti, Missouri. Hayti (pronounced Hay-tie) is a small town almost 90 miles north of West Memphis, Arkansas, with a 2010 Census population of 2,939 residents. Humes was born and raised there and on the day of this interview, we met briefly at the only McDonalds in the city limits, before traveling to the place of his video inspirations – his church. The second oldest son, of five children – Karlton Humes has an older brother, two younger brothers, and a younger sister. Ironically, none of his siblings are 40

UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

portrayed in the videos. All of the characters were created by Humes – even “Le Le,” who by the way, he says is not a caricature of his sister. All of the characters are church-based and fondly depicted. Sometimes Humes admits to going a little overboard, and being what he calls “extra,” but it works. At his church, he volunteers as the sound technician. Because he’s located at the back of the church in a booth, he says that he gets to observe behaviors and various personalities during the services. Fortunately, no one in the church has “fallen out” with him because of the characters, according to Humes. As a matter of fact, he says his church supports him. “I know who I am,” he said. “I always put God first in what I do. This is just comedy. I’m not mocking the church, but there are people in the pews who make the church personalities funny.” His social media handle, “Not Karlton Banks” developed out of irritation. Humes said when he was younger and told people his first name, they would respond with “like Carlton Banks on TV?” to which he’d explain that his name was spelled with a “K not a C” like the television character from The Fresh Prince of Bel-Air. According to Humes, his first set of videos in 2011 was “Ratchet Parodies of a Black Momma” that were laced with profanity. However, his friends said the videos weren’t him, and so he created a few gospel parodies, which were better accepted. Then he changed focus.


The church videos started picking up viewers in the 2013-14 academic year.

First Lady

They became so popular that one of the members from The Walls Group, an urban contemporary gospel recording group, reposted one of Humes’ videos that picked up 50,000 followers.

WHEN YOUR FANS CALL …

FROM HEAD TO IPHONE “I don’t think about it, I just do it,” Humes said during a recent telephone interview. “I record my own videos from home on my iPhone. Sometimes I just wake up and get into character and make a video. My notes, ideas and everything is on that phone – not a computer or an iPad. I started with iPhone 4 and have worked my way up to iPhone 7.” The videos take only five to six minutes to record – an impressive feat since he is a one man crew – creator, cameraman, producer, and actor. Apparently, his antics are entertaining because his video followers have grown in leaps and bounds. To date, Humes said he has at least three or four videos that have gone viral with over one million views. Most of his videos post from 1,000-3,000 comments, and his “likes” range from 28,000 to 42,000 per post. He has at least 622,000 Instagram followers. SOUL TRAIN AWARDS Almost overnight, Humes was a social media success. He didn’t realize the extent of his success until he received the Internet Soul Sensation - Soul Train Award presented to him by Erykah Badu. Out of the blue, Humes said he received a phone call during summer 2016 from a representative of the Soul Train Awards inviting him to attend the show. Humes said he was not told the reason for the invitation (He was still in shock that they knew who he was). One month before the show, he received his travel arrangements and the next month he flew to Las Vegas for the show. Without detailed information about his attendance, he packed character wigs and outfits for this venture. “In my mind, I thought they were putting me in as a guest presenter, but I wasn’t sure,” he said. “I was backstage and still didn’t know what was going on. Receiving an award never came to my mind.

The camera came over and Erykah Badu came to my seat. That’s when I knew – I found out at the show while they were taping.”

Sis. Squint

Humes joined the UAPB Family in summer 2011, and decided to follow this video dream in 2013 after his popularity soared. “I left school to do what was working for me,” he said. “I was enjoying the HBCU experience, classes and all, but this (video) thing was blowing up. I had to make a decision to step out in faith and do this full time.” As an art major, Humes’ other talent was drawing, and his goal was to teach art grades K-6. Taking the Praxis was his next step when he accepted the pull of another vocation. “I would like to complete my degree at UAPB someday soon because I only have 30 or 40 hours to go,” Humes said. “Mr. Linton and Mr. Campbell said they knew I would eventually leave because my videos were getting more and more popular. They knew I wanted better, but I would not take back my memories, friends and great experiences.” Humes said Linton was a type of “father figure” who always pushed the students to do better. “He knew when I missed classes and didn’t do my best,” Humes said. “Many of us (students) would stay on campus late to finish sculptures and ceramics.” In addition to hosting events, Humes has performed in videos with other social media artists such as the Playmakers, another gospel comedy group. His popularity has taken him to Washington State, Florida, District of Columbia, New York, Georgia, and California, and he now has an agent. Ironically, Humes said he has always wanted to be in the entertainment business, and only a few years ago, he was turned down for casting calls and modeling interviews in St. Louis and Memphis. The tides have changed now, and he receives calls from across the nation all because of a simple pastime. Humes' cast of characters on his videos include First Lady (top), Sister Squint (center), and LeLe (bottom).

Spring/Summer 2018 41


alumni profiles

Kalisha Hall


alumni profiles

Pattern with a Purpose

ALUMNA KALISHA HALL ENCOURAGES SELF-CONFIDENCE AND INNER STRENGTH THROUGH FASHION DESIGN IN NEW YORK CITY by William Hehemann Themes of self-identity are at the heart of the fashion designs produced by K. RaShaé, the luxury women’s wear fashion brand founded in New York City by Kalisha Hall, a 2011 alumna of the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. The company’s product line, which includes a diverse range of garments that emphasize texture, volume and bold patterns, asserts confidence, determination and individuality. “I call it ‘purpose-driven design,’” said Hall. “The inspiration for the garments I create comes from an emotional standpoint and a desire to help others, especially women and young girls.” Hall said when creating a particular design she considers the message it can send to others. She uses her creativity and desire to experiment with design to express themes of personal empowerment and self-confidence. “My designs are based on the premise of being true to yourself and embracing the characteristics that make you who you are,” she said. “Each of us is unique and has a different purpose in this world. I want to inspire other women to have a positive outlook on themselves and the accomplishments they are capable of achieving.” Hall said many of the themes of her work arose from her own experiences in overcoming personal boundaries and

reaching for new opportunities, which eventually led her from her hometown of Pine Bluff, Arkansas to New York City. After developing an interest in clothes and fashion at an early age, her true journey began when she decided to major in fashion merchandising at UAPB. “Though I have always loved redesigning outfits and playing with clothes, I assumed I would eventually seek a career as a fashion buyer because I lacked the background in the creative aspects of fashion design,” she said. “However, I took a class in sewing and design during my senior year that I absolutely loved. My advisor, Kalari Turner, who was then an instructor of merchandising, textiles and design, said I should seriously consider redirecting my focus toward the creative and design aspects of fashion rather than the business side of the industry.” After graduation, Hall was hired as a sales representative at Fashion Industry Gallery in Dallas, Texas. Though her job was primarily sales-focused, she used her creative talents to piece together garments in original combinations during presentations with buyers. When Hall’s manager noticed her knack for innovation, she encouraged her to go back to school to hone her natural design skills, and suggested that she apply to institutions in New York City. Spring/Summer 2018 43


alumni profiles

Acting on the encouragement, Hall applied to Parsons School of Design, a private art and design college located in Greenwich Village in Manhattan. When she received a letter of acceptance and a scholarship to major in fashion design, she knew she had to take the chance of a lifetime. “At first it was intimidating to move to New York,” she said. “I wondered what the experience would be like, considering my upbringing in a small town and the fact that I would speak a bit differently from everyone else in the classroom.” Hall quickly realized there was no time to worry about apprehensions, as she became absorbed by the college’s fast-paced, demanding schedule. In addition to regular coursework, she interned at House of Z, the women’s apparel company owned by designer Zac Posen. For her senior thesis, she had to conceptualize and design a complete clothing collection and present it in front of a pool of actual clothing buyers. “The rigorous schedule at Parsons taught me how to make efficient timelines and meet tight deadlines,” she said. “I spent many late nights in the classroom sewing.” After graduating with honors, Hall sought hands-on experience at a startup bridal company to complement her experience as an intern at a large company. “I wanted to experience first-hand every step and challenge involved in starting your own fashion company,” she said. “In addition to designing and draping, I was also responsible for maintaining the company’s social media presence. It was a fantastic opportunity to watch a business grow from the ground up.” Hall was hired in her first salaried position in the digital visual merchandising department for the menswear company JackThreads. Later, however, she was incidentally part of a layoff following the hire of a new creative director. The setback turned out to be the push Hall needed to refocus the direction of her career. “The tragedy of losing my job turned into a blessing when I started using the connections I had made over the years to figure out how to start my own fashion brand,” she said. “Contrary to what one might think about New York stereotypes, my colleagues were always gracious in offering their support, resources and advice as I set out to start my own company.”

Hall said things quickly went into full throttle as she started building a folder of contacts and setting up appointments with fabric vendors. Seamstresses she had formerly worked with helped sew some of her original designs, while her fiancé, Terrance Price, used his career experience in advertising to help her create a logo and branding, as well as a portfolio of stylish promotional materials. After months of hard work, K. RaShaé was officially founded. Since its inception, the company has released two product lines that embrace the mantra “Fearfully and Wonderfully Made,” which is meant to encourage women to embrace their individuality. Hall’s designs have been featured in Sports Illustrated, CBS Watch Magazine, Women’s Wear Daily, California Apparel News, LA Travel Magazine and Fashion 360 Magazine. Some of her garments were also recently featured in the Fox musical television series “Star.” In March 2017, she presented her most recent fashion collection at Paris Fashion Week after receiving an invitation from the Oxford Fashion Studio. When she is not crunching sales numbers and marketing new designs to retailers, Hall enjoys focusing on the artistic parts of the job that allow her to express her creativity. She tries to share the joy she derives from creative expression by regularly speaking to groups of girls and young women at educational and church camps. “I want to motivate other young women by letting them know they are capable of anything they put their mind to,” she said. “I tell them that you don’t have to look at your past or where you are from to judge where you are going. We all have the ability to shape our destiny if we believe in ourselves.” Hall said she received similar messages of inspiration and support from her professors at UAPB. “My advisor, Ms. Turner, saw more potential in me than I saw in myself at the time,” she said. “She challenged me to step out of my comfort zone and consider the things I was capable of achieving.” Hall aims to impart a similar message to others as she continues a journey based on inner strength that began in Pine Bluff, Arkansas.

“I call it ‘purposedriven design.' The inspiration for the garments I create comes from an emotional standpoint and a desire to help others, especially women and young girls.”

At right: Models are shown wearing designs from the Masterpiece collection by K. Rashae', Kalisha Hall's clothing line.

All photos courtesy of Kalisha Hall

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff



COVER STORY

Sharri Jones

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff


by Donna M. Mooney

Alumna Sharri Jones attended other university campuses before finding her place at UAPB. It was here where she learned the real value of investing in others.

Spring/Summer 2018 47


cover story

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff


“Life is good and filled with ups and downs – everything happens for a reason, and everything you do gets you to where you are now.”

S Sharri Jones works alongside her husband, Bill, inside the Sissy's Log Cabin Little Rock, Arkansas location.

Sharri Wyatt Jones lives by the motto above, and she believes that where she started in education played a major role in where she is today. Jones is a UAPB alumna who graduated in 1988 with a bachelor’s degree in elementary education. She was proud to begin her career as an educator and follow in the steps of her grandmother, Juanita Wyatt, who taught elementary school in the Pine Bluff School District for more than 30 years. To Jones’ delight, her first teaching assignment was at First Ward Elementary School working down the hall from Grandmother Wyatt. Jones is the Executive Secretary and Chairman of Events for Sissy’s Log Cabin of Pine Bluff, Little Rock, Jonesboro and Memphis. Married to Bill Jones of Sissy’s, she is the behind-thescenes person whose activities keep the business in the forefront. On this day, a few minutes before Sissy’s Log Cabin opens for business, employees are coming out of a morning meeting. Jones doesn’t attend the employee meetings, so she arrives a little later. The delay takes just long enough for the guests to receive a freshly brewed cup of Keurig butterscotch coffee. Soon after, Jones glides discreetly into the room waving hello and greeting employees by name. She’s wearing a sleeveless tea length form-fitting black dress with minimal but brilliant jewelry. “I’m glad I attended UAPB,” Jones said. “I attended the University of Arkansas Fayetteville and UALR before attending UAPB, and I felt like a number. At UAPB, students are not a number and professors know them individually, and I love that. UAPB encompassed you. When you graduated, you were going to represent them well.” Reminiscing, she started naming UAPB instructors who influenced her, such as Dr. Rosemarie Word and Dr. Theodore Elliott, who were her advisors. “They took care of me, and I remember when Dr. Johnny B. Johnson approved me to take 21 hours my last semester, it was hard, but I had to make it,” she said. “I needed to graduate and go to work.” Other instructors mentioned included Dr. Hazel Linton, Dr. Trenton Cooper, and Dr. L.A. Torrence. “There were several of us taking full loads in the daytime and working at night at Dillard’s,” Jones said. “When I graduated, I knew that I was prepared for the classroom because they (professors) cared. They were the greatest support for me.” For three years, Jones taught third grade until her first born, William Murphy Jones IV, arrived, and then she stepped into her new role as homemaker. Three years later, Wyatt Jones was born. Spring/Summer 2018 49


cover story

“I’m glad I attended UAPB... At UAPB, students are not a number and professors know them individually, and I love that. UAPB encompassed you. When you graduated, you were going to represent them well.”

Home is Where the Heart is

For all of the talk about people leaving Pine Bluff, Sharri Jones says she and her husband are here to stay. Recently, they decided to sell their home in west Pine Bluff. While they were searching for a new home, Sharri Jones said they looked in Little Rock and surrounding areas, but they didn’t find the type of home they wanted. By then, their house had been on the market for a year. Then a friend asked a question that settled their decision once and for all. “A friend asked Bill – ‘If you knew you had two years left to live, where would you like to be?’” Sharri Jones said. “We both agreed that we wanted to be in Pine Bluff. This is where we were raised, where we were educated, where our friends are, where our family is, and most of all this town has made our family who we are today.” The day after they made a decision to remain in Pine Bluff, their house sold. With their home sold, the Joneses decided to build and began searching for property. That search ended at the 58-acre wooded site at the corner of 46th Avenue and Hazel Street that reached almost to the Bayou near I-530. The property owner’s name, Umer Porter Hathaway, was an unusual one. Jones reached out to Henri Linton, Sr., Director of the UAPB Museum and Cultural Center, for information. The Hathaway Connection

“Umer G. Porter Hathaway was the wife of the late Isaac S. Hathaway, Jr.,” Linton said. “I have a copy of her will and the property deeds on file.” Linton said previous stipulations in the will were for the property to be sold and proceeds used to build a museum in Tuskegee to display Isaac Hathaway’s works. However, that request was never fulfilled. (Note: due to no fault of the current owners.) Linton explained that the property belonged to Umer Hathaway’s parents - the Porters. When Isaac and Umer Hathaway married, Isaac was a teacher at Merrill High School. He was 47 and she was 25. They 50

UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

had no children together, but Isaac had a son who died in 1938. The elder Hathaway died in 1968, and Erma died in 1991 at the age of 88-years-old. Her only sister also died. “Back when that property was owned by the Porters, that area was considered rural or in the country,” Linton said. “Many blacks owned property in the area then.” From 2008 to 2012, the Joneses persevered with the legal process to purchase the Hathaway “heir” property. The property has belonged to them (Jones) for five years now, and the new home, “Chestnut Place,” will be completed in April 2018. “This is an exciting time for us because not only is UAPB dear to me because of my education, but now I feel even more connected to the university through this property,” Sharri Jones said. Diamonds are my Business

Five years ago, Sharri Jones started work full-time for Sissy’s in her current position, and she uses the same training she learned to assess children - for employees. “I sit in on every interview because I have a sixth sense,” Jones said. “I have insight into people that others might miss. I apply what I learned in education.” Jones says Sissy’s is a destination store. When people shop here, they want to be here, and when they come in, they should feel at home. “This is a very exciting business because jewelry is always changing.” For the last five years, I have worked almost side by side with my husband every day, and it has been fine. “Some days I work from home, thanks to the computer, and I can work from anywhere in the country when we’re traveling.” Jones also is involved in philanthropy. “We support different organizations in the towns where we have stores. We are civic minded and believe it is very important to give back, and we’ve raised our boys by the saying – to whom much is given, much is expected.”


Sharri Jones is photographed in the Sissy's Log Cabin - Pine Bluff location with Jenx, a three-year-old White Golden Retriever and Champ, a nine-year-old Border Aussie. Champ belongs to Wyatt Jones (the Jones' son), who is away at college. His brother Jenx (as Sharri calls him), is Sharri’s pet. This inseparable doggy duo is obviously at ease while in the store and often sit as close to Sharri as possible.

William Jones, IV, works in the Little Rock store and is a graduate of UA Fayetteville, while Wyatt Jones is a fifth year senior currently attending the Gemological Institute of America in Carlsbad, California. He will complete his degree in fall 2018. Both sons majored in business. After graduation, Wyatt plans to work in one of the stores also. “Our sons must graduate from college and then attend the Gemological Institute of America. They start working in the stores like everyone else. We expect them to work their way up. If I can mop floors and empty garbage cans, I expect them to do the same.” A Time to Relax

When time permits, Jones enjoys traveling, raising horses and cooking. Over the years, she has developed an expertise for cooking wild game such as wild turkey, venison, quail, duck and dove. “I have 300 cookbooks, and I love to cook,” she said. “When we first got married, I could not boil water, but I bought cookbooks and learned. As for cooking wild game, the rule is, when Bill and the boys go hunting, if you kill it, then you have to figure out how to eat it.” She said that when the boys were younger, her home was where the children’s friends gathered. “It was nothing for Bill and me to fry chicken or cook waffles at midnight for the boys and their friends. We love family. I’m looking forward to moving into my house and cooking again. I’m ready to entertain.”

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class notes Jennifer R. Smith '89, was recently appointed to serve on the National Executive Board of Delta Sigma Theta Sorority, Inc. for the 2017-19 biennium by National President, Beverly Evans Smith. Jennifer Smith will serve the sorority as Chair of the National Ritual and Ceremonies Commission. She is also a Golden Life Member of Delta. Smith is a third-generation alumnus of AM&N/UAPB, a Dorothy Magett Fiddmont New Millennium Leader, and a Platinum Life Member of the UAPB/ AM&N National Alumni Association, Inc. In the community, she is a member of the Dallas (TX) Chapter of The Links, Incorporated, a Silver Life Member of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, and a member of the National Council of Negro Women, and she serves as Chair of the Library Advisory Board for the City of DeSoto, Texas. Professionally, she is employed at Southern Methodist University in the Meadows School of the Arts as the Graduate Academic Records Coordinator. Jennifer Smith

Tamla Lewis

Tamla Lewis '02, was named Associate Dean for Administration in the University of Arkansas School of Law. She will serve in a chief of staff capacity and will be responsible for compliance and external reporting and provide innovative leadership for special projects. She will coordinate with student affairs and serve as primary liaison to law student organizations. "We are excited to have Tamla back in the School of Law as part of our senior leadership," said Stacy Leeds, Dean of the School of Law.

Danyelle Walker '92, has been appointed to the Board of Directors of the Arkansas Bar Foundation. Having practiced exclusively in consumer bankruptcy for approximately 17 years, Walker knows she has truly found her calling. She was a law clerk for former Arkansas Supreme Court Justice Andree Layton Roaf, whom she credits for instilling in her the desire to help individuals with their financial hardships. Walker currently serves on the UALR Board of Visitors, VOCALS board, Our House board, the American Heart Association board and the Arkansas Access to Justice Commission. Her desire to help others has led to numerous awards. She was the 2008 Arkansas Pro Bono Partnership Attorney

"The skills and broad institutional knowledge she brings from both the general counsel's office and her time here as a student will make her transition seamless." Prior to joining the law school, Lewis served nearly a decade in the university's Office of General Counsel, where she worked on a wide range of legal issues including policy development and revision, employment law, student affairs, campus safety, transactional and property matters and responses to Freedom of Information Act requests.

Before that, she was an associate at Mitchell, Williams, Selig, Gates and Woodyard PLLC in Rogers. Lewis graduated with a Bachelor of Arts in English, magna cum laude, from the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. She holds a Master of Education in workforce development education with emphasis in human resource development from the University of Arkansas College of Education and Health Professions and a Juris Doctor from the University of Arkansas School of Law.

of the Year and received the Arkansas Bar Association’s Equal Justice Distinguished Service Award in 2008. Having accepted over 200 pro bono cases, she was VOCALS 2012 Attorney of the Year. She was most recently honored at UALR William H. Bowen School of Law’s Alumni Scholarship Luncheon for her public service. Walker graduated with a B.S. degree in accounting, Summa Cum Laude, from the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff in 1992 and a Juris Doctorate from the UALR William H. Bowen School of Law in 1995. She is married to Assistant U.S. Attorney Edward Walker and they have two children, Victoria, 11, and Ethan, 8. Dannyelle Walker

WE WANT TO KNOW 52

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Send your accomplishments, milestones and publications to communications@uapb.edu


Hannibal Bolton, left, accepts the Emmeline Moore Prize from American Fisheries Society president Joe Margraf. Photo courtesy of the American Fisheries Society

Hannibal Bolton '71, was awarded the Emmeline Moore Prize at the American Fisheries Society (AFS) annual meeting in Tampa, Florida. The award recognizes the efforts of an individual society member who has demonstrated exemplary service to the cause of equal opportunity of access to higher education in fisheries and professional development in any of the disciplines of fisheries science or management. The award is named after Emmeline Moore, the first female president of the society, who served from 1927 to 1928. A native of Crawfordsville, Arkansas, Bolton was the first member of his family to graduate from college when he received a bachelor’s

Mollie Sanford '14, received the New Teacher of the Year Award by the Arkansas Association of Teachers of Family and Consumer Sciences. The award recognizes teachers who have made significant contributions toward innovative and unique career and technical education (CTE) programs and demonstrated a professional commitment early in their careers. Eligible candidates for the award needed to be employed as classroom or laboratory CTE teachers at the middle, secondary or postsecondary level for a period of three to five years and have a current membership with the Arkansas chapter of the Association for Career and Technical Education (ACTE). “Mollie was a very talented student who excelled in her courses at UAPB, and I am very excited that she won this award,” Dr. Kaye Crippen, professor of

degree in agriculture from UAPB. In 1972, he started his 45-year career with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS). According to the AFS, Bolton recruited a generation of African-American professionals to leadership positions in the FWS. As president of the endowment fund for UAPB and adviser for the Department of Aquaculture and Fisheries, he recruited dozens of AfricanAmerican students into private, state and federal fisheries programs. Douglas Austen, executive director of the AFS, said ensuring equal access to opportunities is a critical issue in the fisheries industry that reflects the challenges and opportunities of modern society. The profession should ensure that opportunities are available to everyone – regardless of ethnicity or gender – so that young people of all backgrounds can see themselves as fisheries, wildlife or natural resources professionals, he said. “Hannibal was a role model in this effort because he rose to a high and very visible level in a key federal agency,” Austen said. “People respected him for his competency, professionalism, engaging personality and ability to show others of any background that they can be successful, make significant contributions, have a meaningful career and live a fulfilling life as a fisheries professional.” Bolton is the third person associated with UAPB to receive the Emmeline Moore Prize. Dr. Mamie Parker, a UAPB alumna, received the award in 2017, and Dr. Steve Lochmann, professor of aquaculture and fisheries at UAPB, received it in 2013. “I’m not aware of any one institution that has had so many winners of any AFS award,” Austen said. “This highlights UAPB’s character as an institution that fully embraces the mission of being open and equally available to people of all backgrounds, which results in graduates who make a difference in all walks of life. UAPB takes people from all backgrounds and gives them the tools, training, moral character and support to be successful.” Austen said the three award winners with ties to UAPB validate the argument that diversity – in addition to the fundamental moral obligation of equality – also makes good business sense. “These people have added tremendous value to the institutions that employed them and rose to be among the agencies’ leaders,” he said. “They were seen as people who made the agencies successful and were valued because of that ability. Their contributions help others knock down barriers, create new opportunities and encourage all institutions to work even more energetically to ensure their leaders, employees and partners embrace diversity as a core component of who they are now and in the future.”

the Merchandising, Textiles and Design (MTD) program at UAPB, said. “She has great organization skills and works well with everyone. I saw her interact with students when she was a student teacher, so I know she is an outstanding teacher.” Sanford currently works as a teacher of family and consumer sciences at Dumas New Tech High School in Dumas, Arkansas. She teaches courses in child development, parenting, food and nutrition, family dynamics and teaching orientation. “I love working with students and preparing them for life after high school,” she said. “I believe teaching students the life skills necessary to perform adult roles and fulfill their responsibilities will help them be more successful on their own in the future.” In addition to the courses she teaches, Sanford also serves as a sponsor of the

Family Career and Community Leaders of America organization. At Dumas High School, she serves as chair of both the wellness and improvement committees and is a member of the leadership team and parental involvement committee. She also serves on the curriculum committee for the Dumas School District. Sanford said she always knew she wanted to become a teacher. As a child, she loved going to school, reading and learning about new subjects. “I eventually wanted to play a role in something that was much bigger than just myself,” she said. “While I was in high school I loved taking family and consumer sciences courses, but it wasn’t until I started my college coursework at UAPB that I finally found my calling and made the decision to major in human sciences education.”

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in memoriam Willie Daniel Dykes '69 was

born May 18, 1940, in El Dorado, Arkansas, to Willie Alex Dykes and Minnie Lee Williams. Both parents, grandparents, four sisters and a daughter preceded him in death. His early years of formal learning experience were in El Dorado, Arkansas. He graduated from Washington High School, Class of 1959. He was a Veteran who served a total of six years in the United States Army. He later continued his education and earned a B.S. degree in mathematics from University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff (AM&N) in 1969. After graduation in that same year he was employed as a production planner for Bendix Corp. Willie also taught mathematics in the Kansas City School District for five years. In 1977, he was employed by General Motors as

a production worker, subsequently as a reliability engineer retiring in 2001 after twenty-four years of service. Dykes belonged to several organizations that were each near and dear to his heart: National Association for Black Veterans (NABVETS), Kansas City Chapter 41, Mid America Cobra Club, Corvette Connected Club, University of Arkansas Pine Bluff Alumni Chapter and the GM Fairfax Reliability Breakfast Club. He was a very caring and compassionate man who never met a stranger. He would help anybody with anything, and always had plenty of tools and supplies to come your aid. Willie was affectionately called, “Mr. Willie” or “Mr. D” by his neighbors. If you needed something, you could count on him to not only have it but help you through it! He had a passion for photography he was GOOD at it! If you didn’t want your picture taken, you could forget it. He would find a way to smooth talk you into it. He also enjoyed participating in parades where he’d be seen waving and driving his pride and joy, his 1966 Cobra.

His car served as mascot for Founder/ Drill Master Willie Arthur Smith of the Marching Cobras and for Schlagle High School Marching Band under the direction of Reginald May who affectionately called him “Pops”. Memories of Dykes will forever remain in the hearts of his loving and devoted wife, Maureen; children, Debra DykesPlummer, Ramona Swygart (Willis), Daniel Dykes and Sonya DeWalt; sisters, Flossie Mae Freeman and Ernestine Dykes; grandchildren, Danielle, Chris, Marcus, Jonathan, Alfonzo, Nickkole, Brandon, Kevin, Allison and Seth; twenty-three great grandchildren and two great-great grandchildren. His extended family includes: daughters, Kandace Grant (Steven) and Janeen Hutchinson (Maurice); father-in-law, Cecil Harden; sister-in-law, Brenda Chavers (Billy); infinity friends, Don Andrews (Crecia) and Willie Hampton; his spiritual uplifter, Aumariece Sherman. He also leaves a host of nephews, nieces, cousins as well as a number of special friends who also have loved and adored him.

Matthew Henry of Pine Bluff, Arkansas was born in Rison, AR, to the late Isaiah and Inez (Beasley)

Henry. He was the first African-American CPA in Arkansas and owned Matthew Henry, CPA. He leaves to cherish his memories, son, Rev. Jermon Henry of North Little Rock; three daughters, Marian Nelson of Memphis, TN, Dr. Candace Pace of Hampton, VA, and Dr. Esther Pace of San Antonio, TX; Three sisters, Marie Sprinkle Coleman and Mattie Johnson of Pine Bluff, and Christine Hawkins of Newport News, VA. Seven Grandchildren; and three Great-Grandchildren. Evelyn Hildreth was born July 26,

1947, to the late Edgar and Viola Roberson in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. She attended local schools, and graduated from Coleman High School in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. She also graduated from AM &N College, now known as the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff with a Bachelor of Science in Biology. She also retired from the University of Arkansas of Pine Bluff. On March 3, 1968, she was united in holy matrimony to the late Billy James Hildreth, Sr. Their union lasted 49 wonderful years, and was blessed with three children. She tremendously loved God, her family, and church. She was very involved in her church, the Order of the Eastern Star, Adah #424, and several other houses. She was also a lifetime member of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Incorporated where she held various local, state and regional positions.

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UAPB Magazine • University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff

She is preceded in death by her parents- Edgar and Viola Roberson; two brothers: Carl Johnson and Edgar Jr.; daughter, Anneshia Hildreth Smith; and husband, Billy Hildreth, Sr. She is survived by two children, Monica (Pine Bluff, AR), and Billy II (Greenville, TX); six grandchildren: Kyla (Darrian) of Plano, TX, Aaron II and M’Kajea (Pine Bluff, AR), Tyja (Little Rock, AR), Tia (Hot Spring, AR), Tmia (Arizona); four greatgrandchildren: Kingston, Paisley, Amiyah and Eelyja; four sisters: Geraldine “Ann” Buie, Lula (John) Smith, Beverly (Earl) Williams all of Pine Bluff, and Cheryl (Franklin, Jr.) Rivers of Little Rock, AR; one brother: Richard (Billie) Roberts of Pine Bluff, AR; her best friends, Jessie Walters and Patricia Johnson (Pine Bluff, AR). She also leaves behind an aunt, Rosie Scott; four sisters-in-law’s (Ocia, Margaret, Wilma and Connie), bother-in-law (Rickey Brown), and a host of nieces, nephews, cousins, godchildren, family members and friends.


Savannah C. Wright Johnson '60,

She continued to work part- time until she fully retired in the fall of 2016 at the age of 97. She was very active both in the community as well as in Church. She was a member of the Sunday School Class #8, The Order of The Eastern Star, The Nu Omega Chapter of Zeta Phi Beta Sorority, Inc. Graduate Chapter, The State and National Association of Funeral Directors and Embalmers, The AM&N/ UAPB Alumni Association and Past President of the Malvern Chapter. Savannah supported and participated in many Charitable Organizations. While Johnson did not have children of her own, she dedicated many years of her life to mentoring young people, many of whom went on to become Teachers, Funeral Directors, and Entrepreneurs. She will lie in-state from 10 a.m. until 11 a.m. service time at First Baptist Church 220 Vine Street. She is survived by her sister, Magdalene Armstead; nephews, Sean and Craig Armstead; niece, April Armstead Greer all of Chicago, Ill. She also leaves a host of cousins and friends in Malvern, Pine Bluff and Stuttgart.

Lorenzo Ramsey Jones, III '76,

He was united in holy matrimony to Jacqueline Ruth Howard on Sunday, September 30, 1973, at Kings Highway MBC. Unto this union, 2 sons were born, Lorenzo Ramsey Jones, IV and Kevyn Howard Jones. He was called to his heavenly home on September 3, 2017. He is survived by his wife Jacqueline Ruth Jones, sons, Lorenzo R. Jones IV (Kennasha), Kevyn Howard Jones, Mother, Marie Early Jones, granddaughters, Anya Monique Jones, Kierstyn Lauren Jones, Kennedy LaNiece Jones, and Kerrington Jene De Jones, sisters, Zaida Pauline Davidson, Sharon Rose Thompson (Donald), Christine Jones, brothers, Calvin Christian Jones (Sandra), David Ramsey Jones, aunt, Lucille Johnson, godchildren, Leslie and Donnie Smith, Madilyn Wiley, the late Kenric May, a host of nieces, nephews and cousins, his extended family, the Howard-Golden family and many others who affectionately called him daddy or uncle. He was preceded in death by his father, L.R. Jones, Jr and sister, Evangeline Cecilia Boykin.

was born September 4, 1919, in St. Charles, Arkansas Margaret McCray and her father was Jake Carter. After graduating from Holman High School in 1942 she worked at a clinic in Stuttgart for 10 years to save enough money to pay her tuition to attend AM&N College, now the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff. In 1960 she graduated with her Bachelors and Master’s Degree in Education. Savannah taught First and Second Grades in the Saint Charles, Stuttgart and Malvern Public School Districts. In 1973 she married Mr. James R. Johnson and moved to Malvern in 1974. She taught Second Grade in the Malvern Public School District until she retired in 1982. Johnson became Licensed Funeral Director in March of 1976 and assisted her husband at Johnson Funeral Home where she worked until 2015 when her health began to fail.

was born January 14, 1953 to the late L. R. Jones, Jr and Marie Early Jones in Pine Bluff, AR. He attended St. Peters Catholic School and Townsend Park Elementary School. He resided in Chicago, IL, for a brief period and returned to Pine Bluff in 1969. He attended Dollarway High School and graduated in 1971. He was a 1976 graduate of the University of Arkansas at Pine Bluff with a Bachelor's Degree in Accounting. He was employed at Mad Butcher Supermarket. He was also Special Agent with the IRS Criminal Investigation Division. He was the former pastor of New St. Hurricane Missionary Baptist Church. After 24 years of serving as pastor, he retired in April 2012. He continued to preach as an associate minister of Kings Highway Missionary Baptist Church.

Velma “Peggy” Mitchell Morris, was born to the late Wiley Bryant Fuller and Velma Rucker on June 28,

1928, in Hot Springs, Arkansas. She was a resident of Pine Bluff where she was a dedicated teacher in the public schools, member of St. James United Methodist Church, graduate of UAPB (formerly A.M.&N. college) and a lifetime member of the UAPB Alumni Association. She is survived by her three daughters, Ann Mattison of Conway, Ark., Lorraine Allen of Little Rock, Ark., and Cherron Boston of New Braunfels, Texas; two sons Robert Mitchell of San Antonio, Texas and Bryant Mitchell of San Diego, Calif.; 11 grandchildren and 8 great-grandchildren.

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FOOTBALL SCHEDULE 2018

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SEPT. 22 PRAIRIE VIEW A&M UNIVERSITY

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