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Model_Jahidul Islam Sibllu

2016.07.09

for the FAMU festival they put the tape eveywhere, on the street, on the wall, on the floor. i took this foto at FAMU main building.

Lucy Moten School was built in 1932 at Florida A&M University (FAMU) with support from the Julius Rosenwald Fund and General Education Board. For more than 70 years, the school served as a training facility for African-American educators. The one-story brick building was designed in the Colonial Revival style. In 1935, FAMU President J.R.E. Lee, Sr., named the school in honor of Washington D.C. Miner Training School for Teachers principal, Lucy Ellen Moten (1851-1933), a protégé of Frederick Douglass. A Howard University graduate (1870), she was a pioneer of the “normal school” teacher training method during the early 20th century. Moten received her medical degree from Howard University in 1897. Her contributions as an educator and physician earned her national acclaim. In 1953, FAMU’s Lucy Moten School was placed under the College of Education as part of the FAMU High Developmental Research School (FAMU DRS) comprising grades K-12. In 2008, a new FAMU DRS was built on campus. The original Lucy Moten Elementary School building continues to be used by FAMU.

This brick house was the home of legendary Florida A&M University (FAMU) football coach Alonzo “Jake” Gaither and his wife, Sadie, a FAMU English professor. The couple regularly hosted sports and public figures from the 1950s-1960s, including Florida governors. The Gaither residence also served as a second home for many FAMU football players. Jake Gaither’s career at FAMU spanned 1937-1973, with 24 years (1945-1969) as head football coach. He held one of the best records in the history of American college football with 203 wins, 36 losses, and 4 ties. Gaither, in his own words, conditioned his players to be “mobile, agile, and hostile.” He and his loyal coaching staff produced 36 All-Americans and 42 of “Jake’s Boys” played in the National Football League. He was a coach, teacher, mentor, father figure, and friend to his players and students. Using sports to champion civil rights, Gaither advised state and local leaders on racial matters. The award-winning coach was inducted into the National Football Hall of Fame in 1975. In Tallahassee, a gymnasium, golf course, recreational center, and neighborhood are named in his honor. Gaither’s epic life and legacy enshrined forever in this home, makes him an American hero.

 

Kendrick toured a cafeteria at FAMU in Tallahassee to meet with hard working supporters.

#1 and #4: the first female KDs

"Thanks for visiting our little garden." If you know some Spanish or Portuguese, you can probably learn to speak Papiamentu pretty quickly! This little inscription was in Adelfa St. Jago's "hofje".

Hofje? Oh, yes, a little Dutch also can help you figure out some words in Papiamentu (which folks in Curaçao tend to spell "Papiamento").

(They speak the language in Aruba, too, but I forget which spelling they prefer there.)

Now if someone would like to endow a chair in the Papiamentu language at Florida A&M University, maybe we could add some elements to our new little exchange program.....Mr. Gates, are you listening?

A cargo de la FAMUS UANL

  

Florida A&M University and Tennessee State University Welcome to Tampa!!

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