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March 17, 2009. Alina Campan instructs one of her computer science classes. (Photos by Timothy D. Sofranko/NKU).

 

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College of Idaho alumni reunited with professors during Homecoming 2013.

Baohong Zhang Professor Dept. of Biology speaks at Faculty Convocation in Wright Auditorium. (ECU Photo by Cliff Hollis)

Faculty Development Programme in association with Information and Communication Technology Academy of Tamilnadu.

On November 21, 2019, Ramapo Dining Services and the leadership team from Enrollment Management and Student Affairs division invited students to the annual Thanksgiving Feast at Birch Tree Inn. EMSA and Sodexo staff helped serve the meal.

Mingyan Liu, Peter and Evelyn Fuss Chair of Electrical and Computer Engineering, speaks at a reception hosted by the ADVANCE Program and the Dean's Advisory Committee on Female Faculty (DACFF) celebrating women in leadership positions in the College of Engineering at the Ford Library on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on September 5, 2018.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing

A faculty recital presented by the Verona Quartet with Jonathan Ong and Dorothy Ro, violin; Abigail Rojansky ’11, viola; and Jonathan Dormand, cello with Peter Takacs, piano.

 

Photo by Dale Preston '83

Fakultas Ilmu Keperawatan (FIK) Universitas Indonesia

Title: Faculty Orchestra - 1

Digital Publisher: Digital: Cushing Memorial Library and Archives, Texas A&M University, College Station, Texas

Physical Publisher: Physical: Graphic Services, Texas A&M University

Date Issued: 2011-08-17

Date Created: 1941

Dimensions: 4 x 5 inches

Format Medium: Photographic negative

Type: image

Identifier: Photograph Location: Graphic Services Photos, Box 25, File 25-121

Rights: It is the users responsibility to secure permission from the copyright holders for publication of any materials. Permission must be obtained in writing prior to publication. Please contact the Cushing Memorial Library for further information

 

Mary-Ann Mycek, Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Associate Dean for Graduate Education speaks at a reception hosted by the ADVANCE Program and the Dean's Advisory Committee on Female Faculty (DACFF) celebrating women in leadership positions in the College of Engineering at the Ford Library on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on September 5, 2018.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing

Renaissance Charter High School for Innovation faculty training day November 5, 2013

See photos from the 2015 International Faculty Welcome event.

From left: Orrin Latham, James F. Dubuar, Ross Williams, and Phillip J. Haddock.

Mary-Ann Mycek, Professor of Biomedical Engineering and Associate Dean for Graduate Education speaks at a reception hosted by the ADVANCE Program and the Dean's Advisory Committee on Female Faculty (DACFF) celebrating women in leadership positions in the College of Engineering at the Ford Library on North Campus of the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, MI on September 5, 2018.

 

Photo: Joseph Xu/Michigan Engineering, Communications & Marketing

CalArts School of Dance faculty member Cynthia Young teaching a ballet technique class.

 

CIA-20070222-3092

Photo by Steven A Gunther

© CalArts 2007

Every year, our faculty start the school year off with a flourish. This year's musicale featured Anne Waller and Mark Maxwell, guitar; Robert Sullivan, trumpet; Kurt Hansen, tenor; James Giles, piano; and Blair Milton and Gerardo Ribeiro, violin. September 30, 2013. Photo by Anneliese Sloves.

Jazz faculty giving concert to PCC community.

Michael picked this image.

Mordecai Johnson was the president of Howard University in Washington, D.C. from 1926-1960, recruiting top quality faculty and turning the school into the pre-eminent African American university in the country. He is shown here in a photograph circa 1930.

 

After completing the elementary grades, Johnson left Paris, Tennessee to attend Roger Williams University in Nashville. Upon graduating from Atlanta Baptist College (later Morehouse College) in 1911, his oratorical ability won him critical acclaim. In 1922 Johnson delivered a commencement speech during his graduation from Harvard University Divinity School, titled “The Faith of the American Negro.” He also received his Doctor of Divinity degree from Gammon Theological Seminary Atlanta, Georgia.

 

On June 26, 1926, at the age of thirty-six, Johnson was unanimously elected the eleventh president of Howard University in Washington, D.C., becoming the first African American to serve as the permanent head of that institution. Prior to his appointment, Johnson had served as professor of economics and history at Morehouse. He had also served earlier as pastor of the First Baptist Church in Charleston, West Virginia.

 

During his tenure at Howard, Johnson appointed a number of people who became prominent scholars including Alain Locke, Ralph Bunche, Charles Drew, Percy Julian, Sterling Brown and Charles Hamilton Houston.

 

When Houston was appointed dean of the Howard University Law School he began producing a generation of great civil rights lawyers, including future Supreme Court Justice Thurgood Marshall. Houston himself was the architect of the strategy that dismantled the Jim Crow laws and laid the groundwork for the famous Brown v. Board of Education decision in 1954 by the United States Supreme Court.

 

Johnson was committed to the civil rights struggle, but was conflicted internally in how best Howard could serve that end.

 

In 1931 he was accused of being a communist and some trustees threatened to fire him. In 1933, he came under attack from southern Democratic members of Congress also for being a communist who threatened to cut off Howard’s federal funding.

 

Johnson weathered the storm, but he made the decision then to place the well being of the institution above any individual fight.

 

In 1934 when 30 Howard students challenged Jim Crow at the U.S. Capitol restaurants during the first organized ongoing sit-ins in the city, Johnson brought them before the faculty disciplinary committee for expulsion or suspension.

 

The committee chair Ralph Bunche prevailed in his recommendation of no discipline, but student activism at that time was quashed.

 

Similarly, a 1943-44 campaign by Howard students to end Jim Crow at Washington, D.C. restaurants using the sit-in tactic was halted by Johnson just as it appeared on the verge of victory.

 

Johnson dramatically expanded the campus with no buildings and increased enrollment from 2,000 in 1926 to 10,000 when he retired in 1960.

 

In Johnson’s last year, Howard students seized on the Greensboro, N.C. sit-in to stage their own desegregation sit-ins in the Washington, D.C. suburbs of Arlington, Va. and Montgomery and Prince George’s Counties in Maryland.

 

For a detailed blog post on the fight against Jim Crow at the U.S. Capitol’s restaurants, see washingtonspark.wordpress.com/2018/02/26/origins-of-the-c...

 

For related images, see flic.kr/s/aHsmcArGZz

 

Photo by Addison Scurlock. The image is a Scurlock Studio photograph courtesy of the Smithsonian Institution, National Museum of American History: Archives Center.

The seminary’s first faculty, c. 1860. Clockwise from top left is David Boyd, professor of ancient languages and English; Powhattan Clarke, surgeon and assistant professor of ancient languages; Anthony Vallas, professor of mathematics and natural philosophy; Francis W. Smith, professor of chemistry and commandant of cadets. In the center is William Tecumseh Sherman, superintendent and professor of engineering.

 

1860

 

Louisiana State University Office of the Chancellor Records, A0001, Louisiana State University Archives, LSU Libraries, Baton Rouge, La.

 

University Archives in the Louisiana Digital Library: www.louisianadigitallibrary.org/cdm/search/collection/LSU...

 

LSU University Archives: www.lib.lsu.edu/special/archives

 

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